Little League World Series: Difference between revisions
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* [[Derek Bell (baseball player)|Derek Bell]] - Former MLB player: 1992 MLB World Series Champion / (1980, 1981 World Series) [[Tampa, Florida]] |
* [[Derek Bell (baseball player)|Derek Bell]] - Former MLB player: 1992 MLB World Series Champion / (1980, 1981 World Series) [[Tampa, Florida]] |
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* [[Sean Burroughs]] - MLB player / (1992, 1993 World Series) [[Long Beach, California]] |
* [[Sean Burroughs]] - MLB player / (1992, 1993 World Series) [[Long Beach, California]] |
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* [[George W. Bush]] - Former [[President of the United States]] |
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* [[Michael Cammarata]] - [[New York City Fire Department|FDNY]], KIA 9/11/2001 at World Trade Center / (1991 World Series) [[Staten Island|Staten Island, New York]] |
* [[Michael Cammarata]] - [[New York City Fire Department|FDNY]], KIA 9/11/2001 at World Trade Center / (1991 World Series) [[Staten Island|Staten Island, New York]] |
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* [[Matt Cassel]] - [[NFL]] [[quarterback]] / (1994 World Series) [[Northridge, Los Angeles, California|Northridge, California]] |
* [[Matt Cassel]] - [[NFL]] [[quarterback]] / (1994 World Series) [[Northridge, Los Angeles, California|Northridge, California]] |
Revision as of 00:55, 18 April 2010
Current season, competition or edition:![]() | |
Sport | Baseball |
---|---|
Founded | 1947 |
No. of teams | 16 |
Country | International |
Most recent champion(s) | ![]() (Chula Vista, CA) |
Most titles | ![]() |
Official website | LittleLeague.org |
The Little League World Series is a baseball tournament for children aged 11 to 13 years old. Named for the World Series in Major League Baseball, it was first held in 1947 and is held every August in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania in the United States. (The postal address of the organization is in Williamsport, but the stadium complex is in South Williamsport.) Initially, only teams from the US competed in the "World Series" but it has since become a worldwide tournament. The tournament has gained popular renown, especially in the United States, where games from the Series and even from regional tournaments are broadcast on ESPN. In 2006, the age limit was changed such that players could turn 13 after May 1, not August 1, as had previously been the case. As the competitions take place in the Northern Hemisphere summer, many of the players have already turned 13 before the World Series.
The Little League World Series is one of eight tournaments sponsored by Little League International. Each of them brings baseball or softball all-star teams from around the world together in one of four age divisions. The tournament structure described here is that used for the Little League Baseball World Series. The structure used for the other World Series is similar, but sometimes with different regions.
Qualifying tournaments
In the summer months leading up to the Little League World Series, held each year in August, Little Leagues around the world select an All-Star team made up of players from its league. It is these All-Star teams that compete in district, sectional and/or divisional and regional tournaments, hoping to advance to Williamsport for the Little League World Series. How many games a team has to play varies from region to region. In the United States, the tournaments at the lowest (district) level lack nationwide standardization. Some use pool play or double elimination, while others use single elimination.
In the United States, the fate of district winners varies widely from state to state. In some larger states such as Pennsylvania, New York, Florida and California, the district winners advance to one of many sectional tournaments. The winners of each sectional tournament then advance to a state or divisional tournament, the latter only being held in Texas and California and are similar to the state tournaments held in less densely populated states. Most smaller states lack competition at the sectional level and go straight from district to state tournaments. A handful of states are composed of only one district, and the district champion is the automatic state champion.
With 4 exceptions, every state as well as the District of Columbia crowns a state champion,[1] and sends that team to represent it to one of eight regional tournaments. The exceptions involve California, Texas, and the states of North Dakota and South Dakota. Because of their large geographic and population sizes, California and Texas send two representatives to their regional tournament; Northern California and Southern California in the West region tournament and Texas East and Texas West (whose areas encompass more than the geographical areas of East Texas and West Texas, splitting roughly along the I-35/I-37 corridor) compete in the Southwest region tournament. However, North Dakota does not have any towns who play through Little League, and the Dakotas have one district spanning the two states, and its winner becomes the joint champion and advances to the Midwest region tournament.
The state champions (as well as the Northern California, Southern California, Texas East, Texas West and Dakotas champions) compete in one of eight different regional tournaments. Each regional tournament winner then advances to the Little League World Series. See [1] for a comprehensive breakdown of current and historical US regional tournament locations, participants and results.
Other countries and regions pick their own way of crowning a champion. Little League Canada holds tournaments at the provincial and regional level to field five champions at the national tournament: Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia, the Atlantic Provinces, and the Prairie Provinces. The host site of the national tournament varies from year to year, and the host team gets an automatic berth as the sixth team. The tournament is played as a round robin and uses the page playoff format. The winner of the national tournament earns the right to represent Canada at the Little League World Series.
World Series breakdown
The Little League World Series consists of 16 teams—8 from the United States, and 8 from other countries. Prior to 2001 there were eight teams in the LLWS: four U.S. teams (Central, South, East, and West) and four international (Canada, Latin America, Europe, and Asia). It should be noted that in 1975 there were only four teams in the LLWS, all from the United States. The international teams returned in 1976.
The 16 teams are divided into two brackets, the United States Bracket and the International Bracket. Each team is then randomly assigned to one of two "pools" in their respective bracket. In the opening days of the tournament, the teams compete round robin within their own pool. The top two teams in each pool advance to the semifinal of their bracket, where the 1st place team from one pool competes against the 2nd place team from the other. The respective winners advance to play in either the United States or International Final. The U.S. champion and the International champion advance to compete in the Little League World Series Championship Game.
On April 14, 2010, Little League announced[2] that starting in 2010, round robin play would be replaced by a double-elimination bracket in each pool. The winners of each pool will advance to single elimination US and International Championship games and the winners of those games will advance to the World Championship game. Every team will play a minimum of three games: the four teams that lose their first two games will cross over and play US vs. International games.
The eight regional tournament winners which compete in the United States Bracket of the Little League World Series, as well as the states those regional champions could possibly hail from are as follows:
- New England (ME, NH, VT, MA, RI, CT)
- Mid-Atlantic (PA, NY, NJ, MD, DC, DE)
- Midwest (ND/SD, NE, KS, MN, IA, MO)
- Great Lakes (MI, WI, OH, IN, IL, KY)
- Southeast (VA, WV, NC, SC, GA, FL, AL, TN)
- Southwest (MS, LA, AR, TX East, TX West, OK, CO, NM)
- Northwest (AK, WA, OR, ID, MT, WY)
- West (AZ, NV, UT, CA Northern, CA Southern, HI)
The eight divisions which compete in the International Bracket are as follows:
- Canada
- Mexico
- Caribbean
- Latin America
- Japan
- Asia-Pacific
- Europe
- MEA (Middle East-Africa)
Prior to 2008, instead of two separate geographic regions, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa held two coterminous regions [2]:
The Transatlantic and EMEA regions were geographically identical. Leagues from the Transatlantic region generally consisted of children and other dependents of American expatriates, typically Armed Forces personnel, international organization members, and oil company workers (such as the team representing the Saudi Aramco Residential Camp in Dhahran, which advanced to the World Series 19 times through 2007, including all the tournaments from 2001 through 2007). The leagues within the "EMEA" region consisted of players native to the league's own country. Representative teams for the Trans-Atlantic region had to have at least 51% nationals of Canada, the U.S. or Japan, while teams for the EMEA region could have no more than three players from those three countries.
Teams in the reorganized Europe and MEA regions no longer have nationality restrictions, as evidenced by the 2009 series. In that year, both regions were won by teams made up primarily of children of American expatriates. Europe was represented by a team from Ramstein Air Base, a United States Air Force base in Germany, while MEA was represented for the second time in its two-year existence by the team from the Saudi Aramco camp.
Venues
Two venues host World Series games: Howard J. Lamade Stadium and Little League Volunteer Stadium. Lamade Stadium has hosted games since 1959, while Little League Volunteer Stadium opened in 2001 when the field expanded to 16 teams. Prior to 1959 the Little League World Series was held at Original Little League on West Fourth Street in Williamsport.
Both fields have symmetrical fences, with a distance of 68.6 m (225 feet) from home plate to each of the outfield positions. That distance had been 62.5 m (205 feet) before 2006.
Admission to all LLWS games is free for all spectators. However, stadium seats for the World Championship game are distributed in a random drawing of all interested parties due to high demand[3]. Lamade Stadium has a berm beyond the fences that has held up to 45,000 spectators.
Little League World Series champions
- ‡Forfeit by Zamboanga City
- * Mexicali, Mexico played in the Western Region of Southern California District 22 from 1957-1985.
Championship tally by country
Team | Championships |
---|---|
![]() |
32 |
International | 31 |
![]() |
17 |
![]() |
6 |
![]() |
3 |
![]() |
2 |
![]() |
2 |
![]() |
1 |
Championship tally by U.S. state
Championships | State(s) |
---|---|
6 | ![]() |
4 | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
3 | ![]() |
2 | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
1 | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Famous participants in Little League World Series
- Jason Bay – MLB player: 2004 National League (NL) Rookie of the Year / (1990 World Series) Trail, British Columbia
- Don Beaver - Co-Owner, Pittsburgh Pirates / (1952 World Series) Mooresville, North Carolina
- Larvell Blanks - Former MLB player / (1962 World Series) Del Rio, Texas
- Derek Bell - Former MLB player: 1992 MLB World Series Champion / (1980, 1981 World Series) Tampa, Florida
- Sean Burroughs - MLB player / (1992, 1993 World Series) Long Beach, California
- George W. Bush - Former President of the United States
- Michael Cammarata - FDNY, KIA 9/11/2001 at World Trade Center / (1991 World Series) Staten Island, New York
- Matt Cassel - NFL quarterback / (1994 World Series) Northridge, California
- Billy Connors - Former MLB player / (1954 World Series) Schenectady, New York
- Wilbert Davis - Staff Sergeant, U.S. Army, KIA 4/3/2003 in Iraq / (1975 World Series) Tampa, Florida
- Nancy dosReis - Detective, Providence, Rhode Island Police Dept. / (1979 World Series) North Providence, Rhode Island
- Chris Drury - NHL player: 2001 Stanley Cup Champion, 1998 Hobey Baker Award Winner, 1999 Calder Memorial Trophy Winner / (1989 World Series Champion, 1989 LLWS MVP) Trumbull, CT
- Ray Ferraro - Former NHL player / (1976 World Series) Trail, British Columbia
- Jose Maiz Garcia - Owner, Monterrey Sultans, Mexican Baseball League / (1957 World Series) Monterrey, Mexico
- Gale Gilbert - Former NFL quarterback / (1974 World Series runner-up) Red Bluff, California
- Charlie Hayes - Former MLB player: 1977 World Series / (1996 MLB World Series Champion) Hattiesburg, Mississippi
- Ken Hubbs - Former MLB player: 1962 NL Rookie of The Year & Gold Glove Winner / (1954 World Series) Colton, California
- George H. Hunter - Former MLB player; U.S. Prosecutor for Northern California; Executive Director, NBA Players Association / (1955 World Series Champion) Delaware Township, New Jersey
- Keith Lampard - Former MLB player / (1958 World Series) Portland, Oregon
- Carney Lansford - Former MLB player: 1988 & 1990 MLB World Series runner-up, 1989 MLB World Series Champion, 1981 MLB Batting Champ, 1988 American League (AL) All Star, 1992 Hutch Award Winner / (1969 World Series) Santa Clara, California
- Vance Lovelace - Former MLB player / (1975 World Series) Tampa, Florida
- Jason Marquis - MLB player: 2005 NL Silver Slugger, 2006 MLB World Series Champion, 2009 NL All Star / (1991 World Series) Staten Island, New York
- Stephane Matteau - Former NHL player: 1994 Stanley Cup Champion / (1982 World Series) Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec
- Lloyd McClendon - Former MLB player & manager: currently an MLB hitting coach / (1971 World Series) Gary, Indiana
- Lastings Milledge - MLB player / (1997 World Series) Bradenton, Florida
- Jim Pankovits - Former MLB player / (1968 World Series) Richmond, Virginia
- Marc Pisciotta - Former MLB player / (1983 World Series) Marietta, Georgia
- Boog Powell - Former MLB player: 1969 & 1971 MLB World Series runner-up, 1966 & 1970 MLB World Series Champion / (1954 World Series) Lakeland, Florida
- Colby Rasmus - MLB player / (1999 World Series) Phenix City, Alabama
- Turk Schonert - Former NFL player & currently Offensive Coordinator of the Buffalo Bills / (1968 World Series) Garden Grove, California
- Gary Sheffield - MLB player: 1997 MLB World Series Champion, 1992 MLB Batting Champ, 7-Time NL All-Star, 2-Time AL All-Star, 5-Time Silver Slugger / (1980 World Series) Tampa, Florida
- Brian Sipe - Former NFL quarterback & 1980 NFL MVP / (1961 World Series) El Cajon, California
- Robert Stratta - Doctor and Professor of Surgery, University of Tennessee, Memphis / (1967 World Series) Chicago, Illinois
- Carl Taylor - Former MLB player / (1954 World Series) Lakeland, Florida
- Hector Torres - Former MLB player / (1958 World Series) Monterrey, Mexico
- George Tsamis - Former MLB player / (1979 World Series) Campbell, California
- Pierre Turgeon - Former NHL player: 4-Time NHL All-Star / (1982 World Series) Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec
- Jason Varitek - MLB player: 1994 NCAA CWS, 2004 & 2007 MLB World Series Champion / (1984 World Series) Altamonte Springs, Florida
- Ed Vosberg - Former MLB player: 1980 NCAA CWS Champion, 1997 MLB World Series Champion / (1973 World Series runner-up) Tucson, Arizona
- Krissy Wendell - U.S. Olympic Women's Hockey Team / (1994 World Series) Brooklyn Park, Minnesota
- Dan Wilson - Former MLB player: 1996 AL All-Star / (1981 World Series) Barrington, Illinois
- Rick Wise - Former MLB player: 1975 MLB World Series) / (1958 World Series) Portland, Oregon
Championship notes
- In 1975, Little League Baseball banned all non-US teams from the World Series. After considerable criticism, the ban was rescinded the following year.[3]
- In 1985, Mexicali (MX) represented the Western Region of the United States because of its proximity to the El Centro/Calexico area in Southern California. It represented California's District 22 in the Southern California region.
- In 1992, Long Beach was declared a 6–0 winner after the international tournament committee determined that Zamboanga City had used ineligible players that were either not from within its city limits, overage, or both.
No teams from Taiwan (now required to compete as "Chinese Taipei") participated after the 1996 tournament until the 2003 tournament, after the Chinese Taipei Baseball Association decided its leagues would no longer charter with Little League, claiming inability to comply with rules enacted in 1992 regarding the maximum size of player pools and number of participating teams in leagues based at schools, and residency requirements, which Little League Baseball had stated they would enforce more strictly, especially after the 1992 incident. From the introduction of Far East teams in 1967 until after 1996, Taiwan had won 17 of a possible 30 championships and had been runners-up twice.[4]
Media coverage
The first broadcast of the Little League World Series on television was on ABC Sports (now ESPN on ABC) in 1963. At first, only the championship game was televised. Since the late 1980s, when the tournament was reorganized, both the U.S. and international championships, the "semifinals," have been shown. As the years passed, more telecasts were added on ABC, ESPN, and ESPN2. In 2006, 28 of the 36 games were televised on the three networks.
The 2006 world championship game was to be the last telecast on ABC Sports before ESPN's complete takeover of the sports division and name change. However, the final was postponed one day because of rain and was shown by ESPN2.
In January 2007, it was announced that ESPN, ESPN2, and ABC had extended their contract with the Little League organization through 2014.[4] That year, every game of the LLWS was scheduled to be televised for the first time, with all but one game live on ESPN, ESPN2 or ABC. (The other game was to be available online at ESPN360, then shown on ESPN2 the next day.)[5] In addition, a number of games were to be shown in high-definition on one of ESPN's two dedicated HD channels, or on ABC HD. The championship games in all other divisions, as well as the semifinals and finals of the Little League Softball World Series, was scheduled for either ESPN, ESPN2 or ESPNU.
Most LLWS games are broadcast live on local radio station WRAK 1400AM, which is owned by Clear Channel. The radio broadcasts are also streamed online at the LLWS page at littleleague.org.
Other divisions in Little League Baseball
Each of the other seven divisions of Little League Baseball has its own World Series format.
See also
- Danny Almonte - the center of an age fraud investigation during 2001 series
- List of Little League World Series broadcasters
- Little League World Series on television
- Little League World Series Baseball 2008 (video game)- A recently released video game adaptation of the LLWS.
- Amateur baseball in the United States
- List of organized baseball leagues
- Baseball awards#World
- Baseball awards#U.S. youth baseball
References
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
- ^ Little League Baseball State Champions (1950-2007). Little League International. Retrieved 2009-11-24.
- ^ http://www.littleleague.org/media/newsarchive/2010/Jan-Apr/FormatChangeToLLBBWSFor2010.htm
- ^ http://www.littleleague.org/media/2009llbbseriesinfo.htm
- ^ Taiwan, once dominant, to return to Little League, Associated Press Newswires, 25 April 2003, The Associated Press.