Pro Wiffleball aims to centralize stats, scores, and rankings

Wiffle Ball · By Sarah Mitchell · July 18, 2026
Pro Wiffleball aims to centralize stats, scores, and rankings

Pro Wiffleball’s homepage calls the site “the official home of competitive wiffleball stats, scores, and rankings.” The site is making a straightforward play to centralize records in a sport that still spreads its numbers across team pages, league hubs, and social feeds.

Why centralization matters

Wiffle Ball’s growth has created a familiar problem: the games are real, but the data lives in pieces. A league may post scores on its own site, a team may track batting stats on a separate page, and the biggest performances may show up only in a recap post or a social update. Pro Wiffleball pulls those strands together so players, teams, and organizers are looking at the same scoreboard.

Players need a place where home runs, batting average, and rankings sit side by side. League operators need a common reference point when they compare results across formats and regions. Fans benefit too, because a central hub reduces the hunt for scattered updates and makes it easier to follow how one result fits into the larger competitive calendar.

How Pro Wiffleball is built

The site’s navigation shows that it is not trying to function as a simple news page. Its visible menu includes Rankings, Fast Pitch, Medium Pitch, Big League Wiffleball, Scores, and Tournaments. In this sport, the format matters as much as the final score.

Fast Pitch and Medium Pitch are not cosmetic labels. They reflect different pitching styles, rule sets, and run environments, which means a player’s success in one format does not automatically translate to another. By separating those categories, the site compares performance without pretending every game is played under the same conditions.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The homepage also surfaces player-stat leaderboards, including home runs and batting average. One visible snippet lists Jordan Robles with 4 home runs, Luke Rose with 3, and Randy Dalbey with 2.

What the player pages already show

Pro Wiffleball’s rankings page goes beyond broad team standings and tracks individual players by format. It also lists Big League Wiffleball competitors Jordan Robles, Randy Dalbey, and Luke Rose.

The inclusion of Big League Wiffleball means this is not just a generic tournament calendar or a single-league tracker. It is trying to sit across a wider competitive ecosystem, one where the same player may appear in different events, under different rules, with different statistical implications.

The presence of player pages and batting stats also suggests a shift in how the sport documents itself. In backyard and local play, the score is often the only thing that survives. In a more developed competitive environment, the leaderboard, the player page, and the score line document individual performance over time.

The credibility test is breadth, not branding

Related stock photo
Photo by NIKOLAI FOMIN

Pro Wiffleball’s strongest selling point is the promise of a unified record. Its biggest test is whether enough of the sport uses it as the place where records actually settle. A branded homepage can announce authority, but authority in competitive sports is earned through consistency, coverage breadth, and the willingness of leagues to treat the platform as a shared source of truth.

AWA Wiffle’s official league hub includes rankings and leaders with season filters from 2020 through 2026, along with separate batting leaders and pitching leaders. Pro Wiffleball has to match that kind of depth if it wants to be the default reference point.

Big League Wiffle Ball’s site posts scores and promotes an All-Star Game in St. Louis on Fri., July 24. For Pro Wiffleball, the opportunity is to absorb that activity into a larger statistical framework so the scores, the players, and the event calendar sit in one place.

What still has to be proven

The site combines rankings, scores, tournaments, and format-specific pages in one place. It even has a privacy policy page, and the snippet tied to it was indexed on Mar. 21, 2026.

Still, a real central hub needs more than a polished layout. It has to stay current, cover enough leagues to matter, and make its format distinctions clear enough that players trust the comparisons. In a sport where Big League Wiffle Ball, AWA Wiffle, and other properties are all building their own systems, Pro Wiffleball has to collect enough current data to feel complete.

Sources

  1. [1]prowiffleball.com
  2. [2]awawiffle.com
  3. [3]blwwiffleball.com