Flying Turtles stay unbeaten after dominant June 17 Wiffle Ball slate

Wiffle Ball · By Sarah Mitchell · June 23, 2026
Flying Turtles stay unbeaten after dominant June 17 Wiffle Ball slate

June 17 in Texas Wiffle Ball was a night of clues, not just scores. The slate produced blowouts, one-run finishes and even a pair of scoreless games, and the Flying Turtles sat at the center of it all with a 10-0 rout of the Pork Chops and a 3-2 escape against the Cosby Show.

The Turtles’ doubleheader was the clearest read on the league’s top end. A 10-run shutout says power and control; a 3-2 win says poise when a contender pushes back. Those two results helped keep the Turtles at 17-0-1, miles ahead of the pack and still looking like the only team in the league with room to breathe. Even when Blue Ballers held them to a 0-0 draw, the Turtles did not lose ground in the broader picture because nobody else was stringing together the same kind of run.

The rest of the night showed how thin the margins are everywhere else. Pork Chops beat D-Generation X 1-0, a result that looked more like survival than separation. Who’s Your Daddy edged the Crooked Rooks 2-1 before falling 2-1 to the Cosby Show, while the Crooked Rooks and D-Generation X played to a 1-1 tie. Cookie Monsters split their night too, opening with a 0-0 tie against the Cosby Show, then later blanking the Pork Chops 1-0 before finishing with a 6-0 win over the Crooked Rooks.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

That mix of shutouts and tight games points to a league that is starting to sort itself by identity. The Turtles win with dominance and the ability to switch into a late-game gear when needed. Teams like the Blue Ballers, Crooked Rooks, Cosby Show and Who’s Your Daddy are living on execution, where one mistake can decide a game and one clean inning can swing a night. Cookie Monsters showed the upside of top-heavy offense in their 6-0 finish, but the sequence of results also made clear that consistency is still the separator.

The standings reflect the gap. The team page lists records from the Turtles’ 17-0-1 mark down to 3-14-1, a spread that turns every June result into playoff math. June 17 did not close the gap at the top. It made the hierarchy more obvious, with the Flying Turtles still setting the standard and everyone else fighting to define the space beneath them.

Sources

  1. [1]texaswiffleball.com