Minor League Baseball | 09/13 02:05 | 2 | Modesto Nuts v San Jose Giants | L | 6-2 | |
Minor League Baseball | 09/11 01:30 | 2 | San Jose Giants v Modesto Nuts | L | 2-4 | |
Minor League Baseball | 09/09 00:05 | - | Fresno Grizzlies v San Jose Giants | W | 5-11 | |
Minor League Baseball | 09/08 01:50 | - | Fresno Grizzlies v San Jose Giants | L | 7-3 | |
Minor League Baseball | 09/07 02:05 | - | Fresno Grizzlies v San Jose Giants | W | 5-6 | |
Minor League Baseball | 09/06 01:50 | - | Fresno Grizzlies v San Jose Giants | L | 5-4 | |
Minor League Baseball | 09/05 01:50 | - | Fresno Grizzlies v San Jose Giants | W | 5-10 | |
Minor League Baseball | 09/03 01:50 | - | Fresno Grizzlies v San Jose Giants | L | 5-1 | |
Minor League Baseball | 09/01 20:00 | - | San Jose Giants v Rancho Cucamonga Quakes | W | 5-2 | |
Minor League Baseball | 09/01 00:00 | - | San Jose Giants v Rancho Cucamonga Quakes | L | 4-6 | |
Minor League Baseball | 08/31 02:00 | - | San Jose Giants v Rancho Cucamonga Quakes | L | 4-6 | |
Minor League Baseball | 08/30 01:30 | - | San Jose Giants v Rancho Cucamonga Quakes | L | 1-9 |
The San Jose Giants are a Minor League Baseball team of the California League and the Single-A affiliate of the San Francisco Giants. Located in San Jose, California, the Giants play their home games at Excite Ballpark.
San Jose has hosted multiple minor league baseball teams throughout its history. The current lineage can be traced back to the San Jose Bees who joined the California League in 1962 as an affiliate of the expansion Los Angeles Angels. They switched to a Kansas City Royals affiliate from 1970–1974 and a Cleveland Indians affiliate in 1975–1976. Many players on the Kansas City Royals teams of the 1970s and 1980s, including George Brett, Amos Otis, and Dennis Leonard played in San Jose.
The Sacramento Solons then leased the San Jose affiliate for two seasons, when they were known as the San Jose Missions and played in the Pacific Coast League as an affiliate of the Oakland Athletics and Seattle Mariners. In 1982 the club became affiliated with the Montreal Expos and was known as the San Jose Expos. The Expos ended their affiliation after one year and the renamed Bees became an independent club.
As an independent club, the Bees were free to sign players from Nippon Professional Baseball; the Seibu Lions sent several players to the Bees on loan in this period including Norio Tanabe and Kimiyasu Kudo. The 1986 Bees employed five decorated former Major Leaguers who struggled with drugs and alcohol and were effectively blacklisted by Major League Baseball: Steve Howe, Mike Norris, Ken Reitz, Todd Cruz and Daryl Sconiers. The mix of disgraced former stars and Japanese imports attracted attention from such publications as The Times, Rolling Stone, The New York Times, The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times.