Baseball in North America is a very popular sport, mostly in the United States, the
Dominican Republic,
Cuba,
Puerto Rico, Canada, and Mexico, among others. In the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, and Cuba, Baseball is the most popular sport, universal love for the sport there is a cultural trait of the Spanish Caribbean, especially in Dominican Republic. In Central American countries, it is popular most likely due to US influence. In Mexico it is a popular and is the country's second most prominent sport, after soccer. It is also the most popular sport in
Nicaragua,
Panama, and
Venezuela with the game also popular on the Caribbean coast of
Colombia. Both Nicaragua and Colombia operate professional winter leagues, while
Panama was invited to the inaugural
2006 World Baseball Classic. In Canada, the sport is often played and watched during summer months, and one of the most popular games behind
ice hockey.
Canada Professor
Bob Barney researched the oldest verified baseball game played in Canada, based on a letter from Adam Ford to the editor of
Sporting Life, published on May 5, 1886. In the letter, Ford described in detail a game he witnessed on June 4, 1838, played in
Beachville, Ontario. Barney verified the names of participants and descriptions of the field; by researching tax forms, census records, maps, church records, and tombstones, and found that all of the participants and details in Ford's letter were correct. The
Journal of Sport History published his findings in 1988. While baseball is widely played in Canada, the American major leagues did not include a Canadian team until 1969, when the
Montreal Expos joined the
National League (the London Tecumsehs were refused admission to the National League in 1877 because they refused to stop playing exhibition games against local teams). The team enjoyed a widespread following until about
1994 (when the Expos were in first place in the
NL East); after the strike shortened year a series of poor management decisions, disputes with the city, and neglect by the ownership caused the Expos to be routinely last in MLB attendance. In 2004, the Expos, then owned by MLB itself, moved to Washington, D.C. and became the
Washington Nationals.
Gary Carter, a popular player in Montreal along with
Andre Dawson are members of the Hall of Fame whose plaques have an Expos cap on. In 1977, the
Toronto Blue Jays joined the
American League. They won the
World Series in 1992 and 1993. On July 12, 2022,
Philadelphia Phillies manager
Rob Thomson became the first Canadian to ever manage a
Major League Baseball team in Canada. Thomson was also the first Canadian-born manager since 1934. In 2003 an attempt to create the
Canadian Baseball League was launched, but the league folded halfway through its first season. A few Canada-based teams play in low-tier American circuits. Some of these teams such as the
Winnipeg Goldeyes draw crowds of 7,000 on a regular basis, making them one of the highest attended low-tier baseball teams in all of North America. See
List of baseball teams in Canada.
Cuba The early years (1864–1874) Baseball was introduced to
Cuba in the 1860s by Cubans who studied in the United States and American sailors who ported in the country. The sport quickly spread across the island nation.
Nemisio Guillo is credited with bringing a bat and
baseball to Cuba in 1864 after being schooled in
Mobile, Alabama. Two more Cubans were sent to Mobile, one being his brother Ernesto Guillo. The Guillo brothers and their contemporaries formed a baseball team in 1868—the
Habana Baseball Club. The club won one major match—against the crew of an American schooner anchored at the
Matanzas harbour. Soon after this, the
first Cuban War of Independence against its Spanish rulers spurred Spanish authorities in 1869 to ban playing the sport in Cuba because Cubans began to prefer baseball to viewing
bullfights, which Cubans were expected to attend dutifully as homage to their Spanish rulers in an informal cultural mandate. As such, baseball became symbolic of freedom and egalitarianism to the Cuban people. The ban also prompted
Esteban Bellán to join the semipro
Troy Haymakers. He became the first Latin American player to play in a
Major League in the United States. Bellan started playing baseball for the
Fordham Rose Hill Baseball Club, while attending St. John's College (1863–1868, now
Fordham University) in
the Bronx, New York City. After that he played for the
Union of Morrisania, a team from what is now part of New York City. Bellan played for the Haymakers until 1862; in 1861 it joined the National Association. The first official match in Cuba took place in Pueblo Nuevo,
Matanzas, at the
Palmar del Junco, December 27, 1874. It was between
Club Matanzas and
Club Habana, the latter winning 51 to 9, in nine innings.
Cuban baseball is organized (1878–1898) In late 1878 the
Cuban League was organized, consisting of three teams—
Almendares, Habana, and Matanzas—and playing four games per team. The first game was played on December 29, 1878, with Habana defeating Almendares 21 to 20. Habana, under team captain Bellán, was undefeated in winning the first championship. The teams were amateurs (and all whites), but gradually professionalism took hold as teams bid away players from rivals.
Cuban baseball becomes international (1898–1933) The
Spanish–American War brought increased opportunities to play against top teams from the United States. Also, the Cuban League admitted black players beginning in 1900. Soon many of the best players from the Northern American
Negro leagues were playing on integrated teams in Cuba. Beginning in 1908, Cuban teams scored a number of successes in competition against major league baseball teams, behind outstanding players such as pitcher
José Méndez and outfielder
Cristóbal Torriente. By the 1920s, the level of play in the Cuban League was superb, as Negro league stars like
Oscar Charleston and
John Henry Lloyd spent their winters playing in Cuba.
Decline and abolition of the Cuban League During the
Great Depression, the Cuban League came close to bankruptcy. The revolution which overthrew the administration of
Gerardo Machado forced the cancellation of the 1933–34 season. When the league resumed play, it was without black American ballplayers and many of its Cuban stars who departed for the
Negro leagues, most notably pitcher-outfielder
Martín Dihigo. The League's financial situation improved over the course of the decade, enabling it to attract many star players from the Negro leagues, including power-hitting catcher
Josh Gibson, shortstop
Willie Wells and third baseman
Ray Dandridge, as well as
white Latin American Major Leaguers, including the great Venezuelan pitcher
Alex Carrasquel. World War II resulted in new travel restrictions cutting off the flow of ball-players from the U.S. The end of the wartime player shortage resulted in pay cuts in the U.S. major leagues, leading many players to sign contracts with Cuban League and the newly formed
Mexican League. In 1946, a record 36,000 fans attended the opening of the Gran Estadio del Cerro (now known as
Estadio Latinoamericano) in
Havana. The 1946–47 season included a number of major leaguers, including
Lou Klein and
Max Lanier, alongside such great Cuban ballplayers as
Orestes (Minnie) Miñoso,
Connie Marrero,
Julio Moreno, and
Sandalio (Sandy) Consuegra. Efforts to control the flow of players to Latin America culminated in a 1947 agreement with the
National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues to bring minor and major league players to Cuba during the winter off-season in the U.S. Cuba League champions dominated the
Caribbean Series, which began in 1949. The Havana Cubans, a team formed by a
Washington Senators scout in 1946, joined the
International League as a farm team of the
Cincinnati Reds in 1954, when they were renamed the
Havana Sugar Kings. Despite encountering discrimination on the basis of language and race, many Cuban ball-players had success in the Major Leagues, including pitcher
Camilo Pascual and former Negro leagues first baseman Minnie Miñoso. In 1959, the year
Fidel Castro seized power in the
Cuban Revolution, the Havana Sugar Kings won the
International League championship, and captured the
Little World Series by defeating the
Minneapolis Millers of the
American Association. Castro was an avid fan of the Sugar Kings, and pitched for a pickup squad
Los Barbudos in an exhibition game on July 24, 1959. However, the following day, gunfire erupted in the stadium during raucous celebrations on the anniversary of the
26th of July Movement, forcing the cancellation of the Sugar Kings season. The following year, after Castro announced the nationalization of all American-owned enterprises, the
Baseball Commissioner announced the Sugar Kings would be relocated to
Jersey City. In 1961, professional sports were abolished, and the
Cuban League was replaced by the amateur
Cuban National Series.
Havana's
Industriales, founded by workers representatives from the cities industries and intended as heir to
Almandares club, dominated the league, winning four of the first five championships. Initially consisting of four teams, by 1967 the number had increased to 16, with the construction of new stadiums in all of the nation's provincial capitals. Industriales, with most of the top-tier ballplayers from Havana, has remained the strongest team, but
Santiago de Cuba,
Villa Clara and
Pinar del Río have also experienced considerable success.
Recruitment of Cuban baseball players Many talented players were raised and trained in Cuba and then recruited to the major leagues in the United States. Some of the more famous modern players are José Contreras, Orlando Hernández, and Liván Hernández. These players make very good money for their talents, but this was not always the case. From the 1930s through the 1950s many American scouts went to Cuba to find inexpensive recruits. During this time period many talented Cuban players were recruited, signed contracts and were locked into little or no money. In 1961, due to severed diplomatic relations with Cuba, one of the major league's main sources of foreign players was cut off. This has limited the number of Cuban players migrating to the United States to play baseball. The US major league baseball clubs are in hopes that in the near future they will be able to recruit players from Cuba again. This can and will deeply affect baseball as it is played in Cuba today. In the United States, Cuban players such as Liván Hernández can make million dollar salaries, while players in Cuba will make less than thirty dollars a month. Cuba cannot compete with major league wages and this already has shown an impact. Although salaries are the same for all of the Cuban baseball players, some of the best Cuban players can get perks or gifts from the Cuban government. These can be anything from a vacation, to a car, unlimited expense accounts at restaurants, or something as small as movie tickets. The problem with these gifts is that they are very unpredictable and players often complain about the gifts. Cuba has lost many talented players since the 1990s due to defection for financial reasons.
Dominican Republic Baseball was first brought to the Dominican Republic by Cuban sugar planters who arrived in the country in the 1870s, fleeing the
Ten Years' War on their home island, and built the nation's first mechanized sugar mills. Cuban sugar planters began providing baseball equipment to their workers as a diversion to keep up morale. Much of the labor force of the sugar industry was made up of migrants from the British West Indies, and were familiar with
cricket. Several semi-professional baseball clubs were founded in the early 20th century, most notably Santo Domingo's storied
Tigres del Licey. The U.S. occupation from 1916 to 1924 resulted in further inroads, as military administrators provided money to form and purchase equipment for amateur clubs, while organizing games between Dominican clubs and U.S. Marines. Towards the end of the occupation, professional baseball took on the shape and structure it retains today, with two teams in Santo Domingo—
Tigres del Licey and
Leones del Escogido—and one each in
San Pedro de Macorís,
La Romana and
Santiago.
Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo came to power in 1930 and quickly sought to consolidate control over the national economy. While not a baseball fan himself, his family were avid baseball fans, and, seeking to bolster his regime, he acquired Licey. In 1936, the
Estrellas Orientales of San Pedro de Macorís defeated Licey in the national championship. Afterwards, Trujillo merged Licey and Escogido into one team, the Ciudad Trujillo Dragones. To counter this, San Pedro signed the three top players from the
Negro league powerhouse
Pittsburgh Crawfords-pitcher
Satchel Paige, catcher
Josh Gibson and centre fielder
Cool Papa Bell—but, upon arriving in the country, they were detained by Trujillo and forced to suit up for the Dragones. Santiago's
Águilas Cibaeñas later signed several Cuban Negro league players, including pitcher Luis Tiant, Sr. (father of the Red Sox pitcher of the same name) and pitcher/outfielder
Martín Dihigo. The Dragones defeated Santiago and San Pedro to win the 1937 championship, but the vast amounts of money used to finance the season bankrupted the other owners, and ended professional baseball in the Dominican Republic for ten years. Attention shifted to the amateur national teams the country assembled, using a unit of the Dominican army as Trujillo's personal farm club. The first wave of Dominican ballplayers to play professionally in the
Major Leagues, including
Ozzie Virgil, Sr., the Alou brothers—
Felipe,
Matty and
Jesus—and Hall-of-Fame pitcher
Juan Marichal emerged from Trujillo's amateur teams. Professional baseball resumed in 1951 as a winter league of the U.S. Major Leagues, with the old alignment still in place. In 1955, construction was completed on Santo Domingo's
Estadio Quisqueya, shared home to rivals
Tigres del Licey and
Leones del Escogido. This alignment has largely remained intact, although an expansion team in
San Francisco de Macorís was founded in 1996. Licey and Aguilas have been the most successful teams in the
Dominican Winter League, and the Caribbean, Licey with 22 National Championships, and Águilas with 21. Their fierce rivalry reflects the competition between the countries two main cities, the capital of
Santo Domingo and
Santiago, the largest city and unofficial capital of the northern part of the country. Leones del Escogido have won sixteen titles and are reigning Dominican Republic champions in the 2015–2016 season. Definitely to say, that the
Dominican Winter League is the most respected baseball league in the Caribbean. The Dominican Republic in the 2020 Caribbean tournament, won their 20th Caribbean Title, more than any other country in the world, this title was won by
La Romana team,
Toros Del Este against the team representing
Puerto Rico,
Cangrejeros de Santurce. On an international level, the Dominican Republic is currently the world's largest exporter of baseball players. In every season since 1999, Dominicans have comprised at least 9% of active MLB rosters, more than any other nationality except Americans. More recently, many Dominicans have also begun to play in the
Nippon Professional Baseball leagues in Japan and the
Mexican League, the largest summer leagues outside of the United States and Canada. Nevertheless, the success of the
Dominican Republic national baseball team has never matched the promise held by the island country's production of baseball talent. In 2013 they made up for the 2009 loss by eliminating the Netherlands at the semifinals and becoming the first undefeated champion of the event with a score of 8–0 in the world Baseball Classic tournament of 2013, defeating their baseball rivals, the Puerto Rican national Baseball team.
Mexico Puerto Rico :
See: :Category:Baseball in Puerto Rico. Baseball began in Puerto Rico in 1896. A Puerto Rican that was born in Brooklyn, Amos Iglesias Van-Pelt, started practicing a group of men, some of them Cuban students who already knew the game from back home. Two years later, January 9, 1898, the first official game was held at the Velodromo, Stop 15, Santurce. The Cubans formed a team known as Almendares and the Puerto Rican ball club was named Borinquen with Amos Iglesias Van-Pelt on the mound. After three innings, the game was postponed by rain. Games kept going until March of that year because of the advent of the Spanish–American War, stopping all baseball activities until November 1899. == Oceania ==