Hawaii national baseball team

Hawaii national baseball team
Information
Country Hawaii
FederationInternational Baseball Federation
International Baseball Congress
World Cup
Appearances1 (first in 1940)
Best result5th (1940)

The Hawaii national baseball team was the national baseball team of the Territory of Hawaii. It represented the territory in international competitions before Hawaii was granted statehood in 1959; Hawaii now competes as part of the United States national team.

Hawaii competed in the third edition of the Amateur World Series in 1940, where it finished fifth.

Hawaii also participated in the 1940 East Asian Games, held in Tokyo as a substitute for the canceled 1940 Summer Olympics. The territory was represented by the Hawaii Asahis amateur team. It lost all three of its games to Japan (4–3), the Philippines (4–2), and Manchukuo (1–0).[1][2]

Hawaii was represented by the Honolulu Red Sox at the 1955 and 1956 Global World Series, organized by the National Baseball Congress. However, at the 1957 installment of the tournament, the territory was represented by a selection of Hawaiian all-stars.[3]

Competitive Record

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Amateur World Series

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Amateur World Series & Baseball World Cup record
Year Result Position Pld W L % RS RA Org.
United Kingdom 1938 Did not enter IBF
Cuba 1939
Cuba 1940 Single-table tournament 5th 12 5 7 .417 51 49
Cuba 1941 Did not enter
Cuba 1942
Cuba 1943
Venezuela 1944 FIBA
Venezuela 1945
Colombia 1947
Nicaragua 1948
Nicaragua 1950
Mexico 1951
Cuba 1952
Venezuela 1953
Total 0 Titles 1/14 12 5 7 .417 51 49

East Asian Games

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Global World Series

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References

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  1. ^ Guthrie-Shimizu, Sayuri (2012). Transpacific Field of Dreams: How Baseball Linked the United States and Japan in Peace and War. University of North Carolina Press. p. 171. ISBN 9780807882665.
  2. ^ Bedingfield, Gary (April 2022). "The 1940 Keio University Baseball Tour of Hawaii". Baseball in Wartime Newsletter (58): 13.
  3. ^ "Some Answers on the Global Series". Center for Labor Education & Research, University of Hawaii. Honolulu Record. 15 August 1957. Retrieved 27 July 2024.