Excellent!!! This the type of information that I seeking not only for Mexico but, for Latin countries (and Asian as well). Lets put this one on the backburner for about a month or two and see if anyone else can contribute in the meantime. Good luck on your move. Kevin
--- On Wed 08/17, Alberto Rondon < titorondon2002@... > wrote:
From: Alberto Rondon [mailto: titorondon2002@...] To: latinobaseball@yahoogroups.com Date: Tue, 16 Aug 2005 21:11:57 -0700 (PDT) Subject: RE: [latinobaseball] Mexican Association
In trying to track down (and understand) the career of the first Nicaraguan pro, Lefty Davila, I investigated the Mexican professional leagues in 1951.
I found these 50-51 Winter leagues:
1) Liga Costa del Pacifico, organized in 1945. Today it is the Mexican Pacific League, with basically the same teams as then. 2) Liga Peninsular de Yucatan, organized in 1946. Teams: Campeche, Merida, Motul and Yucatan. 3) Liga Veracruzana, organized in 1944. Former champions included Santa Rosa, Alvarado, Cuitlahuac; the teams in 50-51 were Orizaba, Cordoba, Jalapa and Veracruz. 4) Liga del Golfo. Ebano, Ciudad Mante, Tampico, Naranjos, Cerro Azul; Poza Rica was a former champ.
Summer leagues:
1) Liga Mexicana, organized in 1925 and upgraded in 1937, entered O. B. in 1955 (today it is the triple A league). 2) Liga Nacional (Chihuahua, Delicias, Fresnillo, Camargo current in 1951; cities with teams in previous years include Gomez Palacio, Torreon, Ciudad Juarez). 3) Liga Sonorense (Tijuana, Nogales, Santa Ana, Cananea, Hermosillo, Empalme, Navojoa, Ciudad Obregon and formerly, Guaymas). 4) Liga del Norte de Coahuila. 5) Liga de Sinaloa. 6) Liga del Sur de Veracruz. 7) Liga del Norte de Sinaloa. 8) Liga Sinaloa-Nayarit.
a) Was I all inclusive? Probably but not 100 per cent sure. b) Some of these leagues might have lasted until 1970. c) Some leagues died and were later revived, maybe at the whim of some millionaire benefactor. d) New leagues were created, such as Liga del Bajio in Winter and the Southeasy and Center Summer O. B. leagues.
Between local amateurs and failed pros who did not want to give up the dream there were lots of inexpensive players to be hired.
Davila liked to drink; I found he dropped out of the Mexican League so he could be the big fish in the small pond and not keep regular hours and train so much.
I have some magazines, Hit and Superhit, from the early 70s and many leagues are mentioned. Unfortunately I am packing as I am moving one of these days. I should be back to normal in about a month. I will write you to see if you are interested in getting more info. Meanwhile, I am sure there is a Mexican in SABR who should be able to help you, or at least point you in the right direction. Let me know.
Regards, Tito
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