Livestream - FR Cardinals
Cardinals Welcome Baseball Season Back to Town
Baseball is back, and the Cardinals are ready to bring summer nights, wooden bats, and hometown energy back to the ballpark.
The new season is getting started this week, with the Cardinals returning to the field for their first action of the year. Fans will get an early look at the team on May 26 during a scrimmage game. The Cardinals are scheduled to face the Yorktown Coconuts, with first pitch set for 6 p.m.
The official season opener is set for Sunday, May 31, 2026, when the Cardinals face the Culpeper Cavaliers.
The May 26 game will give players a chance to settle in, coaches a chance to see the roster in action, and fans a chance to welcome the Cardinals back to town. While it will not count in the standings, the scrimmage is an important step before the regular season begins.
For many players, summer baseball is a bridge between college competition and the next level. It is a time to sharpen skills, adjust to wooden bats, play nearly every day, and compete in front of local fans who quickly become part of the team’s summer story.
The Cardinals play in the Valley Baseball League, one of the most historic collegiate summer baseball leagues in the country. The league began in 1923 and was sanctioned by the NCAA in 1961. Since 1993, the Valley League has used wooden bats, giving college players a game experience closer to professional baseball.
The league is based in the Shenandoah Valley region of Virginia and is sanctioned by both the NCAA and Major League Baseball. It is also part of the National Alliance of College Summer Baseball, a group of top summer leagues across the country. Major League Baseball provides grant funding to support the Valley League.
Over the years, the Valley Baseball League has built a strong reputation for developing talent. More than 1,000 former Valley League players have gone on to play professional baseball. In 2008, the league set a record when 79 former players were selected in the Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft.
That history gives each new season added meaning. Every player who arrives for the summer brings college experience, big goals, and a chance to become part of a league known for helping players grow. Some are looking to earn more playing time when they return to school. Others are hoping to catch the eye of professional scouts. All of them are stepping into a league where the game is taken seriously.
For the Cardinals, the early days of the season are about building chemistry. Summer rosters often come together quickly, with players arriving from different colleges, different states, and different conferences. Many are meeting their teammates for the first time just days before taking the field.
That makes the scrimmage on May 26 especially useful. It allows the team to work through game situations, test lineups, see pitchers in live action, and get comfortable with the pace of summer league baseball. It also gives fans a first look at the players who will represent the Cardinals throughout the season.
Then, on May 31, the games begin for real.
The Cardinals will open the season against the Culpeper Cavaliers, a matchup that marks the official start of another Valley League summer. Opening night brings a different feeling. The uniforms are fresh, the standings are empty, and every team believes it has a chance to build something special.
For the community, the return of the Cardinals means more than baseball. It means families in the stands, kids chasing foul balls, neighbors catching up between innings, and summer evenings built around the rhythm of the game. Collegiate summer baseball has a local feel that is hard to match. The players may only be in town for a short time, but the connection with fans can grow quickly.
That connection is part of what keeps the Valley Baseball League strong after more than a century. The league has changed over time, but its purpose has stayed the same: give talented college players a competitive place to develop while bringing quality baseball to local communities.
As the Cardinals begin another season, fans will have a chance to watch that story unfold from the first pitch. The May 26 scrimmage offers a preview. The May 31 opener against Culpeper starts the chase.

After a long wait, the Cardinals are back in town. Summer baseball is here again.
Fans are encouraged to come out, grab a seat in the stands, and be part of the action in person. For those who cannot make it to the ballpark, home games at The Bing will be live-streamed on the Royal Examiner, making it easy to follow the Cardinals all season long.






