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Harwich did not reach the league title series again until 1962 when the team was downed by Upper Cape powerhouse Cotuit after defeating Chatham for the Lower Cape title. [ 43 ] [ 44 ] Harwich's 1961 and 1962 teams featured CCBL Hall of Famer and longtime New Jersey Devils general manager Lou Lamoriello , who played in the CCBL until 1964, then ...
The Cape League was revived after World War II, and was originally composed of 11 teams across Upper Cape and Lower Cape divisions. [19] Brewster began play in the Cape League in 1948, entering the Lower Cape Division as its sixth team, along with Orleans, Chatham, Harwich, Yarmouth, and Dennis. [20]
BOURNE – Champions are built through the ability to overcome tough times, and that’s true for the Harwich Mariners. The Mariners ended their 13-year drought without a Cape Cod Baseball League ...
B.F.C. Whitehouse Field, or Whitehouse Field, is a baseball venue in Harwich, Massachusetts, home to the Harwich Mariners of the Cape Cod Baseball League (CCBL).. Opened in 1969, Whitehouse Field was named for Mr. B.F.C. Whitehouse and was dedicated in July 1969 as part of Harwich's 275th anniversary celebration.
Falmouth defeated Sagamore in a one-game playoff for the Upper Cape Division title, [100] then met Lower Cape champion Harwich in the best-of-three championship series. Harwich took Game 1 at Brooks Park, 6–1, holding the All-Stars to just three hits. Game 2 was played on Labor Day at Falmouth Heights before a reported crowd of 3,000.
[3] [4] Chatham competed in the Cape League from the league's inaugural 1923 season through the 1926 season, then from 1927 to 1929 competed as a combined Chatham-Harwich team with home games split between Veterans Field and Harwich's Brooks Park.
According to the release, Harwich Patrol Officer Jessica Ferreira, parked along Queen Anne Road in Harwich, observed a 2017 BMW passing her location at 10:45 p.m. on Monday night, at a speed ...
The team was then renamed the Cape Cod Bluefins. For the 2012–13 season, home games were scheduled to be played at a number of rinks throughout the Cape including ice arenas in Hyannis, Orleans, Falmouth, Bourne, and Martha's Vineyard. The team stopped playing home games in late November 2012.