Get ready for a scoop of baseball history mixed with a dash of legal absurdity! For the second time, the Binghamton Rumble Ponies are transforming their identity to celebrate—or perhaps poke fun at—one of New York’s most bizarre Blue Laws. Last year, they trotted onto the field as the Bathtub Donkeys, honoring a law that forbids donkeys from sleeping in bathtubs. This season, they’re back with an even sweeter twist: meet the Southern Tier Scoop Scoundrels. But here’s where it gets controversial—the law they’re referencing bans carrying an ice cream cone in your back pocket on Sundays. Why? No one’s entirely sure, but theories abound. One suggests it was an extension of a broader Sunday ice cream ban, while another hints at horse thieves using ice cream as bait. Is this law a relic of religious restrictions, a quirky crime-fighting measure, or just plain odd? You decide.
The Scoop Scoundrels brand is as playful as the law it highlights, featuring a masked ice cream cone character donning an Old West cowboy hat and a logo adorned with maraschino cherries. The name also nods to the Southern Tier, a region along New York’s southern border with Pennsylvania, which the team has celebrated before—like last year’s Southern Tier Spicy Meatballs stint. And this is the part most people miss: these alternate identities aren’t just for laughs; they’re a clever way to engage fans and spark conversations about local history. The Scoop Scoundrels will hit the field July 17–19, 2026, but the debate over this law’s origins is already heating up. What do you think? Is this law a harmless quirk or a relic of outdated restrictions? Share your thoughts below!