Little League World Series in Latin America
The Latin America Region has competed in the Little League World Series since its creation in 1958.[1] Until 2001, the Latin America Region included Mexico and the Caribbean. In 2001 – when the Little League World Series expanded to sixteen teams – Mexico and the Caribbean were given their own regions. The region is open to all Latin American teams, but is typically contested by the teams from Panama and Venezuela. Since the 2001 split, the region has been represented by either Venezuela (ten appearances) or Panama (seven appearances) at the Little League World Series, as of 2018.
Most recent season or competition: 2019 Little League World Series qualification | |
Sport | Baseball |
---|---|
Founded | 1958 |
Most recent champion(s) | |
Most titles |
Teams from Latin America have won the LLWS title five times, but only four were as the Latin America Region champion. The Industrial Little League of Monterrey, Mexico, won back-to-back titles in 1957 and 1958, but the first title was as the champion of the South Region.[1] The other three LLWS championships were won by Guadalupe, Nuevo León, Mexico, in 1997, and Maracaibo, Venezuela, in 1994 and 2000.
Latin America Region Countries
Region champions
Year | Host | Champion | City | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1957 | Industrial | Champions[1] | ||
1958 | Industrial | Champions[1] | ||
1959 | San Juan | Quarterfinals | ||
1960 | Industrial | 4th Place | ||
1961 | Industrial | 3rd Place | ||
1962 | Del Norte | 4th Place | ||
1963 | Obispado | 5th Place | ||
1964 | Obispado | Runners-up | ||
1965 | Zulia | 7th Place | ||
1966 | Cuauhtémoc | 6th Place | ||
1967 | Linares | 4th Place | ||
1968 | Chinandega | 7th Place | ||
1969 | Jorge Rosas | 6th Place | ||
1970 | Chinandega | 3rd Place | ||
1971 | Caguas Gillette | 5th Place | ||
1972 | Admiral Gallery | 4th Place | ||
1973 | Mitras | 6th Place | ||
1974 | Coquivacoa | 4th Place | ||
1975 | International teams were banned by Little League | |||
1976 | Puerto Nuevo | 3rd Place | ||
1977 | Coquivacoa | 4th Place | ||
1978 | La Javilla | 4th Place | ||
1979 | Luis Llorens Torres | 5th Place | ||
1980 | Pabao | 5th Place | ||
1981 | Unidad Modelo | 7th Place | ||
1982 | Coquivacoa | 5th Place | ||
1983 | Liquito Hernández | Runners-up | ||
1984 | Willys R. Cook | 5th Place | ||
1985 | Coquivacoa | 5th Place | ||
1986 | Coquivacoa | 4th Place | ||
1987 | Rolando Paulino | 3rd Place | ||
1988 | Curundú | 7th Place | ||
1989 | Coquivacoa | 3rd Place | ||
1990 | Matamoros | 5th Place | ||
1991 | Luis Montas | 3rd Place | ||
1992 | Epy Guerrero | T-3rd Place | ||
1993 | David Doleguita | Runner Up | ||
1994 | Coquivacoa | Champions | ||
1995 | Eduardo Sosa | T-3rd Place | ||
1996 | Matías Ramón Mella | T-3rd Place | ||
1997 | Linda Vista | Champions | ||
1998 | Linda Vista | Group Stage | ||
1999 | Juan A. Bibiloni | T-3rd Place | ||
2000 | Sierra Maestra | Champions | ||
2001 | Santiago de Veraguas | Group Stage | ||
2002 | Los Leones | Quarterfinals | ||
2003 | Altagracia | Quarterfinals | ||
2004 | Curundú | Quarterfinals | ||
2005 | Los Leones | Group Stage | ||
2006 | Cardenales | Quarterfinals | ||
2007 | La Victoria | Quarterfinals | ||
2008 | Coquivacoa | Quarterfinals | ||
2009 | Coquivacoa | Group Stage | ||
2010 | Chitré | Group Stage | ||
2011 | Gran Maracay | Int'l Semifinal | ||
2012 | Aguadulce | 4th Place | ||
2013 | Aguadulce | Int'l Semifinal | ||
2014 | Coquivacoa | Round 3 | ||
2015 | Cardenales | Int'l Semifinal | ||
2016 | Aguadulce | 3rd place | ||
2017 | Luz Maracaibo | Round 3 | ||
2018 | Vacamonte | Round 2 | ||
2019 | Cacique Mara | Round 2 |
Summary
As of the 2019 Little League World Series
Country | Championships | Best Result in LLWS |
---|---|---|
21 | Champions (1994, 2000) | |
14 | Champions (1957, 1958, 1997) | |
10 | Runners-up | |
7 | 3rd Place | |
7 | Runner up | |
2 | 3rd Place | |
1 | 5th Place |
Italics indicates team no longer competes in Latin America Region. Mexico now has its own region, while Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, and Curaçao compete in the Caribbean region.
See also
References
- In 1957, the Industrial Little League of Monterrey, Mexico, was the first team from outside the U.S. and Canada to compete in the LLWS. It competed in an area tournament in McAllen, Texas, won the South Region tournament, and defeated the West Region in the championship game. (The only other two regions in the LLWS were the East and North regions.) As a result, the next year (1958), three new regions were created: Latin America, Canada, and Pacific. Two years later, in 1960, a fourth international region was created: Europe. Two years after that, in 1962, the Pacific Region was replaced by the newly created Far East Region.