Canadian Baseball League

Canadian Baseball League
Upcoming season or competition:
2026 CBL season
FormerlyIntercounty Baseball
League (1919–2025)
SportBaseball
Founded1919
CommissionerTed Kalnins
No. of teams9
CountryCanada
ConfederationWBSC Americas
Most recent
champion
Welland Jackfish (2nd)
Most titlesBrantford Red Sox (15)
BroadcasterYouTube
Official websitecbl.ca

The Canadian Baseball League (CBL) is a Canadian professional independent baseball league comprising teams in Southern Ontario. Up until 2025, the league was a semi-professional league and known as the Intercounty Baseball League.

The league was formed in 1919 as the and has enjoyed much success over its long history.[1] Teams are run similar to a professional minor league team, providing players an opportunity to play under the same conditions, using wooden bats and minor league specification baseballs. Teams play 42 (48 in 2026) scheduled games from early May to late-August. The playoffs are best-of-five series with the championship series typically played around mid-September. The most recent champions are the Welland Jackfish who defeated the Barrie Baycats 4-1 in the 2025 Dominico Cup Final.

History

The Intercounty Baseball League (IBL) was founded in 1919 with just four cities represented — Galt, Guelph, Stratford and Kitchener, and is the oldest amateur men's league in Canada.[2] During the early years, the league expanded to include the cities of Waterloo, Brantford, Preston, London, and St. Thomas.

It was previously known as the Intercounty Major Baseball League and the Senior Intercounty Baseball League. Teams compete for the Jack and Lynne Dominico Trophy, which is awarded to the league champions. The trophy is named for the late owners of the Toronto Maple Leafs baseball team, husband and wife Jack and Lynne Dominico.

On December 3, 2024, the Toronto Maple Leafs announced they had signed Ayami Sato, making her the first female player in the league as well as the first female player chosen to play professional baseball in Canada.[3] She began playing on May 11, 2025.[4]

In 2025, IBL commissioner Ted Kalnins stated that league was transitioning from being a semi-professional to fully professional league and would be expanding to a total of 10 teams as a part of that effort.[5] In addition to being a fully professional league, the league would now be known as the Canadian Baseball League and see the amount of regular season games played increase from 42 to 48, as well as a 5-team playoff structure. Further changes to the league are set to be announced in by the end of 2025. [6]

All-Star Game

On July 8, 2006, in Barrie, the league's New Era IBL All-Star Classic game between the Barrie Baycats and the IBL All-Stars; Barrie won 7–2.

On August 21 and 22, 2010 in Ottawa, the Fat Cats hosted the New Era All-Star Classic between the IBL All-Stars and the All-Stars from Ligue de Baseball Senior Élite du Québec (LBSEQ).[7]

Barrie hosted the league's All-Star Game on July 11, 2015, with the IBL All-Stars defeating Barrie Baycats 13–4.

Following a several-year hiatus the IBL announced they will be hosting a mid summer classic on July 20, 2024 in Welland.[8]

All-Star Game results

Year Venue Host team Result MVP Home Run Derby winner
2024 Welland Stadium Welland Jackfish South 13 - North 6 Matteo Porcellato (Welland Jackfish) Tyler Duncan (Hamilton Cardinals)
2025 Bernie Arbour Memorial Stadium Hamilton Cardinals North 5 - South 4 Yunior Ibarra (Kitchener Panthers)

Transition to "Canadian Baseball League"

On November 24, 2025, the league announced that, beginning with the 2026 season, the league would be changing its name from the Intercounty Baseball League, which had been in use since the league's founding in 1919, to the Canadian Baseball League. The change was made due, in part, to the growing popularity of the league across the country, as well as the move from its former semi-professional standing to a fully professional structure. The league also announced that it would be expanding its regular season from 42 games to 48, and setting the number of playoff teams at five.

Under the new playoff system, the fourth- and -fifth place teams will play in a win-or-go-home one-game playoff, followed by the remaining teams playing in two best-of-seven series to determine the winner of the Dominico Cup.[9]

Teams

100km
62miles
                    Cardinals
Royals               
Red Sox      
Locations of teams that competed in the 2025 season.
List of 2025 Intercounty Baseball League teams
Team Location Stadium Cap. First
Barrie Baycats Springwater Athletic Kulture Stadium 1,500 2001
Brantford Red Sox Brantford Arnold Anderson Stadium 2,000 1921
Chatham-Kent Barnstormers Chatham-Kent Fergie Jenkins Field 1,600 2024
Guelph Royals Guelph Hastings Stadium 1,400 1919
Hamilton Cardinals Hamilton Bernie Arbour Memorial Stadium 3,000 1958
Kitchener Panthers Kitchener Jack Couch Park 1,400 1919
London Majors London Labatt Park 5,200 1925
Toronto Maple Leafs Toronto Dominico Field 1,000 1969
Welland Jackfish Welland Welland Stadium 3,241 2000
  • List of franchises (1919–present)
  • Bold text indicates current teams

Champions

The winning team is awarded the Jack and Lynne Dominico Cup.

Other awards presented include:

  • Rawlings IBL Player of the Year Award/John Bell Memorial Trophy
  • IBL Rookie of the Year/Brian Kerr Memorial Trophy

Notable players

† Player is an inductee of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame

Notable executives

  • Bob Ferguson, league statistician (1958 to 1966) and owner of the London Pontiacs (1963 to 1964)[16]

References

  • Intercounty Major Baseball League's 1998 Record Book by Editor Herb Morell and Dominico Promotions Inc.
  1. ^ "An Intercounty Baseball League Primer". Mop-Up Duty. 14 June 2010.
  2. ^ "IBL signs lease for Ottawa Stadium". Ballpark Digest. 18 March 2010.
  3. ^ "Japanese pitcher to make history as 1st woman to play pro baseball in Canada". CBC. The Canadian Press. December 3, 2024.
  4. ^ https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ayami-sato-baseball-pitch-1.7532434
  5. ^ Cosovic, Aleksa (May 9, 2025). "Intercounty Baseball League gaining ground". BNN Bloomberg. Although it is characterized as a semi-professional league on paper, the players who have come through the IBL's ranks have certainly blurred the lines. ... "We're now transitioning into a fully professional league, and as part of that, I'd like to add a 10th team. Expanding to 10 teams would allow us to grow our geographic footprint and create two divisions of five – which would help with travel savings and scheduling," said Kalnins.
  6. ^ "Intercounty Baseball League rebrands as fully professional 'Canadian Baseball League'". Ottawa Citizen. 24 November 2025.
  7. ^ "New Era All-Star Classic, Intercounty Baseball League". CHCH. 24 November 2025.
  8. ^ "Welland Jackfish to Host 2024 IBL All-Star Showdown - Classic 1220AM CFAJ Radio". Retrieved 13 July 2024.
  9. ^ "A New Era for Independent Professional Baseball in Canada Begins". Retrieved 24 November 2025.
  10. ^ Mercer, Greg (February 23, 2018). "A century of baseball: New book to celebrate IBL history". Waterloo Region Record. Archived from the original on December 7, 2025. Retrieved December 7, 2025. Back in that inaugural season in 1919, the Panthers were known as the Kitchener McBrines [...] Their name would evolve a lot over the next century, from the Panthers to the Wolves, Bluetops, Legionnaires, Dutchmen and back to the Panthers again.
  11. ^ Senoran, Heather (August 7, 2024). "Kitchener baseball team seeks new owner with 'deep pockets'". CTV News. Archived from the original on December 7, 2025. Retrieved December 7, 2025.
  12. ^ Parker, Jim (June 27, 2025). "'Untapped market' — Windsor area eyed as home for different brand of baseball". Windsor Star. Archived from the original on June 30, 2025. Retrieved December 7, 2025. The Windsor Chiefs actually played in the league from 1979-81 [...] The Chiefs opted to move to the Detroit Federal League in 1982...
  13. ^ "IBL gives Burlington's move to Welland the green light". Barrie Today. October 2, 2018. Archived from the original on December 7, 2025. Retrieved December 7, 2025.
  14. ^ Franke, Bernd (June 12, 2023). "Jackfish win ninth game in a row". Welland Tribune. Archived from the original on December 7, 2025. Retrieved December 7, 2025. A franchise that dates back to 2000, when it was founded as the St. Thomas Storm, also played in Stratford and Mississauga before moving to Burlington in 2011.
  15. ^ Mawhood, Rod (September 19, 2023). "Jackfish crowned IBL Champs". The Niagara Independent. Archived from the original on December 7, 2025. Retrieved December 7, 2025.
  16. ^ Boughner, Barry (2021). "London Majors' History 1925–2021". London Majors' Alumni Association. Retrieved November 15, 2021.