Baseball New Zealand

Baseball New Zealand, formerly known as the New Zealand Baseball Federation,[1] is the governing body of the sport of baseball in New Zealand.[2] Baseball New Zealand is composed of a number of regional associations and local clubs.[3]

Baseball New Zealand
SportBaseball
JurisdictionBaseball in New Zealand
AbbreviationBaseball NZ
Founded1989 (1989)
AffiliationWorld Baseball Softball Confederation
HeadquartersAuckland
PresidentVaughan Wyber
CEORyan Flynn
SponsorUnited Airlines
Official website
www.baseballnewzealand.com

History

Annual events

National Championships

National Championships are held annually across age grades throughout March and April.

Organisation

Executive & Board

The Baseball New Zealand Board consists of nine (9) members, four (4) of whom are deemed independent members and who are appointed by the Board.[4]

Professional staff

CEO: Ryan Flynn [5]
Coaches: Dan Tan [6]

Annual General Meeting

Baseball NZ must hold an Annual General Meeting of the members once in each calendar year on a date to be fixed by the Board and no later than 15 months after the previous Annual General Meeting.[7]

Players of note

Current professional players

Scott Richmond became the first New Zealand citizen to play at the Major League level on 31 July 2008,[8] when he pitched for the Toronto Blue Jays. Born in Canada to a New Zealand father, Richmond started the 2008 season with Campbell at New Hampshire, but was promoted to AAA Syracuse on 28 June and then to the Major League club on 28 July 2008. His call-up cost him the opportunity to play for the Canadian national team in the 2008 Olympics.

Brothers Boss and Moko Moanaroa were signed by the Boston Red Sox in 2008[9] [10]

Beau Te Wera Bishop was signed by the Boston Red Sox in 2011 [11][12][13][14]

Pita Rona was signed by the Baltimore Orioles in 2012

Daniel Devonshire was drafted in the 37th round of the 2012 First Year Player Draft by the Toronto Blue Jays, and has signed with the organisation.

Former professional players

Scott Campbell, the first New Zealander selected in the Major League Baseball amateur draft, playing in the Toronto Blue Jays' organization. He spent 2007 at their High-A club, the Lansing Lugnuts, after spending 2006 with the short-season Auburn Doubledays. In 2008, he's playing for the New Hampshire Fisher Cats in Double-A. Campbell was named to the 2006 New York Pennsylvania (NYP) League Mid-Season All-Star team. He finished in the top 10 for both batting average and on-base percentage. In 2008, Campbell played in the Futures All-Star game in Yankee Stadium. He went 0-4 as the designated hitter, scoring a run, in the 3–0 victory over the USA team.[15] Campbell retired in March 2012 due to reoccurring hip injury problems.[16]

Travis Wilson was signed by the Atlanta Braves after being spotted as part of the world champion Black Socks. Wilson spent eight years signed to the club, though never making the Major Leagues and spending most of his time at Triple-A level. He returned to New Zealand to continue his softball career in 2005, and also performs coaching duties for the Black Caps (the New Zealand cricket team).

Gus Leger was signed by the California Angels in 1993 after being spotted as a softball player for New Zealand. Leger spent 2 years playing Rookie Ball in the Arizona League as an outfielder.[17]

Affiliated Baseball Clubs and Associations

Northland

Baseball was introduced to the region in 2006

Bayside-Westhaven

Bayside Westhaven has been going for a number of years and fields teams from peewee (T ball) up through to a seniors team. Home fields are at Crossfield Reserve, Crossfield Road in Glendowie, Auckland

Central City

The Central City Baseball Club was formed in 2007 and play out of Fearon Park in Mt Roskill.

Howick-Pakuranga

The Howick-Pakuranga club is located in Pakuranga adjacent to the rugby club at Lloyd Elsmore Park.

North Shore City

Established in 2010

West City

West City Baseball Club plays its home games at McLeod Park in Te Atatū South and is part of the Auckland Baseball Association.

In December 2008, West City hosted Masashiro Tanaka, star Olympian Japanese Baseball player from the Rakuten Eagles of Japan.

Canterbury

The Canterbury Baseball Club was founded in 2003 and is located at Avonhead Park, on the western edge of Christchurch.

Nelson

The Nelson Heat Baseball Club was founded in 2016.

The club was scheduled to host the 2020 u13 National Club Championship but was cancelled due to the COVID-19 Pandemic

Competitions

Domestic competitions

The Auckland Baseball Association runs a junior competition each summer, with 12U, Little League, 14U, 16U, and 18U leagues.

The senior competition is dominated by Howick-Pakuranga and West City.

Canterbury runs an internal competition, while Northland runs an internal competition for the 14U age group.

National Club Championships

The first true National Club Championships occurred in January 2006, when four age levels held competition: Senior, Under 19, Under 15 & Under 13. Prior years' tournaments were one-off or friendly competitions or only included teams from Auckland.

2009 National Club Championships

West City won their third national title in four years as they downed Howick-Pakuranga 7–2 in the senior final.

Central City won the Under 12s, defeating Howick-Pakuranga 3–0.

The tournament witnessed the longest game in Nationals history – Canterbury defeated HP 6–4 in 16 innings. It was small solace for Canterbury, who were eliminated on tiebreakers as all three senior teams finished 1–1.

The tournament was marred with poor weather, as an entire day's schedule was wiped out by rain, resulting in an abbreviated schedule.

2008 National Club Championships

The Howick-Pakuranga seniors defeated West City 4–3 in the final.[18] Both teams finished 3–2, while Canterbury finished 1–3.

Bayside-Westhaven Under 16s defeated Howick-Pakuranga 6–5 in their final. The Bayside-Westhaven Under 13s defeated Central City 3–1 in their final.

2007 National Club Championships

The first baseball tournament held outside of Auckland, the 2007 national championships saw nine teams from four clubs compete in Canterbury. In the senior level, West City won the title, defeating Canterbury 12–11.[19] Howick-Pakuranga finished 1–1, but failed to reach the finals on IBAF tiebreakers.

At the under 15 level, Howick-Pakuranga claimed the title over Bayside-Westhaven in extra innings, while Canterbury finished third. At the under 13 level, Bayside-Westhaven swept away Howick-Pakuranga, with Canterbury again finishing third.

2006 National Club Championships

The first national championship tournament with teams from outside of Auckland saw all four age levels contested by 10 teams from four different clubs. West City defeated Canterbury 5–4 in 10 innings in the championship game to cap an undefeated tournament.[20] Howick-Pakuranga came in third.

The Howick-Pakuranga under 18s defeated Canterbury two games to one. The Bayside-Westhaven & Howick-Pakuranga under 15s were awarded a co-championship. The Bayside-Westhaven under 13s defeated the Canterbury under 13s in the championship game after all three teams finished 1–1.

International competition

NZ's first Representative side participated in the 1992 Merit Cup tournament, held in Cocoa Beach, Florida U.S.A

Olympic Qualification

New Zealand sent a squad to Australia for the Olympic Qualifying Tournament for the 1996 Olympics, but were beaten by Australia. New Zealand was invited to challenge Australia for the right to compete in the 2008 Olympic qualifying tournament, but pulled out three weeks before the tournament.[21]

Australian Provincial Championship

A senior team competes in the Australian Provincial Championships most years.

IBAF Oceania Qualifiers

An Under 15 team competed against Australia and New Caledonia for the right to represent Oceania in the 2007 IBAF 'AA' World Championships to be held in Venezuela later in 2007. New Zealand won all of their games against New Caledonia and lost all of their games against Australia.[22]

In 2011 New Zealand will be hosting the IBAF Oceania Qualifiers, in which Australia and Guam will compete against New Zealand for the right to participate in the 2011 IBAF AA World Cup in Mexico later on in the year. Another addition to the tournament is Curtis Granderson, centre-fielder to the New York Yankees, who will make an appearance to promote Baseball around the minor-code nation.

2012 WBC Qualifiers

In 2011, Major League Baseball announced that New Zealand would be among the nations invited to a new qualification round to be held in 2012 for the 2013 World Baseball Classic.[23] Ryan Flynn, Chief Executive of Baseball New Zealand, called the development "the best thing to happen in the history of diamond sports in New Zealand."[24]

See also

Notes

  1. "Learn about our online services | Societies and Trusts". www.societies.govt.nz. Retrieved 9 June 2018.
  2. "Find a sport » Sport New Zealand". sportnz.org.nz. Retrieved 9 June 2018.
  3. "Baseball NZ - Regions/Clubs". Baseball New Zealand. 10 June 2018. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  4. "Baseball NZ - Board of Directors". www.baseballnewzealand.com. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  5. Claire, Fred. "Flynn bringing baseball to New Zealand". MLB.com. Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  6. New Zealand, Baseball. "16U AA Oceania Championship 2011". Archived from the original on 12 August 2011. Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  7. New Zealand, Baseball. "Constitution". Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  8. New Zealand Herald Baseball: Power pitcher first Kiwi to play in Major League http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/4/story.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=10524449
  9. SoxProspects.com. "Boss Moanaroa". Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  10. SoxProspects.cpm. "Moko Moanaroa". Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  11. Moran, Dylan. "Beau Bishop begins Red Sox journey". Archived from the original on 2 October 2012. Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  12. MLB.com. "Beau Bishop Stats".
  13. Claire, Fred. "Flynn bringing Baseball to NZ". Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  14. "Maori boy signed to the Boston Red Sox".
  15. "2008 World Futures vs. US Futures Box Score". Major League Baseball. 13 July 2018. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  16. "Baseball: Injuries ruin big time dream". The New Zealand Herald. 30 October 2012. Archived from the original on 17 December 2020. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  17. BaseballReference.com. "Gus Leger Minor League Statistics".
  18. Source: Canterbury Baseball Club: http://www.canterburybaseball.co.nz/scores.php?month=1&year=2008&l_id=78 Archived 14 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  19. Source: Canterbury Baseball Club: http://www.canterburybaseball.co.nz/scores.php?month=1&year=2007&l_id=51 Archived 15 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  20. Source: Canterbury Baseball Club: http://www.canterburybaseball.co.nz/scores.php?month=1&year=2006&l_id=30 Archived 15 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  21. Gray, Chet. "2007 Senior Oceania Championships". Baseball Confederation of Oceania. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
  22. "Results for 2007 AA Oceania Championship". FOX SPORTS PULSE. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  23. "2013 World Baseball Classic Field Expands to 28 Teams." Major League Baseball News Release, 1 June 2011. Accessed 27 October 2011. http://www.baseball.ca/eng_news_story.cfm?NewsID=1888
  24. Stanley, Ben. "NZ in bid to make World Baseball Classic." Stuff.co.nz, 2 June 2011. Accessed 27 October 2011. http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/other-sports/5087664/NZ-in-bid-to-make-World-Baseball-Classic
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.