Cuban National Series

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Cuban National Series
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event
Cuban National Series.png
SportBaseball
Founded1961
No. of teams16
CountryCuba
Most recent
champion(s)
Granma (3rd title)
Most titlesIndustriales (12)
TV partner(s)Tele Rebelde (Cuba)
(USA, since 2019-2020 season)
YouTube (Worldwide via Game Time platform of the World Baseball Softball Confederation YouTube channel, since 2020-2021 season)

The Cuban National Series (Spanish: Serie Nacional de Béisbol, SNB) is the primary domestic professional baseball competition in Cuba. Formed after the dissolution of the Cuban League in the wake of the Cuban Revolution, the Series is a part of the Cuban national baseball system.

League structure[]

Cuban National Series is located in Cuba
Cienfuegos
Cienfuegos
Bayamo
Bayamo
Isla de la Juventud
Isla de la Juventud
Mayabeque
Las Tunas
Las Tunas
Matanzas
Matanzas
Santiago de Cuba
Santiago de Cuba
Villa Clara
Villa Clara
Artemisa
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Location of teams in the Cuban National Series

Since 1993, the league has had 16 teams: one representing each province, and one for the city of Havana. Each team is made up of players from the province it represents.

In Havana, most of the top tier players take the field for Industriales, traditionally the strongest team in the league. Other typically strong teams include those from Santiago de Cuba, Pinar del Río and Villa Clara.

The 96-game regular season stretches from early August until late January, split into two halves – the fall period stretches from August to early October and the winter period from late October to early January the following year, and culminates with a six team postseason tournament in January to decide the league champion.

In the 2008–2009 season, the Cuban League was reorganized to determine playoff qualification by zones rather than groups, as it had been the previous 15 years. The two zones represented the country's geography, with teams split into Western and Eastern Zone divisions.

In the 2011–2012 series, there were 17 competing teams, since Havana Province was split into two: Artemisa Province and Mayabeque Province. Thus, the Western League had nine teams, including the two new clubs, the Artemisa Cazadores ("Hunters") and the Mayabeque Huracanes ("Hurricanes"). The CNS dropped to 16 teams beginning with the 2012–13 season when the Metropolitanos (long seen as the "farm club" of the powerhouse Industriales) dropped out.

In the 2012–13 season, the zone qualification format was dropped in favor of a phase qualification system. All teams would play 45 games in the "classification phase". The top 8 ranked teams from this phase would move on to the "qualification phase", which determines the playoff participants. In the 2016–17 season, the number of teams in the qualification phase was dropped to six. In the 2020–21 season, the phase format was removed from the league, and the league determined qualifiers based on a single table of standings, with the top teams at the end of the regular season advancing to the postseason, thereby ending divisional play.

The Cuban National Series also serves as the first stage in the selection of players for the Cuban national baseball team, for international competitions during the summer as well as for the World Baseball Classic and the Olympics (1992–2008 and from 2020 onward). The Cuban National Team Preseleccion is selected from the Series and practices in Havana. Sometimes more than one team can be asked to select players for international duty as part of the national team.

To accommodate the 2013 World Baseball Classic, the league took a six-week break after the February 3rd All-Star Game. The CNS played a shortened 45-game season, with all 16 teams competing in a single table format (doing away with the regular two division format). The bottom eight seeded teams then played amongst themselves in the consolation round, while the top eight did the same for the championship. In 2014, the consolation round format for the midseason was officially adopted, effectively making it a de facto wild card game with the winners having a chance to make it to the postseason.

The designated hitter is used in all games. The is held yearly in the middle of the regular season.

Teams[]

Team Location Stadium Capacity Ref.
Artemisa Artemisa 6,000 [1]
Camagüey Camagüey Estadio Cándido González 14,000 [2]
Ciego de Ávila Ciego de Ávila José Ramón Cepero Stadium 13,000 [3]
Cienfuegos Cienfuegos Cinco de Septiembre Stadium 15,600 [4]
Granma Bayamo Mártires de Barbados Stadium 10,000 [5]
Guantánamo Guantánamo Nguyen Van Troi Stadium 14,000 [6]
Holguín Holguín Calixto García Íñiguez Stadium 30,000 [7]
Industriales Havana Estadio Latinoamericano 55,000 [8]
Isla de la Juventud Nueva Gerona Estadio Cristóbal Labra 5,000 [9]
Las Tunas Las Tunas Julio Antonio Mella Stadium 13,000 [10]
Matanzas Matanzas Victoria de Girón Stadium 22,000 [11]
Mayabeque San José de las Lajas Estadio Nelson Fernández 8,000 [12]
Pinar del Río Pinar del Río Estadio Capitán San Luis 8,000 [13]
Sancti Spíritus Sancti Spíritus José Antonio Huelga Stadium 13,000 [14]
Santiago de Cuba Santiago de Cuba Estadio Guillermón Moncada 25,000 [15]
Villa Clara Santa Clara Estadio Augusto César Sandino 18,000 [16]

National Series champions[]

Series Year Winning team Manager
1 1962 Occidentales Fermín Guerra
2 1963 Industriales Ramón Carneado
3 1964 Industriales Ramón Carneado
4 1965 Industriales Ramón Carneado
5 1966 Industriales Ramón Carneado
6 1967 Orientales Roberto Ledo
7 1968 Habana Juan Gómez
8 1969 Azucareros / Villa Clara Servio Borges
9 1970 Henequeneros Miguel A. Domínguez
10 1971 Azucareros / Villa Clara Servio Borges
11 1972 Azucareros / Villa Clara Pedro P. Delgado
12 1973 Industriales Pedro Chávez
13 1974 Habana Jorge Trigoura
14 1975 Agricultores Orlando Leroux
15 1976 Ganaderos Carlos Gómez
16 1977 Citricultores Juan Bregio
17 1978 Vegueros José M. Pineda
18 1979 Sancti Spíritus Cándido Andrade
19 1980 Santiago de Cuba Manuel Miyar
20 1981 Vegueros José M. Pineda
21 1982 Vegueros Jorge Fuentes
22 1983 Villa Clara Eduardo Martín
23 1984 Citricultores Tomás Soto
24 1985 Vegueros Jorge Fuentes
25 1986 Industriales Pedro Chávez
26 1987 Vegueros Jorge Fuentes
27 1988 Vegueros Jorge Fuentes
28 1989 Santiago de Cuba Higinio Vélez
29 1990 Henequeneros Gerardo Junco
30 1991 Henequeneros Gerardo Junco
31 1992 Industriales Jorge Trigoura
32 1993 Villa Clara Pedro Jova
33 1994 Villa Clara Pedro Jova
34 1995 Villa Clara Pedro Jova
35 1996 Industriales Pedro Medina
36 1997 Pinar del Río Jorge Fuentes
37 1998 Pinar del Río Alfonso Urquiola
38 1999 Santiago de Cuba Higinio Vélez
39 2000 Santiago de Cuba Higinio Vélez
40 2001 Santiago de Cuba Higinio Vélez
41 2002 Holguín Héctor Hernández
42 2003 Industriales Rey Vicente Anglada
43 2004 Industriales Rey Vicente Anglada
44 2005 Santiago de Cuba Antonio Pacheco
45 2006 Industriales Rey Vicente Anglada
46 2007 Santiago de Cuba Antonio Pacheco
47 2008 Santiago de Cuba Antonio Pacheco
48 2009 Habana Esteban Lombillo
49 2010 Industriales Germán Mesa
50 2011 Pinar del Río Alfonso Urquiola
51 2012 Ciego de Ávila Roger Machado
52 2013 Villa Clara Ramón Moré
53 2014 Pinar del Río Alfonso Urquiola
54 2015 Ciego de Ávila Roger Machado
55 2016 Ciego de Ávila Roger Machado
56 2017 Granma Carlos Martí
57 2018 Granma Carlos Martí
58 2019 Las Tunas Pablo Civil
59 2020 Matanzas Armando Ferrer Ruiz
60 2021 Granma Carlos Martí

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Artemisa". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  2. ^ "Camagüey". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  3. ^ "Ciego de Ávila". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  4. ^ "Cienfuegos". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  5. ^ "Granma". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  6. ^ "Guantánamo". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  7. ^ "Holguín". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  8. ^ "Industriales". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  9. ^ "Isla de la Juventud". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  10. ^ "Las Tunas". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  11. ^ "Matanzas". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  12. ^ "Mayabeque". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  13. ^ "Pinar del Río". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  14. ^ "Sancti Spíritus". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  15. ^ "Sancti Spíritus". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  16. ^ "Villa Clara". Cuban National Series Official Website (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 April 2021.

External links[]

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