International League

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International League
International League logo
Sport Baseball
Founded 1885
No. of teams 14
Country Flag of United States United States
Flag of Canada Canada
Current champions Toledo Mud Hens
Official website www.ilbaseball.com

The International League (IL) is a minor league baseball league which operates in the eastern United States and Canada. Like the Pacific Coast League, it plays at the Triple-A level, which is one step below Major League Baseball. The league was created from the mergers of member teams from three precursor leagues: the Eastern League, founded in 1884; the New York State League, formed in 1885; and the Ontario League, also organized in 1885. The New York State and Ontario leagues merged in 1886 to form the International League, and in 1887 the Eastern League was absorbed to create a 10-club league.

The league collapsed soon afterwards, when the northern teams claimed that it was too onerous to travel to the south and formed the International Association. Teams and league names came and went over the years. In 1954, a franchise was awarded to Havana, Cuba, but due to political upheaval in that country it had to be moved — to Jersey City, New Jersey — in the middle of the 1960 season. Another foray into the Caribbean failed when the newly-created team in San Juan, Puerto Rico, added in 1961, had to be moved to Charleston, West Virginia in mid-season.

In 1971, an International League all-star team beat the New York Yankees in an exhibition game in Rochester, New York, before 11,000 people. In 1984, the all-stars lost to the Cleveland Indians in 11 innings before 11,032 fans in Columbus, Ohio, to commemorate the league's 100th anniversary.

The International League and the American Association, another Triple-A league that operated in the Midwest, voted in 1988 to play interleague games. The league also split into two divisions that year. The interleague concept ended in 1992, but the two league divisions remained.

In 1998, with the addition of three new teams from the disbanded American Association and the Durham Bulls moving up to Triple-A from Class-A, the league reorganized into three divisions: the North Division, South Division, and West Division.

At the end of each season, the three divisional leaders and a wild card team square off in best-of-5 playoffs, with the winning team of the finals awarded the Governors' Cup, the league's championship trophy.

Contents

[edit] Current Member Teams and Stadiums

North Division
Name MLB Affiliation Stadium
Buffalo Bisons Cleveland Indians Dunn Tire Park
Ottawa Lynx Philadelphia Phillies Lynx Stadium
Pawtucket Red Sox Boston Red Sox McCoy Stadium
Rochester Red Wings Minnesota Twins Frontier Field
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees New York Yankees PNC Field
Syracuse Chiefs Toronto Blue Jays Alliance Bank Stadium
South Division
Name MLB Affiliation Stadium
Charlotte Knights Chicago White Sox Knights Stadium
Durham Bulls Tampa Bay Devil Rays Durham Bulls Athletic Park
Norfolk Tides Baltimore Orioles Harbor Park
Richmond Braves Atlanta Braves The Diamond
West Division
Name MLB Affiliation Stadium
Columbus Clippers Washington Nationals Cooper Stadium
Indianapolis Indians Pittsburgh Pirates Victory Field
Louisville Bats Cincinnati Reds Louisville Slugger Field
Toledo Mud Hens Detroit Tigers Fifth Third Field

[edit] Scheduled to Begin Play in 2008

[edit] Playoffs

[edit] 2006

  • Round one:
Charlotte Knights @ Toledo Mud Hens (best-of-five series)
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Red Barons @ Rochester Red Wings (best-of-five series)
  • Governors' Cup:
Rochester Red Wings @ Toledo Mud Hens (best-of-five series)
  • Champion:
Toledo Mud Hens

[edit] Affiliate changes for 2007 season

Several franchises shifted their Major League affiliations for the 2007 season:

Washington Nationals

New York Yankees

Philadelphia Phillies

Baltimore Orioles

New York Mets

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

International League
North Division South Division West Division
Buffalo Bisons | Ottawa Lynx | Pawtucket Red Sox | Rochester Red Wings | Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees | Syracuse Chiefs Charlotte Knights | Durham Bulls | Norfolk Tides | Richmond Braves Columbus Clippers | Indianapolis Indians | Louisville Bats | Toledo Mud Hens
In other languages