United Baseball League (proposed)

The United Baseball League, also known simply as the United League (UL), was a planned third major league that was formed in 1994, but folded in 1996 without playing a game.

United Baseball League
SportBaseball
Founded1994
Ceased1996
CountriesUnited States
Canada

Formation

First announced on November 1, 1994, the UL founders were Bob Mrazek, a former five-term Congressman from Long Island; John Bryant, a Congressman from Dallas; Richard Moss, a player agent, and Andrew Zimbalist, an economist at Smith College.[1] The UL originally planned to have ten teams, eight in the U.S. and one each in Canada and Mexico.

By August 1995, the league introduced former Texas Rangers president Mike Stone as its CEO, and former star Curt Flood as its commissioner. "We need an alternative league," Flood said. "America deserves an alternative league. I wish there was one when I played. Baseball's owners have shut me out for 25 years." Eight franchises were announced, seven in the U.S. and one in Canada.

Announced franchises

Eastern Division Proposed or presumed home field
Central Florida Osceola County Stadium in Kissimmee[2]
New York Kongs[3] Suffolk County Community College (proposed)
Puerto Rico Hiram Bithorn Stadium in San Juan
Washington, D.C. R.F.K. Stadium[4]
Western Division Proposed or presumed home field
Los Angeles Blaze[5] Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
New Orleans Superdome
Portland, Oregon Civic Stadium
Vancouver B.C. Place

Further developments

Original UBL logo, 1994

The league also announced a twenty-year TV contract with Liberty Sports and a 154-game schedule to begin March 28, 1996.[6] Co-founder Richard Moss said the plan was for the UL to expand to 16 teams, including Japan and Korea, within three years.[7]

Mike Casey, identified as the owner of the New Orleans franchise, announced former big-leaguer Paul Blair would be the club's assistant general manager.[8] Casey's son-in-law, former Boston Red Sox pitching prospect Ed Riley, became the first signing for the proposed club; later, reports indicated the team had offered the disgraced Pete Rose $500,000 a year to serve as its manager. (By January 1996, Casey's franchise was apparently located not in the Big Easy but in Worcester, Massachusetts; Riley turned up in the "transactions" column of sports pages nationwide as being acquired by the Albany-Colonie Diamond Dogs of the Northeast League "from Worcester of the United Baseball League".)[9]

By December 1995, Dick Moss announced that the league had been put off until 1997.[10] In late January 1996, Mike Casey identified the UL's eight teams as Washington, Orlando, Bridgeport, Connecticut and his Worcester club in the Northern Division, with Los Angeles, San Juan, New Orleans and Austin, Texas in the Southern Division. Finally, on April 12, 1996, the league ceased operations, citing stadium problems. Also, Liberty Sports had merged with the Fox Television Network, who promptly announced a deal with Major League Baseball starting in 1997.[11]

gollark: I mean, it might in some cases simplify to the "intended" one.
gollark: Yes, you do.
gollark: Technically correct is the best kind of correct.
gollark: Also quadratic, in GCSEMaths™.
gollark: And this can produce technically-valid-but-stupid answers for some questions relating to those.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.