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Little League Baseball (World Series) South Williamsport, Pennsylvania: 1947 10–12 years old Intermediate League Baseball (World Series) Livermore, California: 2013 11–13 years old Junior League Baseball (World Series) Taylor, Michigan: 1981 13–14 years old Senior League Baseball (World Series) Easley, South Carolina: 1961 13–16 years old
The Little League World Series is an annual baseball tournament for children (primarily boys) aged 10 to 12 years old, held in the Eastern United States. [1] [2] Originally called the National Little League Tournament, it was later renamed for the World Series in Major League Baseball.
The Tainan City Little League of Tainan City, Taiwan, defeated the Cactus Little League of Tucson, Arizona, in the championship game of the 27th Little League World Series. The champions from Taiwan did not allow a run or a hit in the entire tournament, registering no hitters in each of their three tournament games. [ 1 ]
Past Little League World Series results. Teams from the United States have dominated the Little League World Series as of late, having won each of the last five dating back to 2017.
The 2020 Little League World Series was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic The 2021 Little League World Series only featured United States teams for the first time since 1975 . Two teams from each of the 8 U.S. regions participated in the World Series (regional champion and runner-up)
1962: Jackie Robinson attends the Little League World Series. President John F. Kennedy proclaims National Little League Week. [6] 1967: A team from West Tokyo, Japan, is the first team from Asia to win the Little League World Series. [6] 1969: Taiwan begins a dominant era that would see them win 17 Little League World Series titles. [6]
Roy Halladay threw two no-hitters in 2010: a perfect game during the regular season and a no-hitter in the 2010 National League Division Series. He is the only major leaguer to have thrown no-hitters in regular season and postseason play. Ryan holds the record for most no-hitters in a career, with seven.
The Cubs went from 1972 (Milt Pappas) to 2008 (Carlos Zambrano) without a no-hitter, but have five in the past 16 years: Jake Arrieta (2015 and 2016), Alec Mills (2020) and the 2021 combined no-no ...