Jump to content

Junior League World Series (Central Region)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 1906cubs (talk | contribs) at 19:56, 22 August 2016. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Central Region
Most recent season or competition:
2016 Junior League World Series
SportBaseball
Founded1981
No. of teams13
Country United States
Most recent
champion(s)
Michigan Midland, Michigan
Most titles Indiana (7)

The Junior League World Series Central Region is one of five United States regions that currently sends teams to the World Series in Taylor, Michigan. The region's participation in the BLWS dates back to 1981.

Central Region States

Region Champions

As of the 2016 Junior League World Series.

Year City JLWS Record
1981 Ohio Boardman Champions
1982[1] Illinois Libertyville Runner–Up
1983
1984
1985
1986[2] Ohio Athens County
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996 Indiana Fort Wayne Third Place 3–2
1997 Ohio Ashtabula Not in Top 4 0–2
1998 Indiana Fort Wayne 0–2
1999 Indiana Fort Wayne 1–2
2000 Kansas Baxter Springs Fourth Place 2–2
2001 Indiana Fort Wayne (H) Not in Top 4 1–2
2002 Indiana Fort Wayne (H) 0–4
2003 Iowa Urbandale 0–4
2004 Iowa Ankeny 2–2
2005 Indiana Fort Wayne (H) 0–4
2006 Indiana South Bend 1–3
2007 Wisconsin Glendale 1–3
2008 Iowa Johnston US Final 3–2
2009 Indiana Middlebury 2–3
2010 Indiana Jeffersonville Not in Top 4 2–2
2011 Ohio North Canton 1–3
2012 Ohio North Canton 1–3
2013 Indiana Bedford 2–2
2014 Michigan Midland 1–3
2015 Iowa Johnston US Final 4–1
2016 Michigan Midland Not in Top 4 1–2

Results by State

As of the 2016 Junior League World Series.

State Region
Championships
JLWS
Championships
Indiana Indiana 7 0
Ohio Ohio 5 1
Iowa Iowa 4 0
Host Team(s) 3
Michigan Michigan 2
Illinois Illinois 1
Kansas Kansas
Wisconsin Wisconsin

See also

Central Region in other Little League divisions

References

  1. ^ After runner-up years, Belmont Heights dominated the world — and that's a fact. [1]. St. Petersburg Times.
  2. ^ Baseball. [2]. Argus-Press.