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This season was the Kingfish's 10th season in the Northwoods League and the first year the Northwoods League started using MLB's pitch clock rule, to speed up the pace of the game. [14] Kenosha started the year accumulating a 17–16 record. But a 14–25 finish to the year had Kenosha with a 31–41 record by the end of the season.
Simmons Field is a baseball stadium in Kenosha, Wisconsin. It is currently home to the Kenosha Kingfish of the Northwoods League, the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Rangers NCAA Division II baseball team, and a semi-pro team, the Kenosha Kings. It was the home field of the Kenosha Comets of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League ...
Kenosha 1974–1975, 1976–1981 ... Kenosha Kingfish: Baseball Northwoods League ... This page was last edited on 1 February 2025, ...
Jun. 23—TRAVERSE CITY — The Kenosha Kingfish rebounded after a Monday loss to beat the hosting Traverse City Pit Spitters 6-2 on Tuesday. The Kingfish dropped five runs on TC starter Cade Heil ...
Kenosha was also home to the Frontier League's Kenosha Mammoths in 2003, and the Single-A Kenosha Twins from 1984 to 1992. It is currently home to the Kenosha Kingfish, a collegiate baseball team in the Northwoods League, which played its first game on May 31, 2014, [136] and in 2015 won their first championship.
Kenosha Kingfish [10] St. Cloud Rox 2-0 2016 Wisconsin Rapids Rafters: Eau Claire Express 2-0 2017 St. Cloud Rox (4) Battle Creek Bombers 2-1 2018 Fond du Lac Dock Spiders: Duluth Huskies 2-1 2019 Traverse City Pit Spitters: Eau Claire Express 3-2 2020: No official league champion as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic--- --- 2021 Traverse City ...
A UW-Milwaukee distance runner in a mascot outfit became instantly viral over the weekend thanks to a bone-crushing hit by Packers' A.J. Dillon.
Big Top Baseball was a leader in summer collegiate baseball, operating four Northwoods League franchises in the state of Wisconsin at the time. Big Top Baseball owns and operates the Madison Mallards and Kenosha Kingfish and formerly owned the Wisconsin Rapids Rafters and Green Bay Bullfrogs, which were sold off during the COVID-19 pandemic. [6]