“Baseball is ninety percent mental. The other half is physical.” — Yogi Berra
“Baseball is ninety percent mental. The other half is physical.” — Yogi Berra

For most of baseball’s history, the game has existed not only in professional stadiums, but in local parks, small clubs, working communities, and among groups of friends gathering simply to play. Amateur baseball remains an essential part of the sport’s fabric — a way people continue to meet, compete, travel, and build community through the game itself.
Outside of a handful of countries, opportunities to regularly play organized hardball baseball can be limited, and access to proper fields, equipment, and competition is not always guaranteed.
IBAT was created in part to help bring players and enthusiasts together across those distances and offer the experience of playing meaningful games in places deeply connected to the history and culture of baseball.
To gather, travel, compete, and simply play the game together
— regardless of level — still matters.
For most of baseball’s history, the game has existed not only in professional stadiums, but in local parks, small clubs, working communities, and among groups of friends gathering simply to play. Amateur baseball remains an essential part of the sport’s fabric — a way people continue to meet, compete, travel, and build community through the game itself.
Outside of a handful of countries, opportunities to regularly play organized hardball baseball can be limited, and access to proper fields, equipment, and competition is not always guaranteed.
IBAT was created in part to help bring players and enthusiasts together across those distances and offer the experience of playing meaningful games in places deeply connected to the history and culture of baseball.
To gather, travel, compete, and simply play the game together
— regardless of level — still matters.
For most of baseball’s history, the game has existed not only in professional stadiums, but in local parks, small clubs, working communities, and among groups of friends gathering simply to play. Amateur baseball remains an essential part of the sport’s fabric — a way people continue to meet, compete, travel, and build community through the game itself.
Outside of a handful of countries, opportunities to regularly play organized hardball baseball can be limited, and access to proper fields, equipment, and competition is not always guaranteed.
IBAT was created in part to help bring players and enthusiasts together across those distances and offer the experience of playing meaningful games in places deeply connected to the history and culture of baseball.
To gather, travel, compete, and simply play the game together
— regardless of level — still matters.



