Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Collegiate summer baseball
Amateur baseball leagues for college students From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Collegiate summer baseball leagues are amateur baseball leagues in the United States and Canada for players who have attended at least one year of college and have at least one year of athletic eligibility remaining. Generally, they operate from early June to early August. Unlike college baseball, which permits players to use baseball bats made of aluminum or other inorganic materials, these leagues require wooden bats—hence the nickname "wood-bat leagues". The leagues enable college baseball players to compete—and professional scouts to observe them—with professional rules and equipment .

To find a collegiate summer team, players work with their college coaches and prospective teams' general managers. They report to summer leagues after completing their spring collegiate season, arriving late if their college team goes deep into postseason play. Players drafted during the collegiate summer season may remain with the team until they sign a professional contract.
Summer leagues often housed their players with volunteer host families in the area, but the recent flow of money to baseball's lower leagues has enabled some teams to put their players up in local hotels. They generally travel by private coach bus to and from road games, and stay in hotels during road trips.[1]
The leagues vary greatly in their attendances, quality of play, and ability to attract scouts. The Alaska Baseball League (ABL) and the Cape Cod Baseball League (CCBL) are considered the premier collegiate summer leagues.[2][3]
Remove ads
Active leagues
Summarize
Perspective
This list is organized by federation.
National Alliance of College Summer Baseball
- Atlantic Collegiate Baseball League – Eastern Pennsylvania; Northern New Jersey; Staten Island, New York
- Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League – Washington–Baltimore metropolitan area
- California Collegiate League
- Cape Cod Baseball League – Cape Cod area of Massachusetts
- Florida Collegiate Summer League – Orlando area
- Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League – Michigan and Ohio
- Hamptons Collegiate Baseball League – The Hamptons (Eastern Long Island, New York)
- New England Collegiate Baseball League – New England
- New York Collegiate Baseball League – Central and western New York state
- Southern Collegiate Baseball League – Charlotte metropolitan area (North and South Carolina)
- Sunbelt Baseball League – Georgia
- Valley Baseball League – Shenandoah Valley and nearby areas (Virginia)
Source:[4]
National Amateur Baseball Federation
Chicago Suburban Baseball League
- Great Lakes Bay Baseball Association[5]
- Metropolitan Collegiate Summer Baseball League of Illinois[6]
- New York Collegiate Baseball League
- Northern League
- Shoreline League
- St. Louis Metro Collegiate Instructional Baseball League[7]
- Tri-State Collegiate League[8]
National Baseball Congress
Minor League Baseball Prospect Development Pipeline
- Appalachian League - Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina
Other (unaffiliated) leagues
- All-American Amateur Baseball Association - Pennsylvania
- Arizona Collegiate Wood Bat League[18]
- Atlantic Baseball Confederation - New Jersey
- Atlet Summer College Training League - Dallas/Ft. Worth, Texas (atletcollegeleague.com)
- Ban Johnson Amateur Baseball League
- Bay Area Collegiate League[19]
- Beach Collegiate Summer Baseball League
- Blue Chip Collegiate Baseball League (Formerly known as the LICBL)
- Cascade Collegiate League[20]
- Centennial State League - Northern Colorado[21]
- Coastal Plain League - North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia
- Coastal Collegiate Baseball League Jacksonville,FL
- Collegiate Baseball League Europe
- Connecticut Collegiate Baseball League
- Corn Belt Baseball League
- Cotton States Baseball League[22]
- Front Range League[23] - Colorado, Nebraska
- Futures Collegiate Baseball League - Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Vermont
- Golden State Collegiate Baseball League[24]
- Greater Northeast Collegiate Baseball League (GNCBL)
- Honor the Game College Wood Bat League
- Hudson Valley Collegiate Baseball League
- Independence League Baseball - Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming
- Interstate Collegiate Baseball League[25]
- Kansas Collegiate League[26]
- Maryland Collegiate Baseball League[27]
- Mavericks League - Salem, Oregon[28]
- Mid-Plains League - Kansas, Missouri
- Mile High Collegiate Baseball League
- MLB Draft League – northeast United States
- M.I.N.K. Collegiate Baseball League - Missouri, Iowa[29]
- New Jersey Amateur Baseball League
- Northern Utah League
- Northwoods League - Great Lakes states and Ontario, Canada
- Ohio Valley Summer Collegiate Baseball League
- Ohio Collegiate Summer Baseball League
- Old North State League[30]
- Pacific Coast Collegiate League[31]
- Pacific Empire League[32]
- Palm Springs Collegiate League[33]
- Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League - New York state
- Piedmont Collegiate Baseball League
- Play Ball Collegiate League
- Prospect League - Great Lakes states, Missouri, Tennessee
- Rockingham County Baseball League - Virginia
- Southern California Collegiate Baseball League
- Sunset Baseball League[34]
- Texas Collegiate League - Texas, Louisiana
- Tidewater Summer League
- West Coast League - US: Washington state, Oregon; Canada: British Columbia, Alberta[35]
- Western Canadian Baseball League - Alberta, Saskatchewan
- Wild Wild West League - metro Portland, Oregon[36]
Remove ads
Defunct leagues
- Basin League
- Big States League
- Central Illinois Collegiate League
- Clark Griffith Collegiate Baseball League
- Cotton State League
- Eastern Collegiate Baseball League
- Expedition League
- Far West League
- Great West League
- Hawaii Collegiate Baseball League
- Horizon Air Summer Series
- Sunflower Collegiate League
- KIT Summer Collegiate Baseball League
- Lewis & Clark Baseball League
- Mountain Atlantic Collegiate Baseball League
- Mountain West Summer Collegiate Baseball[37]
- Northern League (1936–1941, 1946–1950, 1952; mainly in New York and Vermont)[citation needed]
- Pacific West Baseball League
- Puget Sound Collegiate League
- Saskatchewan Major Baseball League
- Sierra Baseball League
- Thorobred Collegiate Baseball League
Remove ads
See also
- Scenic West Athletic Conference, a junior-college league that uses wooden bats in conference play during the standard college baseball season
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads