1977–78 Cuban National Series

The 17th season of the Cuban National Series saw Vegueros of Pinar del Río Province win the title, finishing with a slim lead over Industriales of Havana. The makeup of the league was directly influenced by the administrative restructuring of the provinces of Cuba. The league expanded from 14 to 18 teams, and the regular season increased from 39 to 51 games[lower-alpha 1] (although some teams played as few as 46 games).

1977–78 Cuban National Series
Serie Nacional de Béisbol 1977–78
LeagueCuban National Series
SportBaseball
Number of games51
Number of teams18
Regular season
ChampionVegueros (36–14)

Restructuring

Cuba's provinces as of December 1976

Many teams were reconstituted to align with Cuba's restructuring into 14 provinces and one special municipality, announced in December 1976.[1]

The league expanded to 18 teams: 11 provinces fielded a single team each, three provinces fielded two teams each, and the special administrative area of Isla de Pinos (later renamed Isla de la Juventud) fielded a team.

The three provinces fielding two teams each were:

The 1977–78 season was also the first in which aluminum bats were used league-wide replacing the wooden bats, and was also the first in which the designated hitter was used, replacing the pitcher's turn at bat, following an off-season decision by the Baseball Federation of Cuba and by the National Sports Institution, following the lead of the American League of Major League Baseball four years before.

Standings

TeamWLPct.GB
Vegueros (Pinar del Río)3614.720-
Industriales (Havana)3516.686
Camagüey3021.588
Forestales (Pinar del Río)2921.5807
Metropolitanos (Havana)2821.571
Villa Clara2821.571
Cienfuegos2922.568
Guantánamo2822.5608
Ciego de Ávila2623.5309
Citricultores (Matanzas)2724.529
Granma2525.50011
Santiago de Cuba2525.50011
La Habana2126.44613½
Holguín2228.44014
Sancti Spíritus2030.40016
Henequeneros (Matanzas)1630.34718
Las Tunas1237.24423½
Isla de Pinos1041.19626½

Source:[2]

Notes

  1. A team facing each of the other 17 teams in the league 3 times each yields a schedule of 51 games.

References

  1. Goodsell, James Nelson (December 12, 1976). "Cuba's citizens to have a say". The Columbian. Vancouver, Washington. The Christian Science Monitor. p. 47. Retrieved September 2, 2023 via newspapers.com.
  2. "Las 40 primeras Series Nacionales". Granma (in Spanish). Archived from the original on December 27, 2014.

Further reading

  • "Cronología: 1978" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on February 25, 2005. Retrieved 2006-10-05. (Note - text is printed in a white font on a white background, depending on browser used.)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.