Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Below find the complete listing of North Jersey softball tournaments for the 2022 season: Saturday, April 2 ... New Milford, 11 a.m. Bergen Tech vs. Rutherford, 1 p.m. Waldwick vs. Dumont, 1 p.m.
The Blue Water Fastpitch Invitational kicks off with its first game at 5 p.m. Friday ahead of a three-day event. A scrimmage with a team from New Zealand is set for noon Monday.
In September 2016, the National Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA) and Triple Crown Sports joined together to bring about the National Invitational Softball Championships, a 48-team postseason Division-I event designed to highlight the growth of women's softball and the depth of talent on college rosters from coast to coast.
Association of Fastpitch Professionals (AFP) is a professional women's fastpitch softball league in the United States consisting of independent teams in collaboration to create a platform for competition at the highest level. The new league began its promotional campaign in 2023 and launched its first official season to begin June, 19 2024. [2]
The ISC World Tournament is an annual tournament held each August to crown the best softball club in North America. [3] Teams from six regions (US East, US Central, US West, Canada East, Canada West, International) are represented at the World Tournament. The ISC allocates berths by region to qualifying tournaments throughout North America.
Diamond Nation is a 65-acre baseball complex in Raritan Township, New Jersey, that was established in 2009. [1] It is home to Jack Cust Baseball Academy and Jennie Finch Softball Academy making itself a premier baseball and softball tournament and training center in the country. Diamond Nation currently has seven fields in total.
County-tournament time has come to North Jersey baseball diamonds. Here are the latest Top 25 rankings. ... red-hot and managed to nose one spot ahead of the Hornets as the fifth-highest ranked ...
USA Softball was founded in 1933 as the Amateur Softball Association (ASA) with a tournament held in Chicago that was organized by Leo Fischer and Michael J. Pauley. [2] The following year, the 1934 National Recreation Congress recognized the ASA. [2] Shortly afterward, the ASA was located in Newark, New Jersey.