South Williamsport, Pa.
Distance: 136 kilometres
Home of the Little League World Series.
Each summer since 1947, teams from across the country and later, around the world, have come to this town in rural central Pennsylvania in the Little League World Series tournament. Games are played at Little League Volunteer Stadium and Howard J. Lamade Stadium, both located in South Williamsport, and televised around the world. Last year, Huntington Beach Ocean View beat Japan to win the crown.
This year’s tournament will run Aug. 16-26. Tickets for World Series games have already been sold through littleleague.org, with entries closing at the end of March. Tickets will go on sale again next winter. Other times of the year, visitors can stop in Little League’s museum and Hall of Excellence.
Nearby Williamsport is home to the Crosscutters, a short-season A-level team in the New York-Penn League, who are affiliated with the Philadelphia Phillies. They play in Bowman Field, erected in 1926. Williamsport has seen its pro baseball fortunes rise and fall several times over the decades, so visit soon since things seems to be on the upswing.
Little League: www.littleleague.org. The museum is located at 525 Route 15 Highway, South Williamsport, PA. More info: littleleague.org/learn/museum.htm or 570-326- 3607
Binghamton, N.Y.
Distance: 222 kilometres
Through the baseball bat forest.
The road north out of Williamsport takes drivers into the rural "T" of Pennsylvania, the area made up of everything outside of Pittsburgh in the southwest and Philadelphia in the southeast. Farm country gives way to the Appalachian Mountains. Here, on the border between the Keystone State and Empire State are the forests of pine and ash that are turned into baseball bats. Most of the operations are to the west of our route, around the Larimer & Norton lumber company in Russell, Penn. Each day, two truckloads of logs from the company are turned into 8,000 "billets" - basically tube shaped wood cores ready to be made into bats, which are then shipped to Louisville for the final fashioning of the bat. Think of all the home runs in those endless miles of trees as you drive over the border to Binghamton, where you can catch a game of the Binghamton Mets, the AA affiliate of the New York Mets. The "B-Mets" play at NYSEG Park.
Binghamton Mets: 211 Henry St., Binghamton, NY. More info: bmets.com or 607-723-6387
Oneonta, NY
Distance: 96 kilometres
Baseball how it used to be
Built in 1939, Historic Damaschke Field is on the endangered ballpark list. The minor-league Oneonta Tigers blew town for Norwich, Conn., in 2010. But the park has stayed alive with the Oneonta Outlaws, part of the New York Collegiate Baseball League, a 12-team summer league for college players. The Outlaws won the 2011 league championship. The ballpark claims some of the closest seats to the action in professional baseball. Teams have played on the site since 1906 and the backdrop of the forested hills beyond the outfield wall is one of the prettiest in the region. For our road trip, it’s a great stop because it’s just a half hour to the end of the line.
15 James Georgeson Ave., Oneonta, NY. More info: oneontaoutlaws.com or 607-432-6326
Cooperstown, N.Y.
Distance: 37 kilometres
Baseball’s holy of holys
The legend goes that an Army officer named Abner Doubleday invented the national pastime in a cow pasture on Elihu Phinney’s Cooperstown farm in 1839. It is up there with George Washington chopping down a cherry tree when it comes to American myths that have been debunked. But the idea held long enough for Cooperstown to be selected as the site of the National Baseball Hall of Fame. It would be worth a visit just for the hall and the adjacent museum, a treasure house of bats, balls, gloves, seats, hats and other souvenirs from great and infamous moments in the games history.
But the town itself has a 19th century feel that will appeal to any baseball fan, the most nostalgic of any sport. Special games are still played at Doubleday Field, built in the 1920s on part of Phinney’s farm. The Hall of Fame Classic, featuring two teams, including Hall of Famers, is played every Father’s Day weekend. A great time to visit is during the playoffs, when fall foliage wraps the towns in leafy reds, golds and browns.
25 Main St., Cooperstown, NY. More info: baseballhall.org or 888-425-5633
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