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This is a list of fictional sports teams, athletic groups that have been identified by name in works of fiction but do not really exist as such. Teams have been organized by the sport they participate in, followed by the media product they appear in. Specific television episodes are noted when available.
By late 2015, SportsLogos.net had nearly 35,000 logo images hosted on the site and generated approximately 100 million hits per year. [1] [3] Both Creamer and the site are regularly referenced for logo and uniform-related news and imagery from a variety of media sources, including NHL.com, the Toronto Star, FoxSports.com, and CBSSports.com.
0–9. File:1959 Major League Baseball All-Star Game 1 logo.png; File:1959 Major League Baseball All-Star Game 2 logo.png; File:1978 World Series logo.gif
File:2015 Asian Baseball Championship logo.png; File:2015 Asian Baseball Cup logo Eastern Div..png; File:2017 Asian Baseball Championship.png; File:2017 World Baseball Classic logo.png; File:2018 KBO League season.png; File:2018 Korean Series.png; File:2019 Women's Baseball Asian Cup.png; File:2020 Korean Series Logo.png
Shuffle All Teams reassigns every roster, so each team has a random set of players. Fictional Players generates a new set of players with statistics based on players from the era chosen by the player. Fictional Teams renames all teams, complete with nicknames (i.e. the San Francisco Giants become the California Cowboys). It does not create any ...
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In 1985, the Grandstand Sports Services launched the first nationally available rotisserie baseball leagues online through Q-Link (later America Online). [citation needed] Between 1985 and 1996, the Grandstand continued to improve on the game and the technology by being the first to offer automated drafting, real-time scoring, real-time trading and transactions, and continuous leagues.