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College baseball teams in Illinois (45 C) Pages in category "Amateur baseball teams in Illinois" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
The Rockford Foresters, an amateur team, were formed by owner and team president Joe Stefani of Three Strikes Baseball and other investors including a former owner of the American Hockey League's Rockford IceHogs. The team was formally announced in November, and the team announced the team name and logo at a press conference at the Rockford ...
Following the demise of the Frontier League's Rockford Aviators, their ballpark was put on the market. On October 14, 2015, the Northwoods League officially announced that Rockford Baseball Properties, LLC (composed of league president Dick Radatz, Jr. and Chad Bauer) had purchased the ballpark and would field a team in the league to begin play in the 2016 season.
Hawaii Winter Baseball: Hawaii: Winter Independent: 1993–2008 Hudson River League: Massachusetts, New York: Class D (1903) Class C (1904–1907) 1903–1907 Illinois-Indiana League: Illinois, Indiana: Independent: 1889, 1892 Illinois-Indiana-Iowa League (Three-I) Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin: Class D (1901)
The Metropolitan Collegiate Summer Baseball League of Illinois is a collegiate summer baseball league consisting of eight teams based in Illinois. Formed in 1978, the league is affiliated within the National Amateur Baseball Federation. The majority of the teams are located in the Chicago, Illinois metropolitan area.
The league existed under NCAA rules and guidance for 41 years. In 2005, the NCAA ended its official association with summer collegiate baseball; however, the CICL continued to preserve the amateur status of its member athletes by abiding by the rules and regulations of the National Alliance of College Summer Baseball (NACSB). [1]
Amateur baseball teams in Illinois (1 C, 9 P) P. ... Pages in category "Baseball teams in Illinois" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
Rockford finished in last place with 4 wins and 21 losses, 15½ games behind the champion Philadelphia Athletics.Their poor record was partially because player-manager Scott Hastings was found to have violated the "60 day rule" implemented by the league—if a player switched teams during the season, the team had to bench him for 60 days before he could play.