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The New York Collegiate Baseball League (NYCBL) is a collegiate summer baseball league founded in 1978 and sanctioned by the National Alliance of College Summer Baseball, National Amateur Baseball Federation and Major League Baseball. Each NYCBL team plays a 42-game schedule starting in 2017, down from 46 previously, from June to July with ...
Before the 2012 season, the Nashville Outlaws folded, and the DeKalb County Liners left the league to join the Midwest Collegiate League, leaving the Prospect League with twelve teams in two, six-team divisions. The 2012 schedule consisted of 60 games with no "cross-over" games; with all games played among teams from the same division only.
Oneonta, located just 30 minutes from the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, first appeared on the baseball map in 1890 with the Oneonta Indians and was a mainstay in the New York–Penn League (NYPL) for more than 40 years, beginning with the arrival of the Oneonta Red Sox in 1966. [2]
Cape Cod Baseball League – Cape Cod area of Massachusetts; Florida Collegiate Summer League – Orlando area; Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League – Indiana, Ohio, Michigan and Ontario; Hamptons Collegiate Baseball League – Eastern Long Island in New York; New England Collegiate Baseball League – New England
The Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League (PGCBL) is a 16-team collegiate summer baseball league founded in 2010. As of 2022, all teams are within New York (state). All players in the league must have NCAA eligibility remaining in order to participate. Players are not paid so as to maintain their college eligibility.
New England Collegiate Baseball League; New Hampshire State League; New York Collegiate Baseball League; New York State League; New York State League (1885–1917) New York–New Jersey League; New York–Penn League; New York–Pennsylvania League (1923–1937) North Atlantic League; North Country Baseball League; Northeastern League; Northern ...
The New York–Penn League affiliate of the Boston Red Sox moved from Williamsport, Pennsylvania, to Elmira for the 1973 season, and remained there through 1992. The 1973 team was known as the Pioneers, but the team was called the Elmira Red Sox for four seasons (1974–1976, 1978) and Elmira Pioneer-Red Sox in 1977.
Established in 1994, the Northwoods League was the first for-profit summer collegiate baseball league. It has more teams and plays more games than any other summer collegiate baseball league. [ 2 ] The Northwoods League drew over 1.1 million fans for the fourth consecutive year in 2017.