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Major
League Baseball in North America consists of the National
League and the American League. Historically, teams in one
league never played teams in the other until the World Series,
in which the champions of the two leagues played against each
other; this changed in 1997 with the advent of interleague
play.
In addition to the major leagues,
many North American cities and towns feature minor league
teams. An organization officially styled Minor League Baseball,
formerly the National Association of Professional Baseball,
oversees nearly all minor league baseball in the United States
and Canada. The minor leagues are divided into classes AAA,
AA, A, and rookie league. These minor-league teams are affiliated
with major league teams, and serve to develop young players
and rehabilitate injured major leaguers. The Mexican League
is a Minor League Baseball member league that operates without
affiliations to major league teams. There are also a number
of non-Minor League Baseball leagues that exist independently
of the influence of the major leagues. The Northern League
and the Can-Am League (formerly the Northeast League) are
two of the top independent minor leagues in North America.
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During the late 19th and early 20th
centuries, African-American players were barred from playing the
major leagues, though several did manage to play by claiming to
be Cubans or Indians. As a result, a number of parallel Negro Leagues
were formed. However, after Jackie Robinson began playing with the
major-league Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, the Negro Leagues gradually
faded. The process of integration did not go entirely smoothly;
there were some ugly incidents, including pitchers who would try
to throw directly at an African-American player's head. Now, however,
baseball is fully integrated, and there is little to no racial tension
between teammates.
Between 1943 and 1954, the All-American
Girls Professional Baseball League fielded teams in several Midwestern
towns.
Bat-and-ball games are games that are played
using a bat and a ball. Examples are cricket, baseball, golf, and
older games such as bat and trap. The games rely on the physics
of bats (see baseball bat and cricket bat), which work by greatly
increasing, through the length and flexibility of the bat, the force
that acts upon the ball.
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