Last Thursday, the unassuming white sign on the northwest corner of Prince William Parkway and Greatbridge Road announced GAME TONIGHT for the final time. Inside the aging, outdated Pfiztner Stadium in Woodbridge, Virginia 鈥 known affectionately as The Pfitz 鈥 the Potomac Nationals played under that name for the final time, taking on the Myrtle Beach Pelicans in front of 4,682 fans there to say goodbye.
Next season, the P-Nats will move to a shiny, brand new ballpark to the south in Fredericksburg. They鈥檒l still be affiliated with the Washington Nationals and may still share the parent club鈥檚 name (that鈥檚 still to be determined this offseason). But they鈥檒l leave Prince William County, 35 years of history, and a small-but-devoted fan base behind.

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The minor league season is an incessant churn, with short, overworked staffs, 13-hour days, and homestands that often stretch longer than a week all before you get to rainouts, extra innings, and any number of daily fires, real or metaphorical, that require immediate attention. But once it鈥檚 over and the seasons cool, baseball鈥檚 absence 鈥 the absence of the churn 鈥 makes the heart grow fonder and the head at best forgetful, at worst longing, missing the grind that Opening Day will bring once again.
That grind keeps you focused on only the task in front of you each day, which is why it鈥檚 believable that Potomac Nationals GM Bryan Holland really hadn鈥檛 given much thought to Thursday鈥檚 finale at The Pfitz until it was upon him.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 finally washed over me and our staff that there鈥檚 finality to it,鈥 he said in his office after gates had opened for the final time, inside of an hour until first pitch. 鈥淚 think the walk to the parking lot tonight will be different than it has.鈥
Holland started as the team鈥檚 media relations director and play-by-play man. He鈥檚 been at The Pfitz for eight seasons, 70-plus games a year. Few people have seen as many games there as he has.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 like saying goodbye, I have problems with that myself,鈥 said Holland. 鈥淚 say, 鈥榮ee you later.鈥欌
That may work well enough for Holland and the rest of his full-time staff 鈥 all nine of them 鈥 who are making the move with the team down I-95 to Fredericksburg. They鈥檒l be set up in a new downtown space this fall, which will become a merchandise and ticket hub. Theoretically, they鈥檒l at the New Fredericksburg Ballpark at the Celebrate Virginia South development.
But that doesn鈥檛 mean Holland isn鈥檛 sensitive to the plight of the fans they鈥檙e leaving behind.
鈥淚t鈥檚 unavoidable. If you lost your hometown team, you鈥檇 feel the same,鈥 said Holland. 鈥淚 share with them in the disappointment. I wish we could have gotten an agreement done here locally, but it proved, for a litany of reasons, some in and out of our control, that it just wasn鈥檛 the case. We weren鈥檛 able to make the numbers work and politically it wasn鈥檛 in the cards.鈥
The P-Nats explored different sites both inside and outside Prince William County for years before finally landing on Fredericksburg. The Pfitz opened its doors in 1984, just eight years before Camden Yards, but feels of an entirely different generation than the Orioles鈥 home. It survived a fire caused by a gas leak, which destroyed the front office tucked into the bowl back in the middle of the 2012 season. No humans were hurt in the incident, though mascot Uncle Slam wasn鈥檛 seen again until the following year. Even before the fire, it was due for an upgrade, in Woodbridge or elsewhere.

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First pitch comes a minute early at 7:04 p.m., an occurrence as rare as the unseasonably dry, exquisite 79-degree evening, with not a single cloud dotting the Northern Virginia sky.
For Sue and Steve Jones of nearby Lake Ridge, the finale is an emotional affair. They鈥檝e been 35-game season ticket holders since 1991 back when the team was the Prince William Cannons. They鈥檝e watched the team for its entire run at The Pfitz, as a Yankees, then White Sox, then Cardinals, then Reds, and finally Nationals affiliate. As players and big league affiliates and front offices have come and gone, they鈥檝e been here every spring and summer as booster club members, sponsoring cookies for players on their birthdays, or breakfast before the long bus rides that knit the fabric of seasons in the Carolina League, which stretches from South Carolina to the tip of Delaware.
They were here for Stephen Strasburg鈥檚 post-Tommy John surgery rehab, as much of a zoo as The Pfitz has ever been, with ESPN cameras on site, cutting into 鈥淪portscenter鈥 with updates. They were here when Vice President Al Gore attended a game in the 鈥90s. Steve bought him a beer and had it sent over, only to find himself suddenly being interrogated by Secret Service. They keep score at every game and hold onto the scoresheets, a stack of them lining a box in a closet at home, the kind of keepsake that means nothing to almost everyone, but everything to someone.
Like keeping score by hand, with pencil and paper, baseball generally is often seen as a sport clinging to tradition and notoriously change-averse, yet things are changing in the sport all the time, especially at the minor league level. Teams rebrand and switch affiliates. Players come and go daily. Those who remain longer than a year or two at any given stop are the anomaly.
So it鈥檚 fitting that the player that jumped to mind first for the Joneses when thinking back over the years was Ian Desmond. One of the last holdovers from the Nationals鈥 Montreal days, Desmond played 276 games over three seasons with the P-Nats between 2005-07 before embarking on a big league career that has endured more than a decade.
鈥淵ou really get to know these guys. You get to watch them progress through their career,鈥 said Steve Jones. 鈥淭hose kind of things are lasting memories that you鈥檒l never forget.鈥
As they watched the final innings from their customary seats just off the field level down the third base line, the raw anger and sadness of the Joneses鈥 impending loss overtook the wistful nostalgia.
鈥淚鈥檝e teared up a couple times,鈥 said Sue Jones. 鈥淚鈥檓 gonna miss them. Trip Kiester, the manager, has been here, what, five years? We鈥檙e friends with him. It鈥檚 awful, actually. It鈥檚 awful.鈥
Her husband expressed frustration at the inability of the county supervisors to get a deal done to keep the team.
鈥淧eople that hold political office, they鈥檙e in for as long as they鈥檙e in, and then they鈥檙e gone,鈥 he said. 鈥淥nce professional baseball leaves, it will be a very long time, if ever, that you鈥檒l ever see it again.鈥

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Steve Dameron of Springfield, Va. is a much more casual fan who mostly just comes out to games on Saturday nights, but his ties to the P-Nats still run deep. He started attending Potomac Cannons games in 2000 with his then-toddler daughter after moving back to the states from Germany. She grew up a fan of the team, and Dameron still attends several games each year, often with his friend Mike Finnerty, who he was with Thursday (and who remembers the $1 tickets in the 鈥80s, back when the club was a Pirates affiliate), sitting in the top row of the main grandstand that wraps behind home plate. The two of them had decided just earlier in the week to make it out to the finale.
鈥淚 saw it on the radar and found out I didn鈥檛 have to go to work on Friday, so I was able to take tomorrow off and get down here for tonight鈥檚 game,鈥 said Dameron.
Sporting an Albuquerque Isotopes shirt, he鈥檚 a baseball fan in general, but appreciates both the feel and the affordability of the minor leagues.
鈥淚t just feels more interactive, you can see what鈥檚 going on, hear what鈥檚 going on,鈥 he said. 鈥淓xpense-wise, you can鈥檛 beat it. You bring a family down for under 50 bucks and have a good time, and that barely gets you a ticket at Major League games.鈥
But with the team鈥檚 move further away down I-95, attending regularly just won鈥檛 be feasible. Fredericksburg is less than 35 miles south of Woodbridge and just over 40 miles from Springfield, but as anyone who has traveled the I-95 corridor knows, that distance can be a terror to drive at rush hour. The next day, even before 3 p.m., the estimated time from The Pfitz to the team鈥檚 future home was pushing two hours.
鈥淪ad to see them go,鈥 said Dameron. 鈥淔ighting 95 to go to a game is going to be a bear. We鈥檒l probably go down to one or two a year, but not much more than that.鈥

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There is, awkwardly, a very good chance that Thursday wasn鈥檛 the last game the P-Nats will play in Woodbridge. The in Fredericksburg in late February, but site work did not , putting the April 2020 opening of the 5,000-seat facility very much in question. For comparison, the Nationals鈥 6,500-seat spring training complex in West Palm Beach broke ground in Nov. 2015 and required heavy overtime work to be ready 15 months later in Feb. 2017, while still requiring work to be completed after opening.
If the Fredericksburg stadium isn鈥檛 ready in time, the club still holds a lease option at The Pfitz for 2020, and could well open the season there until their new home is finished. Making things even weirder, the team is currently contemplating a name change and rebrand, meaning there鈥檚 a chance that a team with a new, Fredericksburg identity and different name could find itself back at The Pfitz on Opening Day, 2020.
鈥淲e鈥檙e also fully aware of the contingency with the new stadium, that we do have a lease extension option,鈥 said Holland.
The only requirement under the deal with the city is that the new facility .
But none of that uncertainty makes Thursday night鈥檚 goodbye feel like any less of a finality. There are deals everywhere, as the club clears out the last of its inventory. Food specials abound, for what items remain, but the biggest values are in the team store. Official fitted hats, normally retailing for $34.99, are being sold for $20, buy-one-get-two-free. Even that isn鈥檛 the pinnacle of value, though.
In the eighth inning, an adolescent boy climbs into the stands to announce that everything in the store is now on sale for $5.

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In the middle of the fifth inning, the staff takes to the field behind home plate to thank the fans. It鈥檚 a quick, low key affair, spare on pomp and circumstance.
Those attending will more likely remember the bottom half of the inning. At one point, a towering foul ball bounces off the top of an unsuspecting fan鈥檚 head, knocking his hat off. Once the crowd sees he鈥檚 no worse for wear, he gets a rousing round of applause. Two pitches later, Austin Davidson fouls another one high over the screen near the same fan, and the crowd erupts with laughter.
Later in the frame, the P-Nats finally get on the board, tying the game at a run apiece. Then, with two on and two out, P-Nats first baseman Aldrem Corredor belts a booming, three-run shot to give the home side the lead for good. It won鈥檛 be the field-storming, walk-off victory Sue Jones had wished for, but it will be a win, one that keeps the faint flicker of postseason hopes alive for another couple days, before they are extinguished on the road over the weekend, eliminating any chance of another home game this season.
The game ends and fans file out, the P-Nats staff exchanging hugs on the field as players sign final autographs and take photos with the die-hards camped out behind the home dugout. Holland stands out on the warning track along the third base side looking up, more out of practicality than sentimentality.
鈥淚鈥檓 just making sure nobody takes anything,鈥 he said.
The abnormally mild temperature at first pitch has led to a cooler than usual night come the final out, lending a distinct autumn-like atmosphere as the last fans trickle out of the Prince William County Stadium Complex one final time, leaving them to face the fall alone.