The
North American Softball League (NASL) split from the APSPL after the 1979 season, as three teams came to the NASL from the APSPL – Fort Wayne, the
Cleveland Stepien's Competitors, owned by
Ted Stepien, who served as NASL President, along with the APSPL champion
Milwaukee Schlitz. Six of the eight NASL teams (all except Fort Wayne and Milwaukee) were owned by Stepien. Former MLB player
Mudcat Grant served as a PR official for the league. The NASL would last just one season. The Fort Wayne Huggie Bears were formed by Rivera and also played at the Tah-Cum-Wah Complex in Fort Wayne. The team was named after a lollipop manufactured by a local candy company. The Huggie Bears fared only slightly better than the Scouts, finishing the year 11-49 (.183), 36 games behind Milwaukee in the NASL Eastern Division. No Huggie Bears made the all-pro team but Lou Banks and Cardell Collins represented Fort Wayne at the mid-season All-Star game played in
Willoughby, Ohio. The team did feature former
San Francisco Giant Bruce Miller, a Fort Wayne native. Dave France pitched again for Fort Wayne in 1980, Cardell Collins and Lou Banks provided power, and Eddie Echols and Clint Werley added depth for the Huggie Bears. The NASL disbanded at the end of the season, bringing the disastrous run of professional softball in Fort Wayne to a close. ==Fort Wayne year-by-year record==