Canadian-American Association of Professional Baseball

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This article refers to the modern Can-AM League. For the original incarnations of the Can-Am League, which operated between 1936 and 1951, see Canadian-American League

Canadian-American Association of Professional Baseball
CanAm League logo
Sport Baseball
Founded 2004
No. of teams 10
Country Flag of United States United States
Flag of Canada Canada
Current champions Quebec Capitales
Official website www.canamleague.com

The Canadian-American Association of Professional Baseball, based in Durham, North Carolina, is a professional, independent baseball league located in the Northeastern United States and the Canadian province of Quebec. It operates in cities not served by Major or Minor League Baseball teams and is not affiliated with either.

The Can-Am League exists so that professional baseball players who are not signed by a Major or Minor League organization could have another chance at playing at a higher level. Although the level of CanAm League play can be categorized as A level, players in independent baseball are usually not scouted heavily by Major League teams. A few Major League alumni have called Can-Am League teams home in an effort to get back to the Majors. The league also caters to players who are not quite talented enough to play at a higher level.

Despite its nickname, the Association, founded in 2004, is not to be confused with the Canadian-American League, a 20th-century predecessor.

Contents

[edit] 2007 Can-Am League teams

Can-Am
Team Logo City Stadium
Atlantic City Surf Atlantic City, New Jersey Bernie Robbins Stadium
Brockton Rox Brockton, Massachusetts Campanelli Stadium
The Grays Traveling team Traveling team
Nashua Pride Nashua, New Hampshire Holman Stadium
New Haven County Cutters West Haven, Connecticut Yale Field
New Jersey Jackals Little Falls, New Jersey Yogi Berra Stadium
North Shore Spirit Lynn, Massachusetts Fraser Field
Quebec Capitales Quebec City, Quebec, Canada Stade Municipal
Sussex Skyhawks Augusta, New Jersey Skylands Park
Worcester Tornadoes Worcester, Massachusetts Fitton Field

[edit] League history

The Canadian-American Association is an indpendent league with ties to two different independent leagues, the Northeast League (formed in 1995), and the Northern League. The two leagues merged in 1998, but after the 2002 season, the Northeast League was reestablished as a separate league.

For the 2005 season, the Northeast League reconstituted as the Canadian-American Association and acquired a new team in Worcester, Massachusetts, to replace the Allentown Ambassadors, who folded days before the 2004 season began and forced the league to field a traveling team called the Aces. The Bangor Lumberjacks, native to Bangor, Maine, folded only three weeks before the start of the 2005 season, forcing the team to create the traveling team The Grays.

For 2006, the Can-Am League added two teams. The Elmira Pioneers announced they were folding operations in the offseason between 2005 and 2006, with the Sussex Skyhawks replacing them. Prior to that, the Nashua Pride were unable to keep up with the level of competition and attendance in an higher standard, so they announced that they would be leaving the Atlantic League's and join the CAL.

The League also announced that they were changing their playoff format for the 2006 campaign. Prior to that, the league was divided into two divisions (North and South), with the division winners in each half-season qualifying for the playoffs, with wild-card teams (based on record) added if necessary to equal four. Under the new format, the divisions have been scrapped. All eight teams will compete for 4 playoff spots. The first two will be for the first and second half division winners. The second two spots will be given to the teams with the best winning percentage after that. If necessary, 3 teams can qualify based on win percentage (but only if the first half winner also wins the second half).

In October 2006, the League announced that the Atlantic City Surf would be switching from the Atlantic League to the Can-Am League beginning in the 2007 season. In November of 2007, the league announced that it would revive the Grays franchise as a traveling team as the 10th team. The Grays were also a traveling team in 2005, but were not a member of the Can-Am League in 2006.

[edit] League champions

[edit] External link


Canadian-American Association of Professional Baseball
Atlantic City Surf | Brockton Rox | The Grays | Nashua Pride | New Haven County Cutters
New Jersey Jackals | North Shore Spirit | Quebec Capitales | Sussex Skyhawks | Worcester Tornadoes
In other languages