Southern Collegiate Baseball League
Established in 1999, Southern Collegiate Baseball League (SCBL) is a non-profit, wooden bat collegiate summer league, affiliated with the National Alliance of College Summer Baseball, with six teams located in the Charlotte metropolitan area of North Carolina and South Carolina. College players from four-year institutions (NCAA and NAIA) as well as junior and community colleges are eligible to play. SCBL differs from other summer wooden bat leagues in that pitchers may only throw a maximum of 85 pitches per game. At the end of the season, the teams play in a tournament to determine the league champion.
Sport | Baseball |
---|---|
Founded | 1999 |
No. of teams | 6 |
Country | ![]() |
Most recent champion(s) | Piedmont Pride |
Official website | www.scbl.org |
Current franchises
Southern Collegiate Baseball League | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Team | City | Stadium | ||
Carolina Vipers | Charlotte, North Carolina | Charlotte Latin School | ||
Charlotte Crushers | Charlotte, North Carolina | Victory Christian Center School | ||
Concord Athletics | Concord, North Carolina | Concord High School | ||
Lake Norman Copperheads | Cornelius, North Carolina | Hough High School | ||
Lenoir Oilers | Lenoir, North Carolina | Walker Stadium | ||
Mooresville Spinners | Mooresville, North Carolina | Moor Park | ||
Piedmont Pride | Rock Hill, South Carolina | York High School | ||
Former teams
- Asheville Redbirds
- Athens Pirates (Georgia)
- Ballantyne Smokies
- Carolina Chaos
- Carolina Stingers
- Carolina Warriors
- Kernersville Bulldogs
- Lenoir Oilers
- Monroe Channelcats
- Pineville Pioneers
- Rock Hill Sox (became Carolina Thunder)
- Salisbury Pirates
- Spartanburg Blue Eagles
- Spartanburg Crickets
- Spartanburg Spartans
- Statesville Owls
- Tennessee Tornado
gollark: Um. What even is that?
gollark: That seems impractical and poorly defined.
gollark: Also redundancy.
gollark: I support having multiple nations or something similar around to provide choice of governance system.
gollark: There don't seem to be viable alternatives at this point.
External links
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