Listed below are each of the active sports leagues in Minor League Baseball, with linked articles containing rosters for each active team in the league.
As with nearly all North American professional team sports, there are limits to the roster sizes of minor-league teams, which vary by classification level. Major League Baseball-affiliated teams are limited in how many players they may place on their active rosters, except for some "rookie" leagues. At lower classification levels, there are restrictions on how much prior professional experience players on the roster may have.
While a team's active roster consists of players eligible to compete for the team in games, a team's reserve roster consists of players on the injured list, those who are restricted or suspended, or who are otherwise temporarily inactive.[1] Major league players on rehabilitation assignments do not count against active roster limits.[2]
As of the 2021 season, the following limits are used:
Level | Active roster size[3]: 10–11 | Player restrictions[3]: 100 |
---|---|---|
Triple-A | 28 players | no restrictions |
Double-A | 28 players | no restrictions |
High-A | 30 players | No more than 2 players and 1 player-coach with 6 or more years of minor-league experience |
Single-A | 30 players | No more than 2 players with 5 or more years of minor-league experience |
US-based Rookie |
no limit | No more than 3 players with 4 or more years of minor-league experience |
International Rookie |
35 players | No players with 4 or more years of minor-league experience |
Triple-A edit
International League edit
Pacific Coast League edit
Double-A edit
Eastern League edit
Southern League edit
Texas League edit
High-A edit
Midwest League edit
Northwest League edit
South Atlantic League edit
Single-A edit
California League edit
Carolina League edit
Florida State League edit
Rookie edit
Arizona Complex League edit
Dominican Summer League edit
Florida Complex League edit
Offseason leagues edit
Arizona Fall League edit
See also edit
References edit
- ^ "FAQs: The Business of MiLB". MiLB.com. Minor League Baseball. Retrieved July 25, 2017.
- ^ "Transaction Terminology". Nashville Sounds. Minor League Baseball. Retrieved July 25, 2017.
- ^ a b The Official Professional Baseball Rules Book (PDF). New York City: Office of the Commissioner of Baseball. 2021. Retrieved May 1, 2021 – via mlbpa.org.