Israel Baseball League
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Israel Baseball League | |
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Current season or competition: 2007 Israel Baseball League season |
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Sport | Baseball |
Founded | 2007 |
No. of teams | 6 |
Country(ies) | Israel |
Most recent champion(s) |
Bet Shemesh Blue Sox |
Official website | IsraelBaseballLeague.com |
The Israel Baseball League (IBL) (Hebrew: ליגת הבייסבול הישראלית, Liget ha-Beisbol ha-Israelit) is a new professional six-team baseball league in Israel. The first game was played on June 24, 2007. The league will add a seventh team in Jerusalem in 2008.
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[edit] Teams
The six league teams are the Tel Aviv Lightning, Netanya Tigers, Bet Shemesh Blue Sox, Petach Tikva Pioneers, Modi'in Miracle, and Ra'anana Express.[1]
The teams play games at three ballparks. The Yarkon Sports Complex, seating 15,000, in the Baptist Village in Petach Tikva, just outside of Tel Aviv, is home to the Ra’anana Express and the Petach Tikva Pioneers. Gezer Field, about 25 minutes from Jerusalem, approximately halfway between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, sits on Kibbutz Gezer, in one of Israel’s wine districts. It is home to the Bet Shemesh Blue Sox and the Modi’in Miracle. And Sportek Baseball Field, in the southern end of Tel Aviv’s largest outdoor public park, a 10-minute walk from seaside Tel Aviv hotels, is shared by the Tel Aviv Lightning and the Netanya Tigers.[2] A fourth field, which will be the home field for the Blue Sox, is under construction in Bet Shemesh. It is expected to be ready for the 2008 season.
[edit] 2007 season
The league has an eight-week, 45-game season.[1] Bet Shemesh (29-12; .707), led by hitters Gregg Raymundo and Jason Rees, had the best regular season record in the league, and finished with a 2.5 game lead over Tel Aviv (26-14; .650), led by pitchers Aaron Pribble and Daniel Kaufman.[2]
August 19th in Petach Tikva, Ron Blomberg’s Bet Shemesh Blue Sox shut out Art Shamsky’s Modi’in Miracle 3-0 in the IBL’s inaugural championship game. Californian RHP Rafael Bergstrom (7-2, 2.44) pitched a complete game shutout for Bet Shemesh, downing Dominican RHP Maximo Nelson (5-3, 3.55 ERA) who pitched for Modi’in.
The Israel Baseball League announced on February 20, 2008 that eight of its players who starred in the inaugural 2007 IBL season have been given the opportunity to advance their baseball careers and pursue their dreams.
“One of our stated goals has been to become the “Go To” league for the international player. It isn’t easy to establish credibility on the professional level, so it is extremely heartening to see the opportunities that have presented themselves to our players after just our first year of play,” Dan Duquette said.
The eight players are:
Eladio Rodriguez, who was signed by the New York Yankees
Jason Rees, who also was signed by the New York Yankees
Maximo Nelson, who signed with the Japanese champions Chunichi Dragons
Juan Feliciano, who turned down AAA offers from the Nationals, Astros and Pirates to sign with the Sultanes de Monterrey of the Mexican League
Rafael Bergstrom, who signed and played with the Bridgeport Bluefish ( Atlantic League)
Jason Benson, who signed and played with the Newark Bears (Atlantic League)
Josh Doane, who has been invited to spring training to try out for the Boston Red Sox
Noah Walker, who has also been invited to spring training to try out for the Boston Red Sox
The IBL had many objectives when it was launched. It particularly wanted to provide its players with a great experience while in while also showcasing their skills so that they could continue their career pursuits.
[edit] Players
The IBL had 120 players from nine countries in 2007: the United States (77 from 19 states), the Dominican Republic (16), Israel (15), Canada (9), Australia (7), Colombia, Japan, New Zealand, and Ukraine. The league hopes to be made up of at least 25% Israelis by its fifth year. About 40% of the league is Jewish. [3]
The League held tryouts in 2007 in Los Angeles, Massachusetts, Miami, Israel, and The Dominican Republic. Those selected were current and former U.S. minor leaguers, professional baseball players from other countries, and starting college players. The quality of play is similar to low Class AA ball in the United States.[3]
The first pick in the draft was infielder Aaron Levin, 21, who played for Cuesta College and was selected by Modi'in. The first player signed was former Midwood High School and Binghamton University left-handed hitting outfielder Dan Rootenberg. He hit .407 for Binghamton during his senior year, garnering All-SUNYAC and All-State honors, played in the Frontier League, the Swiss professional league,[4] [5] and for the Pleasantville Red Sox, and in 2006 batted .351 in the Westchester Rockland Wood Bat League.[6] Right-handed 6' 5" pitcher Leon Feingold, among the players first signed, pitched for the State University of New York at Albany, and then in the Cleveland Indians system from 1994-95, was signed by the independent Atlantic League in 1999, and later pitched for the Pleasantville Red Sox.
41 years after he retired from baseball, Hall of Fame pitcher Sandy Koufax was the last player chosen in the draft. Koufax, 71, was picked by the Modi'in Miracle. "His selection is a tribute to the esteem with which he is held by everyone associated with this league," said Art Shamsky, who will manage the Miracle. "It's been 41 years between starts for him. If he's rested and ready to take the mound again, we want him on our team." He'll be working on 14,875 days rest, as has been pointed out.[4] Koufax wouldn't pitch Game 1 of the 1965 World Series for Los Angeles, so that he could observe the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur. In his career with the Dodgers he threw four no-hitters, including one perfect game. [7]
[edit] 2007 season
Hitting. Catcher and former Boston Red Sox minor leaguer Eladio Rodriguez of Modi'in was the league batting champion (.461) and had 16 home runs in 102 at bats, and 23-year-old Australian right fielder Jason Rees led the league with 17 home runs and 50 RBIs in 130 at bats.[5] Rodriguez, 28 years old, and Rees, 24 years old, were both subsequently signed in October to minor league deals by the New York Yankees,[6] and will report to the Yankees minor-league complex in Tampa for spring training.[7] Third baseman Gregg Raymundo, who hit .292 in 7 minor league seasons and played for the Texas Rangers' and Pittsburgh Pirates' AAA teams,[8] was a close second in batting with a .459 batting average.
Pitching. One of the leading pitchers was Juan Feliciano of Bet Shemesh, who had pitched for the 2005-06 Hiroshima Carp in Japan. He was 7-1, with a 1.97 ERA, and in 50.1 innings gave up only 28 hits while striking out 73. 6' 5" lefthander Aaron Pribble of Tel Aviv was 7-2, with a league-leading 1.94 ERA. Rafael Bergstrom was 7-2, with a 2.44 ERA. Daniel Kaufman, who pitched for Emory University, held opposing batters to a .170 batting average. And 6' 6" Maximo Nelson from San Pedro de Macoris, in the Dominican Republic, led the league with 85 strikeouts; he pitched for the Gulf Coast Yankees in 2004 (posting a 6-5 record, with a 2.63 ERA).
Awards. The Hank Greenberg Award for Most Valuable Player was shared by Eladio Rodriguez and Raymundo. The Commissioner's Award for Sportsmanship and Character went to Pribble and infielder Brendan Rubenstein (Ra'anana Express). The Commissioner's Award for Distinguished Service was awarded to shortstop Eric Holtz of Bet Shemesh, a player-coach who also filled in as player-manager. The award for best pitcher went to Feliciano, and the Most Valuable Israeli Player was pitcher Dan Rothem of Tel Aviv. Leon Feingold of the Netanya Tigers was named Player Of The Year in a league-wide vote of the players. [9]
[edit] Managers
Among the first managers of the IBL were three of the best-known Jewish former major leaguers: Ron Blomberg manages league champion Bet Shemesh (he is a former New York Yankee, and the first DH in the major leagues), Art Shamsky manages Modi’in (he hit .300 for the '69 World Champion New York Mets), and Ken Holtzman managed Petach Tikva, a sister city of Chicago (his 174 career victories are the most in the major leagues by a Jewish pitcher), until he resigned a week before the season ended.[10] In addition, Steve Hertz manages Tel Aviv, Shaun Smith, an Australian, manages Ra'anana,[8] and Ami Baran, an Israeli originally from Chicago, manages Netanya.[9]
[edit] Management
The League is the brainchild of Larry Baras, a businessman from Boston.
Martin Berger, President and Chief Operating Officer, is a Miami trial attorney. The league's Director of Baseball Operations is Dan Duquette, former General Manager of the Boston Red Sox and Montreal Expos. Berger and Duquette were involved in selecting the inaugural season players. Bob Ruxin is Director of Business Operations; Ruxin has served as vice president of a sports products and management business. Leon Klarfeld is Director of Israeli Operations; he is a resident of Even-Yehuda, and has been involved in Israeli Baseball for over 20 years, was the president of the Israel Association of Baseball (IAB) between 1994 and 2002, and is a certified umpire for the Confederation of European Baseball. Jeremy Baras is the Director of Game (fan) Experience.
The Commissioner in 2007 was Dan Kurtzer, former U.S. Ambassador to Israel and Egypt. The league's Board of Advisors in 2007 included, among others: Bud Selig (Major League Baseball Commissioner), Wendy Selig-Prieb (former Milwaukee Brewers owner), Marshall Glickman (former president of the NBA Portland Trailblazers, and former president of a minor league baseball team), Professor Andrew Zimbalist (baseball economist), Marvin Goldklang (minority owner of the New York Yankees, and principal owner of four minor league teams), Randy Levine (President of the Yankees), and Marty Appel (former NY Yankees public relations director).
On November 15, 2007, Kurtzer and nine advisory board members (including Zimbalist, Goldklang, Levine, and Appel) resigned.[11] They commended Baras for having the vision to bring pro baseball to Israel, but in their letter of resignation, summing up the concerns of all, Goldklang and Zimbalist wrote that: "it has become apparent that the business leadership of the league has ceased to perform in an effective, constructive or responsible manner and has failed to manage its capital and other resources in a manner likely to produce successful results." [12] The advisers who resigned said the league was unwilling to provide financial information. Berger, the league president, said: "They were asking us for things that we didn’t have yet. We haven’t done our financials for this year. We are upset and disappointed that they’re leaving, but we are going ahead for next year. We have been talking to people who potentially are going to purchase the teams." Duquette will continue to be the league’s baseball operations director.[13]
[edit] Miscellaneous
- PBS aired the opening game, which had attendance of 3,112, on a one-week delay (July 1, 2007), in Boston, New York, Chicago, Washington DC, Los Angeles, and Miami. MLB.com carries coverage of the league's games.[10]
- Tickets are $10 and $6 at all locations for regular season games.
- While most of the umpires are international, some are Israeli. There are two umpires per game, with three on Sunday nights.
- Games are seven innings, with a home run hitting contest (a "home run derby") to decide a tie. Games take approximately two hours to play.
- Sometimes, the mix of nationalities leads to a veritable Tower of Babel. One on-field dispute included "an umpire who spoke primarily German and maybe some Hebrew, a pitcher who spoke little but Japanese and a Dominican infielder who spoke nothing but Spanish."[14]
[edit] Baseball in Israel
Baseball was first played in Palestine (now Israel) on July 4, 1927.[citation needed] The first field in Israel was built in Kibbutz Gezer in 1979, and the country now has a baseball field at the Yarkon Sports Complex in Petach Tikva.[citation needed] Israel sends National teams of various age groups to international baseball tournaments each year. The best recent showing to date in International Play (Pool A)was a 3rd place by the Israeli Juvenile (ages 10-12) in the 2006 Eurpean Championships (CEB). Between 500 and 1,000 Israelis regularly play baseball in amateur league play. Baseball is growing at an accelerated pace, with much greater baseball identity associated with the country.[citation needed]
In November 2007 it was announced that a new 6-team league, the Israel Professional Baseball League, was taking shape, and would play its first season in 2008. Those behind the new league include billionaire Jeffrey Rosen, a major IBL investor who also owns the Maccabi Haifa basketball team, which he bought in the summer of 2007, and is the chairman of Triangle Financial Services of Aventura, Florida; Andrew Wilson, who was a facilitator on the ground for the IBL and now works for Rosen; Alan Gardner, a lawyer from New York, who was the centerfielder for the Bet Shemesh Blue Sox; and Michael Rollhaus, a businessman from Queens and major IBL investor.[11][12]
[edit] World Baseball Classic
This section does not cite any references or sources. (June 2008) Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
Israel has applied to participate in the next World Baseball Classic[citation needed]. Jewish-American established major league baseball players (such as Brad Ausmus, Mike Lieberthal, Kevin Youkilis, Ian Kinsler, Ryan Braun, Shawn Green, Gabe Kapler, David Newhan, Sam Fuld, Jason Marquis, Jason Hirsh, John Grabow, Scott Schoeneweis, Mike Koplove, and Scott Feldman) would be eligible for the team.[citation needed] Also eligible would be players such as Adam Greenberg, Craig Breslow, Adam Stern, Brian Horwitz, Justin Wayne, Tony Cogan, Frank Charles, and Matt Ford, and retired players Andrew Lorraine and Brian Rose.
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Edelstein, Nathaniel (2006-12-26). "Israel Baseball League locks in three ballfields for six teams" (HTML) (English). Jerusalem Post. Retrieved on 2007-04-29.
- ^ "Batter-up"!, New Jersey Jewish Standard, 2007-04-27. Retrieved 2007-07-09.
- ^ Wohlgelernter, Elle. "Israel baseball takes the field" Israel21c, 2007-06-27. Retrieved 2007-07-09
- ^ "Former BU baseball player Rootenberg signs pro contract in Israel," Sports News Binghamton University, 2006-10-23. Retrived 2007-07-09.
- ^ 2005 Binghamton Baseball Guide. (PDF). Retrieved 2007-09-07.
- ^ Baseball Report (PDF) (English). The WRWBL Intelligencer. Retrieved on 2007-05-02.
- ^ "Koufax Drafted By Israeli Baseball Team", CBS News, 2007-04-27. Retrieved 2007-07-09.
- ^ Shaun Smith Profile, israelbaseballleague.com. Retrieved 2007-07-09.
- ^ Ami Baran Profile, israelbaseballleague.com. Retrieved 2007-07-09.
- ^ Berkman, Jacob. "Israel Baseball League starts in June", St. Louis Jewish Light. Retrieved 2007-07-09.
- ^ http://www.thejewishweek.com/viewArticle/c41_a1081/News/Short_Takes.html
- ^ http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/932135.html
[edit] External links
- Baseball in Israel
- The Israel Baseball League
- Israel Association of Baseball
- "Israel Baseball League: An Idea Who's (sic) Time Has Come"
- Announcement of NY Yankees signing of two IBL players after first Israel Baseball League season
- "The new ball game," interview with Dan Kurtzer, 3/13/07
- "Israel Baseball League starts in June," 4/11/07
- "St. Louisan plays big role in IBL," 4/11/07
- Exclusive coverage if the rise & fall of the IBL
- "The Dream Comes True: Israel Baseball Season Starts in 2 Weeks," 6/10/07
- Nate Silver, "L’Chayim to the IBL," BaseballProspectus.com, 7/2/07.
- "Hardball in the Holy Land," by Marty Appel, 7/11/07
- "Baseball, kosher-style," 8/17/07
- "Shalom, Y'all. Local Ump Spends Summer In Israel," 9/28/07
- Biblemetrics--Blog for Israel Baseball League Statistical Analysis
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