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Link to original content: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Cod_Baseball_League
Cape Cod Baseball League - Wikipedia Jump to content

Cape Cod Baseball League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cape Cod Baseball League
ClassificationCollegiate Summer Baseball
SportBaseball
Founded1885
PresidentAndrew Lang
CommissionerJohn Castleberry
MottoWhere the Stars of Tomorrow Shine Tonight
No. of teams10
Country United States
Most recent
champion(s)
Harwich Mariners
Most titlesCotuit Kettleers (17)
Official websitewww.capecodleague.com

The Cape Cod Baseball League (CCBL or Cape League) is a collegiate summer baseball wooden bat league located on Cape Cod in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. One of the nation's premier collegiate summer leagues, the league boasts over one thousand former players who have gone on to play in the major leagues.

History

[edit]
Hall of Famer Pie Traynor played for Falmouth in 1919
Danny MacFayden (Osterville 1924, Falmouth 1925) played for the Boston Red Sox from 1926 to 1932
New York Yankees captain Aaron Judge played for Brewster in 2012

Pre-modern era

[edit]

Origins

[edit]

As early as the 1860s, baseball teams representing various Cape Cod towns and villages were competing against one another. The earliest newspaper account is of an 1867 game in Sandwich between the hometown "Nichols Club" and the visiting Cummaquid team. Though not formalized as a league, the games provided entertainment for residents and summer visitors.[1][2]

In 1885, a Fourth of July baseball game was held matching teams from Barnstable and Sandwich.[3] According to contemporary accounts, the 1885 contest may have been at least the twelfth such annual game.[4] By the late 19th century, an annual championship baseball tournament was being held each fall at the Barnstable County Fair, an event that continued well into the 20th century, with teams representing towns from Cape Cod and the larger region.

In 1921, the Barnstable County Agricultural Society determined to limit the fair's annual baseball championship to teams from Cape Cod. Falmouth won the championship in 1921,[5][6] and Osterville in 1922.[7] Interest in baseball was growing, as was a movement to create a formal league of Cape Cod teams.

The early Cape League era (1923–1939)

[edit]

The "Cape Cod Baseball League" was formed in 1923, consisting of four teams: Falmouth, Osterville, Hyannis, and Chatham.[8][9] Teams were made up of players from local colleges and prep schools, along with some semi-pro players and other locals. One notable player during this period was North Truro native Danny "Deacon" MacFayden, who went on to play for seventeen years in the major leagues.[10][11]

Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, the composition of the league varied from season to season. Towns did not opt to field teams in every season, and teams from other towns such as Bourne, Harwich, Orleans, Provincetown, and Wareham joined the league. Teams were not limited to league play, and often played teams from towns and cities in the larger region, as in 1929 when Falmouth played an exhibition game against the major league Boston Braves.[12][13][14]

The league enjoyed widespread popularity throughout the 1930s, and even engendered competition in the form of the Barnstable County Twilight League and the Lower Cape Twilight League. However, as the cumulative effects of the Great Depression made it increasingly more difficult to secure funding for teams, the Cape League disbanded in 1940.

The Upper and Lower Cape League era (1946–1962)

[edit]

With young men returning home after World War II, the Cape League was revived in 1946. The league now excluded paid professional or semi-pro players, and for a while attempted to limit players to those who were Cape Cod residents. The league was split into Upper Cape and Lower Cape divisions, and in addition to many of the town teams from the "old" Cape League, new teams now joined such as those representing the Massachusetts Maritime Academy, Otis Air Force Base, and the Cape Verdean Club of Harwich among others.

Modern era (1963–present)

[edit]

In 1963, the Cape Cod Baseball League was reorganized and became officially sanctioned by the NCAA. The league would no longer be limited to Cape Cod residents, but would recruit college players and coaches from an increasingly wide radius.

In 1985, the league moved away from the use of aluminum bats, and became the only collegiate summer league in the nation at that time to use wooden bats.[15] This transition began a period of significant growth in the league's popularity and prestige among MLB scouts, as well as among college players and coaches. This popularity has translated into over one thousand former players who have gone on to major league playing careers, including multiple members of the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

Structure and season

[edit]
A night game at Doran Park, home of the Bourne Braves

The CCBL regular season runs from mid-June through mid-August.[16] Teams are geographically divided into the East Division and West Division. Each division consists of five teams which each play 44 regular season games, 6 games against each team from within their division, and 4 games against each team from the other division.

During the latter half of the regular season, an all-star game is contested between the all stars from the East and West divisions, and features a pre-game home run hitting contest. The CCBL All-Star Game was played at Fenway Park from 2009 to 2011, but is normally played at one of the CCBL home fields.

Following the regular season, the top four teams in each division qualify for the playoffs, which is an elimination tournament consisting of three rounds of best of three series to determine the league champion and winner of the Arnold Mycock trophy.

Teams

[edit]

Current teams

[edit]
Cape Cod Baseball League teams (West Division teams in red, East Division teams in blue)
Division Team Town/Village First year Home Field Capacity
West Bourne Braves Bourne 1988 Doran Park
(Upper Cape Cod Regional Technical High School)
3,000
Cotuit Kettleers Cotuit 1947 Lowell Park 2,500
Falmouth Commodores Falmouth 1923;
1946
Arnie Allen Diamond at Guv Fuller Field 8,000
Hyannis Harbor Hawks Hyannis 1976 Judy Walden Scarafile Field at McKeon Park
(Pope John Paul II High School)
3,000
Wareham Gatemen Wareham 1952 Clem Spillane Field
(Wareham High School)
3,000
East Brewster Whitecaps Brewster 1988 Stony Brook Field
(Stony Brook Elementary School)
4,000
Chatham Anglers Chatham 1946 Veteran's Field 8,000
Harwich Mariners Harwich 1946 Whitehouse Field
(Monomoy Regional High School)
4,000
Orleans Firebirds Orleans 1947 Eldredge Park
(Nauset Regional Middle School)
6,000
Yarmouth–Dennis Red Sox South Yarmouth 1946 Red Wilson Field
(Dennis-Yarmouth Regional High School)
5,500

Origin of team nicknames

[edit]

Prior to 2009, six of the ten teams in the CCBL shared their team nickname with a team in Major League Baseball (MLB). However, in late 2008 MLB announced that it would enforce its trademarks, and required those CCBL teams to either change their nicknames or buy their uniforms and merchandise only through MLB-licensed vendors.

Three of the teams eventually changed their nicknames. In 2009, the Chatham Athletics became the Anglers, and the Orleans Cardinals became the Firebirds.[17] The following season, the Hyannis Mets became the Harbor Hawks.[18]

The Bourne Braves and Yarmouth–Dennis Red Sox, teams who share nicknames with Boston's two historic professional baseball franchises, chose to keep their nicknames and use MLB licensees for their merchandise.

MLB could not enforce the "Mariners" trademark against the Harwich Mariners because the use of the nickname by Harwich predated the entry of the Seattle Mariners into MLB as an expansion team in 1977.

The four teams whose nicknames were not in conflict with MLB have locally themed names such as the nautical monikers of the Falmouth Commodores and Brewster Whitecaps. The Cotuit Kettleers nickname recalls a legendary local Native American land transaction whose terms of sale involved the exchange of a brass kettle.[19] The Wareham Gatemen are the only team that does not play its home games over the bridge, as the town of Wareham sits on the edge of the mainland, at the "gateway" to Cape Cod. Wareham was considered Cape Cod prior to the construction of the Cape Cod Canal.

Franchise timelines

[edit]

Origins

Below is a partial list of Cape Cod baseball teams from the 1860s until the formation of the Cape League in 1923.

  • Barnstable Cummaquids
  • Barnstable Osceolas
  • Barnstable Village
  • Chatham
  • Falmouth Cottage Club
  • Harwich
  • Hyannis
  • Orleans Pants Factory
  • Osterville
  • Sandwich Athletics
  • Sandwich Nichols Club
  • West Barnstable Mastetuketts
  • West Falmouth
  • Yarmouth Mattakeesetts


Blondy Ryan and Red Rolfe played for Orleans during the Early Cape League era. Both went on to enjoy long major league careers. Ryan was starting shortstop for the 1933 World Series champion New York Giants, and Rolfe was starting third basemen for five New York Yankees World Series championship teams.

Early Cape League era (1923–1939)

Team Seasons
Barnstable 1931–1937; 1939
Bourne 1933*–1939
Chatham 1923–1926; 1930–1931
Chatham-Harwich 1927–1929
Falmouth 1923–1939
Harwich 1930–1939
Hyannis 1923–1930
Orleans 1928–1934; 1937–1938
Osterville 1923–1930
Provincetown 1933*
Wareham 1927–1928; 1930–1932
* In 1933, Provincetown withdrew and was
replaced by Bourne mid-season.

Upper and Lower Cape League era (1946–1962)

A team from Otis AFB played in the Cape League from the 1940s to the 1960s. View of an inspection at Otis Field in August, 1944.
Keith Field, in the shadow of the Sagamore Bridge, was home of the Sagamore Clouters from the 1940s to the 1960s.
Division Team Seasons
Upper
Cape
Barnstable Townies / Barons / Red Sox 1946*–1952
1955–1956
1959–1962
Bourne Canalmen 1946–1950
1961–1962
Cotuit Kettleers 1947–1962
Falmouth All-Stars 1946–1962
Falmouth Falcons 1951–1953
Mashpee Warriors / Indians 1946–1951
1953–1955
Massachusetts Maritime Academy 1946–1947
1949–1961
Osterville 1948–1950
Otis Air Force Base Jets / Minutemen 1949–1950
1955
1957–1961
Sagamore Clouters 1946–1962
Sandwich 1946–1949
Wareham Gatemen 1952–1962
Division Team Seasons
Lower
Cape
Brewster 1948–1951
1956–1960
Chatham 1946–1962
Dennis Clippers 1946–1961
Eastham 1949–1955
Harwich 1946–1962
Harwich Cape Verdean Club 1949–1950
North Truro Air Force Station Blue Sox 1952–1957
Orleans Red Sox 1947–1962
Wellfleet 1956
Yarmouth Indians 1946–1962
* Barnstable played in the Lower Cape division in 1946 only.
In 1952, Barnstable withdrew and was replaced by Wareham mid-
season.[20][21]
Mass. Maritime Academy played in the Lower Cape division in 1946–1947.

Beginnings of the modern era (1963–1987)

From 1963 to 1969, the newly reorganized league maintained the Upper Cape/Lower Cape divisional structure, with the championship series played by the winners of each division. Beginning in 1970, the divisional structure gave way to a single combined league, with the top four teams in the league advancing to the playoffs. This combined league structure continued through 1987.

Team Seasons
Bourne Canalmen 1963–1964*; 1967–1969; 1971–1972
Cotuit Kettleers 1963–1987
Falmouth All-Stars / Commodores 1963–1987
Hyannis Mets 1976–1987
Sagamore Clouters / Canalmen 1963–1966*
Wareham Gatemen 1963–1987
* In 1965, the Bourne Canalmen and Sagamore Clouters merged. The new
team was called the "Sagamore Canalmen" during the 1965 and 1966
seasons, and the "Bourne Canalmen" thereafter.
Team Seasons
Chatham Red Sox / Athletics 1963–1987
Harwich Mariners 1963–1987
Orleans Cardinals 1963–1987
Otis Air Force Base Minutemen 1963–1964
Yarmouth Indians / Red Sox / Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox 1963–1987

Present Day

In 1988, the Bourne Braves and the Brewster Whitecaps joined the CCBL as expansion teams and the resulting ten-team league was split into East and West divisions. Since 1988, there have been no changes to the league's franchise composition or divisional alignments.

League championships

[edit]
Frank "Shanty" Hogan won a CCBL championship with Osterville in 1924 and went on to a 13-year MLB career with the Boston Braves, New York Giants and Washington Senators.
Frank Skaff was an all-league outfielder for Harwich's 1933 title club, and went on to play for the Brooklyn Dodgers
Championships by Season, 1923–1939
Year Winning
Team
Manager Games Losing
Team*
Manager Ref
1923 Falmouth Byron H. Parker
Frank Silva
[22]
1924 Osterville Arthur "Dutch" Ayer [23][24]
1925 Osterville Joe Murphy [25]
1926 Hyannis /
Osterville
(co-champs)
Freddie Moncewicz
(Hyannis)
John "Dot" Whelan
(Osterville)
[26][27]
[28][29]
1927 Hyannis Freddie Moncewicz [30][31]
1928 Osterville Eddie McGrath [32]
1929 Falmouth Lynn Wells [33]
1930 Wareham Harry Noznesky [34]
1931 Falmouth Jack Walsh [35]
1932 Falmouth Jack Walsh [36]
1933 Harwich Joe Harraghy 3–0 Falmouth Jack Walsh [37]
1934 Barnstable Pete Herman [38]
1935 Falmouth Jack Walsh 3–2 Barnstable Pete Herman [39]
1936 Bourne Larry Donovan [40]
1937 Barnstable Pete Herman [41]
1938 Falmouth Bill Boehner [42]
1939 Falmouth Buzz Harvey [43]
Championships by Team, 1923–1939
Team Won Championship
Seasons
Falmouth 7 1923, 1929, 1931, 1932, 1935,
1938, 1939
Osterville 4 1924, 1925, 1926, 1928
Hyannis 2 1926, 1927
Barnstable 2 1934, 1937
Wareham 1 1930
Harwich 1 1933
Bourne 1 1936

* During the 1923–1939 era, postseason playoffs were a rarity. In most years, the regular season pennant winner was simply crowned as the league champion.
However, there were four years in which the league split its regular season and crowned separate champions for the first and second halves. In two of those
seasons (1936 and 1939), a single team won both halves and was declared overall champion. In the other two split seasons (1933 and 1935), a postseason
playoff series was contested between the two half-season champions to determine the overall champion.

CCBL Hall of Famer Lou Lamoriello came up short in back-to-back CCBL title series as a player with Harwich and Orleans in 1962 and 1963, but won a league title in 1965 as manager of Sagamore.
Championships by Season, 1946–1962
Year Winning
Team
Manager Games Losing
Team
Manager Ref
1946 Falmouth John DeMello 2–1 Harwich Charley Jones [44][45][46]
1947 Orleans Herb Fuller 2–0 Mashpee Herb Gardner [47][48]
1948 Mashpee Herb Gardner 3–2 Orleans Herb Fuller [49]
1949 Orleans Laurin Peterson 3–1 Falmouth Willard E. Boyden [50][51]
1950 Orleans Laurin Peterson 3–2 Sagamore George Karras [52][53]
1951 Sagamore George Karras 3–2 Orleans Laurin Peterson [54][55]
1952 Orleans Laurin Peterson 3–0 Sagamore George Karras [56]
1953 Orleans Laurin Peterson 3–0 Sagamore George Karras [57]
1954 Sagamore George Karras 3–2 Orleans Laurin Peterson [58]
1955 Orleans Laurin Peterson 3–0 Cotuit Cal Burlingame [59][60]
1956 Sagamore Manny Pena 2–0 Dennis Bren Taylor [61]
1957 Orleans Laurin Peterson 2–0 Wareham Steve Robbins [62][63]
1958 Yarmouth John Halunen 2–0 Sagamore Manny Pena [64]
1959 Sagamore Manny Pena 2–0 Orleans Laurin Peterson [65]
1960 Yarmouth John Halunen 2–1 Sagamore Manny Pena [66]
1961 Cotuit Jim Hubbard 2–1 Yarmouth John Halunen [67]
1962 Cotuit Jim Hubbard 2–0 Harwich Dave Gavitt [68][69]
Championships by Team, 1946–1962
Team Won Championship
Seasons
Orleans 7 1947, 1949, 1950, 1952, 1953,
1955, 1957
Sagamore 4 1951, 1954, 1956, 1959
Cotuit 2 1961, 1962
Yarmouth 2 1958, 1960
Falmouth 1 1946
Mashpee 1 1948
CCBL Hall of Famer Jeff Reardon pitched for the 1974 and 1975 champion Cotuit Kettleers.
Charles Nagy was playoff MVP of Harwich's 1987 championship season.
Barry Zito pitched for the 1997 CCBL champion Wareham Gatemen
Emmanuel Burriss won playoff co-MVP in Orleans' 2005 championship season
Buster Posey played shortstop and catcher for the 2006 & 2007 back-to-back CCBL champion Y-D Red Sox
DJ LeMahieu played on Harwich's 2008 CCBL championship team
Bradley Zimmer was playoff MVP of Cotuit's 2013 championship season
Championships by Season, 1963–present
Year Winning Team Manager Games Losing Team Manager Playoff MVP Ref
1963 Cotuit Jim Hubbard 2–0 Orleans Dave Gavitt Not Awarded [70][71]
1964 Cotuit Jim Hubbard 3–1 Chatham Joe "Skip" Lewis Not Awarded [72][73]
1965 Sagamore Lou Lamoriello 3–2 Chatham Joe "Skip" Lewis Not Awarded [74]
1966 Falmouth Bill Livesey 3–1 Chatham Joe "Skip" Lewis Not Awarded [75]
1967 Chatham Joe "Skip" Lewis 2–0–1 Falmouth Bill Livesey Not Awarded [76][77][78]
1968 Falmouth Bill Livesey 3–1 Harwich John Carroll Not Awarded [79]
1969 Falmouth Bill Livesey 2–1 Chatham Joe "Skip" Lewis Not Awarded [80][81]
1970 Falmouth Bill Livesey 2–0 Orleans Tony Williams Not Awarded [82][83]
1971 Falmouth Bill Livesey 3–2 Orleans Tony Williams Not Awarded [84]
1972 Cotuit Jack McCarthy 3–1 Chatham Ben Hays Not Awarded [85]
1973 Cotuit Jack McCarthy 3–1 Yarmouth Merrill "Red" Wilson Not Awarded [86][87]
1974 Cotuit Jack McCarthy 3–2 Orleans Tom Yankus Not Awarded [88][89][90]
1975 Cotuit Jack McCarthy 3–2 Falmouth Jack Gillis Not Awarded [91][92]
1976 Wareham Bill Livesey 3–2 Chatham Ed Lyons Not Awarded [93]
1977 Cotuit Jack McCarthy 3–2 Y-D Bob Stead Not Awarded [94][95][96]
1978 Hyannis Bob Schaefer 3–1 Harwich Don Prohovich Not Awarded [97][98]
1979 Hyannis Bob Schaefer 3–1 Harwich Don Prohovich Not Awarded [99][100][101]
1980 Falmouth Al Worthington 3–2 Chatham Ed Lyons Not Awarded [102][103][104]
1981 Cotuit George Greer 3–1 Orleans Jack Donahue Not Awarded [105][106]
1982 Chatham Ed Lyons 3–0 Hyannis Rich Magner Not Awarded [107][108][109]
1983 Harwich Steve Ring 3–2 Cotuit George Greer Not Awarded [110][111]
1984 Cotuit George Greer 2–0 Wareham Mike Roberts Not Awarded [112]
1985 Cotuit George Greer 2–1 Chatham John Mayotte Grady Hall, Cotuit [113]
1986 Orleans John Castleberry 2–0 Cotuit George Greer Gary Alexander, Orleans [114]
1987 Harwich Bill Springman 2–1 Y-D Don Reed Charles Nagy, Harwich [115]
1988 Wareham Stan Meek 2–1 Orleans John Castleberry John Thoden, Wareham [116][117]
Mo Vaughn, Wareham
1989 Y-D Don Reed 2–0 Hyannis Ed Lyons Mark Sweeney, Y-D [118][119]
1990 Y-D Don Reed 2–1 Wareham Jim Fleming Kirk Piskor, Y-D [120][121][122]
1991 Hyannis Brad Kelley 2–0 Chatham Rich Hill Chad McConnell, Hyannis [123]
1992 Chatham Rich Hill 2–0 Cotuit Roger Bidwell Steve Duda, Chatham [124][125][126]
1993 Orleans Rolando Casanova 2–0 Wareham Don Reed Chris Ciaccio, Orleans [127][128]
1994 Wareham Don Reed 2–0 Brewster Bill Mosiello Chris Boni, Wareham [129][130]
1995 Cotuit Mike Coutts 2–1 Chatham John Schiffner Josh Paul, Cotuit [131][132]
Josh Gandy, Cotuit
1996 Chatham John Schiffner 2–0 Falmouth Harvey Shapiro Jermaine Clark, Chatham [133][134]
Keith Evans, Chatham
1997 Wareham Don Reed 2–0 Harwich Chad Holbrook Kevin Hodge, Wareham [135][136]
1998 Chatham John Schiffner 3–2 Wareham Don Reed Matt Cepicky, Chatham [137][138]
Ryan Earey, Chatham
1999 Cotuit Mike Coutts 2–1 Chatham John Schiffner Garrett Atkins, Cotuit [139][140]
2000 Brewster Dave Lawn 2–0 Hyannis Tom O'Connell Jack Headley, Brewster [141][142]
Pat Shine
2001 Wareham Cooper Farris 2–1 Chatham John Schiffner Aaron Hill, Wareham [143][144][145]
2002 Wareham Cooper Farris 2–1 Orleans Carmen Carcone Matt Kutler, Wareham [146]
2003 Orleans Carmen Carcone 2–0 Bourne Harvey Shapiro Cesar Nicolas, Orleans [147][148]
2004 Y-D Scott Pickler 2–0 Falmouth Jeff Trundy Ryan Rohlinger, Y-D [149][150]
Joshua Faiola, Y-D
2005 Orleans Kelly Nicholson 2–1 Bourne Harvey Shapiro Brad Meyers, Orleans [151][152]
Emmanuel Burriss, Orleans
2006 Y-D Scott Pickler 2–1 Wareham Cooper Farris David Robertson, Y-D [153][154][155]
2007 Y-D Scott Pickler 2–0 Falmouth Jeff Trundy Trevor Holder, Y-D [156][157][158]
2008 Harwich Steve Englert 2–0 Cotuit Mike Roberts Jason Stidham, Harwich [159][160]
Marc Fleury, Harwich
2009 Bourne Harvey Shapiro 2–0 Cotuit Mike Roberts Kyle Roller, Bourne [161][162]
2010 Cotuit Mike Roberts 2–1 Y-D Scott Pickler Jordan Leyland, Cotuit [163]
2011 Harwich Steve Englert 2–0 Falmouth Jeff Trundy Mike Garza, Harwich [164][165]
2012 Wareham Cooper Farris 2–1 Y-D Scott Pickler Kyle Schwarber, Wareham [166][167][168]
2013 Cotuit Mike Roberts 2–0 Orleans Kelly Nicholson Bradley Zimmer, Cotuit [169][170]
2014 Y-D Scott Pickler 2–0 Falmouth Jeff Trundy Walker Buehler, Y-D [171][172][173]
Marcus Mastrobuoni, Y-D
2015 Y-D Scott Pickler 2–1 Hyannis Chad Gassman Ben Bowden, Y-D [174][175]
Donnie Walton, Y-D
2016 Y-D Scott Pickler 2–1 Falmouth Jeff Trundy Kevin Smith, Y-D [176][177][178]
2017 Brewster Jamie Shevchik 2–1 Bourne Harvey Shapiro Nick Dunn, Brewster [179][180][181]
Hunter Bishop, Brewster
2018 Wareham Don Sneddon 2–0 Chatham Tom Holliday Austin Shenton, Wareham [182][183]
2019 Cotuit Mike Roberts 2–0 Harwich Steve Englert Casey Schmitt, Cotuit [184][185]
2020 Season cancelled due to coronavirus pandemic
2021 Brewster Jamie Shevchik 2–0 Bourne Harvey Shapiro Chad Castillo, Brewster [186][187]
2022 Bourne Scott Landers 2–0 Brewster Jamie Shevchik Bryce Eblin, Bourne [188][189]
2023 Bourne Scott Landers 2–1 Orleans Kelly Nicholson Josh Kuroda-Grauer, Bourne [190][191]
2024 Harwich Steve Englert 2–1 Bourne Scott Landers Wilson Weber, Harwich [192]
The Cotuit Kettleers' record of 15 titles in the modern era and 17 overall is unmatched among CCBL franchises.
Skipper Mike Roberts led Cotuit to CCBL titles in 2010, 2013 and 2019
Championships by Team, 1963–present
Team Won Played Last Won Last Played
Cotuit 15 20 2019 2019
Wareham 8 13 2018 2018
Y-D* 8 13 2016 2016
Falmouth 6 14 1980 2016
Chatham 5 18 1998 2018
Harwich 5 10 2024 2024
Orleans 4 13 2005 2023
Bourne 3 7 2023 2024
Hyannis 3 7 1991 2015
Brewster 3 5 2021 2022
Sagamore 1 1 1965 1965
* Includes records of predecessor Yarmouth Indians.
Defunct.
Championships by Team, 1923–present
Team Won Championship Seasons
Cotuit 17 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975,
1977, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1995, 1999, 2010, 2013,
2019
Falmouth 14 1923, 1929, 1931, 1932, 1935, 1938, 1939, 1946,
1966, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1980
Orleans 11 1947, 1949, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1957, 1986,
1993, 2003, 2005
Y-D* 10 1958, 1960, 1989, 1990, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2014,
2015, 2016
Wareham 9 1930, 1976, 1988, 1994, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2012,
2018
Harwich 6 1933, 1983, 1987, 2008, 2011, 2024
Hyannis 5 1926, 1927, 1978, 1979, 1991
Sagamore 5 1951, 1954, 1956, 1959, 1965
Chatham 5 1967, 1982, 1992, 1996, 1998
Bourne 4 1936, 2009, 2022, 2023
Osterville 4 1924, 1925, 1926, 1928
Brewster 3 2000, 2017, 2021
Barnstable 2 1934, 1937
Mashpee 1 1948
* Includes records of predecessor Yarmouth Indians.
Defunct.
CCBL Hall of Famer Scott Pickler has led Y-D to six league titles
CCBL Hall of Famer George Greer skippered Cotuit to three league titles in the 1980s
Championships by Manager, 1923–present
Manager Team Seasons as Manager Total
Seasons
Total
Championships
Championship Seasons
Scott Pickler Y-D 1998–2024 26* 6 2004, 2006, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2016
Bill Livesey Falmouth
Wareham
1965–1972 (Falmouth)
1976–1977 (Wareham)
10 6 1966, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971 (Falmouth)
1976 (Wareham)
Laurin Peterson Orleans 1949–1962 14 6 1949, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1957
Jack McCarthy Cotuit 1970–1978 9 5 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977
Don Reed Y-D
Wareham
1987–1990 (Y-D)
1991–1999 (Wareham)
13 4 1989, 1990 (Y-D)
1994, 1997 (Wareham)
Jim Hubbard Cotuit 1961–1969 9 4 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964
Steve Englert Harwich 2003–2024 21* 3 2008, 2011, 2024
Mike Roberts Wareham
Cotuit
1984, 2000 (Wareham)
2004–2024 (Cotuit)
22* 3 2010, 2013, 2019 (Cotuit)
Cooper Farris Wareham 2001–2004
2006–2015
14 3 2001, 2002, 2012
George Greer Cotuit 1979–1987 9 3 1981, 1984, 1985
Jack Walsh Falmouth 1931–1936 6 3 1931, 1932, 1935
Scott Landers Bourne 2022–2024 3 2 2022, 2023
Jamie Shevchik Brewster 2015–2024 9* 2 2017, 2021
John Schiffner Chatham 1993–2017 25 2 1996, 1998
Mike Coutts Cotuit 1995–1996
1999–2001
5 2 1995, 1999
Bob Schaefer Bourne
Hyannis
1971–1972 (Bourne)
1978–1979 (Hyannis)
4 2 1978, 1979 (Hyannis)
John Halunen Yarmouth 1958–1963 6 2 1958, 1960
Manny Pena Sagamore 1956–1961 6 2 1956, 1959
George Karras Sagamore 1948–1954 7 2 1951, 1954
Pete Herman Chatham
Barnstable
1930–1931 (Chatham)
1933–1937 (Barnstable)
7 2 1934, 1937 (Barnstable)
Freddie Moncewicz Hyannis 1926–1927
1929–1930
4 2 1926, 1927
* Season count excludes 2020 CCBL season cancelled due to coronavirus pandemic.
Key
CCBL Hall of Fame Inductee

All-Star Game

[edit]
Baseball Hall of Famers Phil Rizzuto, Roy Campanella, and Whitey Ford were on hand at the 1961 CCBL All-Star Game.

The first CCBL All-Star Game took place in 1946, as a squad of Cape League stars battled a collection of Boston Red Sox tryout players. Throughout the Upper and Lower Cape League era (1946–1962), the two divisions routinely featured both intra-divisional all-star contests, as well as an annual inter-divisional CCBL All-Star Game. From 1957 to 1961, the CCBL All-Star Game was sponsored by P. Ballantine and Sons Brewing Company. Ballantine was a major advertising sponsor of the New York Yankees, and arranged for appearances at the CCBL festivities by Yankee alumni including Phil Rizzuto, Elston Howard, Whitey Ford, Moose Skowron, Bill Stafford, Eddie Lopat, and Mel Allen, as well as Brooklyn Dodgers great Roy Campanella.

As the league's modern era began, the All-Star Game continued to be contested between the CCBL's Upper Cape (western) and Lower Cape (eastern) divisions from 1963 to 1969. In 1963, an additional All-Star Game was played by a team from the CCBL against a team from the southeastern Massachusetts-based Cranberry League. The game was played at Keith Field in Sagamore, and the CCBL came out on top, 15–2.

From 1970 to 1987, a team of stars from the CCBL played an annual interleague All-Star Game against stars from the Atlantic Collegiate Baseball League (ACBL). The games were typically played at major league stadiums including Fenway Park, Yankee Stadium and Shea Stadium in New York, and Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium.

Since 1988, the All-Star Game has been contested between stars representing the CCBL's East and West divisions, and has also featured a pre-game home run hitting contest. The event is normally held at one of the CCBL home fields, though it returned to Fenway Park for a three-year stretch from 2009 to 2011.

Annual award winners

[edit]
CCBL Hall of Famer and 1976 league MVP Nat "Buck" Showalter won the league batting title with a .434 average
CCBL Hall of Famer Steve Balboni, 1977 league MVP and Outstanding Pro Prospect
CCBL Hall of Famer Walt Terrell was the league's Outstanding Pitcher in 1979
Steve Lombardozzi, 1980 Sportsmanship Award winner
CCBL Hall of Famer Joey Cora was league MVP in 1984
CCBL Hall of Famer Robin Ventura, 1987 Outstanding Pro Prospect Award winner
CCBL Hall of Famer Darin Erstad, 1994 league MVP
CCBL Hall of Famer Carlos Peña, 1997 league MVP and Sportsmanship Award winner
CCBL Hall of Famer Matt Wieters, 2006 Outstanding Pro Prospect Award winner
CCBL Hall of Famer Kolten Wong was league MVP in 2010
Stephen Piscotty was CCBL batting champ in 2011

The league annually presents several individual awards,[193][194] including:

  • The Pat Sorenti MVP Award
  • The Robert A. McNeece Outstanding Pro Prospect Award
  • The BFC Whitehouse Outstanding Pitcher Award
  • The Russ Ford Outstanding Relief Pitcher Award
  • The Daniel J. Silva Sportsmanship Award
  • The Manny Robello 10th Player Award
  • The John J. Claffey Outstanding New England Player Award
  • The Thurman Munson Award for Batting Champion
Annual Award Winners, 1963–present
Year MVP Outstanding
Pro Prospect
Outstanding
Pitcher
Outstanding
Relief Pitcher
Sportsmanship 10th Player Outstanding
New Englander
Batting Champ
1963 Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Ken Voges
Chatham (.505)
1964 Ken Huebner
Cotuit
Not Awarded Bernie Kilroy
Cotuit
Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Harry Nelson
Bourne (.390)
1965 Ron Bugbee
Sagamore
Not Awarded Noel Kinski
Sagamore
Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded John Awdycki
Orleans (.407)
1966 Ed Drucker
Harwich
Not Awarded Joe Jabar
Chatham
Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Tom Weir
Chatham (.420)
1967 Thurman Munson
Chatham
Not Awarded Joe Jabar
Chatham
Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Thurman Munson
Chatham (.420)
1968 Dick Licini
Bourne
Not Awarded Phil Corddry
Orleans
Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Dick Licini
Bourne (.382)
1969 Jim Norris
Orleans
Not Awarded Paul Mitchell
Falmouth
Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Jim Norris
Orleans (.415)
MVP Pro Prospect Pitcher Relief Pitcher Sportsmanship 10th Player New Englander Batting Champ
1970 Jim Prete
Wareham
Not Awarded Paul Mitchell
Falmouth
Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Mike Eden
Orleans (.378)
1971 Joe Barkauskas
Wareham
Not Awarded Bob Majczan
Wareham
Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Ken Doria
Chatham (.346)
1972 Brad Linden
Orleans
Not Awarded John Caneira
Bourne
Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded Ed Orrizzi
Falmouth (.372)
1973 Steve Newell
Wareham
Not Awarded John Caneira
Chatham
Not Awarded Jeff Washington
Orleans
Not Awarded Not Awarded Dave Bergman
Chatham (.341)
1974 Phil Welch
Wareham
Not Awarded Andy Muhlstock
Harwich
Not Awarded Jim Foxwell
Wareham
Not Awarded Not Awarded Pete Ross
Yarmouth (.357)
1975 Paul O'Neill
Cotuit
Not Awarded Jerry Hoffman
Wareham
Not Awarded Ed Kuchar
Orleans
Not Awarded Not Awarded Paul O'Neill
Cotuit (.358)
1976 Nat Showalter
Hyannis
Bobby Sprowl
Wareham
Mickey O'Connor
Chatham
Not Awarded Joe Gurascio
Chatham
Not Awarded Not Awarded Nat Showalter
Hyannis (.434)
Steve Taylor
Chatham
1977 Steve Balboni
Y-D
Steve Balboni
Y-D
Karl Steffen
Wareham
Not Awarded Russ Quetti
Chatham
Not Awarded Not Awarded Del Bender
Cotuit (.395)
Brian Denman
Cotuit
1978 Bill Schroeder
Hyannis
Bill Schroeder
Hyannis
Chuck Dale
Orleans
Not Awarded Gary Cicatiello
Falmouth
Not Awarded Not Awarded Randy LaVigne
Cotuit (.370)
Randy LaVigne
Cotuit
1979 Ron Perry Jr.
Hyannis
Ross Jones
Hyannis
Walt Terrell
Chatham
Not Awarded Gary Kaczor
Harwich
Not Awarded Not Awarded Ross Jones
Hyannis (.407)
John McDonald
Wareham
MVP Pro Prospect Pitcher Relief Pitcher Sportsmanship 10th Player New Englander Batting Champ
1980 Ron Darling
Cotuit
Ron Darling
Cotuit
Joe Pursell
Cotuit
Not Awarded Steve Lombardozzi
Falmouth
Not Awarded Not Awarded Brick Smith
Hyannis (.391)
Brick Smith
Hyannis
1981 John Morris
Wareham
Wade Rowdon
Orleans
Greg Myers
Harwich
Not Awarded Joe Sickles
Y-D
Not Awarded Not Awarded Sam Nattile
Falmouth (.443)
Gary Melillo
Wareham
Jim Sherman
Chatham
1982 Terry Steinbach
Cotuit
Gary Kanwisher
Chatham
Scott Murray
Harwich
Not Awarded Jeff Innis
Cotuit
Not Awarded Not Awarded Terry Steinbach
Cotuit (.431)
1983 Greg Lotzar
Cotuit
Cory Snyder
Harwich
Dennis Livingston
Wareham
Not Awarded Jim Howard
Hyannis
Not Awarded Not Awarded Greg Lotzar
Cotuit (.414)
1984 Joey Cora
Chatham
Mike Loggins
Harwich
Bill Cunningham
Wareham
Not Awarded Tom Hildebrand
Cotuit
Not Awarded Not Awarded Jim McCollom
Falmouth (.413)
1985 Greg Vaughn
Cotuit
John Ramos
Cotuit
John Howes
Orleans
Not Awarded Dan Arendas
Wareham
Not Awarded Not Awarded Tim McIntosh
Chatham (.392)
Casey Close
Harwich
1986 Scott Hemond
Harwich
Cris Carpenter
Cotuit
Jack Armstrong
Wareham
Not Awarded Jim DePalo
Chatham
Scott Coolbaugh
Chatham
Not Awarded Scott Hemond
Harwich (.358)
1987 Mickey Morandini
Y-D
Robin Ventura
Hyannis
Pat Hope
Hyannis
Not Awarded Mike Hensley
Wareham
Tom Aldrich
Hyannis
Not Awarded Mickey Morandini
Y-D (.376)
1988 Dave Staton
Brewster
Chuck Knoblauch
Wareham
John Thoden
Wareham
Not Awarded Will Vespe
Hyannis
Steve O'Donnell
Y-D
Not Awarded Chuck Knoblauch
Wareham (.361)
1989 Kurt Olson
Y-D
Tyler Green
Hyannis
Mike Hostetler
Cotuit
Not Awarded Brian Bark
Orleans
Bob Rivell
Bourne
Not Awarded Bob Rivell
Bourne (.358)
MVP Pro Prospect Pitcher Relief Pitcher Sportsmanship 10th Player New Englander Batting Champ
1990 Mark Smith
Wareham
Doug Glanville
Wareham
Bill Wissler
Bourne
Not Awarded Mark Sweeney
Y-D
Chris Demetral
Cotuit
Not Awarded Mark Smith
Wareham (.408)
1991 Brent Killen
Y-D
Derek Wallace
Chatham
Bill Wissler
Bourne
Brad Clontz
Wareham
Craig Mayes
Falmouth
Jack Stanczak
Wareham
Not Awarded Mike Hickey
Wareham (.366)
1992 Rick Ellstrom
Cotuit
Billy Wagner
Brewster
John Kelly
Cotuit
Scott Smith
Chatham
Lou Merloni
Cotuit
Steve Hirschman
Falmouth
Not Awarded Lou Merloni
Cotuit (.321)
1993 Jason Varitek
Hyannis
Chris Clemons
Y-D
Andy Taulbee
Y-D
Don Nestor
Falmouth
Paul Ottavinia
Chatham
Nomar Garciaparra
Orleans
Not Awarded Jason Varitek
Hyannis (.371)
1994 Darin Erstad
Falmouth
Dave Shepard
Orleans
Bob St. Pierre
Falmouth
Scott Winchester
Falmouth
Karl Thompson
Wareham
Matt Quattraro
Harwich
Not Awarded Jon Petke
Y-D (.379)
1995 Josh Paul
Cotuit
Josh Paul
Cotuit
Eddie Yarnall
Harwich
Brendan Sullivan
Cotuit
Scott Steinmann
Falmouth
Scott Sollmann
Brewster
Not Awarded Josh Paul
Cotuit (.364)
Jason Ramsey
Chatham
1996 Kevin Nicholson
Wareham
Matt Anderson
Chatham
Billy Coleman
Harwich
Drew Fischer
Brewster
Andre Champagne
Falmouth
Jermaine Clark
Chatham
Not Awarded Lance Berkman
Wareham (.352)
Clint Chrysler
Wareham
1997 Carlos Pena
Wareham
Kip Wells
Brewster
Brent Hoard
Harwich
Chris Aronson
Cotuit
Carlos Pena
Wareham
Alex Santos
Hyannis
Not Awarded Jason McConnell
Y-D (.345)
1998 Bobby Kielty
Brewster
Kyle Snyder
Chatham
Phil Devey
Wareham
Tim Lavigne
Bourne/Chatham
Ben Johnstone
Brewster
Jeff House
Bourne
Not Awarded Bobby Kielty
Brewster (.384)
Jeff Heaverlo
Cotuit
1999 Lance Niekro
Orleans
Mark Teixeira
Orleans
Rik Currier
Chatham
Derrick DePriest
Chatham
Curtis Sapp
Hyannis
James Ramshaw
Cotuit
Not Awarded Jaime Bubela
Wareham (.370)
Pat Pinkman
Wareham
MVP Pro Prospect Pitcher Relief Pitcher Sportsmanship 10th Player New Englander Batting Champ
2000 Mike Fontenot
Wareham
Bob Brownlie
Falmouth
Dan Krines
Chatham
Taft Cable
Orleans
Bryan Prince
Orleans
John Baker
Y-D
Not Awarded Steve Stanley
Brewster (.329)
Ben Crockett
Wareham
Dan Rich
Brewster
2001 Matt Murton
Wareham
Russ Adams
Orleans
Chris Leonard
Wareham
Ryan Speier
Bourne
Bill Peavey
Cotuit
Adam Bourassa
Y-D
Ben Crockett
Wareham
Eric Reed
Wareham (.365)
2002 Pete Stonard
Cotuit
Wes Whisler
Y-D
Brian Rogers
Orleans
Zane Carlson
Chatham
Ryan Hanigan
Orleans
Ryan Hanigan
Orleans
Ryan Hanigan
Orleans
Pete Stonard
Cotuit (.348)
Shaun Marcum
Harwich
2003 J.C. Holt
Brewster
Wade Townsend
Wareham
Eric Beattie
Bourne
Jarrett Santos
Brewster
Richard Mercado
Hyannis
Justin Maxwell
Bourne
Chris Lambert
Chatham
J.C. Holt
Brewster (.388)
2004 Daniel Carte
Falmouth
Tyler Greene
Orleans
Matt Goyen
Brewster
Kevin Whelan
Wareham
Chris Robinson
Hyannis
Cliff Pennington
Falmouth
Frank Curreri
Y-D
Ryan Patterson
Brewster (.327)
2005 Evan Longoria
Chatham
Andrew Miller
Chatham
Andrew Miller
Chatham
Steven Wright
Orleans
Joel Collins
Wareham
Brad Lincoln
Bourne
Tim Norton
Falmouth
Chris Coghlan
Chatham (.346)
Tim Norton
Falmouth
2006 Justin Smoak
Cotuit
Matt Wieters
Orleans
Terry Doyle
Y-D
Joshua Fields
Y-D
Matt LaPorta
Brewster
Andrew Walker
Falmouth
Charlie Furbush
Hyannis
Matt Mangini
Hyannis (.310)
Shaun Seibert
Brewster
2007 Conor Gillaspie
Falmouth
Aaron Crow
Falmouth
Tom Milone
Chatham
Nick Cassavechia
Y-D
Shea Robin
Hyannis
Nate Freiman
Orleans
Bill Perry
Bourne
Conor Gillaspie
Falmouth (.345)
2008 A.J. Pollock
Falmouth
Grant Green
Chatham
Nick McCully
Bourne
Russell Brewer
Hyannis
Kevin Patterson
Cotuit
Andrew Giobbi
Harwich
Ryan Quigley
Harwich
Jimmy Cesario
Falmouth (.387)
2009 Kyle Roller
Bourne
Todd Cunningham
Falmouth
Chris Sale
Y-D
Tyler Burgoon
Y-D
Pierre LePage
Bourne
Pierre LePage
Bourne
Mickey Wiswall
Y-D
Todd Cunningham
Falmouth (.378)
MVP Pro Prospect Pitcher Relief Pitcher Sportsmanship 10th Player New Englander Batting Champ
2010 Kolten Wong
Orleans
Tony Zych
Bourne
Grayson Garvin
Bourne
Tony Zych
Bourne
Joe Panik
Y-D
Clint Moore
Harwich
Matt Watson
Y-D
John Ruettiger
Hyannis (.369)
2011 Travis Jankowski
Bourne
Victor Roache
Cotuit
Ryan Eades
Bourne
Trevor Gott
Orleans
Patrick Cantwell
Bourne
Ben Waldrip
Orleans
Nate Koneski
Falmouth
Stephen Piscotty
Y-D (.349)
2012 Phil Ervin
Harwich
Sean Manaea
Hyannis
Sean Manaea
Hyannis
Dan Slania
Cotuit
Zak Blair
Y-D
Jake Hernandez
Orleans
Tyler Horan
Wareham
Patrick Biondi
Cotuit (.388)
2013 Max Pentecost
Bourne
Jeff Hoffman
Hyannis
Lukas Schiraldi
Chatham
Eric Eck
Hyannis
Connor Joe
Chatham
Matt Troupe
Orleans
Tommy Lawrence
Chatham
Kevin Newman
Falmouth (.375)
2014 Kevin Newman
Falmouth
Phil Bickford
Y-D
Kolton Mahoney
Orleans
Phil Bickford
Y-D
Anthony Hermelyn
Harwich
A.J. Murray
Chatham
Chris Shaw
Chatham
Kevin Newman
Falmouth (.385)
Adam Whitt
Cotuit
2015 Nick Senzel
Brewster
Nick Senzel
Brewster
Mitchell Jordan
Orleans
Austin Conway
Bourne
Will Haynie
Cotuit
Johnny Adams
Harwich
Aaron Civale
Hyannis
Andrew Calica
Wareham (.425)
Thomas Hackimer
Brewster
2016 Ernie Clement
Harwich
Michael Gigliotti
Falmouth
Jeff Passantino
Falmouth
Garrett Cave
Hyannis
Johnny Adams
Harwich
Austin Filiere
Harwich
Willy Yahn
Bourne
Cole Freeman
Wareham (.374)
2017 Greyson Jenista
Cotuit
Griffin Conine
Cotuit
Kris Bubic
Y-D
Riley McCauley
Y-D
Josh Breaux
Falmouth
Marty Bechina
Falmouth
Mickey Gasper
Brewster
Tanner Dodson
Wareham (.350)
Ryan Feltner
Bourne
2018 Matthew Barefoot
Hyannis
J.J. Bleday
Orleans
Adam Laskey
Falmouth
Dylan Thomas
Hyannis
Maverick Handley
Falmouth
Andre Lipcius
Harwich
Justin Lasko
Bourne
Matthew Barefoot
Hyannis (.379)
Jacob Wallace
Bourne
2019 Nick Gonzales
Cotuit
Austin Wells
Y-D
Ian Bedell
Wareham
Zach Brzykcy
Falmouth
Max Troiani
Orleans
Austin Masel
Falmouth
Jared Shuster
Orleans
Zach DeLoach
Falmouth (.353)
MVP Pro Prospect Pitcher Relief Pitcher Sportsmanship 10th Player New Englander Batting Champ
2020 Season cancelled due to coronavirus pandemic
2021 Brock Wilken
Harwich
Chase DeLauter
Orleans
Trey Dombroski
Harwich
Eric Adler
Bourne
Kurtis Byrne
Brewster
Tyler Locklear
Orleans
Matt Donlan
Cotuit
Clark Elliott
Hyannis (.344)
2022 Matt Shaw
Bourne
Tommy Troy
Cotuit
Bryce Warrecker
Orleans
Cam Schuelke
Cotuit
Garrett Guillemette
Orleans
Rikuu Nishida
Hyannis
Jordy Allard
Hyannis
Matt Shaw
Bourne (.360)
2023 Travis Bazzana
Falmouth
Cam Smith
Hyannis
Camron Hill
Cotuit
Sean Matson
Orleans
Hugh Pinkney
Bourne
Derek Clark
Orleans
Tyler MacGregor
Falmouth
Travis Bazzana
Falmouth (.375)
2024 Ethan Petry
Y-D
Ethan Petry
Y-D
Itsuki Takemoto
Orleans
Trevor Moore
Y-D
Tanner Thach
Cotuit
Yohann Dessureault
Wareham
Cam Maldonado
Harwich
Jarren Advincula
Cotuit (.392)
Key
CCBL Hall of Fame Inductee

Statistical records

[edit]

Individual season records below are for a 42-game regular season from 1963 to 1987 and a 44-game regular season from 1988–present.
Aluminum bats were used from 1975 through 1984.

Individual batting, season (1963–present)

[edit]
CCBL Hall of Famer Tim Teufel hit 16 home runs and had 52 RBI for Cotuit in 1979.
CCBL Hall of Famer Mickey Morandini swiped 43 bases for Y-D in 1987.
Batting Average (AVG)
AVG Player Year
.505 Ken Voges, Chatham 1963
.443 Sam Nattile, Falmouth 1981
.434 Nat "Buck" Showalter, Hyannis 1976
.431 Terry Steinbach, Cotuit 1982
.425 Andrew Calica, Wareham 2015
.420 Thurman Munson, Chatham 1967
.420 Tom Weir, Chatham 1966
Home Runs (HR)
HR Player Year
22 Cory Snyder, Harwich 1983
16 Tyler Horan, Wareham 2012
16 Dave Staton, Brewster 1988
16 Tim Teufel, Cotuit 1979
15 Jim McCollom, Falmouth 1984
15 Bill Schroeder, Hyannis 1978
Runs Batted In (RBI)
RBI Player Year
54 Doug Fisher, Falmouth 1984
54 Terry Steinbach, Cotuit 1982
52 Mike Lopez, Wareham 1982
52 Tim Teufel, Cotuit 1979
51 Chris Morgan, Hyannis 1983
At Bats (AB)
AB Player Year
191 Paul Ottavinia, Chatham 1993
189 Don Samra, Wareham 1983
188 Warner Jones, Wareham 2004
186 Warner Jones, Wareham 2003
Runs Scored (R)
R Player Year
50 John Morris, Wareham 1981
48 Tim Teufel, Cotuit 1979
47 Cory Snyder, Harwich 1983
47 Ron Perry Jr., Hyannis 1979
Base Hits (H)
H Player Year
75 Terry Steinbach, Cotuit 1982
70 Sam Nattile, Falmouth 1981
70 Rod Peters, Harwich 1981
69 Mark Smith, Wareham 1990
69 Ron Perry Jr., Hyannis 1979
Doubles (2B)
2B Player Year
19 Dan Olson, Hyannis 1994
19 Walt Weiss, Wareham 1984
18 Kevin Nicholson, Wareham 1996
18 Terry Steinbach, Cotuit 1982
Triples (3B)
3B Player Year
8 Bruce Thompson, Hyannis 1993
8 Ed Drucker, Harwich 1966
7 Travis Jankowski, Bourne 2011
7 Jeff Groth, Chatham 1978
Stolen Bases (SB)
SB Player Year
48 Roy Marsh, Wareham 1993
47 Jeremy Carr, Chatham 1992
43 Mickey Morandini, Y-D 1987
42 Billy Rapp, Wareham 1986

Individual pitching, season (1963–present)

[edit]
CCBL Hall of Famer Paul Mitchell set a league record with 126 strikeouts for Falmouth in 1969.
CCBL Hall of Famer Ryan Speier saved 16 games for Bourne in 2001.
Wins (W)
W Player Year
11 Pat Hope, Hyannis 1987
10 Noel Kinski, Sagamore 1965
9 (12 players tied)
Strikeouts (SO)
SO Player Year
126 Paul Mitchell, Falmouth 1969
122 Dan O'Brien, Chatham 1974
120 Bill Fuller, Chatham 1972
119 John Caneira, Bourne 1972
118 John Caneira, Chatham 1973
Earned Run Average (ERA)
ERA Player Year
0.21 Mitchell Jordan, Orleans 2015
0.21 Eric Milton, Falmouth 1996
0.39 Shaun Seibert, Brewster 2006
0.39 Eric Beattie, Bourne 2003
0.40 Brian Rogers, Orleans 2002
0.43 Jonathan Gonzalez, Wareham 2000
0.45 Ed Baird, Chatham 1965
0.55 Kyle Schmidt, Bourne 2003
Minimum 34 innings pitched
Games (G)
G Player Year
30 Jeff Innis, Cotuit 1982
29 Ryan Cahalan, Cotuit 2004
29 Mike Dennison, Bourne 2001
27 Donnie Bivens, Y-D 1996
Innings Pitched (IP)
IP Player Year
123 Walt Terrell, Chatham 1979
115 Pat Hope, Hyannis 1987
111 John Caneira, Bourne 1972
110 Dan O'Brien, Chatham 1974
110 Oz Griebel, Harwich 1970
Saves (SV)
SV Player Year
16 Ryan Speier, Bourne 2001
15 Derrick DePriest, Chatham 1999
13 Josh Fields, Y-D 2006
13 Clint Chrysler, Wareham 1996
13 Drew Fischer, Brewster 1996
13 Scott Winchester, Falmouth 1994

Presidents and commissioners

[edit]
Longtime Springfield College head coach Archie Allen was CCBL Commissioner in 1983. He is shown here coaching the Dutch national team in the 1964 European Baseball Championship.
League Presidents
Years in Office Name Ref
1968–1970 Charles F. Moore [195][196]
1970–1971 Elwood C. Kastner [196][197]
1972–1976 Robert A. McNeece [197][198][199][200]
1976–1977 Mike Curran [199][201][202]
1978–1983 Russ Ford [201][203][204]
1983–1986 Dick Sullivan [203][205][204]
1986–1987 Chuck Smith [205][206]
1988–1989 Dave Mulholland [207][208]
1989–1991 John Claffey [208][209]
1991–2015 Judy Walden Scarafile [210][211][212][213]
2015–2022 Chuck Sturtevant [214][215]
2023–present Andrew Lang [216]
League Commissioners
Years in Office Name Ref
1962–1968 Danny Silva [217][218][219]
1968–1970 Bernie Kilroy [218][220][204]
1970–1972 Larry Upton [221][197]
1973–1974 George Manfredi [222][223]
1974 Robert Kessler [223]
1975–1978 Dick Sullivan [224][225][204]
1978–1982 G. Arthur Hyland [226][225]
1983 Archie Allen [227][203]
1983–1996 Fred Ebbett [203][228][229][230]
1996–1998 Dick Marr [229][231]
1999–2003 Bob Stead [232][233][234]
2003–2019 Paul Galop [234][235][236][237]
2019–2024 Eric Zmuda [236]
2024–present John Castleberry [238][239]
Key
CCBL Hall of Fame Inductee

Hall of Fame and Museum

[edit]
CCBL Hall of Famer Thurman Munson
CCBL Hall of Famer Peter Gammons
CCBL Hall of Famer Kyle Schwarber

The CCBL Hall of Fame and Museum is a history museum and hall of fame honoring past players, coaches, and others who have made outstanding contributions to the CCBL.[240] Since its inaugural class in 2000, the Hall of Fame has held annual inductions of new members, enshrining over 170 members to date.

Originally opened to the public in 2003 at the Heritage Museums and Gardens in Sandwich,[241] the Hall of Fame and Museum moved in 2008 to the lower level of the John F. Kennedy Hyannis Museum in Hyannis, Massachusetts, where it remained until 2017.[242] The league anticipates a 2024 reopening of the Hall of Fame at a permanent location in South Yarmouth.[243]

Inductees (by year):

Alumni in the National Baseball Hall of Fame

[edit]

The following former CCBL players have been inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York.

In addition to the player inductees below, Cooperstown also honored longtime CCBL president Judy Walden Scarafile in 2010 by featuring her in the museum's Diamond Dreams exhibit, which highlights stories of pioneering women in baseball.[259][260][261]

Player Pie Traynor Carlton Fisk Frank Thomas Craig Biggio Jeff Bagwell Todd Helton
Pie Traynor
Carlton Fisk
Frank Thomas
Craig Biggio
Jeff Bagwell
Todd Helton
CCBL Team Falmouth /
Oak Bluffs

1919
Orleans Cardinals
1966
Orleans Cardinals
1988
Yarmouth–Dennis Red Sox
1986
Chatham A's
1987, 1988
Orleans Cardinals
1994
Year
Inducted
1948 2000 2014 2015 2017 2024
Ref [248][262] [263] [219][264] [265] [266][267] [268]
Key
CCBL Hall of Fame Inductee

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Cape Cod Baseball: The First Team Was In Sandwich". sandwichhistory.org. Retrieved August 5, 2019.
  2. ^ "Al Irish a walking history of Falmouth baseball". wayneindependent.com. Retrieved August 5, 2019.
  3. ^ "It's been 70 great years for the Cotuit Kettleers". capecodlife.com. 5 January 2017. Retrieved August 5, 2019.
  4. ^ "Cape Cod League a Talent Showcase". sabr.org. Retrieved August 5, 2019.
  5. ^ "County Fair at Barnstable". Yarmouth Register. Yarmouth, MA. August 27, 1921. p. 8.
  6. ^ "Barnstable Fair". Yarmouth Register. Yarmouth, MA. September 10, 1921. p. 7.
  7. ^ "Barnstable County Agricultural Society Fair". Barnstable Patriot. Barnstable, MA. September 4, 1922. p. 4.
  8. ^ "Cape Cod Baseball League". Falmouth Enterprise. Falmouth, MA. July 14, 1923. p. 6.
  9. ^ "Falmouth Commodores' History in the Cape Cod Baseball League". falmouthcommodores.com. Retrieved August 5, 2019.
  10. ^ a b "Cape League Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony Set for Nov. 10". capecodbaseball.org. Retrieved August 11, 2019.
  11. ^ "Career statistics of Danny MacFayden". baseball-reference.com. Retrieved August 5, 2019.
  12. ^ "Falmouth to Play Braves". Falmouth Enterprise. Falmouth, MA. August 22, 1929. p. 4.
  13. ^ "Falmouth Has Grip On League Winners Pennant". Falmouth Enterprise. Falmouth, MA. August 29, 1929. p. 1.
  14. ^ "Braves Beat Falmouth 8–7". Falmouth Enterprise. Falmouth, MA. August 29, 1929. p. 12.
  15. ^ "Welcome Page". capecodbaseball.org. Retrieved July 16, 2019.
  16. ^ "CCBL Schedule". capecodbaseball.org. Retrieved July 21, 2019.
  17. ^ Katie Thomas (October 24, 2008). "In Cape Cod League, It's Tradition vs. Trademark". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  18. ^ 2010 Article Archived 2011-06-17 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ "Origin of Cotuit Kettleers Name". kettleers.org. 14 February 2012. Retrieved August 4, 2019.
  20. ^ "Barons Quit League After Falcon Forfeit". Falmouth Enterprise. Falmouth, MA. June 20, 1952. p. 8.
  21. ^ "Wareham is Admitted to Upper Cape Loop". Falmouth Enterprise. Falmouth, MA. June 27, 1952. p. 4.
  22. ^ "Chatham". Chatham Monitor. Chatham, MA. August 28, 1923. pp. Suppl.
  23. ^ "Base Ball". Hyannis Patriot. Hyannis, MA. July 31, 1924. p. 6.
  24. ^ "Base Ball". Barnstable Patriot. Barnstable, MA. September 4, 1924. p. 9.
  25. ^ "Cape Cod Field Day". Hyannis Patriot. Hyannis, MA. September 10, 1925. p. 1.
  26. ^ "Hyannis, Out Hit, Defeats Osterville, 4-3". Chatham Monitor. Chatham, MA. July 22, 1926. p. 14.
  27. ^ "Baseball". Chatham Monitor. Chatham, MA. July 29, 1926. p. 1.
  28. ^ "Cape Title Remains Undecided Hyannis and Osterville in Tie". Hyannis Patriot. Hyannis, MA. September 9, 1926. p. 1.
  29. ^ "Barnstable Wins Penant". Falmouth Enterprise. Falmouth, MA. September 11, 1926. p. 1.
  30. ^ "Base Ball and Billings". Falmouth Enterprise. Falmouth, MA. September 8, 1927. p. 4.
  31. ^ "The Hyannis Baseball Team, Champions of the Cape Cod League". Hyannis Patriot. Hyannis, MA. September 8, 1927. p. 13.
  32. ^ "Osterville Wins League Pennant". Hyannis Patriot. Hyannis, MA. September 6, 1928. p. 7.
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Further reading

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