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The team would later be named "Outlaws". After winning the 2011 NYCBL title, the team moved to the Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League (PGCBL) for the 2012 season, [8] but returned a year later after local businessman Gary Laing bought the team. [9] The Outlaws won another NYCBL title in 2013, but rejoined the PGCBL before the 2016 season. [10]
The original baseball field was officially opened on Memorial Day in 1905 under the name Elm Park. [1] Numerous stars from the early years of US baseball, including Babe Ruth and Rogers Hornsby, drew large crowds at the field for semi-pro and exposition games. A permanent steel grandstand was erected for spectators in 1938.
Pages in category "Defunct baseball teams in New York (state)" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 265 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The New York–Penn League (NYPL) was a Minor League Baseball league that operated in the northeastern United States from 1939 to 2020. Classified as a Class A Short Season league, its season started in June, after major-league teams signed their amateur draft picks to professional contracts, and ended in early September.
New York City FC II: Queens, New York: Belson Stadium: New York Red Bulls II: Montclair, New Jersey: MSU Soccer Park at Pittser Field: Philadelphia Union II: Chester, Pennsylvania: Subaru Park: Toronto FC II: Toronto, Ontario: York Lions Stadium: Southeast Atlanta United 2: Kennesaw, Georgia: Fifth Third Stadium: Carolina Core FC: High Point ...
In 1966, the Red Sox shifted their franchise in the current New York–Penn League from Wellsville, New York to Oneonta, keeping the Red Sox moniker for that season. In 1967, Sam Nader and Sidney Levine purchased the team and renamed them the Oneonta Yankees , or O-Yanks, an affiliation they would have for three decades.
The Watertown Pirates were a Short-Season Class-A minor league baseball team located in Watertown, New York. The team played in the New York–Penn League from 1983 to 1998. They played their home games at the Duffy Fairgrounds Ball Park. From 1983 until 1988 the club was affiliated with the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The Loomis Gang was a family of outlaws who operated in Central New York during the mid-19th century. The patriarch of the gang, George Washington Loomis, was a descendant of the immigrant Joseph Loomis, who arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony from England in the early 17th century.