Leones de León

Leones de León

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Information
LeagueNicaraguan Professional Baseball League
LocationLeón, Nicaragua
BallparkEstadio Rigoberto López Pérez
Established1945
Latin American Series championships2019
League championships9 (1957, 1957–58, 1959–60, 2004–05, 2009–10, 2018–19, 2019–20, 2021–22, 2024-25)
Former nameMets de San Felipe
Mets de León
Melenudos de León
ColorsBlack, gold, white
     
ManagerSandor Guido

The Leones de León are a professional baseball team competing in the Nicaragua Professional Baseball League (LPBN). Their home games are played at Estadio Rigoberto López Pérez in León, Nicaragua. Their biggest rival is Indios del Bóer, which are based in the capital of Managua.

Leones also fields a team in Nicaragua's summer league, the Germán Pomares Ordóñez First Division, representing the department of the same name, albeit with different colors (blue and red) and management from the professional team. The team is historically the most successful in the first division.

History

In 1957, the first full season of professional baseball in Nicaragua, the "Melenudos de León" (León Mane-men) were skippered by manager Tony Castaño, whose pitching staff included Conrado Marrero, formerly of the Washington Senators.[1] In the following 1957–58 season, Cuban pitcher Manuel Montejo of León threw the country's first professional no-hitter, in a 5–0 win over Cinco Estrellas on November 5, 1957.[2]

Leones won the 1958 Pan American Series (Serie Panamericana), a one-off international club tournament against Venados de Mazatlán of the Mexican Pacific League and Vanytor de Barranquilla of the Colombian league.[3][4] They also won the 2019 Latin American Series, the other counterpart of Caribbean Series, in a final game against the Chileros de Xalapa of the Mexican Liga Invernal Veracruzana.

The team has also won the most titles in Nicaragua's amateur league, the Germán Pomares Ordóñez First Division (Campeonato Nacional de Béisbol Superior Germán Pomares Ordoñez), with 20 (1939, 1943, 1960, 1962–64, 1967, 1968, 1973, 1974, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1990, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003, and 2019).

Leones previously played their home games at the Estadio Héroes y Mártires de Septiembre, which held a capacity of 3,328 spectators.[5][6] Since 2024, they have played at the new Estadio Rigoberto López Pérez.[7]

Championships

Season Manager Opponent Series score
1957 Tony Castaño
1957–58 Wilfredo Calviño Cinco Estrellas 4–2
1959–60 Julio Moreno Cinco Estrellas 4–1
2004–05 Noel Areas Tigres de Chinandega 4–3
2009–10 Roger Guillén Oriental de Granada 4–1
2018–19 Sandor Guido Tigres de Chinandega 4–1
2019–20 Sandor Guido Tigres de Chinandega 4–1
2021–22 Sandor Guido Gigantes de Rivas 4–3
2024–25 Sandor Guido Tren del Norte 4–3
Total championships 9

International competition

Latin American Series record

Year Venue Finish Wins Losses Win% Manager
2019 Veracruz 1st 7 0 1.000 Sandor Guido
Total 7 0 1.000

Serie de las Americas record

Year Venue Finish Wins Losses Win% Manager
2025 Managua 2nd 5 2 .714 Sandor Guido
Total 5 5 .714

Roster

Leones de León roster – 2024–25 LPBN champions
Players Coaches
Pitchers
  • 23 José Acosta
  • 79 Joaquin Acuña
  • 98 Alvaro Amador
  • 30 Ismael Cabrera Taveras
  •  5 Cole Cook
  • 29 Ernesto Glasgon
  • 33 Aaron Glickstein
  • 27 Janser Lara
  • 54 Walter Lopez
  • 32 Dilmer Mejia
  • 48 Luis Peña
  • 14 Joshua Quezada
  • 42 Jean Carlo Sandoval
  • 77 Junior Tellez
  • 78 Bryan Torres
Catchers
  • 36 Alberto Mineo
  • 43 Leonardo Ortiz

Infielders

  • 17 Benjamin Alegria
  • 24 Kaiden Cardoso
  • 44 Miguel Angel Hiraldo
  • 20 Saul Orozco
  •  2 Renato Morales
  • 31 Alvaro Rubi

Outfielders

  •  3 Dwight Britton
  •  4 Alec Craig
  • 97 Chase Dawson
  • 15 Caleb McNeely
  • 22 Isaac Mondragon
  • 65 Jairo Perez
  • 12 Jiandido Tromp


Manager

Coaches

  • 13 Juan Lopez
  • 88 Gustavo Salcedo
  • 59 Jenrry Roa
  • 69 Nery Carmona
  • 10 Yader Roa
  • 16 Barney Baltodano
  • 96 Luis Alen

Roster updated on 13 April 2025


References

  1. ^ "COMENTANDO EL BEISBOL NICARAGÜENSE". La Republica. 27 March 1957. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
  2. ^ "Leones propinan juego Sin Hit Ni Carrera". No. 8 January 2023. LBPN. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
  3. ^ Lou Hernández (10 October 2011). The Rise of the Latin American Baseball Leagues, 1947-1961. McFarland. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-7864-8936-7.
  4. ^ "Con Wilfredo Calvino" (in Spanish). La Prensa. 8 September 2003. Retrieved 13 February 2024.
  5. ^ "Leones - Liga de Béisbol Profesional Nacional". lbpn.com.ni. Archived from the original on 2020-01-22.
  6. ^ "Conozca el diseño de Construcción del Nuevo Estadio de Béisbol de León". El19Digital. 18 August 2020. Retrieved 2 September 2025.
  7. ^ "Estadio Rigoberto López Pérez de León, Nicaragua". VisitLeon.com. Retrieved 2 September 2025.