Texas Collegiate League

Texas Collegiate League

Texas Collegiate League logo
Sport Baseball
Founded 2004
President Uri Geva
No. of teams 7
Country  United States
Most recent champion(s) Brazos Valley Bombers
Most titles Coppell Copperheads (4)
Official website www.texascollegiateleague.com

The Texas Collegiate League (TCL) is a collegiate summer baseball league comprising teams from the states of Texas and Louisiana.

TCL is headquartered in Coppell, Texas.

The President of the TCL is Uri Geva, owner of the Brazos Valley Bombers.

History

The TCL played its inaugural season in the summer of 2004 with eight teams in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, and was co-founded by Wayne Poage, former Athletic Director at Dallas Baptist University, and a company controlled by Gerald W. Haddock, a minority owner and General Counsel of the Texas Rangers from 1989 to 1998.

The TCL would nearly fold in 2007, when seven of the original nine teams (all except the McKinney Marshals and the Coppell Copperheads) allegedly decided to boycott the TCL by collectively terminating their interests in the TCL. TCL ceased operations after the season, filed suit against the seven teams to terminate their franchises, and entered into a written license agreement authorizing the owners of the teams who were not part of the boycott (which included the Brazos Valley Bombers and the East Texas Pump Jacks, two new teams which had joined TCL in 2007) to operate a reorganized TCL beginning in 2008.

The 2008 summer season (the first under the reorganized TCL) set new attendance records for the league with the Brazos Valley Bombers making the top 50 attendance list of all summer collegiate teams.

Teams from the Texas Gulf Coast (Victoria Generals), Louisiana (Acadiana Cane Cutters and Alexandria Aces), and Greater Houston (The Woodlands Strykers) later joined the league. The Aces left TCL after 2012 and the Copperheads ceased operations at that time, while the McKinney Marshals ceased play during 2011 (and returned in 2012 under the name Texas Marshals).

Eligibility Requirements

All players in the league must have NCAA eligibility remaining in order to participate. Players are not paid so as to maintain their college eligibility.

Season Format

TCL teams are run similar to professional minor league teams, providing players an opportunity to play under the same conditions as the minor leagues. Games are played six days during the week (Monday is the league-wide off-day), in three series of two games each, and wooden bats and major league specification baseballs are used. Season play occurs from late May through early August in a 60-game, split-season format. Each team will visit every other team three times during the season. The first-half winner and runner-up make the post-season, as do the second-half winner and runner-up; should a team be post-season eligible in both halves, the team with the best overall record not already eligible is selected as a wild card. The first half winner and runner-up are given home-field advantage in the playoffs.[1]

Current teams

Texas Collegiate League
Team Founded City Stadium Capacity
Acadiana Cane Cutters 2011 Lafayette, Louisiana Fabacher Field 1,400
Brazos Valley Bombers 2007 Bryan-College Station, Texas American Momentum Bank Ballpark 2,121
East Texas Pump Jacks 2008 Tyler, Texas University of Texas at Tyler
Texas Marshals 2004 (*) McKinney, Texas Jesuit College Preparatory School of Dallas
The Woodlands Strykers 2012 The Woodlands, Texas The Woodlands Christian Academy Stadium 600
Victoria Generals 2009 Victoria, Texas Riverside Stadium 4,000

(*) The Marshals reformed in 2012 after previously disbanding at the end of the 2010 season. The Pump Jacks moved to Tyler, Texas, from Kilgore, Texas, beginning with the 2015 season.

Former Teams

(**) Tomcats played only the 2010 season

League Champions

Notable TCL Alumni

Since the TCL was established, more than 300 TCL players have been drafted by major league teams and no fewer than a dozen have played in the big leagues. Notable TCL alumni include:

References

  1. http://www.texascollegiateleague.com/news/league/index.html?article_id=601

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, January 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.