Greenville becomes second base for drafted players.

Minor League Baseball may have fielded a season of reconfiguration, but Greenville's Fenway Park look-alike isn't breaking ties with the Boston Red Sox anytime soon, verified Greenville Drive General Manager Eric Jarinko.

In fact, the Greenville Drive is even strengthening their 17-year relationship with the major league team this year with its transition from a Low-A to Advanced-A Status-affiliated team. It means the Drive will be the second stop for players drafted by the Red Sox and groomed for the majors.

"We will be the player's second stop rather than their first stop on their journey," Jarinko said. "The Red Sox draft very young players out of high school and college, and so when they come to Greenville, it's really their first taste of Minor League Baseball, professional baseball. They've gone from playing 30 games a season in high school to all of a sudden 140 games, so there is obviously a learning curve there. They just have to get used to it. So, by us moving up a level to High A, they will have already experienced that."

Greenville will be trading places with Salem, Va. for the position, which is now drafted players' first stop on their climb to the top. Thus far, 93 players have reached the major league by way of Fluor Field, Jarinko said.

Several of South Carolina's minor league teams paired up with new affiliates this year. The Columbia Fireflies, originally a Class A affiliate of the New York Mets, became a Kansas City Royals affiliate this winter. Charleston's RiverDogs rejuvenated old links to the Tampa Bay Rays in lieu of their 16-year-old ties to the New York Yankees. But Jarinko said the Drive's link with the Red Sox runs deep with Fenway Park literally serving as an architectural model for Fluor Field.

"At our core, we are very relationship and partnership driven," Jarinko said. "You can kind of see that with all of the different organizations within the Upstate that we're involved with, and our biggest relationship that we have is with the Red Sox on the major league partnership. We've very proud of that relationship."

Despite no play on the field this season, the Greenville Drive has also kept up momentum for the next season with awards on both the national and local fronts. The minor league team was awarded the Bob Freitas Award for the Nation's Top Single A Franchise by Baseball America for its operations and community initiatives.

The Drive also received the Urban league of the Upstate's Corporate Citizen...

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