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The Greater Middlesex Conference is an athletic conference comprising 34 public and private high schools located in the greater Middlesex County, New Jersey area. The league operates under the supervision of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association. There are both competitions in Middle and High school levels.
Rutgers Scarlet Knights baseball is the varsity intercollegiate team representing Rutgers University in the sport of college baseball at the Division I level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The team plays its home games at Bainton Field on campus in Piscataway, New Jersey.
On August 11, 2008, the NJSIAA released an official proposal for a realignment of athletic conferences located in Central and North Jersey. [5] The proposal affects over 200 NJSIAA high schools in 31 conference divisions, making it the single largest realignment in state history. [5]
The state tournament for Little League Baseball U12 will begin Wednesday (July 24). The double elimination tournament will be held at Freehold Township Little League (65 Georgia Rd).
The road to Williamsport and the Little League World Series is a step closer with the 2024 NJ Section 3 Little League Tournament here.
On May 2, 1866, Rutgers baseball contested the university's first intercollegiate athletic event, a 40–2 loss to Princeton. [1]The original name of the facility was the "Class of 1953 Complex - Gruninger Baseball Complex"; however, in 2007, the stadium was renamed in honor of Ron Bainton, an alumnus who graduated from Rutgers in 1962.
Piscataway High School was one of only nine schools out of 27 in Middlesex County to be given an "A" rating. [7] The school was the 144th-ranked public high school in New Jersey out of 339 schools statewide in New Jersey Monthly magazine's September 2014 cover story on the state's "Top Public High Schools", using a new ranking methodology. [8]
Demie Mainieri (1928–2019), college baseball head coach who was the first junior college coach to win 1,000 career games [46] Charles Mays (1941–2005), Olympic athlete who competed in the long jump at the 1968 Summer Olympics and politician who represented the 31st Legislative District in the New Jersey General Assembly [47]