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Sports competitions in Bridgeport, Connecticut ... Connecticut (13 P) B. Baseball competitions in Connecticut (1 C) Baseball leagues in ... 2018 Tournament of Nations; U.
The 1999 Northeast Conference baseball tournament began on May 7 and ended on May 10, 1999, at The Ballpark at Harbor Yard in Bridgeport, Connecticut.The league's top four teams competed in the double elimination tournament.
The Bridgeport Bluefish were an American minor league baseball team based in Bridgeport, Connecticut. The team was a member of the Liberty Division of the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball, which was not affiliated with Major League Baseball. They played their home games at The Ballpark at Harbor Yard from 1998 to 2017.
Believing that Harbor Yard would be one of the important pieces of Bridgeport's renewal, team co-founder, Jack McGregor, chose its name as an allusion to Baltimore's renewal of the Camden Yards neighborhood. [3] Harbor Yard was the home field of the Bridgeport Barrage of Major League Lacrosse from 2001 to 2003. [4]
Virginia baseball CBA pitcher Sean Loggie. Christian Brothers Academy Baseball edges out Red Bank Catholic 13-12 in Monmouth County Tournament final in Middletown, NJ on May 24, 2024.
The Northeast Conference baseball tournament is the conference baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Northeast Conference (NEC). In the current format, established in 2023 after the NEC absorbed the former baseball league of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC), the top six regular-season finishers among teams eligible for postseason competition [a] advance to the double ...
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (WTNH) – Young basketball players from all over the state were in Bridgeport Sunday for an All-Stars tournament. The tournament was organized by R&B and Hip-Hop producer ...
The Houston Little League of Houston, Texas, defeated Bridgeport Little League of Bridgeport, Connecticut, in the championship game of the 4th Little League World Series. [2] Attendees at the championship game included James H. Duff, Governor of Pennsylvania, and Ford Frick, president of the National League (and later Commissioner of Baseball). [2]