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March 6, 2019

Bravehearts owner to purchase second team in Nashua

Photo/Grant Welker The Bravehearts' final regular season home game for the 2018 season. The team ranked sixth highest nationally in attendance among collegiate summer leagues last season, with the highest average attendance in the team's five seasons in Worcester.

John Creedon Jr., the owner of the Worcester Bravehearts, is pursuing the purchase of the Nashua Silver Knights.

Collegiate baseball in Worcester, however, is here to stay, he said Wednesday. 

Both teams play in the Futures Collegiate Baseball League and have been opponents since the Bravehearts inaugural season six years ago. 

Final details are being hashed out and the deal is expected to close within the next few months, said Creedon, who declined to disclose financials. 

According to Creedon, he and Bravehearts General Manager David Peterson visited the Madison Mallards -- one of the most successful collegiate baseball teams in the country -- in 2015.

That teams’ owner spoke about owning three other teams in the Northwoods League. That conversation became a catalyst for exploring the ownership of other teams, Creedon said.

“From a business model perspective, growing into more than one franchise has always been in our heads since that trip,” he said.

Creedon called the Silver Knights a fantastic franchise with an incredible ballpark recently equipped with a video scoreboard installed by the City of Nashua, which owns the park.

The city is upgrading the park’s luxury suites at Holman Stadium.

“There’s a great baseball history and tradition in Nashua,” Creedon said, highlighting the city’s working relationship with the team. 

The Silver Knights are currently owned by Drew Weber, the former owner of the Lowell Spinners, the single-A farm team for the Boston Red Sox.

As for the Bravehearts, which are already facing the possibility of declining ticket sales once the Pawtucket Red Sox move to Worcester in 2021, Creedon said that team is here to stay.

The team ranks sixth on Ballpark Digest’s attendance rankings for collegiate summer baseball leagues. 

“We’re already pacing ahead of where we’ve been,” Creedon said. “Bravehearts are poised for growth for a sixth year in a row.”

Creedon rejected the idea the move was in any way a product of Worcester taking on the top farm team for one of the most storied franchises in sports history. 

Controlling a second team, he said, could help support the Bravehearts by sharing best practices and importing some ideas learned from New Hampshire.

As for what happens after 2021 when the Worcester Red Sox begin play, Creedon said the team’s lease with Holy Cross to play at Fitton Field extends well beyond 2021. 

“We’re in it for the long haul,” he said.

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