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In a league of its own:
The Superior Double-A League of Puerto Rico
The Superior Double-A League is Puerto Rico's semi-pro league. There are eight divisions, with each division having five to six teams. The league's season starts in February, and goes through spring and summer culminating in the Carnival de Campeones (Carnival of Champions) in the fall.Nov 16, 2021
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05/01/2022
At the end of the regular season, each group will compete in the best-of-five semifinals to advance to the best-of-seven final.
The 43 clubs participating in the superior Double-A League in Puerto Rico approved a proposal by the National Baseball Federation (Federación Béisbol Aficionado Puerto Rico) to resume playing night games after four seasons.
The 16-game regular season will open on 27 February at the Nestor Morales Stadium, the home of the defending champions Grises in Humacao.
At the end of the regular season, each group will compete in the best-of-five semifinals to advance to the best-of-seven final. The winners of the eight groups will advance to a round-robin, and the top four will compete in best-of-seven semifinals and final.
The clubs approved the format of the seasons with a 36-4 majority during a meeting held at the Domingo Figueroa Convention Center in Vega Alta.
Starting the 2022 season, every club participating in the Double-A League will need to affiliate with the National Federation.
"We met for the first time since the 2021 season ended," commented Federation President José Quiles Rosas. "It was a very productive meeting, and it will serve as the base for the 2022 activity."
Old-fashioned values
Founded as an amateur league in the 1930s, Doble A has survived several iterations over the decades but has never lost its grassroots charm and its mission to promote the game. While it turned semipro in 2006, allowing teams to recruit professionals — including those who are active in winter ball — the slogan on its website remains an anachronism, a sentiment seemingly from the past:
“We play hard here to make better citizens.”
And now, after a successful 2017 campaign that ended four days before Hurricane María struck the island on Sept. 20, Doble A is back with 38 teams in six divisions playing a modified 20-game schedule.
The new season opened on April 1. But instead of playing on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, this year, as a concession to life on the island post-María, the league will play Sunday double-headers starting at 10 a.m.
Roa and the Titanes de Florida and Jiménez and the Sultanes de Mayaguez met in last year’s finals, with the Sultanes winning the championship in six games, a hard-fought series that cost one manager his job after Game 2.
That’s right. Luis Arroyo, the Titanes’ skipper, was let go after losing the first two games. Doble A might not pay much, but it takes its baseball just as seriously as the major leagues.
All this for what they call in Spanish dieta, or meal stipend — a perk that tops out at $150 per game for the better players.
More than baseball
Doble A is much more than baseball. It’s a pillar of Puerto Rican culture, the pride and joy of many towns who don’t have teams representing them in other sports.
Through the early 2000s, it was a source of talent for the national teams representing the island in international competitions, including the Olympics and the baseball World Cup. And later, it was a second-chance league for major leaguers trying to return to The Show, like the Cubs’ backup catcher René Rivera.
And through it all, Doble A has been known for its vocal and passionate fans whose infectious energy prods the players to play hard during every pitch and every at-bat.
“I played in front of 10,000 fans in the minor leagues and it doesn’t compare to 2,000 Puerto Rican fans at a Doble A game. The music and the racket start with the first inning and don’t end until the last episode. There’s never a quiet moment, and that gives players extra motivation,” Roa said.
Bat flips after a home run? Animated fist pumps after a strikeout? All are a welcome part of the game. Jiménez lived it up during the finals, going 8-for-17 with a home run, two doubles, eight RBI and five runs scored.
“When I played professional ball, I felt like an amateur,” Jiménez said in an interview in Spanish with La Vida Baseball. “I’m a vocal person. I like to talk, to show my emotions and that’s something you don’t see much in professional baseball. That’s the way I play the game and that’s why I love Doble A. You do everything with passion. You can display your emotions and your opponents will rarely get upset because they are just like you.”
Focal point of life
n Doble A, they don’t worry about the pace of the game, either. Four-hour games are routine, even desirable, because it’s the weekend highlight for many fans. Just show up with your favorite fried fritters and cold drinks.
And when a team makes it to the playoffs and gets to the finals, the whole town puts life on pause until the series is over. That’s what happened last September with Florida, a small town of about 12,000 people located on the north coast in the center of the island.
Who could blame them? It was the Titanes’ first finals since Florida’s only championship way back in 1982.
“The Titanes have always been a focal point for the town,” said Mayor José Gerena Polanco in an interview in Spanish with La Vida Baseball. “That was our first final in 35 years, and there was enormous joy in our town. I was 12 when we won in 1982 and I’ve never forgotten it. The generation that never saw a championship finally got to experience what their grandparents and parents had talked about all those years.”
Not surprisingly, Doble A is quite the intimate experience. The Titanes’ ballpark seats only 1,000 people. Last year, during the sectional finals and the league finals, they played their home games in the neighboring city of Manatí.
Telling the manager what to do
Regardless of where teams play, chances are family, friends, neighbors and colleagues are front row, actively supporting the players and voicing their opinions.
“I work in the town of Florida, and it’s normal that when you go out for coffee or lunch, fans will recognize you and come up to you,” said Arroyo in an interview in Spanish with La Vida Baseball. “They will tell you what they think you should do. Sometimes after a game they will telephone you, anxious and desperate. And in social media, they won’t overlook a thing. It’s a very interesting dynamic.”
Arroyo pitched in the minors for the Padres, Mets, Marlins, Blue Jays, Red Sox and Reds, plus played for several independent leagues and in Mexico. Nothing, he said, compares to Doble A.
“You see many passionate fans in professional baseball. But the ones in Doble A are much more euphoric. They get into the game, they live it,” said Arroyo, who now works as an instructor at the Carlos Beltrán Baseball Academy in Puerto Rico.
“It’s different, a much more small-town feel. Since the ballparks are smaller in size, you feel the fans closer to you and you hear all that they say, good or bad,” Jiménez said.
“It’s been a good experience for me. My dad played Doble A for 15 years and I grew up in this baseball environment. In fact, when I was in college, before I signed pro, I played in the league at 19.”
Amateur only in name
Jiménez hasn’t missed a season since 2012. Stephen Morales, who managed the Sultanes to the championship last year, will not get to defend his title this season after being hired as a minor league coach by the Pirates. While he welcomes the promotion, you sense a tinge of regret in his voice.
“It’s incredible how much warmth you feel in a small town,” Morales said. “Everyone gets involved, including the businesses.”
“Baseball is the same game everywhere,” he added. “Professional is just a title. I’ve seen many amateur players with unbelievable talent. The mix of professionals and amateurs gives this league a different flavor.”
Last season, more than 100 former pros played in the league. Of course, most of them now need a full-time job to be able to play baseball part-time. It’s a price most willingly pay to continue in the game.
“When you are playing in professional leagues, you spend the whole day at the park,” Jiménez said. “Now I have to work 40 hours a week at something else and then afterwards go train and play. It’s an adjustment. But I love it. I love this kind of baseball and I’m going to continue playing for as long as I can.”
BASEBALL
Fernando Cabrera shines in his debut with Arenosos de Camuy in Double A Baseball
The former Major League pitcher completed six innings and struck out 11 in the win against the Tigres de Hatillo in the first game of the season
Saturday, March 5, 2022 - 8:58 a.m.
(Old Friend) Veteran pitcher Fernando Cabrera struck out 11 opponents in six innings to give Arenosos de Camuy a victory in the first game of the season this Friday, as part of the first big schedule of the 2022 Double A Superior Baseball season.
Cabrera made his team debut with a 5-2 victory for the Arenosos de Camuy over the Tigres de Hatillo. In six innings he gave up three hits, two of them homers.
Cabrera struck out 11 of the 23 batters he faced and walked one . The two solo shots off Cabrera came from the bats José Villalba and Jay Feliciano.
In other North results, the Florida Titans beat the Montañeses de Utuado 9-2 with three runs scored by Gaby Ayala.
Aneudi Rojas was 3-2 and singled in the top of the ninth inning lifting the Industriales de Barceloneta over the Atenienses de Manatí.
In the Metro, the Guaynabo Mets beat the Vega Baja Melao Melao 2-1. Lefty Héctor Hernández won his debut pitching eight innings with 11 strikeouts and three hits allowed. He faced 28 batters.
For his part, Christian Pérez received bases loaded walk to give the Planters of Vega Alta a 15-14 victory over the Guardians of Dorado in the bottom of the ninth inning and the Carolina Giants beat the Lancheros of Cataño with seven innings of good work from lefty Gerald Barrios.
Cordero bats in four runs for San Sebastián
In the Northwest, the San Sebastián Patrolmen prevailed by a score of 7-1 over the Aguada Navigators in a game shortened to seven innings by means of the 'curfew' rule. Jacob Cordero drove in four runs with a single and a homer.
In addition, the Libertadores de Hormigueros dominated the Fundadores de Añasco 4-2 with two RBIs from Kenneth González
In the South, the Poetas de Juana Díaz came out victorious 6-5 against the Flying Fish of Salinas. The win went to right-hander Julio Morales and the Colts of Santa Isabel came from behind with a three run rally in the eighth inning to beat the Coamo Marathonists 7-4.
Graceful Cabo Rojo and Sabana Grande
In the Southwest, the Piratas de Cabo Rojo defeated the Petroleros de Peñuelas 9-3 with four RBIs from Joel Rivera and the Cardenales de Lajas won 7-2 against the Petateros de Sabana Grande with a perfect night from Gerani Colón , who went 2-for-2 with three RBIs.
In the Southeast, the Yabucoa Sugar Producers dominated the Maunabo Jueyeros 10-8. Edwin Gómez hit a grand slam and Cristian González was the winning pitcher.
Loíza's impressive comeback
The Cocoteros de Loíza recorded the most dramatic comeback of the day by beating the Halcones de Gurabo 10-5.
The game favored the Halcones 5-0 until the seventh inning, when the Cocoteros scored twice to get close and then sealed their ninth-inning comeback with an impressive eight-run explosion. Omar Rohena's rbi single decided Loíza's lead.
Meanwhile, the Mulos de Juncos defeated the Guerrilleros de Río Grande by a score of 6-5 in the eleventh inning, after interference was ruled on pitcher Ender de Jesús. Right-hander Arturo Martoral won in relief and Richard Vincent González led the production with three RBIs.
The game between Artesanos de Las Piedras and Cariduros de Fajardo was suspended due to rain in the ninth inning with the score tied at three runs. In this game, star pitcher Jean Félix Ortega reached his 800th career strikeout.
Cidra wins the first game of the Central Division
The runner-up Bravos de Cidra won the first game of the Clásico de la Central by beating Toritos de Cayey 6-3 with five innings by left-hander Miguel Martínez. Francisco Rosario was 2-3 with two RBIs and two runs scored.
In the same division the Polluelos de Aibonito had 18 hits to beat the Pescadores del Plata de Comerío 10-3. Ricardo de la Torre debuted with two doubles, a home run and a single. Right-hander Joe Alsina was the winning pitcher.