Monday, May 28, 2012

A Gate City Great Continues Baseball Legacy at Historic Holman Stadium


Holman Stadium opened on Thursday September 23, 1937; it was paid for by funds from the federal government's Works Progress Administration (WPA) and money bequeathed by a local citizen, Charles Frank Holman.  He believed the stadium should benefit both present and future generations of citizens of the City of Nashua.  Over the years five professional teams have called Holman Stadium home.  This included farm teams for the Brooklyn Dodgers, California Angels and Pittsburgh Pirates.  After the Nashua Pirates departed, two different non-affiliated teams became the tenants at Holman Stadium.  While professional teams have come and gone, the constant has been amateur baseball.
Holman Stadium has been around for 75 years and hosted Rivier College, Nashua High School (North after the split), Bishop Guertin High School, Babe Ruth Leagues, American Legion, AAU Games and numerous other amateur baseball teams.  The newest residents of Holman Stadium are following in this great tradion.  Nashua resident Tim Bawmann, President of the Lowell Spinners (a class A affiliate of the Boston Red Sox) and Jon Goode, Vice President of the Lowell Spinners, convinced their boss Drew Weber, owner of the Lowell Spinners, to bring a new team to Nashua’s Holman Stadium.  This led to the creation of the Nashua Silver Knights, a founding member of the Futures Collegiate Baseball League of New England (FCBL).  When the new team was announced this group made a commitment to the City of Nashua to showcase local talent.
Growing up in Nashua, Silver Knights manager BJ Neverett watched some of the professional teams come and go over the years.  He remembers his first visit to Holman Stadium was during the 1960s where he watched a local high school baseball team.  When he got older, he played both baseball and football at Holman Stadium for Nashua High School.  “When I played football our locker room is the same one our team will be using this year”.  Once his playing days were over, he became a teacher and coach in the Nashua school district.  He coached the junior varsity baseball team for nine years, and in 1995 he was named the successor to Charlie Mellen as Head Coach of the Nashua High School varsity baseball team.  Nashua High School had won the 1995 New Hampshire State Championship and Mellen was leaving as a champion.
In 2005, Nashua High School was split into two schools and Coach Neverett became Head Coach of Nashua High School South baseball team.  In the season before the split he believes he and his team let a state championship slip through their fingers, and now with the team divided he was not sure how the 2005 season would fare.  This season, however, would be his most rewarding one of his career.  He remembers, “We won 19 in a row, those kids were great, after the split, a season like this came out of nowhere”.  The season ended with his second state championship.
In 2011, after stepping down as Nashua South’s Coach, BJ became the Assistant Coach for the inaugural season of the Nashua Silver Knights.  Under the leadership of Silver Knights Manager Mike Chambers, BJ Neverett learned how to handle college players who were already prepared to play, but also wanted to have fun during their summers off campus.  Mike Chambers says, “We had different styles of coaching and we learned together during the season.  Sometimes we would go with his ideas and sometimes mine.  We coached as a unit even though I was the manager, that’s the way I like to run a team”.  During the season Neverett noticed a difference in the way the games were being presented to fans.

“Our games at Holman Stadium were nothing like the games in the other three stadiums.  I watched Jon Goode ride around in a go-kart; it was like nothing I had seen before.  These guys in Lowell really know how to entertain the fans.”
           
            At the end of the 2011 season Coach Neverett was a champion again, “The championship last year is right under the 2005 State Championship, when it comes to my most rewarding moment.  We meshed as a team and had a lot of fun during the season”.  With renewed energy Coach Neverett was excited to return to Holman Stadium as an assistant coach, but when Mike Chambers accepted a full time roll with Franklin Pierce, he stepped down as Manager and Coach Neverett was the obvious choice to be his replacement.  The ownership group’s commitment to the City of Nashua to showcase local talent now extends to the position of Manager.
            The 2012 season will mark BJ Neverett’s first season as Silver Knights Manager, and his 30th season coaching in and around the City of Nashua.  We here at the Silver Knights are lucky to call Holman Stadium our home, and even luckier to have a homegrown manager the likes of BJ Neverett.

-2012 Nashua Silver Knights Souvenir Program

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