Premier League WIFFLE opens Brooksville tournament signups for August 1 event
Premier League WIFFLE opened registration July 1 for its August 1 Brooksville tournament, with team entry set at $200 and individual signup at $35. The pricing and open-player option show exactly what PLW is trying to build: a field that can grow beyond one-off brackets and keep feeding a larger circuit.
PLW has been framing Brooksville as more than a single stop. The league says the Florida Challengers League is the next step for teams and players who want more than one tournament a month, and it says that starting in August in Brooksville, players can compete, build stats, get noticed and earn their spot in the PLW system. On the Pro Circuit side, PLW describes regular Saturday tournaments as a way for teams to earn Pro Points, climb the rankings and qualify for bigger events later in the season.
The schedule behind that plan is ambitious. PLW says its fall season may include up to 100 official league games between August 10 and December 4, with results counting toward standings, player stats, team records, league leaders, January league evaluation and PLW/PCL placement. The league’s stated 2026 goals are to build momentum, introduce players and teams to the PLW experience, test event formats, grow the community and develop a high-quality wiffleball environment before a full launch of the league and pro circuit in January 2027.

Brooksville already has a result the league can hang that pitch on. On June 20, eight teams played at PLW’s Brooksville property on turf and grass fields, and the Brooksville-based Pitching Peckers won the tournament. Austin Miller was named Tournament MVP after the Peckers ran the table with a 5-0 finish.
That matters because PLW has seen Brooksville draw beyond its own projections before. At the league’s first Florida tournament in July 2025, PLW expected about six teams and ended up with more than a dozen. The August 1 signup is the next test of whether that kind of demand can be repeated on command, with a registration structure built to pull in both established squads and individual players.

If Brooksville fills again, PLW gets more than another event date. It gets another data set, another round of player stats and another argument that competitive wiffle ball can support a fuller calendar instead of a handful of isolated tournaments.