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JUNE 22
CARPENTER CUP SEMIFINAL
Tri-Cape 6, Catholic League 5
Ouch. This one truly stung, mostly because the Cath appeared to
be in GREAT shape to advance to the final and defend its championship. Not only
did the CL own leads of 4-1 and 5-3, but that last one came with only two
at-bats for T-C remaining and C-E sr. RH Brian Herman going to the mound.
But the result was disaster and more than a few of the CL guys had
dazed/dismayed looks on their faces as they left the CBP playing surface (on
what was a sweltering day). Herman was so good, so dominant, so collected while
pitching C-E to its first title since 1968. It was very surprising to see him
struggle. Meanwhile, it was NOT surprising to see that Brian was distraught in
the moments immediately afterward. That confirmed for me what I already knew:
He’s a competitive young man with a BIG interest in doing well for his TEAM and
he’s bothered if that doesn’t happen. Which is EXACTLY the way it should be. We
won’t go into complete detail on what happened in the home eighth, but the
trouble did not begin until two were out. Two walks, one HBP and two wild
pitches were part of the inning, and the second WP, which allowed the sixth run
to score, was quite high, sailing past Roman jr. C Adam George to the
screen. There were two hits in the inning, so T-C assuredly helped its own
cause. The in-defeat ink went to N-G sr. LH Albert DiDomenico, the
coaches’ South MVP. He worked the third through fifth innings, surrendering one
run (unearned) and two hits. If not for the late problems, he would have gotten
the win. Another headliner was SJ Prep sr. SS Tom Elliott. Batting
ninth as a backup, he posted a walk, single to center and an HBP, in addition to
two steals and two runs scored. His first-bat in the fifth was a thing of
beauty. He fouled off four-five pitches before earning the walk and set a
wonderful tone. La Salle sr. CF Mike Villari, O’Hara sr. 1B Jonathan
Szeliga and C-E sr. LF John Malloy followed with singles, with RBI
going to Villari and Malloy. A later groundout by La Salle jr. C Sean Saverio
got home the third run of the inning. The other CL runs? SJ Prep sr. 3B Matt
Tiagwad slammed an RBI double in the third and La Salle sr. 1B Jared
Carter rapped an RBI single in the eighth. Both hits came with two away.
Nice. La Salle (there’s that school again – smile) sr. LH Matt Zielinski
pitched the first two innings in fine fashion. He finished the tourney allowing
six hits and one run (earned) in eight innings while striking out 12. For photo
purposes, I watched this game from in or around the 3B dugout. About 27 times
(smile), the CL guys asked to borrow my pen so they could sign autographs for
youngsters who were grouped right behind the dugout. Mostly on gloves and hats.
The kids were thoroughly into the game and made noise to the very end. I’m
guessing a few were brothers of CL guys. Also that maybe I’ll see them someday
as players . . . Well, that’s it for another school year, troops. I had some
level of fun (often LOTS of it) every single day and here’s hoping you did, too.
Thanks for paying attention.
P.S. -- It came to my attention that the official boxscore provided by
the Phillies for this game had a mistake with the pitching lines. SJ Prep's
Doug DiSandro indeed pitched one inning. Here's the correct info:
Ryan Buch 1 - 1 - 1 - 1 - 0 - 2
Doug DiSandro 1 - 1 - 1 - 1 - 0 - 0
Buch threw three WPs. DiSandro threw one.
JUNE 19
CARPENTER CUP QUARTERFINAL
Catholic League 14, Inter-Ac/Independent 5
Whoa, what an inning. Fifteen batters, 10 runs, almost 11
consecutive hits (a borderline error prevented that from happening), and more
than enough fun and frolicking en route to the erasing of a 4-3 deficit in the
visiting seventh. Believe it or not, though, this inning had more "almost outs"
than perhaps any in baseball history. Yes, many of the balls were stung. But
most came within a few feet, or even inches, of being caught. It was uncanny how
well directed these CL base hits were. Shot to the left side. Oh, just out of
the reach! Hard up the middle. Oh, just out of the reach! Looper to the
outfield. Oh, just out of the reach! The frame began innocuously enough as
Haverford School jr. RH Mike Galetta recorded a looking strikeout. And
here's what happened from there (brace yourself): single to RF by K-K jr. RF
Mike Fazio; double to RF by Wood sr. 3B Chris Crawford (it was a
blast the wind pushed down and Gtn. Academy sr. RF Mark Brown stumbled as
he tried to regroup and come back to catch it); RBI single to LF by Roman jr. C
Adam George; bobbled grounder to SS by C-E jr. 2B Ryan Terry (run
in); ringing two-run triple down the RF line by Bonner sr. OF Mike Dunn;
(HS jr. Jim McConlogue came on to pitch); RBI single to LF by jr. Carroll
DH Chris Lisowski; single to CF by SJ Prep sr. SS Tom Elliott;
single to RF by Neumann-Goretti sr. CF Albert DiDomenico to load the
bases; infield RBI single by La Salle sr. 1B Jared Carter; two-run
single to LF by Fazio; RBI single to RF by Crawford, popout to 2B by George;
(Chestnut Hill sr. RH Cory Broderick came on to pitch); infield RBI
single, plus an error, for Terry; looking strikeout by Dunn to end it. Phew, and
phew again . . . Have to head out for my son's game right now, a shade before 4
p.m. Just wanted to get this part posted, along with the photos (no captions for
now). We'll catch up later tonight. Sound OK? Thanks . . . OK, back. Kevin’s
team got thumped, 11-4. Second place is better than eighth, right? But as a
test, I asked him whether he wanted me to take a picture of him with his
runner-up trophy. He declined. Good! That’s what I’m talking about! He gets it
!(ha ha). Meanwhile, back to this Carpenter Cup report . . . I-A/Indep. built
its lead thanks to one in the first (unearned; RBI single by GA sr. 3B Erich
Enns) and three in the fourth (RBI single by GA frosh 2B Tommy Coyle
and two more on an infield bobble). SJ Prep sr. LH Doug DiSandro yielded
those three runs and was reached for two hits and a walk in the fifth. But two
were out when the walk took place and DiSandro wriggled free by inducing a foul
popup. C-E sr. RH Ryan Buch worked a perfect sixth (two whiffs) so he
became the winning pitcher thanks to the 10-run outburst. Bonner sr. RH Sean
Fitzgerald and C-E sr. RH Brian Herman worked a scoreless inning
apiece and then Herman went back out for the ninth. In a classic battle between
two big-timers, Malvern sr. CF Tom Grandieri reached Herman for a hard
groundball single to CF. His Friar teammate, jr. SS Phil Gosselin, then
drove an RBI double to deep left-center. Malvern jr. C Pat McGinley was
the early-game star for the I-A/Indep. squad, thanks to a pair of doubles. The
MVP of this and many other tournament days: PA announcer Dan Baker. He
did the doubleheader at Penn, then eased over to CBP for Phillies-Yankees. Dan
works tirelessly to make sure pronunciations are right, and that was never more
evident in 1984 when the U.S. played Korea in an Olympic prelim at the Vet. He
went over the names again and again with a team rep to make sure the guys’ names
weren’t butchered. Pretty nice, right?!
JUNE 14
CARPENTER CUP FIRST ROUND
Sub. One National/Bicentennial 8, Public League 5
Almost every baseball game includes some errors and just last night,
in fact, the Phillies made three in one inning vs. the Mets. So I guess we
shouldn't complain too much that the Pub finished this one with seven. Know
what, though? We ARE going to complain because three came on flat-out drops (as
opposed to misfires and bobbles) and they were killers in a game that could have
produced the Pub's second win in the tourney's 21-year history. Only half of the
winner's eight runs were earned. Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. Here's your weird fact
for the game: The Pub at one point owned a 5-4 lead even though it had committed
three times as many miscues, 6-2, as The Team With the Really Long Name. With
Central soph RH Micah Winterstein on the hill, They went ahead, 6-5, in
the fifth and a dropped throw at first base opened the gates. An RBI triple
followed immediately and an infield single later brought in run No. 6. The Pub's
first pitcher was Northeast jr. RH Joe Breitweiser (85 mph on the guns)
and he was victimized by three miscues in the very first inning. Those three
came with just one out, so the Pub was on a pace to give up 108 outs for the
nine-inning game! Holy Shoddy Fielding! All five Pub runs came in the first two
innings (three, then two). The RBI went to Frankford sr. CF Edwin Burgos
(triple), GAMP sr. LF Ryan Challender (infield single), Central sr. C
Joe Magdovitz (right-side groundout; good piece of hitting) and Frankford
sr. 1B Juan Carlos Torres (single). The fifth run came courtesy of a
double-steal involving Burgos (to second) and Central sr. 2B Matt Smith (to home
on the back end.) The ink went to Penn soph LH Guiceppy Cruz, who drew
attention a month ago by pitching a 21-K no-hitter against Delaware Valley (OK,
so he walked seven; he's just scratching the surface -- smile). Cruz was clocked
at 77-78 in his two-plus innings. His line: three hits, two runs (one earned),
no walks, two hit batters and two strikeouts. Only one ball was smashed. For all
of its woes, the Pub could/should have gone to the ninth in a 7-7 tie! Northeast
frosh RF Tim Freiling beat out a single to deep SS to lead off the home
eighth and Saul sr. RF-C Enrique Meletiche smacked a ball way out down
the LF line. It's 280-290 feet to that part of the park, and then there's a
sharp angle to 325-foot sign not far away. The ball was hooking and was ruled
foul. Some folks thought it was fair. Oh, well. The Pub went quietly thereafter.
JUNE 12
PIAA CLASS AAAA STATE SEMIFINAL
Delaware Valley 7, Central 1
Over the next few years we’ll learn whether this state
tournament mini-run by Central – remember, as cool as it was, it did last only
two games – was the start of something nice or merely an aberration. With a
chance to advance to Friday’s final in Altoona, the Lancers went mostly in quiet
fashion against a pitcher, sr. LH Jesse Johnson, who did not have one
great pitch, but had three “very goods” and was able to mostly put them where he
wanted. Central collected just two hits and they came back to back with two away
in the fifth inning. Soph 2B-P Micah Winterstein sent a looper down the
RF line and it was perfectly placed, falling between the line and the diving RF.
He got a double on it and soph RF Mike Braun followed with a chopper to
the 1B side of the mound. Johnson couldn’t get it and the 2B made an excellent
effort with an on-the-charge throw across his body. Braun was safe and
Winterstein scrambled to third. Next, Braun (I love the leads this kid gets;
always pushes the envelope) broke for second on a steal and the ball hit off a
glove and went into the OF. Winterstein thus scored the Lancers’ lone run. That
moved them within 2-1, but DV erupted for three in the bottom half to chase jr.
RH Jared Farbman and seize control once and for all. The big hit was
Johnson’s two-run double to left-center. Winterstein replaced Farbman and the
next guy squeezed. There was hesitation by Micah and sr. C Joe Magdovitz
and the play was scored an RBI single. DV tacked on two more in the sixth. If
Central had a highlight, aside from handling itself with class
(players/coaches/fans/everybody), it came in the first inning. The field in
Coplay is only 350 feet to dead CF and C Matt Accardi ripped a shot a few
feet to the right of the sign. Fleishman adeptly got to the not-too-high fence
and did a slight lift to get up and over and prevent what would have been a
two-run homer. The Lancers steamed out of the dugout to greet him. Nice! In the
fifth, Winterstein showed a sound grasp of the fundamentals when a runner
strayed off third in one of those sucker-’em-into-a-blunder attempts. Micah ran
right at the guy, forcing him to make a choice and an out was recorded as Magdo
gunned to Farbman at 3B after a little bit of a rundown. Assuming good health
and behavior, Central should again be a force next season. Almost all of the
pitching will return along with the four through eight hitters. Thanks to coach
Bob Barthelmeh and his assistants/players/managers for making the task of
covering this team very enjoyable. Stay well, everyone.
JUNE 12
CARPENTER CUP FIRST ROUND
Inter-Ac/Independent 7, Olympic-Colonial 3
Though the I-A has only six schools, it dominates this squad and
several guys came through in big fashion to produce this victory. The headliner
was Malvern sr. 1B Tim McEndy, who got lost for 40 minutes while trying
to find the field but then rapped a pair of RBI doubles. The lefty swinger
inside-outed the first one down the LF line, then pulled the next one into the
RF corner. Not to be outdone, his good buddy, Malvern sr. OF Tom Grandieri,
smacked a two-run triple to left-center in the eighth, lifting the lead from 5-3
to 7-3. McEndy's first-inning double was immediately followed by another, as Gtn.
Academy sr. OF Mark Brown rifled a one-hopper off the fence in
left-center. A 3-3 tie was snapped in the sixth. Penn Charter frosh 1B Rob
Amaro and GA sr. 1B Jason Davila drew leadoff walks and a forceout at
second followed. GA frosh 2B Tommy Coyle grounded to 2B. The ball was
bobbled and Amaro ran home, with Coyle getting credit for an RBI despite the
miscue. One out later, Grandieri was safe at first on what could have been a
dangerous play (he smacked into the first baseman). As the two guys tried to
figure out how dazed they were, there was a slight delay and no one called time.
Malvern jr. C Pat McGinley was heads-up, and he easily made it home. The
starting pitcher was PC jr. LH Mark Adzick. No other way to say this: He
was not sharp. He walked four and plunked one in his three-inning stint and he
was the only I-A/I hurler to yield a run. Over the next six innings, Malvern sr.
RH Anthony Fenza, Haverford School jr. RH Mike Galetta and two
Chestnut Hill guys, jr. Anthony Cafagna and sr. Cory Broderick,
combined to pitch two-hit shutout ball with six Ks. Because this game was
completed in decent time, I was able to follow through with a plan to head to
Coplay for the Central game. Meant I missed the CL's 1-0 win over Jersey Shore,
but now the CL and I-A/I will meet in a quarterfinal next Monday, and that's way
cool (ha ha).
JUNE 8
PIAA CLASS AAAA STATE QUARTERFINAL
Central 1, Central Dauphin 0
So, check THIS out: Of all the AAAA teams in this state that
play baseball, Central is one of only four still alive! The Lancers came up with
a wonderful performance in a picturesque venue, Spring-Ford High's mini-stadium,
off of Route 422 between King of Prussia and Pottstown, and they're headed next
to a state semifinal. This is a great development for a league that has been
mostly pounded in football, soccer, wrestling, other baseball games, etc., and,
lest anyone forget, has notched just one win in the entire history of the
Carpenter Cup. Coach Bob Barthelmeh and his boys are to be big-time
commended, not so much because they won this one but because of the WAY they won
it -- by withstanding the kind of game-long pressure that's visible, even
tangible, only in 1-0 games. The ink went mostly to soph RH Micah "Stine Not
Steen" Winterstein, who's all of 5-7, 125, but has a heart as big as all
outdoors. (I love that phrase -- ha ha. Ex-Edison hoops coach Howard Ratinoff
once used it to describe one of his players. Not sure where he got.) Micah's
other position is second base, and he used outstanding fielding to help himself
to an immense degree. He had five assists in all and three were very important:
in the first, he started an inning-ending doubleplay; in the second, with one
out and runners on second and third, he snagged a chopper and held both guys to
get the second out (then sr. SS Matt Smith followed with a vintage play
on a deep-in-the-hole grounder); in the fourth, he was cat-quick off the mound
on a bunt and got a forceout at third. Winterstein kept almost every single
pitch at knee level and effectively mixed fastballs and curves with a changeup.
He allowed just two hits in his five-inning stint and then gave way to jr. RH
Jared Farbman. As Farbman warmed up, that back-in-the-day, Paved-Paradise
song, whatever the heck it's called (can't hang with that stuff, give me Motown
and the Philly Sound -- smile), came over the sound system and part of the
lyrics are, "You don't know what you've got 'til it's gone." Hmmmm. A negative
omen, maybe? Because Winterstein definitely had been giving off a
sprinkled-in-stardust aura. When a CD dude smacked a one-out double into
left-center (it wound up being the game's only extra-base hit), the tension
mounted. And intensified as the next guy hit a shot to deep CF. But sr.
Joshua Fleishman ran it down and an easy groundout followed and CD went
1-2-3 in the seventh. The Lancers scored in the first as Smith, the leadoff man,
singled hard to left-center, moved to second as sr. 2B-3B Nick DeLeo
grounded out, moved to third on a passed ball and came home on Farbman's hard
single to right-center. (We made it an earned run, figuring Smith would have
scored from second if the PB had not occurred.) Central did little stirring
thereafter, honestly, except for the fourth inning. Soph LF Aaron Esbensen
and Farbman began the frame with singles and an extra run or two would have been
much appreciated. Jr. 1B Jim Benek sent a blast to left that was caught.
Feeling a little frisky, pinch-runner Lance Wetzel tried to move to third
and was doubled-up there. Winterstein then grounded out. There was a highly
entertaining scene after the game. DeLeo, due to a minor school infraction, had
been banned from attending last night's Senior Prom. As Nick sat in the dugout,
the other Lancers playfully staged a sit-down strike on the gravel in front of
the dugout and said they wouldn't leave unless the decision was reversed. Most
of the guys even took off their hats and waved them from side to side, as if to
say, "We're begging you." Dr. Sheldon Pavel, Central's principal, had a
discussion with other school officials maybe 10 yards away and eventually gave
the sign: OK, he can go to the prom. The players went nuts, swarming around Nick
and then dousing him with water. Great theater!! Ha, ha. I spent part of the
game with Frankford coach Bob Peffle, who loved what he was watching and
offered close-range encouragement to the Lancers from behind the fence near the
on-deck circle. Only one problem with this win: Carp Cup play begins Monday,
with the CL and Inter-Ac both scheduled for action, and Central will be playing
somewhere, too. And likely not very close to Philly. We'll see how we work out
the coverage . . .
JUNE 5
PIAA CLASS AAAA, FIRST ROUND
Central 10, West Chester Henderson 9
This is usually NOT a good idea: After taking a 3-1 lead on a
tremendous effort by your No. 9 hitter (more on that momentarily), you watch as
your franchise pitcher goes back to the mound and allows the opposition to storm
ahead, 5-3, after just four batters. That was what happened to Central and jr.
RH Jared Farbman. But as you noticed by reading the score line, Central
WON this tilt and, in doing so, not only overcame the kick to the groin, but
became the first Pub team to win a state playoff in something other than
basketball. Cool, huh!? The ink went to sr. CF Joshua "Fuego" Fleishman,
and he was the aforementioned No. 9 hitter who made the tremendous effort. It
came in the home second and was truly amazing. The setup: with one away, jr. 1B
Jim Benek walked and was doubled home by soph 2B Micah Winterstein.
Soph RF Mike Braun then beat out an infield single and promptly thieved
second. Fleishman was given a bunt sign, but was not informed of the fact that
Winterstein was also going to try to steal the base, just in case. Phew, baby!
ha ha. Winterstein broke early enough that the pitcher had more than enough
opportunity to follow the guidebook on this one, and he came WAY up and WAY in.
Fleishman got the bunt down in perfect fashion -- if not, the ball might have
hit him flush in the face -- and TWO runs scored because Braun kept motoring
while WCH made the play on Fleishman and he beat the return throw to the plate.
Tremendous play by all involved!! But if you think that one's good, check out
this one: two of the runs in Central's seven-run fourth scored on a two-out
strikeout! Yeah, baby!! Gotta love that, right?? Thirteen batters came to the
plate in that frame and many, of course, produced. For posterity's sake, since
it helped produce this historic win, we'll go batter by batter: Benek led off
with a single to CF; Winterstein fanned; Braun hit into a fielder's choice and
then stole second; Fleishman smacked an RBI single over the second baseman's
head; sr. SS Matt Smith doubled to left-center to set up second and
third; sr. 3B Nick DeLeo ripped an RBI single to left; Magdovitz struck
out for what should have been out No. 3, but the ball was in the dirt and the
catcher couldn't find it too quickly -- Smith scored easily and the pitcher's
throw to third sailed into LF to allow pinch-runner Lance Wetzel to come
home as well; soph LF Aaron Esbensen ripped an RBI double down the
leftfield line; Farbman got another run home with a single to left; Benek and
Winterstein walked to load the bases; another pitching change was made with the
count at 2-0 and Braun drew another walk to make it 10-8; Fleishman then struck
out to end the inning. But what a productive inning it was! Farbman, with just
three days of rest, had left the mound after WCH plated three in the top half,
upping its lead to 8-3. The replacement was Winterstein, and he was clutch when
he needed to be. He ended the fourth with a K and pitched scoreless ball in the
fifth and sixth. He ran into trouble in the seventh as, with one out, WCH went
single-single-double to cut the lead to 10-9 and get the tying/go-ahead runs to
second and third. Uh, oh. Central coach Bob Barthelmeh summoned Esbensen
from LF and the first guy, with the infield up, sent a grass-cutter to Smith.
Matt's throw home was true and Magdovitz, for the second time in the game, made
an authoritative block and tag and Central was still ahead. A stolen base and
intentional walk followed and the next guy hit a hard groundball up the middle.
Smith made the vacuum, emphatically stepped on second for the forceout and that
was it, troops. This was a great win for myriad reasons. Six guys had RBI. All
nine guys had hits. The second-line pitchers picked up the franchise. The
catcher made two tough plays look easy, plus he threw out a guy trying to steal.
What couldn't the catcher do? Tolerate his younger brother (ha ha). As the
warmups for one inning were ending, Joe threw to second and his brother,
Zachary, a freshman backup said, "Good throw, Joe!" Joe muttered, "That was
one of the worst throws I ever made." Zachary responded, "I was trying to be a
good brother!" Good stuff. Hustle of the day: Randy "Ramblings" Seidman
covered the Swenson game (18-0 loss, four innings) at Northeast for the News
Gleaner, then rolled over to this one, played at La Salle High.
JUNE 1
PUBLIC LEAGUE FINAL
Central 7, Frankford 1
A few people asked me at the Catholic League final what I
thought would happen in this one, and my response was that Frankford had the
better lineup but Central had the better pitcher. In this one, specifically in
the sixth inning, Central had both. The game was scoreless through five, but the
visiting Lancers posted a big, ol' six-spot in the sixth and wound up coasting
home from there for their first title since 2001 and second for good-guy coach
Bob Barthelmeh. We'll hit you with some early-game tidbits later, but for
now let's go to the sixth. Frankford usually never comes close to beating
itself, or digging its own holes, but that happened here and Central was only
too thrilled to jump on the pile. The frame began as sr. 3B Nick DeLeo
sent a groundball to the right side. Sr. 1B Juan Carlos Torres ranged to
his right, cut was unable to make a play. However, soph 2B Jon Bracero
sped far to his left and DID make a stop, impressively. One problem: sr. LH
Edwin Burgos was way late in breaking for the bag and DeLeo wound up with a
scratch single. Sr. C Joe Magdovitz followed with a single to CF on a 3-2
count and Frankford boss Bob Peffle made a pitching change, summoning
soph RH Esteban "Shortie" Meletiche from SS and moving Burgos to CF,
among other moves. Soph LF Aaron Esbensen worked a four-pitch walk to
load the bases and that brought up jr. RH Jared Farbman. Bang! Farbman
fired a two-run single to right-center. Bang again! Jr. 1B Jim Benek
doubled deep to CF for another RBI (the ball kept carrying and landed beyond
Burgos, even though he appeared to have a bead on it early). Soph 2B Micah
"Stine Not Steen" Winterstein, with the infield in, flared a ball to quite
shallow right that would have ordinarily been an out. Instead it went for an RBI
single and created a 4-0 lead. Soph RF Mike Braun grounded to Torres.
Hard to fathom because he's usually SO reliable, even outstanding, but JCT
failed to make this play and two more runs came in. Six to nothing! Phew! Benek
added an RBI double in the seventh on a shot to left-center and the only
question became, Will Central not only win but also do so by shutout?! Almost.
Soph LF Jeffry Bru began the home seventh with an infield single deep in
the SS hole. Meletiche zoomed a one-out single to LF. Burgos flied out for No. 2
and sr. C Ramon Reyes sent a grounder to the up-the-middle side of
Winterstein. The ball took two hops and Winterstein couldn't smother it. Tough
error, but a miscue nonetheless and Bru came home to break the shutout bid.
(Frankford has not been blanked by a Pub team since 4/25/01, when Lincoln RH
Ron Clarkson pitched a two-hitter in a 10-0, five-inning game.) Farbman then
fanned Torres to end it. The K was only his third and Jared did surrender nine
hits, but his support was mostly outstanding and he even set an early tone by
helping himself. With runners on first and third in the first, Torres chopped a
ball to the first-base side of the mound. Farbman showed his athleticism by
pouncing on the ball and gunning to Magdovitz to get Meletiche at the plate.
Frankford wound up leavin' 'em loaded. In the second, with two down and runners
on second and third, Burgos sent a grounder to DeLeo. His throw was not only
off-target, but WAY high as well. An error here could have had implications of
the game-long, devastating kind. But at 1B, Benek soared -- well, as much as a
Caucasian can (smile) -- to make the snag and he also slapped a tag on the
running-past Burgos. It was a HUGE play. Like most title-game stories, this one
mixed several themes and one concerned Benek, who missed last year's title game
after being suspended for an in-school infraction. Lesson learned. Kinda fitting
that he emerged as a hero. All Central folks agreed that the Lancers' regular
season win over Frankford -- on the Pioneers' home field, with Farbman pitching
-- did wonders for confidence levels entering this one. Frankford now has five
Pub losses over the last five seasons (along with 84 wins) and three came this
season. Farbman dealt the first, back on May 1, and Northeast later triumphed in
a slugfest. In something that wasn't a surprise at ALL, many/most of the veteran
Frankford players walked over to Central's guys well after the celebrations and
post-game meetings to extend congratulations for a job well done. It's so
comforting year after year to see "Peff" and assistant Juan Namnun
get things right. Overall, the Campbell's Field experience for the semis and
final went wonderfully. However . . . you knew there'd be a however, didn't you?
(smile). There's NO way ground rules, player intros, a ceremonial first pitch
and the singing of the National Anthem should drag on and on and on and on for
21 minutes total. It's not fair to any of the players, but especially not to the
pitchers. Over and out.
MAY 31
CATHOLIC LEAGUE FINAL
Conwell-Egan 8, SJ Prep 3
Herman's a munster, baby. He's also a horse, an ace, a
franchise, Mr. Dependable, and whatever else you want to call him. Brian
Herman, a sr. RH bound for Rider, pitched C-E (nee Bishop Egan) to its
first CL title since 1968 in sweltering weather conditions on three days rest
and all three runs scored against him were shaky in nature. With two out in the
first inning at Widener University, sr. C Pat Murphy sent a dribbler to
first and sr. 1B Mike Rugghia bobbled. EVERY C-E loyalist (and many of
the players, no doubt) were thinking the same thing, "Oh, no. Not this again."
Unfortunately, the Eagles have been the kings of CL playoff self-destruction
through the years and the miscue stood out in bold relief when sr. 3B Matt
Tiagwad followed with a blast to right-center that went for an RBI triple.
Guess what, though? C-E committed nary another error! The Prep's other two runs
came in the fourth after Murphy lined out to sr. 2B Ed Barry (diving
catch) and Tiagwad sent another shot to right-center that was caught 1 1/2 steps
in front of the fence by sr. CF John Malloy. Soph 1B Aaron Haas
ripped a single to left-center. Sr. DH Matt Leddy, a righthanded batter,
inside-outed a ball down the rightfield line. It was reasonably well hit, but
it's only 309 feet to the foul pole and this ball made it by only a few feet up
and over. It was the kind of homer that's commonplace in many Southern Divisions
venues (and, yes, I'll get to the similar C-E homer; which for my money was a
blown call.) The next inning, soph RF Tim Edger led off with another
blast to right-center. Malloy ran and ran and ran some more, and appeared to do
a Rowand as he smashed into the fence. However, the fence at that part is really
a gate and it opened from the impact. Edger easily circled the bases and thought
he had had a homer, but after a discussion the play was ruled a ground-rule
double. His brother, sr. CF Bill Edger, bunted him to third (curious
strategy, giving up an out down two in the fifth as the visiting team, when the
guy's already in scoring position) and two groundouts ended the inning. Herman
maintained from there with continuing solid play from jr. SS John McDonald
(total for game: four assists, three putouts). OK, now for C-E's cheapie HR. In
the third, sr. C Rich Dupell walked and Herman scored CR Jim
Love with a double to right-center. Next was jr. 3B Ryan Terry. It's
only 300 down the leftfield line and he sent a high, deep shot in that
direction. According to numerous folks, the ball hit the foul pole and left the
stadium to the left of that. 3B ump John McArdle ruled it a two-run
homer. Yes, I'm aware that foul pole actually means fair pole, but there's a
huge variable here. Running all the way to the top and over into left-center for
a GOOD distance (maybe 100 feet?) is blue netting that reaches to maybe 40 feet
high, to the very top of the foul pole. If the ball had somehow hit that netting
and spun off it into foul territory, the ball would have been ruled a
ground-rule double. So why was this a homer? C-E benefits because the ball
bounced out of play? It doesn't make sense. There was a brief argument, but the
homer stood and it gave C-E a 3-1 lead. In an oddity, all 11 runs in this game
were scored with two outs. C-E coach Rich Papirio said his squad fared
much better the second time through the lineup vs. sr. LH Doug DiSandro
because adjustments were made. DiSandro has a medium-throwing lefty's typical
drop-and-tail fastball, so Papirio ordered his guys to move up in the box. That
also helped them against breaking stuff, of course. C-E scored two apiece in the
fourth and fifth and an unearned run in the sixth. The two in the fourth came
courtesy of a double by Barry and single by Dupell. The fifth-inning runs: RBIs
to McDonald (single) and Rugghia (double to deep CF over B. Edger's head, and
that's not easy -- smile). Leddy and Tiagwad pitched the fifth and sixth,
respectively. The game ended when sr. RF Ryan Buch made a sprawling catch
of sr. SS Tom Elliott's liner (originally misjudged). The DN story
focused on a few things/people, but began with how the Eagles put their
snakebitten ways behind them. On Tuesday, four of them went to the Delaware
River in Morrisville and caught a four-foot snake! Buch showed me the sequence
on his cell phone. ha ha. I have to mention what a pleasure it was to cover this
squad. The kids were respectful and personable and very much appeared to honor
the game. I also heard nice comments about them from people at/around C-E who
know them much better than I ever could. And Papirio is a favorite of every
media member for his easygoing manner and desire to give his players the best
possible experience. Meanwhile, it wasn't easy to see how crestfallen the Hawks
were. Their lineup also was packed with good guys. Click
here
for a page with some BIG celebration pics. You're welcome to copy/save/whatever.
Enjoy.
MAY 27
CATHOLIC LEAGUE SEMI
SJ Prep 3, La Salle 2
A 60-footer that beats the buzzer? A 75-yard TD pass on the
final play of the game? Yes, it was something like that. But baseball is unique
and so are its defining moments. Unabashed joy in one dugout. Deep hurt in the
other. No matter how many times you see this stuff, it never gets old. The day
it does, I guess it's time to move on . . . La Salle was one out away from
advancing to the championship game and coach Joe Parisi summoned his ace,
sr. LH Matt Zielinski, to nail down a save and give sr. RH T.J. Foley
what would have been a well-deserved win. Through six innings, Foley held the
Prep to three hits. But all along, Parisi said, he planned to use Zielinski in
the seventh if Foley faced anything close to trouble. "Why wouldn't you?" he
said later in even, not agitated tones. "You HAVE to. T.J. gave us a lot today.
Matt has given us a lot for two seasons . . . I wanted this so bad for T.J. I
wanted Matt to come in and do it FOR T.J." Zielinski, a Richmond signee with
hopes of getting drafted, on Wednesday pitched a two-hitter with 14 strikeouts
in a second-round win over Judge. In the inning, soph 2B Brett Tiagwad
grounded out, soph CF Tim Edger fired a groundball single down the
leftfield line and his brother, sr. CF Bill Edger, popped out to right.
Sr. SS Tom Elliott followed with an at-bat that should not be lost in the
shuffle. On a 2-2 count -- yes, in other words, one strike from game's end --
Elliott stayed with an outer-half pitch and sent it hard the opposite way for a
single. That brought Parisi to the mound, and he brought back Foley with him.
Next for Prep was sr. LF Nelson Russom, and his aluminum ended it.
Russom sent a shot to deep right. Sr. RF Bill Warrender did a little bit
of a twist-and-turn as he retreated, and he was also fighting the sun, and the
ball landed at the base of the fence. I don't think he would have caught it even
without his minor difficulties. Anyway, with two outs, T. Edger and Elliott were
off on contact and they easily scored and the celebration for the Hawks was
intense. (Just as Zielinski finished his warmups, I heard the
beep-beep-beep-beep-beep to indicate a full memory card. Oh, no!! I was unable
to delete quickly enough and missed the game-ending shots. Sorry, Prep guys. I
did regroup and get a couple post-game shots.) Russom had a big game because he
was also responsible for the Hawks' third-inning run, when he ripped a single to
left to score T. Edger (HBP, advanced on Elliott's groundout). The winning
pitcher was sr. LH Doug DiSandro, who's mostly a change-speeds/location
guys, and who's very crafty at it. DiSandro was thrown for an early loop when La
Salle plated a first-inning run on a one-out walk to sr. SS Will Phillips,
a groundout by Warrender (with Phillips running; went to the right side; good
baseball) and a double up the left-center alley by jr. C Sean Saverio, a
lefty swinger. DiSandro walked just two all game and the other guy scored, too.
There's a lesson in there somewhere, right? (smile) Sr. DH Jared Carter
drew the free pass with one out in the fifth and moved up on a groundout. Sr. 3B
Ryan Creter rocketed a ball to left that evaded a dive by Elliott and got
Carter home. La Salle had a decent chance at adding an insurance run in the
seventh when sr. 1B John Knab singled and Carter bunted pinch-runner
Frank Deluccia to second. Tiagwad made a nice running catch of a popup and
sr. C Pat Murphy pounced on a chopper to get an out at first. La Salle
lingered in its dugout area for a good 20 minutes after the game. Ultimately,
Parisi called over the seniors and gave each one a good-bye hug along with words
of encouragement and/or thanks. It was touching stuff, especially in light of
what had happened. The Prep and C-E were first seeds in these semis. This was
the third time in five years that both top seeds survived. However, it was only
the seventh time over the last 25 seasons. And now, going back to the 1978
season, top seeds are only 32-26 in semis. Meanwhile, I'll second and even third
what Huck said about Widener's new facility. LOVE it. The Blue
Monster/Great Wall of Widener in LF is cool and coach Steve Carcarey
and his assistants/players were meticulous beyond belief in manicuring the
field. Also, check this out: the helmet racks in the dugouts had little name
tags for the starters!!
MAY 27
CATHOLIC LEAGUE SEMI
Conwell-Egan 3, Bonner 1
This one had the look of possible breeze-through after C-E
scored three in the first. Then, at the end, it had the look of possible ugly
collapse, and that would not have been uncommon for a C-E squad that has been
filled for years with good kids who somehow get hit with bad playoff
experiences. We won't go into them all. But there have been more than a few, and
they've been painful to watch. This was the first game of the doubleheader at
Widener's very appealing new facility and the Eagles seized it by the throat in
the home first. With one out, sr. RH Brian Herman singled hard to
right-center and yielded to courtesy runner Jim Love. Jr. 3B Ryan Terry
singled down the RF line and sr. CF John "Muscle Up" Malloy was next. He
did what the latest version of his nickname (much better than "Slappy" -- smile)
would suggest, as he hammered a ball to right-center that skipped off the fence
on a short hop and went for a two-run triple. Malloy then came in on a passed
ball. Sr. RH Sean Fitzgerald had been knocked out of Wednesday's
second-round game and you'd have to imagine his confidence was wavering. If so,
he quickly put any negative thoughts out of his head and regrouped in fine
fashion to pitch shutout ball the rest of the way. In the second, he got the
putout on a trick pickoff play that caught sr. 2B Ed Barry in vintage
fashion (more in a moment) and jr. 1B Tim Dougherty helped him out in the
fifth, gunning home to retire courtesy runner Mike Thomas after
dropping the ball on what should have been a groundout. The trick play: I've
seen this every so often through the years - it once helped Washington win a Pub
title -- and it plays hard on the fact that most guys on second base turn their
back while returning to that bag on pickoff throws. Well, Fitzgerald never threw
the ball, but the Friars up the middle perfectly carried out their assignments,
yelling "ball!!" and pretending to chase the ball in the outfield. Barry never
had a chance and was tagged out. Herman mostly cruised through six innings and
received strong support from his fielders. In the seventh, though, Dougherty
became just the second Friar to start an inning by reaching base when he scalded
a single to RF (and then yielded to pinch-runner Matt McGillian). Sr. RF
Steve DeBarberie hit into a fielder's choice and 3B Matt Gallagher
whiffed and C-E was one out away. Sr. C Ryan Hunt kept the Friars alive
by drawing a walk (and he left for CR Vince Sculli). Sr. Mike Coleman,
the DH, sent a grounder to Barry. Should have been the ballgame. But Barry
bobbled -- don't tell me this is going to happen to Egan AGAIN!! -- and
DeBarberie beat home a somewhat tentative follow-up throw. Every veteran fan of
the Eagles had to be thinking about the past miseries. It would have been
impossible not to. Meanwhile, it appeared that Sculli was out at third on the
tail end of the preceding play, but the call was safe. Dan Leicht, a
lefty swinger, was sent up to hit for sr. SS Brian Meagher. The battle
had some juice, but Herman got him looking and the game was over. Herman
finished with a four-hitter and six strikeouts. Took some pre-game pics of Best
Teammate '06, Bonner's Colin Liberatore. His plaque has been ordered and will be
ready for pickup Wednesday morning, supposedly. Colin said much later he'd come
to the title game to get it, but I'd have no problem presenting it at Bonner in
front of his teammates/schoolmates, or even at his house in front of family
members, if he'd prefer either of those scenarios.
MAY 24
PUBLIC LEAGUE SEMIFINAL
Central 2, Northeast 1
As often happens, the loose, one-sided scenarios that often
dominate the regular season and early rounds of the playoffs disappear in a
semifinal. In this one, anyway. Yes, there were five errors. but only one
figured in the scoring and the umps who made it happen flat-out missed the call.
Even Northeast's fans were admitting that as I passed them en route from the
field to the press box. This was a classic duel between jr RHs, Central's
Jared Farbman and Northeast's Joe Breitweiser. Farbman was a shade
cleaner and thus got the win. He allowed three hits and one walk while fanning
six. Breitweiser surrendered five hits and two walks while fanning nine.
Breitweiser's one big sin was issuing a free pass to the first batter of the
game, sr. SS Matt Smith. Not a good idea when you're nervous already and
playing in an unfamiliar venue, especially when you figure in the wide expanse
behind the plate. Joe did his big-boy thing and struck out the next two batters
and in stepped soph LF Aaron Esbensen. This kid has impressed me other
times this season and he did so here, too, ripping an RBI double to
right-center. Smith scored easily. Central tallied again -- the hard way -- in
the second inning, as it took a two-out single by the No. 9 hitter, sr. CF
Joshua Fleishman, to get things going. It was a looper down the rightfield
line and Smith again played a prominent role, beating out a single to SS.
Another of Central's gritty little guys, sr. 3B Nick DeLeo, singled hard
to left for a run. The Lancers managed just one hit thereafter, but in
retrospect I doubt they're crying about it. Farbman carried a no-hitter into the
fifth inning. He lost it as sr. LF Craig Young led off the frame with a
blooper that fell into shallow CF. A fielder's choice and single by sr. 3B
Kyle Bachmann followed, so Farbman had to puff out his chest and get to
work. He did. A pair of popups ended the threat. Farbman helped himself
immensely as the sixth began, leaping to snag a bunt by soph SS Jose Lopez.
Sr. C Derek Butler then sent a fly to right. Soph Mike Braun
caught it and I even looked down to note the play on my score sheet. Then, I
heard a commotion and looked up and the ball was on the ground and the umps
wound up saying he dropped it before maintaining full control. No way! Hey, the
blues have their opinion. I have mine (smile). Frosh RF Tim Freiling
followed with a rope to CF that was caught. Breitweiser produced an RBI triple
to right and the courtesy runner, Joel Furman, bumped into sr. C Joe
Magdovitz as he was passing the plate. I had my camera focused on third, in
case there was going to be a play there, but I was told – admittedly by Central
loyalists – that there was no excuse for Furman’s misstep. Coach Bob
Barthelmeh moved quickly onto the field and got into a short, heated rhubarb
with plate ump Joe Lieberman and the two even went face to face – after
Bob turned his hat around backward, that is. Great stuff!! Ha, ha. Nothing came
of it. Sr. LF Craig Young put decent aluminum on the ball, but his fly to
deep center was caught. NE went 1-2-3 in the seventh. Campbell’s Field, in
Camden, is a very cool ballpark, especially with the Ben Franklin Bridge looming
high above the outfield on a slight angle from LF to RF. The Pub honchos are to
be commended for pulling this off. In other cities, many title games in all
sports are played in major league stadiums/arenas. This is “only” a minor league
facility -- and for an independent team, at that -- but I doubt anyone minded.
MAY 23
CATHOLIC LEAGUE FIRST-ROUND PLAYOFF
Judge 6, Ryan 1
This was played at Temple's Ambler Campus, a new site for a CL
contest, and the field is very nice, though there's WAY too much foul territory
(especially for photo-taking purposes with an underpowered point-and-shoot
camera -- smile). And today, it was very windy and bordered on chilly and more
than a few folks were ruing the fact they didn't bring jackets/sweatshirts.
There was an interesting dynamic before things got started: On the RF side, Ryan
sr. RH Mike Miller was warming up and Judge players were right behind him
a shade to the side, ostensibly just taking cuts in a netting-style batting
cage. I wonder if they were able to pick up any tips? Miller wound up allowing
nine hits in six innings and Judge powdered many balls, even into outs. On the
flip side, the Crusaders only scored in one inning, the third, and here goes.
Jr. SS Keith Chichearo, the No. 9 hitter, got grazed by a pitch and sr.
RF Jeff McMahon, with Chichearo running, used a purposeful late
swing to collect a single to RF and get him to third. Sr. CF Mike Chichearo
(strong day for this family!) rapped a hard single to LF, scoring his bro. A
bobble on a grounder by sr. RH Matt Compton loaded the bases and a walk
to sr. 1B Jason D'Ambrosio (headed for Penn, niiiiiiiice) made it 2-0. A
wild pitch ensued, scoring M. Chichearo, and sr. LF Chris Schwartz hit a
ball to jr. 3B Devin Weiss. Courtesy runner Paul McLaughlin was
retired at the plate, with a solid block by sr. C Matt Amato, and that
brought to the plate sr. DH Justin DeCristofaro, of QBing city all-star
FB fame (smile). Bang! DeCris declassified a baseball from normal to bruised
with a shot over the head of sr. RF Pat DelVecchio. The ball landed at
the base of the fence and went for a two-run triple. Run No. 6 scored on a sac
fly to RF by soph 3B Tim Ashenbrenner. Compton went the distance, but
wasn't too thrilled by how things went. Though over two seasons he has shown
some lights-out tendencies, in this one it was more of a dim-them thing. He
allowed five hits and four walks and even plunked two guys, plus he recorded
just four strikeouts. But his teammates were flawless (he had the only error, on
a bad pickoff throw) and three times he caused Ryan to leave guys at third base.
I've always wondered how it must feel to play a regular position and never get
to bat, and today that guy for Judge was sr. 2B Steve Carr. Is part of
you hissed? Disheartened? Is it harder to concentrate when you never get the
reward of at-bats? Who knows? But this is definite: Carr made a sensational play
when jr. 3B Mike Kovacs sent a blast up the middle. The ball was to
Carr's non-glove side and came on a wicked short hop. He stayed with it, made a
perfect snag from a kinda kneeling position and tossed to K. Chichearo for a
force. Ryan's run came in the fifth when soph CF Andrew Lacovara singled, moved
up on a wild pitch and scored on a groundball single to center by jr. LF Rob
McArdle. (Unfortunately, I did not get the word about the change and the hit
was credited in the paper to the starter, Mike Siravo. I apologize for the
mistake.) Judge coach Joe McDermott, in his 31st year, is closer than ever
to retirement. He's very frustrated that leg problems keep him from coaching
third base and even from hitting groundballs/flyballs in the pre-game session.
(By the way, we talked maybe 10 days ago and Joe apologized for his McDevitt
game snapout. No problem. I always believe it's best to start fresh. Some
don't.) While I was interviewing Compton in Judge's dugout, trainer Bill Koch
put a bag of ice under Matt's T-shirt on his right shoulder. Schwartz cracked,
"Matt, you have a really muscular shoulder." Wound up briefly on the third-base
side near some Judge kids. Asked some assorted sports-related questions (best
one: Have you ever interviewed Shaq? -- um, not quite) and begged to have their
picture taken for "Special Photo" purposes. That's why I'm here, baby! Tell me
the red-haired kid doesn't look like "Smitty" from the cell-phone
commercials (smile). The guy who has a job and college-grad buddies who haven't
bothered starting their work lives yet. Know that one? "Smit-eeeeeeeeeee!"
MAY 22
PUBLIC LEAGUE QUARTERFINAL
Central 14, Roxborough 4 (6 innings)
Not a good day for the Pub. Out of a minimum 28 quarterfinal
innings, only 19 were played. The other quarters went three, five and five, so
at least this one earned longest-of-the-day honors. Roxborough coach Howard
Leight tried to warn me that the game could be dicey because he’d been
forced to let go two starters and promote some JV players just to flesh out his
roster to 10. Know what, though? If his kids had made some simple plays along
the way, sr. RH Chris Schroeder probably would have been able to keep his
team in it, and maybe VERY MUCH in it, through all seven. Instead, the Injuns
committed 12 errors and this was an unearned-run festival. The ink went to sr. C
Joe Magdovitz, who’s bound for Cornell (early admission) and boasts an
SAT score that’s so high, he’s sheepish about letting out the number (smile).
Magdo bats thirdo and in this one he went 3-for-3 with a sac fly and three RBI.
His courtesy runner, frosh Ian “Lightfoot” Lewis, stole three bases and
scored two runs. No other Lancer had more than one hit and only one other, soph
RF Mike Braun, with two, had more than one RBI. One came on a single in
the wickedly ugly seven-run fifth (Rox made six miscues) and another on a
groundout in the sixth. The game ended four batters later when sr. 3B Nick
DeLeo grounded a ball that got home two runs – one in legit fashion and the
last because of a compounding you-know-what. Central coach Bob Barthelmeh
took a calculated risk by saving his ace, jr. RH Jared Farbman, for a
hoped-for appearance vs. Northeast in the semis. The decision likely had him
squirming in the very first inning as Roxborough, with two out, went
HBP-BB-single-BB-HBP to plate two runs with the bases still loaded. Uh, oh. But
soph RH Micah Winterstein regrouped and recorded a looking strikeout to
avert disaster and he mostly pitched well thereafter. Roxborough added a
fifth-inning run on a double down the leftfield line by soph INF Fran
Filewicz and an infield single by sr. 1B Johntae Grove. Winterstein
departed in the sixth after plunking soph RF Adrese Hicks and walking
Filewicz. Soph RH Aaron Esbensen took over, immediately was hit with a
balk call, and surrendered a squib of an RBI infield single to jr. C-3B Alex
Ryan. Schroeder followed with a shot to deep right-center that was snagged
by sr. CF Joshua Fleishman and sr. SS-C Sean Murphy flied to left.
Like Winterstein, Esbensen sported elaborate eye-black and that caused one of
the Indians to say, “I guess if you pitch for these guys, you have wear Ultimate
Warrior paint.” Alex Ryan’s nickname is “Quiet.” Why? No one spoke up to provide
an answer. So, he’s not the only quiet Indian (smile). Roxborough’s scorekeeper
was football legend Richard “Microwave” Williams. Meanwhile, one of
Central’s managers, the ever-friendly David Frias, kept bellowing
encouragement and making high-volume growling/grunting noises. Let’s hope he was
able to pass whatever was stuck in his colon (smile). A tidbit: As mentioned,
all four quarters were 10-run jobs. To find a TOTAL of four CL playoffs with
10-run differentials, you'd have to include the last 18 seasons.
Phew!
MAY 21
CATHOLIC SOUTH PRE-PLAYOFF
O'Hara 6, Carroll 1
Let's get the cool tidbit out of the way. Can we assume this
was the only baseball game today in America featuring one player on each team
with surnames starting with "Sz"? You had sr. 1B Jonathan Szeliga for
O'Hara and sr. C Andrew Szalejko for Carroll. Almost makes me want to
change my name to Szilary. And who knows? A couple generations back, maybe it
was that (smile). The biggest bow among Lions should be taken by soph RH
Kevin Culbert. In the PIAA, there's a rule stating that kids who throw at
least three innings in one day must receive one day of rest before cranking it
up again. The CL, of course, does not belong, so today's starter was the same as
yesterday's three-inning finisher. And guess what? He again was highly
effective. After going 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9 vs. Roman, Culbert pitched four innings
of shutout ball. And guess how many he walked in his seven total innings? None.
He even brassed up and evaded a man-on-third, no-out situation in the third
inning after sr. LF Brian Puliti powered a ball over the head of sr. LF
Rob Crowley. Culbert escaped via a popup, strikeout (jr. C Joe
Collelouri held a foul tip) and groundout to sr. SS Harry Duke.
Though Culbert free-passed none, he did plunk Szalejko to open the fifth and
coach Frank Allison came to get the ball. Wonderful job, young man! Duke
immediately found himself in hot water when a grounder was bobbled and Carroll
had first and third with nobody down. Puliti followed with an RBI groundout and
jr. 1B Jesse Rosemann walked. With jr. PH Pete Coppa at bat, jr.
PR P.K. Crossan broke for second. Hit and run? Straight steal where the
guy happened to swing? Don't know. Doesn't really matter. Coppa hit a soft liner
(oxymoron, right? but that's what it was) to short and Crossan was easily
doubled off to end the uprising. Duke allowed one hit with two men down in the
seventh, then closed things out with a strikeout. Carroll's starter was jr. RH
Chris Dengler, and he was followed by another jr. RH, Kyle "Baked
Ziti" Baker. Each has size and potential. I did notice something weird about
Baker's delivery. Right after he releases the ball, he looks down at the ground.
I wonder if that affects his concentration? Anyway, O'Hara's breakthrough inning
was the fourth. Crowley singled hard to right and jr. 3B Marco Menna
slammed a double to right-center. Jr. OF Matt Izzi served up a great
piece of hitting, making sure he hit the ball to the right side. He earned an
RBI on the groundout. The next batter, soph CF Joe Sessa, a lefty, made
sure he pulled the pill and he also collected an RBI on a groundout. Jr. 2B
Pat Young produced a run singlefootedly in the fifth: walk, steal,
steal-error combo. Most of the damage in the sixth came courtesy of the bottom
part of the order. Izzi bunted for a hit, stole second and moved to third on
Sessa's grounder. Collelouri grounded a single to CF and sr. SS Tom Connelly
lined a shot to right-center. Sr. CF John Piotrowicz almost made the
catch with a headlong dive, but the ball squirted out of his glove for an RBI
double. En route to the mound to yank Dengler, coach Fran Murphy order
plate ump Tom Scartozzi (one of the best! he does college and even minor
league games almost exclusively now) to send Duke to first base. Young greeted
Ziti with a zinger in the form of hard groundball to left . . . and through for
a base hit and an RBI. As almost always recently, there was some rain. Not much,
but the umbrella had to pop up maybe three times. It also got very dark on
occasion and dang if I can yet figure out what settings are best for the digital
camera when that happens. Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. The atmosphere for this one was
subdued. Very little juice from the fans and even the players seemed only mildly
into it. Hard to believe, but Carroll will not be part of the official playoffs
for two consecutive years for the first time since 1993-94.
MAY 20
CATHOLIC SOUTH PRE-PLAYOFF
O'Hara 14, Roman 9
Football-score predictions were thrown out by some members of the
coaching staffs before this ballgame even began, and they would prove to be
correct. O'Hara scored two TDs and added the extra points. Roman settled for one
TD and a field goal. At one point Roman coach Joe Tremoglie referred to
the game as "a train wreck" and yelled to a player who'd made a bad throw, "It's
not a grenade! It's not going to blow up in your hand! Pick it up and throw it!"
Neither team has a whole bunch of quality pitching and this first of two
playoffs to decide fourth place, played at La Salle HS, came at the end of a
long, draining week. Each team went with soph RHs -- Zac Tansey for
O'Hara (he also has a basketball future) and Joe Plover for Roman.
Neither was spectacular. Neither received scintillating backing.
Tansey departed after seven of the first eight batters in the second inning
reached base; two did so on errors and five of the seven runs charged to him
were unearned. The curveballing Plover, a JV player until recently, was gritty
as all get-out and lasted four batters into the sixth, mainly because Tremoglie
had very few other options, especially for anything close to an extended period.
Until the sixth, when Plover allowed the first four Lions to reach base (HBP,
single, RBI double, two-run single) and saw them come in as earned runs, only
one of O'Hara's eight runs was earned. In the second inning alone, the
Cahillites were guilty of four miscues. The frame might have even been worse if
jr. DH-P-3B Marco Menna had not run into an easy out after a squeeze-bunt
signal was missed. In all, Roman committed seven errors. O'Hara's leaders: sr.
1B Jonathan Szeliga went 3-for-5 with one RBI and two runs scored; Menna
went 2-for-4 with an HBP and three RBI; sr. RF Matt Izzi went 3-for-4
with two doubles and one RBI. Also, one of the two hits for sr. LF Rob
Crowley was a two-run, ground-rule double to left in the five-run sixth,
during which O'Hara overcame a 9-8 deficit. Meanwhile, the most impressive
performance of the day was posted by jr. RH Kevin Culbert, who achieved
perfection over the final three innings (three strikeouts). Assistant John
Coyle said Culbert did some early-season pitching, but had some rocky
moments and then became a forgotten man. "I guess he was saving it for today,"
Coyle kidded. Roman's seven-run second featured two-run hits from jr. OF Will
O'Mara (single) and sr. 2B Pat DiGiovanni (triple down the LF
line). Roman's oddity of the day: jr. DH Rich Yoka sent flyouts to right
in all three of his plate appearances, with two resulting in sac flies. Sr. 1B
Ken "K.J." Sowisdral was impressive around the bag, dealing with errant
throws and baserunners barreling down on him. It'll be interesting to see who
pitches for O'Hara tomorrow vs. Carroll. I heard Coyle ask soph LH Joe Sessa
whether he's hurling. "I don't know if I am," Sessa responded. "But I could."
Football tonight. Something tomorrow. O'Hara-Carroll or the CL track
championships? Hmmmmmm . . . .Guess you'll have to check back and see (smile).
MAY 19
PUBLIC LEAGUE CLASS AA FINAL
GAMP 14, Saul 1
Music>agriculture. At least it was today. The Pioneers went
six-three-five in the first three innings (if you play 635 in the lottery and it
comes out, I want a cut -- smile) and this one ended after 4 1/2. That was when
the problems began. Or, more accurately, when an alleged reason for the
early-game problems came to light. Saul's starter was LH James Paulk, who
looked very good when I saw him early this season but then ran into some school
difficulties and had to sit down for a stretch. This was only his second game
since his return and things did not go well. He pitched just the one inning
because he was ejected by the plate ump, Joe Lieberman, in the top of the
second. Here's what happened: Saul soph LF Ian Cogan homered to
right-center and some of the Razorbacks streamed out of the dugout, preparing to
greet him at the plate. Paulk was not due to bat for five more spots in the
order, but he wound up first in line (closest to the plate, that is) and stared
REAL hard at GAMP jr. C Eric Funaro as Cogan was still doing his trot.
Funaro definitely said something to Paulk and the part I heard was, "What are
you lookin' at??!!" Paulk responded with something (he was further away) and
Lieberman moved quickly to make sure there'd be no fisticuffs. Lieberman then
announced that Paulk was ejected (for cursing, he said later) and Paulk
went absoutely nuts. He had to be held back by multiple people and even after he
was escorted beyond the fence, he tried to get back into the playing area and
wound up ripping off his jersey. Like many, I'm sure, I was thinking, "What is
his problem? How can he be THIS enraged?" Folks, I'm telling you, he truly put
on a show. Let's move ahead. The game ends and the umpires make sure no more
trouble develops in the handshake lines. Much later, just outside the fence, I
asked one of Saul's people -- a recent player, pretty sure; he did yeoman work,
in time, successfully calming Paulk -- why James had gone so far off the deep
end. He responded excitedly that the catcher (Funaro) had called Paulk the
n-word. The Saul players were on their team bus. Paulk was hanging out in the
back. He confirmed, even insisted, through a window that the n-word had been
used. I spoke briefly with Funaro. He insisted the opposite. Lieberman was still
across Packer Ave., talking with two of his partners. He was adamant that he
didn't hear that word. Back across the street, the bus was about to pull away,
and even did so while we were talking. I let Paulk know what the others had
said. He again became agitated. "Oh, then I'm wrong! I guess it didn't happen!
He didn't say that word, DID he?!" What's the truth here? Is it possible Paulk
took his frustration too far and fabricated the whole thing? Is it possible
Funaro did say that word, but at lower volume and not loud enough for Lieberman
(or anyone else even remotely nearby) to hear? This is of course a very sticky
situation. GAMP coach Art Kratchman vouched for Funaro 100 percent.
Ironically, I spent part of the game speaking with Eric's dad, a starter for a
baseball championship team at Southern. He did not appear to have even a hint of
a rough edge, and came off as a gentleman. I told him afterward what was going
on. "My son wouldn't do that," he said, calmly. Can't be sure what will/could
happen from here concerning this situation, but it's very upsetting wherever the
truth lies . . . Long day tomorrow, capped off by the City All-Star Football
Game, and it's almost 1 a.m. so please understand that the game detail will be
brief. GAMP's highlight was a two-run homer to right-center by soph 1B-OF
Christian Matticks. Also, sr. OF Ryan Challender, who got the ink
(enjoyable kid to interview; this has been a great week on the trail!! smile),
went 2-for-2 with a walk, an RBI and three runs scored.
MAY 18
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Gtn. Academy 9, Chestnut Hill 1
GA needed this one to earn a share of the Inter-Ac title and CH
pretty much wound up saying, “Here you go.” The Patriots probably would have won
anyway, but CH certainly aided the cause with loose play. Only two of GA’s runs
were earned and the Pats were handed no fewer than five outs in a two-run second
inning. After a drop and then a bobble with one out, soph C Joe Conaway
was only too happy to take advantage by ripping a two-run double into
left-center. Jr. RH John Barr, also a CF (and everyone says he made an
all-time, plow-into-the-fence catch at Malvern two days ago), began the second
with a single to center. A sac bunt by frosh 2B Tommy Coyle was
thrown away and GA was again in business. Sr. 3B Erich Enns sent a
groundball single to CF for two RBI. One out later, sr. RF Mark Brown
sent a liner to RF. Sr. Brett DiFelice gloved the ball after a short run,
but it eased out for a SF/E-9 combo and coach Stan Parker said it was
Brett’s first error in three years! Phew! Another bobble made all three runs in
the fourth unearned, though sr. 1B Jason Davila (single, one) and Brown
(double, two) did line shots for legit RBI. The sixth-inning run was clean –
hooray! – and two Hillers even teamed up for a nice play to prevent one more. On
what would have been a wild pitch, jr. C Anthony Cardona made a quick
recovery and fired to a covering Cory Broderick, a sr. RH, and Barr was
nabbed. Broderick and CH’s first pitcher, jr. RH Anthony Cafagna, went
three innings apiece. Cafagna was victimized by five of the errors and it was
also raining, sometimes halfway hard, during his stint. He tried not to let the
insanity get to him, but it wasn’t easy. Barr is one of the quickest workers in
baseball history. As I told him, he pitches like he has TWO dates lined up for
later. Only on rare occasions did he take more than 4-5 seconds to pitch the
ball after getting it back from Conaway. Despite his hurrying, he never looked
rush. Weird, right? Also, if he’s not on base or batting as an inning ends, he
stands right at the edge of the field and trots quickly to the mound to get
started. If I’m a plate ump, I’m giving him every close call (ha ha). The day’s
best defensive play was made by CH jr. CF Mark Justice, who hustled in
hard and made a dive to snag a liner. Or did he? I could have sworn the ball
short-hopped into his glove. Ah, but what the heck. It was a great play either
way. Best part of the day was seeing Joe Conlin, whose son, Craig,
is GA’s coach. Craig was a basketball star at La Salle High and University.
Chris (McDevitt, also NFL), Keith and Kevin (both La Salle)
played football at Penn State. Ken, the oldest, was mostly known for
baseball at McDevitt. Joe is a big dude, just like all of them, really (not fat,
just BIG -- smile), and always displayed a tremendous approach as he nurtured
his sons. I’d strongly imagine that everyone who knew Joe “Moon” Conlin back in
those days felt the same way. Just as they do now about Craig. Salt-of-the-earth
people. The whole family.
MAY 17
PUBLIC LEAGUE FIRST-ROUND PLAYOFF
Edison 10, Mastbaum 2
These schools, in all sports, usually get after each other in
frisky fashion in part because many of the players know each other, especially
the Hispanic guys. This one had some energized moments, but it was tough for
folks – players and spectators alike – to get too excited after Edison overcame
a 2-0 deficit with three in the second and five in the third. The coolest moment
was discovering that I’m related to two of Edison’s players (ha ha). Long story,
but my oldest son, Teddy, has a 5-year-old daughter, Tahlia, and
the moms of two Owls are related to Tahlia’s grandmom from the mother’s side.
Every time I turn around these days . . . new family! Anyway, the story focused
on jr. RH Javier Lafuente, who’s all of 5-6, 125 pounds, but owns a heart
as big as all outdoors. “Javie” said afterward he felt a twinge in his ribcage
while throwing a second inning pitch and was only 75 percent thereafter. Could
have fooled everyone. His sweeping curve had good bite and his fastball was
decent enough to get by. He finished with seven Ks in a three-hitter.
One hit apiece came from sr. SS Ben Garcia and sr. 1B Carmelo Sierra.
Lafuente plays with them on summer teams and he said it helped that he knew how
to pitch to them. Being a classy teammate, he didn’t want to go public with
particulars (smile). Garcia’s hit was a groundball single to CF while Sierra’s
was a squib-job along the first-base line. Lafuente came close with a headlong
dive. The other Mastbaum hit came in the second and yielded an RBI for soph INF
Keith Ribot. It also produced a fabulous pic for DN photographer Yong
Kim, and let’s hope the editors opt to use it. The ball was a blooper and
miscommunication caused a collision between soph 2B Giraldo Robaina
and sr. RF Omar Torres. Robaina went tumbling over Torres. Vintage stuff!
Another legendary play occurred in the third. Jr. CF Luis “Ricky” Marquez
was called out on a slide at the plate even though frosh C Nick Sanchez
admitted later he never came close to making a tag. And my pic shows that! (ha,
ha). “I couldn’t reach down in time,” he said. Mastbaum’s starter was soph RH
Ryan Collins. He has decent size and could be OK in time, but the
Owls hit some shots in this one and he appeared to be slightly intimidated once
that began to happen. It’s part of being young. He lasted three innings, then
was followed by sr. RH Julio Escalante. Edison’s top hitters: jr. 1B
Joshua Guzman, a strong kid, had a double and a two-run single; Marquez went
4-for-4 with one RBI; soph 3B Luis Beato smacked a two-run single
and added another RBI on a walk; sr. LF Phillip Acevedo bagged a two-run
single. Lafuente also had two hits. Garcia is a lively, savvy player and he
experienced some frustration when his less skilled teammates had difficulties.
From SS at one point, he came walking in and muttered, “Why are we throwing a
curve on a 3-2 count?” Also, he got after a courtesy runner by saying, “When you
go into second, go hard! That’s why they call it a take-out slide!” I’ve
recommended Garcia to a friend who manages a team in the wood-bat, semi-pro
Pen-Del League and I hope the connection is made. As the middleman on a DP,
Robaina made an excellent turn and VERY strong throw. He’ll bear watching these
next two seasons. Something to think about: The Pub expanded the playoffs from
four to eight teams for the ’76 season. Edison has made 16 quarterfinals
appearances since then and has lost every time. Ouch.
MAY 16
PUBLIC LEAGUE CLASS AAA SEMIFINAL
Phila. Electrical 8, Franklin Towne 5
Let’s hear it for kitty litter! Again. FT coach Kyle
Riley and his players were out early to work on the sloppy field at Vogt RC,
in Mayfair, and they did a great job getting it ready. The plate and first-base
areas were particularly messy and that was where the KL came in (like yesterday
at Conwell-Egan). Nothing could be done about the tall grass/weeds in the
outfield. When the PE players arrived, they immediately trotted out to leftfield
for exercises. One of them yelled to another, “Watch out for the snake!” He
quickly followed up with, “Just kidding. There’s no snake. If so, you wouldn’t
have seen it anyway.” Did we see a good game? I’ll take the fifth to some degree
(smile). There were 11 errors and some very simple plays weren’t made,
especially on flyballs that were airborne more than long enough to be caught.
This was an enjoyable tilt, however, because the players were into it and maybe
150 people, including what appeared to be many staff members from both schools,
were on hand. You hardly EVER see that at a Pub game. Perhaps the sloppiness was
due in part to the pain-in-the-butt weather. For a while it was bright and
sunny. But it was mostly light gray to dark gray and there were some very brief
periods of light rain. Weird. Where’d the ink go? To sr. SS-RH John Bowers,
who’s planning to become an electrician. From a school with "electrical" in its
name? Hey, who would have thought?? (ha ha) In the No. 3 hole, he went 2-for-4
with a ringing triple to right and two RBI. And then, after sr. LH Eric
Andracchio surrendered a single and double to start the home sixth, Bowers
went to the mound and earned the save. Hopefully, he gave sr. RF Jerard
Mickie a hearty thank-you. Frosh P-2B Mike Skinner (5-4, 125)
greeted Bowers with an RBI groundout. The leadoff man, soph CF Keith Rycek,
followed with a drive to RF. Off the bat it had the sure look of a hit. Even
about three-fourths of the way out there, it did. But Mickie kept running and
running and running and when he finally reached out with his glove, darned if it
didn’t go in. Great play! Even better for the Chargers: the runner on third, sr.
INF Javier Muniz, thought there was no way the ball would be caught and
he failed to tag up and just see what would happen. He was down by the plate
when Mickie made the snag and, despite a scramble-back-up-there attempt, was
doubled off third to end the inning. FT’s subs and fans showed tremendous energy
in the seventh while trying to help their squad post a three-spot and tie the
game, but it wasn’t to be. PE had just seven hits, but got LOTS of help from
FT’s fielding miseries. Four of the eight runs were unearned. Sr. 3B Mario
Dina reached base three consecutive times on bobbles. Ouch. In a serious
oddity, six of PE’s runs came courtesy of grounders. Bowers and sr. LF Pat
Russell had the only hits for RBI (both were triples). Among the spectators:
ex-Lincoln FB star and baseball player Joe DiGrazio. PE jr. C John
McGovern, who had two RBI on groundouts, is his step-brother in kinda-removed
fashion. McGovern has a normal build, but somehow is nicknamed “Meatball.” Said
DiGrazio: “Yeah, I’m trying to figure out THAT one myself.” At the beginning of
the game, one of FT’s subs was doing radio-style play-by-play on the bench. In
rather quick order, he was convinced to knock it off (smile).
MAY 15
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Conwell-Egan 1, La Salle 0
Sometimes your hopes are realized. This was one of those days.
Earlier today, I was not a happy man because it appeared that all of the
baseball games would be postponed due to sloppy field conditions resulting from
last night's heavy rains. But on La Salle's website, there was never a mention
about a postponement (except at the JV level) and when I called C-E's athletic
office about 1 o'clock, coach Rich Papirio happened to answer and said
his people (assistants, players, etc.) had been working hard to get the field in
proper shape and the game would be played. Yes!!!! C-E assistant Dante
Cefalone said his new favorite substance in life is kitty litter (ha ha)
because that's what was used -- bag after bag after bag after bag -- to dry out
the plate area. Anyway, great hustle by all who helped to make this happen. It
was the only game today in the city leagues! Oh, yeah, and it was special! If
you'd predicted a 1-0 final, no one would have laughed at you because the
starters were C-E sr. RH Brian Herman (Rider) and La Salle sr. LH Matt
Zielinski (Richmond). It's a big-time treat to watch each guy work. Usually,
I'm a fan of the nutty-type athletes, merely because they're usually more fun to
watch and write about. But Herman and Zielinski have tremendous poise and mental
toughness and it's impossible not to be impressed and respect how they approach
their duties. Believe it or not, I think I actually heard the ultra-quiet
Zielinski (he's also humble; last year he had to be coaxed big-time just to hold
up the title plaque) say something while he was on the mound. It was the word
"ball" and he said it only because he wanted to get the attention of plate ump
Mike Finney; Matt was getting ready to toss in a ball that had been
fouled off down the line (smile). As far as I know, Brian said nothing. Ever.
Though my story included some bits and pieces from Herman, it focused largely on
sr. C Rich Dupell. He had no hits (0-for-3, two Ks), but played a major
role because he gunned down three baserunners. Oddly, all three reached base to
start innings. We'll start with the first inning. Sr. CF Mike Villari
beat out a roller to jr. 3B Ryan Terry (Terry bobbled slightly; had no
play anyway) and sr. SS Will Phillips was called upon to bunt. Popup.
Right to Herman, who gunned to sr. 1B Mike Rugghia for a DP. Second
inning: jr. C Sean Saverio walked and yielded to jr. CR Mike
Martinelli. He tried to steal and Dupell shot him. Third inning: sr. DH
Jared Carter walked and Dupell picked him off at 1B. Fourth inning: Villari
beat out a single to sr. 2B Ed Barry, who double-hitched and was just
late with his throw. Again, Phillips popped up a bunt and this time Dupell
caught it and fired for another DP. Phew, baby! By contrast, C-E opted not to
play small-ball and things worked out. With one out in the third, Barry ripped a
single past sr. 3B Ryan Creter into LF. Dupell fanned for the second out,
then Barry took off for second and stole it easily. Herman followed with an RBI
double down the RF line. There was no play at the plate, but Barry uncorked a
head-first slide and looked right toward the camera. He came close to sticking
out his tongue. Hey, what'd I do to you, buddy??? (ha, ha). The two other
half-innings of note were the visiting sixth and seventh. There was first a
great moment in the sixth as jr. PH Matt Howard battled and battled and
finally slammed a single to RF. From the third-base coaching box, La Salle boss
Joe Parisi yelled to the other Explorers, "Some of you guys could learn
something from that!" The next moment was ugly. Villari sent a popup down the
first-base line. Trying to catch it was Rugghia. With what was flat-out, full
intention, Villari barreled full-speed into Rugghia to assure the ball would not
be caught. Rugghia went down hard and there was some brief verbal sparring
between the teams. Luckily, things did not go off the deep end. Plate ump
Mike Finney ejected Villari for the severity of the interference and Parisi
said afterward that he would have removed Villari anyway. (On a good note: after
the game, Parisi and Papirio arranged for Villari and Rugghia to meet behind the
backstop, out of most people's field of vision. The players shook hands and
appeared to put the incident behind them.) There was a spillover of emotion when
La Salle went back into the field. One of C-E's subs made a stupid remark about
one of La Salle's players (someone who had nothing to do with the Villari
situation). Papirio called time, walked in from the third-base coaching box and,
in no uncertain terms, told the kid that such actions would not be tolerated. As
you might imagine, the Villari incident caused C-E's student fans to become
agitated and yell some inappropriate remarks. On one hand, though, I could
understand their wrath. It was a bush-league thing to do and no one knows that
more than the highly competitive (and talented) Villari. Now for the visiting
seventh: Herman recorded Ks against the 4-5-6 hitters, sr. RF Bill Warrender,
Saverio and sr. 2B Jeff Liberatore. Along the way, the C-E fans hollered
"MVP! . . . MVP!" and "Brian HER-man! . . . Brian HER-man!" The players mingled
afterward with the students, mostly through a fence (Van Zelst twins
sighting!!), and in time Papirio was doused with the contents of a water bucket.
My DN story began with an injury suffered by Dupell several months back when he
was slicing corned beef at a Shop-Rite. He has pics of his slightly mangled
right thumb on his cell phone, and was all too happy to show them to me. Gotta
love that, right? Maybe our website audience would enjoy them???? (smile). Oh,
and here's some Dupell family trivia. Rich said his surname is actually spelled
"DuPell" with a capital "P." He said to write it as all one word, though,
"because that's what we do." Hey, when in Dupellville, do as the Dupellians do.
MAY 12
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Gtn. Academy 8, Penn Charter 0
In the entire history of baseball, even including the high school
level, do you think anyone has ever thrown a no-hitter with NO strikeouts?
Interesting question, right? Because guys usually throw no-hitters mostly
because they're overpowering and gets LOTS of strikeouts. Well, today, everyone
at GA saw something pretty darn close to what's described in the first sentence
. . . Jason Davila, a sr. RH, twirled a one-hitter with one strikeout and
the K did not come until the final out of the game! Amazing! The 2-2 pitch to jr.
LF Mike Basile was close, but was called a ball. The next pitch yielded a
called strike three and Davila, who's bound for D-III Johns Hopkins, walked off
the mound having faced the minimum 21 batters. PC had two baserunners -- frosh
SS Mark Rhine in the third inning (he sent a clean, hard single through
the hole to LF; and soph RF Ryan Wenger in the sixth innings (he reached
first on a throwing error). Both guys were erased in doubleplays. Davila threw
only 63 pitches and the game was over in 87 minutes. Davila does not light up
radar guns, but he hits spots and exhibits a nice pace. PC hit some hard balls
in the first inning -- jr. CF Billy Goldman lined to frosh 2B Tommy
Coyle and Basile flied deep to left -- but went rather meekly thereafter.
The 21 outs came on 13 grounders (well, 11, with two resulting in DPs), four
flies, two infield pops and Goldman's liner in addition to the last-out K.
Actually, I was rooting against the strikeout because the effort would have been
cooler without one (smile). Davila started one of the DPs and sr. 3B Erich
Enns started the other right after making an error; it was nice to see him
rebound right away with a good play. PC's starter was sr. RH Sean Rust.
He got roughed up a little in the third, fourth and fifth, although the
Patriots' five in the fifth were unearned due to a bobbled grounder. No denying,
however, that jr. DH Joe Zubkoff hit an absolute bomb for a three-run
homer. It was one of those high, big-fly jobs and there was almost no wind, so
Zubkoff really tagged it. The ball cleared the fence in close to exact
left-center. In the third, eighth-grade LF Sean Coyle ripped a one-hop
double off the fence down the leftfield line and scored on a single to CF by jr.
CF John Barr. The highlight of a two-run fourth was an RBI double
by sr. RF Mark Brown. Later, Brown and soph 1B Colin Kish wound up
standing on 3B together after a mixup. Both were tagged and Brown was called
out. PC coach Rick Mellor said the call was wrong because "the lead
runner's entitled to the base," but that he didn't complain "because Brown's the
faster runner and I'd rather see him out." From what I could gather from sitting
in PC's bench area (perfect location for shooting righthanded batters and plays
at 1B), Rust mostly ran into trouble after shaking off pitch-calls. Sr. Alec
Hannah worked the sixth and hit the first two batters. Uh, oh. But he then
retired the side on a flyout and two popups. Nice job! Plate ump Warren
Gillis again nailed pretty much every pitch. He was the plate ump a while
back in the PC-CHA game that was delayed for 55 minutes because the original
base ump was involved in an auto accident and an emergency guy had to be
summoned. This time, the base ump again was late and GA's AD, Jim Fenerty,
drove him down to the field in a golf cart. Guess what? This guy was also
wearing plate-ump gear. Oh, brother. He removed it before the game began.
Ruben Amaro, the Phillies' assistant GM, was among the spectators.
He's the uncle of PC frosh Rob Amaro, who today DH'd. Meanwhile, I can't
ever remember a year when so many freshmen have occupied important spots in
lineups (Amaro bats cleanup.)
UPDATE!!! Poked around on the good,
ol' internet. At least two major leaguers have thrown no-hitters with NO
strikeouts. The Yankees' Sam Jones in 1923 and the Cubs' Ken Holtzman
in 1969. Amazing, right?
MAY 11
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
SJ Prep 4, Kennedy-Kenrick 3
Remember back in the fall, when Pat Murphy and his
buddy, Adam Ferrone, were lighting up this website with outrageous
reports about Prep football? Remember when some detractors figured they must be
dorks, with not a hint of athletic ability? Not sure about Adam (smile; it turns
out he was a stalwart on the championship tennis team!!), but Pat
is a pretty good baseball player. He's a captain, bats third in the order and
has become a solid catcher in his FIRST year playing the position. Not bad.
That's what we're HawkTalkin' about! More than a few guys could have earned the
ink after this triumph, which enabled the Hawks to keep pace with Bonner for
first place (at 10-2) in the South. I checked quickly with coach Chris
Rupertus and he suggested Murphy while saying, "When in doubt, I'm in favor
of going with seniors." So Pat it was. (For the paper, no references to this
website were made. Only to Pat's efforts for SJP's student paper, The Hawklet.
But we all know where he did his best writing -- ha ha.) Who could ever forget
the O'Hara Tims and shaved heads remark? Or the ongoing Explore This bust about
"the sitting down position"? Classic stuff! . . . OK, let's go to the seventh
with the score 2-2. K-K scored one as sr. SS Dennis Morgan singled to
left, was bunted up by sr. RF Kevin Barnett, moved to third on a chopping
infield single by jr. 2B Tom Mahoney, and came around on a looper to
left-center by sr. C D.J. Santoro. That brought Rupertus to the mound,
brandishing a hook. Out went sr. LH Doug DiSandro, who was mostly very
impressive (more later), and in came sr. RH Matt Leddy, who up to that
point had been DHing. Leddy threw a doubleplay ball to quickly end the uprising.
Prep had the top of the order to face jr. RH Mike Fazio in the bottom
half and here's what happened: sr. SS Tom Elliott (2-for-4) singled to RF;
sr. LF Nelson Russom moved him up with a bunt; Murphy powered an RBI
triple to left-center (and departed for courtesy runner Joe Squadroni);
sr. 3B Matt Tiagwad (single, double, walk already in the book) was issued
an intentional walk and, with the infield in, of course, soph 1B Aaron Haas
lined a single to LF to end it. I heard one spectator saying that K-K should
have walked Haas to load the bases and set up a force and/or doubleplay. I
wouldn't have done that. Yes, Leddy, the next hitter, had earlier pounded into a
DP, but MANY times through the years I've seen a four-pitch walk in those
situations, or even a wild pitch/passed ball. This game was played at Ashburn
Field, in South Philly, and there's no batting cage encircling the plate. Would
have been asking a LOT of K-K's battery. Prep scored twice in the first on
Russom's triple/throwing error combo and a sac fly by Haas after Murphy walked
and was pushed up to third on Tiagwad's double. K-K tallied an unearned run in
the first, though sr. 1B Kevin "Irish Kev" Lawrence did have a hit to
help make it happen. K-K's sixth inning run came courtesy of a home run by frosh
DH Christian Walker. Ashburn has legit dimensions, and it's 330 down the
line. I'd estimate that the ball went 350. What a bright future this young man
appears to have! How about this oddity? In back to back days, I saw teams with
freshmen in the three hole (also Northeast's Tim Freiling). There's much
to like about DiSandro. For my money he exhibits perfect pacing in that he
doesn't fart around, and neither does he rush. He's the classic crafty lefty and
it was a pleasure to watch him work. He also got a pair of outs on easy-as-pie
pickoffs. Took a pregame
pic of the Hawks' brother-combo starters, Matt and Brett Tiagwad and
Bill and Tim Edger. They were standing right in front of a small
wooden border in front of the dugout and kept trying to stand on it, thus trying
to appear taller than each other. Gotta love it. Meanwhile . . . Unless the
powers that be come to their senses, the CL next year will feature 21 league
games with three against each division member. The playing dates, supposedly,
will be Monday, Wednesday and Thursday. And, get this, teams will play the same
opponent three times in a week (though rainouts obviously will get in the way of
that). The CL scrapped an 18-game schedule (with four crossovers) a couple years
back and the pitching situation has only gotten worse for the traditional
have-nots. Some barely have one reliable starter, let alone three. It's going to
be a WHOLE lotta fun playing on a team that goes 2-19, 1-20, or even 0-21. Well,
at least the league is going to the 10-run rule. So the maulings, though
there'll be more of them, will be shorter.
MAY 11
SPECIAL NOTE
A few people e-mailed today to ask whether the Freiling
brothers, on Northeast (Tim is a freshman, Mike is a senior) are
the sons of former NE star Howie Freiling (class of '84), who went on to
star at North Carolina, and then played/managed in the minors and is now a scout
for the Mets. I spoke with Howie's mom, Helen. Mike/Tim are the sons of
Howie's cousin, Bob Freiling. Meanwhile, Howie holds a lofty place in
city baseball history for two reasons: three times he was a first team DN
All-City selection at 1B, and he smacked three homers in his first Pub
game as a sophomore, at Olney's field. There used to be bleachers on the
visiting side at Olney's football field, and they were in deep right-center of
the baseball field. One of those homers cleared them. Not bad, eh? (smile)
MAY 10
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Northeast 11, Frankford 10
Joe Breitweiser did a somewhat defiant flip of his bat,
and did not exactly leave the box in great haste. He knew it was gone, and it
was. What a crazy game! What a dramatic finish! A moment earlier, two freshmen
were trying to decide things. Two were out and RH Edwin "Tito" Rohena was
facing RF Tim Freiling, already 2-for-4 with a double and four RBI.
Freiling, who bats third, sent a double to right-center on maybe two bounces off
the fence. Up stepped Breitweiser, a jr. RHP-CF. First pitch. Bzzzzz-ang!!! The
ball rocketed to dead leftfield, up and over the fence (which is higher than it
used to be through the '04 season, if I remember correctly) and the Vikings had
a stirring win. Frankford has won 81 of its last 85 Pub games over five seasons,
including playoffs, but it has now -- perish the thought -- lost two of its last
four. It has good pitchers, but none of the lights-out variety, and one of the
good ones, soph RH Esteban "Shortie" Meletiche (formerly known as "Shorty"
and then as "Shorti" -- maybe "Shorteeeeeee" is next -- smile), is out with a
wicked cut on his hand suffered in a rivalry game with North Catholic. It
reaches pretty much from his wrist to a spot near the start of his index finger.
What all this means is that Frankford is vulnerable, and that gives hope to the
other squads (well, some of them anyway) as the regular playoffs draw near.
Believe us when we tell you a LOT happened along the way, but for purposes of
this report we'll zip ahead to the visiting sixth. A catcher's interference call
loaded the bases with one out and Breitweiser, who showed good velocity and even
better movement, at least early, plunked Rohena and soph RF Jeffry "Colombia"
Bru back-to-back to help Frankford edge within 8-5. NE coach Sam Feldman
had seen enough and Breitweiser had already thrown about 115 pitches.
Ordinarily, the replacement would have been sr. LH Seth Shapiro. The
Sethster is playing with a messed-up hamstring, though, and his action is
limited to first base. So Feldman summoned sr. SS Brad Dwyer, who
according to his teammates had not made a pitching appearance all season. One
popup later, Dwyer served an RBI single to the No. 9 hitter, jr. 3B Dave
Doggett (3-for-3, walk, three RBI). That brought to the plate sr. C Ramon
Reyes, 0-for-4 to that point though he had reached three times on errors.
Bizzzz-oom! Reyes fired a rocket to left and it went up .. and ... over the
fence for a grand salami and Frankford was up, 10-8. Holy Dramatic Turnaround!
In the NE sixth, jr. LF Craig Young drew a one-out walk and Shapiro
mashed a double to right-center, easily scoring Young. For the moment.
Immediately, Frankford coach Bob Peffle and assistant Juan Namnun
yelled for the Pioneers to appeal at second base and Young was called out for
missing the bag. Oh, baby! That play became gigantic when frosh 2B Jose
Delgado sent a popup to RF that was dropped for an error, enabling a
pinch-runner to score. A fielder's choice ended the inning. Dwyer, who throws at
barely medium speeds, let alone fast, even though he's a SS, regrouped from the
grand-slam horror to work a perfect seventh. And if you were paying attention,
you already know what happened in the home half (smile). As he acknowledged in
an interview -- the DN folks made some room; my only story for tomorrow was
going to be a feature on PC's Michael Weick for the all-star FB game --
Breitweiser can't break the habit of fighting himself when things go wrong. One
of these days/months/years, he will, and he'll regret that it took him so long
(smile). Fkd's starter was sr. LH Edwin Burgos. He just wasn't too sharp
in this one, though of course he battled. Also, the Pioneers were uncommonly
sloppy on defense. Strange goings-on: Eight of NE's runs were scored by the last
four guys in the order; Feldman ordered a squeeze bunt with TWO outs in the
second inning (sr. C Derek Butler did not put the ball in play, then
swung away and collected an RBI single); NE sr. 3B Kyle Bachmann got
spiked/run into 27 times (or so it seemed -- smile; he was limping from the
second inning on) . . . NE sr. Naim Muhammad is accustomed to starting,
but for the moment is watching games from the bench. He kept pacing around and
muttering to his fellow subs, "I can't stand this stuff! I don't know how y'all
DO this stuff!" At least I think he said "stuff" (ha ha). In the fifth, sr. CF
Luis Encarnacion lost a popup in the sun. Feldman trotted out and let
Encarnacion use his sunglasses. Later in the inning, Encarnacion did catch a
popup. Feldman quipped, "Three cheers for my sunglasses!" There was a vintage
Pub moment, showing how these guys always find ways to have fun even in tense
moments. Just before Butler dug into the box in the fifth, he and Muhammad,
stationed near the bats and other equipment, had a quick, goofy exchange about
whether they could date each other's mother. From a spot behind my lawn chair
(not sure who said it), one of the other Vikings laughed and yelled in to
Butler, "If you get a hit here, you can date all our mothers!" So, what
happened? The Butler didn't do it. He went down swinging. Central star Jared
Farbman, who also beat Frankford recently, was in attendance. So was
ex-Olney star Edwin DeLeon, a second team All-City infielder in '03 and a
tremendous student/young man. Kudos to NE sr. Mike "Big Reds" Freiling,
Tim's brother, who usually has to satisy his baseball hunger as the first-base
coach. But he was summoned to pinch-hit in the fifth and delivered an RBI single
to CF. There was good energy throughout. Stopped at Lincoln beforehand to take
team pics of the Railsplitters and Washington. They're posted.
MAY 9
PUBLIC LEAGUE CLASS AAA PRELIMINARY PLAYOFF
Swenson 17, Furness 1 (4 inn.)
If not for the fact the coaches are nice guys and into what
they're doing, and that I hadn't seen either team, some pre-game news likely
would have steered me to another game. Furness coach Bob Weidinger, a
former Temple assistant, had to go without his projected starting battery
because one guy didn't show up for school and another was hit with a school
suspension. Furness had just 10 players in uniform and frosh Darryl Porter,
who had never before played the position, had to catch. He had major
difficulties in the first two innings with passed balls and wild pitches that
experienced catchers would have caught. His troubles were not the reason for the
loss, of course, but it was hard for sr. RH Carlton Wade to maintain his
concentration and competitive spirit with that (and so much else -- every
flyball was an adventure to some degree) going on. Sr. SS Tom Lehnau, a
tall, rangy kid with some promise, offered to move behind the plate for the last
two innings and the miseries subsided somewhat, but more than once Lehnau made
strong throws to the bag only to be frustrated by the fact the middle infielders
were late in covering. There's no getting around it: Most of the Falcons had
very little baseball savvy. They did show good behavior and sportsmanship,
though, so they're to be commended. Swenson's pitcher was frosh RH Harry
Davila. He recorded nine strikeouts and walked two (both times it was the
No. 8 hitter, frosh INF Erick Franceshi) while allowing three hits. Wade
went 2-for-3 in the leadoff spot while Lehnau posted a hard double down the
leftfield line. Sr. 1B James Kalbach had the RBI on a grounder
that wound up being misplayed. Swenson banged out 16 hits, but at least a
half-dozen were flyballs that simply weren't caught. Davila went 3-for-4 with a
double, triple and three RBI. Sr. 1B Matt Shields went 3-for-4 with a
double and one RBI. Sr. C Pat Murphy had four RBI on two singles and a
pair of grounders. Sr. CF Gerald Wolford (triple) and soph SS Dom
Simone (double) collected extra-base hits for RBI. Swenson scored five,
three, three and six runs, by inning. Weird scenario: Swenson's opponent in the
next round will be Bok, which has been smacked around VERY hard this season in
Division A. Furness and Bok (and Southern) all play at the same complex at 11th
and Bigler, in South Philly, so Bok was practicing at the adjacent field while
this one was going on. As the game ended, members of the Pub's team for the city
all-star FB game were arriving for practice. Swenson coach Shawn
Williams was doused afterward with a bucket of water. Weidinger cracked,
"That's why WE just bring (plastic) bottles."
MAY 8
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Conwell-Egan 9, Ryan 2
There was heavy cloud cover throughout and, in time, the game's
mood matched the skies. C-E posted three in the second, two in the third and
four in the fourth and all suspense was removed, especially because sr. RH
Brian Herman (Rider signee) was mostly in lights-out mode. Herman really
keeps his fastball on the knees and if the plate ump is even remotely a guy who
favors low strikes, it's very difficult to get much going. He fanned 13 and
seven came in the last three innings; so much for any notion that he might be
the kind of guy who runs out of gas. Ryan managed five hits, all singles, and
four were hit hard. The Raiders' fourth-inning runs came on groundouts, however,
as sr. C Matt Amato and jr. DH Devon Weiss did the honors. So. CF
Andrew Lacovara was the only Raider with two hits, and both were hard
knocks to CF. Ryan had a chance for early damage, but ran right out of it into a
weird doubleplay. Lacovara singled and was bunted up by jr. LF Rob McArdle,
and then sr. 3B Chris Dolan reached on a strikeout-bad throw combo. On
what could have been a wild pitch, Dolan headed for second only to notice that
Lacovara had NOT headed to third. Sr. C Rich Dupell trotted toward
second and finally decided to go for Dolan (at one point the runners were pretty
much the same distance from 2B). Sr. 1B Mike Rugghia made the tag and
then fired to sr. 3B Ryan Terry, who ran down Lacovara back toward second
and bagged the inning-ending doubleplay. Oh, baby! Very disheartening for the
Raiders. In the C-E second, sr. CF John Malloy walked, jr. SS John
McDonald was hit by a pitch (he actually appeared to catch it with his
armpit -- smile) and, two outs later, sr. LF Joe Marziano crushed a
three-run, gotta-run-it-out homer over the head of sr. RF Pat DelVecchio.
He made it easily. Some sloppy play led directly to C-E's two runs in the third
(Terry had the lone hit, a double). All four runs in the fourth were legit, as
the RBI came on Dupell's double, Herman's infield single and Malloy's double to
left-center (good for two runs). C-E did some serious stingin' in those first
four innings. Ryan's starter was sr. RH Mike Miller, and he appeared to
be throwing quite hard. His location was nowhere near as good as Herman's,
though, and he lasted just 3.1 innings. Sr. RHs Tom Steigerwald and
Jim Reardon restored order, though Steigerwald did surrender some crunchers
upon first taking over. I don't think he meant to be a jerk, but Dupell's
attempt to bunt for a hit with a 9-2 lead was not appreciated by the Raiders.
C-E coach Rich Papirio was highly upset with the lack of an
in-the-baseline call when Dolan fanned in the first and was hit by Dupell's
throw. The plate ump got it right. Dolan was clearly in foul territory. Kevin
"Sparky" Cooney, of the Bucks County Courier-Times, was going to come to the
game just to watch. He did not! You can't imagine how disappointed the C-E
players were, especially John "Muscle-Up" Malloy (smile).
MAY 5
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Dobbins 17, Overbrook 12
This was a 2-hour, 58-minute chunk of my life I'll never get
back. Know what? I don't want to!! Yes, it was sloppy and some plays set
baseball back 40 years, but there were also some great moments and the players
had non-stop fun and there were also some funny comments from fans,
scorekeepers, umpires, etc. This one, played at Belmont Plateau with funky music
playing non-stop from loud audio systems in nearby parked cars, had meaning
because playoffs spots in the Class AAAA portion of Division D were on the line.
Overbrook was in either way; it was just a matter of placement. If Dobbins had
lost, Gratz would have claimed the second spot due to the head-to-head
tiebreaker. There were 22 hits (11 apiece), 14 walks, 3 HBPs, 16 strikeouts and
15 errors. The game ended in nifty fashion as Dobbins turned a doubleplay. Sr.
2B Malik Foman sent a flyball into left-center. Sr. LF Terrance Sample,
a star running back, cut in front of jr. LH-CF Darrell "Butter" Brown to
make the catch. Sample then gunned to another good athlete, sr. CF-SS Michael
Harris (wideout, small forward; accepted at Penn State main campus; congrats
Mike!!), to get the game-ending out at 2B. Two Mustangs grabbed the water bucket
with the idea of dousing first-year coach Glen Goldberg. But Glen saw
what was happening and trotted away. Later, he kind of submitted to the
time-honored ritual, though, and indeed took a bath. Dobbins' headliner was jr.
Marcellus Willoughby, who split his day between SS and P. Batting in the
third hole, he went 2-for-3 with a double, three-run homer and two sac flies for
six RBI. Jr. 1B Abdul Mujahid, a lefty-swinging 1B, had a single and
three walks in the leadoff slot and scored four runs. The No. 2 hitter, frosh
catcher Terrell "Mouse" Barringer, went 3-for-4 with a walk, double,
three RBI and three runs scored. For 'Brook, sr. SS Jonathan Moman went
4-for-5 with a double and two RBI and sr. C Mohamed Elbana went 3-for-4
with a walk and one RBI. Brown started on the mound for Dobbins, then switched
to CF after walking the first two guys in the fourth. Willoughby finished up.
'Brook went with sr. Jionquel Arline for the first 1 2/3 innings and
again for the seventh. Sr. LH Sylvester "Lefty" Broxton worked the
4 1/3 innings in between. Broxton was also the Panthers' QB and he's been
practicing this week for the city all-star FB game (May 20). He did not have
good velocity at all, except for a pitch or three, and I imagine he was saving
himself for a start Tuesday in a preliminary playoff. Here's some ebb-and-flow
stuff: Dobbins jumped to a 6-0 lead; 'Brook stormed within 6-4; Dobbins went to
10-4, 'Brook rallied within 10-8; Dobbins went to 16-8; and that was pretty much
it. The home seventh could have gotten interesting, though. When the DP
occurred, 'Brook had three runs home and runners on second and third. Oh, well .
. . Dobbins manager Elizabeth Lowe appeared to have a crush on Moman
(smile). Actually, they looked like brother and sister. Jonathan got a kick out
of Elizabeth's comments while batting. When Mujahid was batting one time,
Barringer and others kept spouting classic baseball chatter in an attempt to
encourage him. Mujahid turned around and said, "Stay calm, baby!" The guys then
whispered more comments (ha ha). Whenever Mustangs went down swinging, an adult
fan bellowed, "Don't go away mad! Just go away!" After drawing a walk, Brown
remained at the plate area and kept looking back at ump Jim Scott.
Finally, Scotty said to him, dryly, "You only get four." Brown then realized he
indeed had walked and strolled to first. 'Brook RF Brandon Pouncey is a
relative of back-in-the-day Gratz basketball forward Greg Pouncy (his
branch of the family spelled the name differently). I ran
a summer league in which Greg played. He was a very good leaper, so take a guess
on what I called him -- Greg "Bouncy" Pouncy. Brandon's face is VERY similar to
Greg's. Brandon's mom has nicknames for all of the Panthers. She calls a
big'-un, DH Richard Ragin "Baby Huey." Wonder if anybody even gets the
meaning? Goldberg said Brown, Sample and jr. RF Ranell Plummer had never
played baseball (nor softball, "not even at picnics") before the spring.
Amazing. A few times when Sample was batting, his mates quipped, "Don't give 'em
a lot. Just a Sample!"
MAY 4
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Judge 13, McDevitt 2
Well, since the game wasn't competitive, let's get right to the
controversy. Wouldn't want to disappoint Judge coach Joe McDermott, who claimed
that's all I'd be looking for . . . The Catholic League does NOT have the 10-run
rule, but this one was halted after six full innings. Why? Lord only knows. I
can't imagine teams are allowed to make up their own rules -- you know, the
whole pre-game prayer thing and all, which happened to be read by Judge
assistant Tim Ginter. Aside from being an assistant to 31-year coach
Joe McDermott, Ginter is also Judge's athletic director AND the moderator
(read: commissioner) for CL baseball. And McDermott put him in a very difficult
spot by combining with McDevitt coach Buddy Glemser to end it after six
innings. Ginter is McDermott's boss in two of his jobs and his underling in a
third job, but now he faces the possibility of having to discipline his own
program. In the overall scope, is ending a game early a big deal? Except for the
fact it's a violation of the rules, no. But I didn't appreciate being asked to
lie by McDermott, and then have to listen to him berate me as he was walking
away in front of players/coaches from both teams. Joe is battling a leg problem
and he mentioned beforehand that he was in some pain, and maybe the combination
of pain/medication made him act irrationally. When I cover a game, there are
sometimes difficult decisions to be made in terms of what to mention or what not
to mention (cursing, rough play, disrespect of players by coaches, and vice
versa). Sorry, the length of the game is not open for debate. McDermott wanted
me to give McDevitt a zero in the seventh and I immediately told him that I
wouldn't lie about how long the game lasted. I suggested we'd list it as "halted
by mutual consent" and he seemed OK with that. But then he added, "Say that
there was a little league game ready to start." No other players were in the
area. Plus it was only 5:19 when the game ended. And I told him that. "Joe, the
game didn't even go 2 hours." He became more agitated and railed about
controversy and eventually wound up bellowing that he never wants me to cover
another Judge game. Last I checked, he doesn't make my assignments. The way I
see it, Glemser is at fault here big-time, as well. Why would he agree to end
the game with HIS team coming to bat for the final time after allowing JUDGE to
bat in the home sixth? Ridiculous. What does that say to your players? Anyway,
with Ginter right there, of course I had to check with him on how this should be
handled. I said, "Mutual agreement?" He said, "Put down what you want to put
down." He did not look comfortable at ALL. Should he be mad at McDermott?
Definitely. Should he have stepped in -- again, he was right THERE, wearing a
Judge uniform -- and ordered the game to be finished? Probably, though that
would have no doubt caused internal strife. (Tim is a relative newcomer to the
job. He probably would have found it difficult to exert that much authority.)
So, where do we go from here? Is it incumbent upon Ginter to discipline
McDermott/Glemser, or at least read them the riot act? If he doesn't, should his
wrists be slapped? Should the CL honchos, perhaps all the way up to Steve
Pawlowski, of the Archdiocese, get involved? You know, because of the prayer
thing and all. One of McDermott's points to me was that McDevitt's players would
be embarrassed if the papers reported that the game was halted after six
innings. Nonsense. They know they lost, 13-2. They know the game was halted
after six innings. Again, six FULL innings. McDevitt's players are going to be
embarrassed -- and pissed, hopefully -- only because their coach, in concert
with the other team's coach, cut short a game with only three outs to go. Every
so often, CL and Pub coaches call in false scores with the idea of saving losing
teams embarrassment. As far as I know, it happens only in baseball of the three
majors. While they're at it, maybe the ADs/principals can figure out a way to
discipline guys who knowingly provide false information. Let's say a suburban
reporter covers a game with a final of 22-1. He writes that, of course.
Meanwhile, a result of 12-1 is called into Scoreservice, which services the
Daily News and Inquirer. Is that fair? I have literally received reports
crediting guys with more total RBI than their team supposedly scored. Wonderful,
eh? Meanwhile, this is Exhibit A of why a coach/athletic director involved in a
sport should NOT be the moderator of that same sport. Too many ways his actions
can be called into question . . .
The game itself? First, in case you're wondering why I even went to
this one: I hadn't seen Judge this season and hadn't seen McDevitt in several.
The ol' two-birds, one-stone thing. Even shortly before the game, Glemser was
unsure who'd pitch and he wound up going with sr. RH Steve Hansberry. He
walked four of the first eight batters (one intentionally) and Judge posted a
four-spot with the RBI going to sr. LF Chris Schwartz on a walk and soph
3B Tim Ashenbrenner on a three-run triple. The next pitcher, for the
start of the second, was soph RH Matt Fisher. He lasted eight batters and
was replaced by soph RH Brian Schoendorfer, who went the rest of the way.
Judge sent 14 batters to the plate in the second, and eight scored. McDermott
showed compassion by ordering third-base coach Randy Hill to hold a
runner at third on what should have been an RBI single, and to hold that same
runner there on what should have been a sac fly. Later, I can't imagine
McDermott was too happy when McDevitt soph Jonathan Etheridge stole
third, surprising sr. LH Justin DeCristofaro, who was on the mound and
stepped off kind of late, with the score 12-2 in the fourth. In Etheridge's
defense, he's new to the varsity and was performing in a courtesy-runner
capacity. Not sure whether he went on his own. Soph 3B Tim Ashenbrenner
hammered a three-run triple in the first. Sr. C Tony Mirabella (single)
and DeCristofaro (triple) posted hits worth two RBI in the second. Sr. RF
Jeff McMahon and sr. 2B Matt Compton enjoyed identical performances
(3-for-4, triple, RBI) while sr. 1B Jason D'Ambrosio went 2-for-3 with a
double, intentional walk and RBI. DeCristofaro pitched all six innings, allowing
seven hits and striking out three. He got the ink and his left arm has had a
rough week, as he's also preparing to play QB in the city all-star FB game. (And
go to his prom Friday night.) His performance was merely OK and, yes, it was
tough to concentrate with a 12-0 lead after two. McMahon had a strong game in RF
with two nice catches; one started a doubleplay. McDevitt's LF, sr. Matt
Gallagher, made a sliding catch. Jr. 3B Joe Mitros began the fourth
with a double, moved up on a wild pitch and scored as Schoendorfer hit a
misplayed grounder. Sr. CF Steve Wilson hit into a fielder's choice and
later came around on a slicing single to RF by jr. C Frank "Widest Stance
Ever" Doyle (smile). Somehow, Fisher appeared in the lineup in two different
spots. He was listed in the seventh spot when he came in to replace Hansberry,
then pinch-hit in the first spot in the sixth. Only in the Cath. The umpires
were the father-son team of Ed (bases) and Jeff Kerrigan (plate).
Jeff has become very good on balls-strikes. Ed is in his 43rd year and is amazed
that the pay during that time has gone from $5 to $63 per game. "Thank God for
inflation," he quipped. Ed also had the day's best crack. After one of
McDevitt's coaches complained that a softball pitching machine, being used by a
girls' team, was on the field out in center, Ed yelled, "Welcome to the city!"
Later, he did successfully get the guy to move the machine a little.
MAY 2
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Penn Charter 6, Chestnut Hill 5
Umps are famous for hanging out at/in their cars until a moment
before the game is scheduled to begin, then making a grand entrance, so I wasn't
THAT concerned when the base ump was missing even though the teams were raring
to go. Then came 3:50, 3:55, 4:00, 4:05 . . . Hay-zoooooos! Let's get this party
started. According to plate ump Warren Gillis, the original base ump was
involved in a car accident (hope he's OK) and Bruce Martin, who has even
worked major league games in strike situations, agreed to hustle over to PC and
fill in. (CHA assistant John McArdle, a highly respected ump for many
years, worked a Phillies game a couple years back when the regulars had travel
woes. PC coach Rick Mellor would have allowed John to work this one, but
Inter-Ac rules prevent coaches from serving as arbiters and BOTH teams could
have been charged with forfeits). Anyway, the game got rolling at 4:40, 55
minutes late, and ended at 6:30. My DN story focused on 6-4, 170-pound jr. LH
Mark Adzick, who five months ago made an oral commitment to Wake Forest and
last spring was a first team All-City honoree. He said his curve was good, but
that his changeup and fastball (movement-wise) were subpar, and he expressed
thanks to his teammates for scoring enough runs to cover him. Each team allowed
two runs in a sloppy first and such a development was probably not surprising,
considering the frustration over the delay. In the seventh inning, Adzick
appeared ready to close out an eight-strikeout five-hitter after easily getting
the first two outs. But in a terrific at-bat, during which he fouled off
five-six pitches, sr. RF Brett DiFelice sent a groundball single to CF to
keep the game alive and, lo and behold, jr. RH Anthony Cafagna mashed a
hit-me fastball over the fence in right-center for a two-run homer. Whoa! Next
was sr. 1B Cory Broderick and he also came through, singling to CF. The
next batter was sr. LF Anthony Giovinazzo, who sent a low liner into
right-center. Soph RF Ryan Wenger ran in and over and, wow!, made a
tremendous diving catch to end it. It was one of those all-or-nothing jobs and,
with Broderick running in the two-out situation, it's likely CHA would have tied
the game. PC's players dashed/trotted out to Wenger to congratulate and thank
him for the game-saving play and CHA's could only sag in disappointment. For PC,
frosh 1B Rob Amaro, nephew of Ruben, son of David
(former minor leaguer) and grandson of Judy (one of the greatest ladies
ever! -- smile), went 3-for-3 with two RBI in the cleanup spot. And, yes, to
repeat, he's a freshman. Sr. DH Sean Rust went 2-for-3 with an RBI and
scored what turned out to be the decisive run on Wenger's RBI double in a
two-run fifth. Sean was feelin' it as he arrived at the plate and I told him
later I was going to edit a picture to show his hanging out (smile). After CHA
touched Adzick for a two-spot in the first, sr. 3B Jim Entwisle
provided a big boost in the bottom half by smashing the first pitch from Cafagna
for a double over Giovinazzo's head. Courtesy runner John Walton, a soph,
came up big in the fourth, stealing 3B when it was left unprotected as CHA
expected a bunt. The Blue Devils' first inning runs came on Cafagna's RBI single
and Giovinazzo's sac fly. CHA hurt itself with some infield bobbles and other
sloppiness. Jr. C Anthony Cardona had a rough moment in the second. When
he squared to bunt, a pitch hit him right in the soprano-makers. Ouch. And more
ouch. He yelled a good 10 times while writhing on the ground and more than a
couple CHA kids were heard to say, "He doesn't like to wear his cup when he's
hitting. Only when he's catching." Anthony stayed in the game, showing big
you-know-whats. Phew, hope you're OK, kid. In the fifth, he did gun down a
would-be basestealer. The members of each coaching staff gave Gillis the
occasional hard time -- muttered from the bench area, usually -- on his
ball-strike calls. I thought he did an excellent job and I spent most of the
game right next to the cage. Broke out camera No. 3 in dot.com history today.
No. 2 just flat-out died this morning. Changed the batteries several times. It
just wouldn't turn on anymore. The Daughter was here when it happened and she
immediately drove me to Target. She kept trying to talk me into cameras of all
kinds of different brands. No! I'm accustomed to Canons and they've been good to
me! ha ha. PC assistant Gerry Sasse had the honor (term used loosely) of
being the first to have his pic taken with the new camera. He was hitting
infield. Remember that. Might win you money someday in a trivia contest. Also on
CHA's bench was all-timer Dave Miller, a star in baseball and
basketball (class of '92) and the Indians' first-round draftee out of Clemson in
'95. Dave, a lefty (though he wasn't a pitcher in the minors), said he was asked
to throw B.P. to the Blue Devils Monday to help get them ready for Adzick. "My
arm's still feeling it," he said, laughing.
MAY 1
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Central 5, Frankford 4
Not used to seeing Frankford's score on the right side of the
comma, are you? In the last five seasons, the Pioneers have dominated in Pub
play to the tune of 79 wins and three losses. The two setbacks before today came
in an '02 semi (to GAMP) and an '04 regular season game (to Northeast), and the
current winning streak was rollin' along at 37. How'd it end? In slightly
strange fashion. This one was sloppy and drawn out early (Central led, 5-3,
after two innings and 52 minutes), then mostly well played and quick after that.
The story went to jr. RH Jared Farbman, who has learned it's tough enough
to battle the opposition without adding occasional skirmishes against yourself.
After a crazy and frustrating first inning, in which Frankford scored three
times, Farbman had only one difficult frame thereafter (the fourth) and was able
to limit the damage to one run in part because he helped himself by pouncing off
the mound to glove what would have been a sacrifice bunt and firing to third for
an out. Jared cut loose with the occasional very good FB, but mostly prevailed
because he mixed his pitches and worked corners. He retired the last eight
batters in order and even humped up for a three-K seventh against the 4-5-6
hitters. He said he respected Frankford's batters enough that he often decided
to work in reverse fashion -- curves early, fastballs late. Fkd's starter was
frosh RH Edwin "Tito" Rohena, and he struggled. Perhaps he was shaken
when the very first batter, sr. SS Matt Smith, reached base on easy
grounder that was bobbled. Soph CF Micah Winterstein sent a groundball
single to LF, Farbman moved up both runners with a groundout, sr. C Joe
Magdovitz walked and soph 3B Aaron Esbensen ripped a two-run single
to left. The second was messy. The Nos. 8 and 9 hitters, sr. 2B Nick DeLeo
and sr. Josh Fleishman, drew one-out walks and Smith lined a
run-scoring single to left-center. Two more runs scored later on a HBP (Magdovitz)
and walk (Esbensen). Rohena departed and sr. RH Richard Jimenez used an
off-speed pitch to fan jr. 1B Jim Benek and end the inning. Jimenez
pitched well thereafter, but ran into some trouble with two out in the sixth as
Farbman walked and Magdovitz collected an infield single. The courtesy runners
wound up on second and third and soph RH Esteban "Shorty" Meletiche,
having been summoned from SS, retired Esbensen on a grounder to Jimenez at SS to
end the inning. Northeast is highly respectable and GAMP, though young, is
dangerous, but a Frankford-Central final would not surprise. Could be a classic.
When one of Central's batters evaded a fastball with a late move, he commented
to his nearby teammates, "That was coming at my dome." Magdovitz quipped, "Wear
a skirt to practice tomorrow!" Before the game, I mentioned to one of the
Lancers that Frankford had won 79 of its last 81 Pub games. The kid was not
impressed (smile). He said, "Yeah, well, none of those games was THIS game."
APRIL 29
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Frankford 4, Northeast 0
Another mostly good one in the Pub. Not a 1-0 job, with no
errors, such as the Roxborough-Mastbaum game the other day, but enjoyable and
eye-opening to a large degree because of the pitching. Frankford's hurler was
sr. LH Edwin Burgos, who's mostly known for his curve and craftiness. But
check this out: he showed more hop on his fastball than I'd ever seen from him
and that made him quite effective. Burgos recorded a whopping 14 strikeouts and
got his last five outs on Ks. He walked three and surrendered two hits (both by
frosh RF Tim Freiling) and no one advanced past second base. Freiling
broke up a no-hitter while leading off the fifth and at first remained on the
bases. Coach Sam Feldman then decided to go with a pinch-runner (jr.
Joel Furman) and Furman was picked off by a lot. He decided to try for
second rather than become an easy out at 1B and was gunned down by sr. 1B
Juan Carlos Torres, with soph SS Esteban "Shorty" Meletiche making
the catch and tag. Freiling's other hit came with two out in the seventh after
jr. LF Craig Young reached 1B on an error by sr. C Ramon Reyes,
who's normally the picture of clean play. Young sent a popup high to the 3B side
of the diamond, about halfway up the line. There was some doubt about whether
the ball might hit the overhanging fence, but it drifted into fair territory and
Reyes couldn't hang on. Rough one. Burgos fanned soph pinch-hitter Jose Lopez
and the game concluded in just under 2 hours. Meanwhile . . . Northeast's
pitcher was sr. LH Seth Shapiro. A scout or college coach was on hand and
he clocked Seth's FB at 84 mph in the very first inning. Impressive! Especially
because Seth is a short-armer and does not reach back very far. Also because he
suffered a hamstring injury while batting in the first (he collided with Torres
after a slightly wide throw) and decided to work exclusively from the stretch.
Shapiro allowed five hits and four walks while striking out nine. Frankford
scored one in the third as Reyes walked, went to second on a wild pitch,
scrambled to third on a right-side grounder (resulting in an error) and scored
on a sac fly to RF by sr. 2B Richard Jimenez. In the fifth, Reyes fired a
groundball down the 3B line for what appeared to be a double. But the plate ump,
a shade late, said he'd been yelling "foul ball!" all along and Reyes was
summoned back to the box. He followed up with a hard single to CF. Torres
dropped down a bunt and Shapiro threw wildly past 1B, giving Fkd second and
third. Jimenez made the Vikings pay, stroking a two-run single into left. Fkd
received another gift in the sixth when sr. CF Naim Muhammad dropped a
popup and Meletiche, because he was hustling all the way, reached 2B. Burgos
walked and Reyes delivered an RBI single down the LF line. Freiling made a
sprawling catch to claim best-defensive-play honors. There was a lively crowd on
hand for this 11 a.m. affair. Fkd's fans, and even players, are always
energized. But at least one NE fan was also loud and funny. While Frankford was
experiencing a batting drought for a while, he yelled, "Where's the drum??!!"
And then, when NE got a couple guys on base, he insisted, "We don't need no
noise!" Spent some time talking with members of the Frankford Boys Club's 13-
and 14-year-old squad. They were into the game throughout and -- surprise,
surprise -- were rooting for Fkd. One of the kids knew about the website, which
he called "da bomb diggity" (ha ha), and was even correcting the others on how
to pronounce my name. Hmmm. How was THAT possible? He later told me his
step-brother is Tim Young, a former Edison basketball star now playing at
Virginia Union. OK, that explains it. It was great to see Fkd coach Bob
Peffle on hand. Heading to the game, I wasn't sure whether Bob or assistant
Juan Namnun would be in charge. A few days ago, "Peff" had a medical problem in
school and had to miss the Pioneers' win over Edison. Late in the game, when the
Boys Club kids were talking through the cage with Reyes and indicating they
couldn't wait to attend Fkd, Ramon said to them, "I'll tell you one thing. We
have the best coaching staff here. The BEST."
APRIL 27
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Roxborough 1, Mastbaum 0
Yes, you read the score line correctly. Hard to believe, right?
A Pub game with a 1-0 final -- the same league that recently provided a 30-25
game (U. City over Overbrook) and yesterday offered up a 24-23 tilt (West over
Mansion). Crazy world. As I write this, it’s early evening and later I’ll have
to cover one of the long-distance events in the Penn Relays. Steeplechase,
anyone? (smile) But my thoughts all night will be with this game and how special
it was, and how much it restored my faith that, at least every so often, the Pub
can come up with a gem. Even in something aside from Division A (which, by the
way, is likely weaker than ever). Anyway, congrats to every player on each team
for competing hard and well (no errors!) and for the sportsmanship shown
throughout. The game lasted only 1 hour, 42 minutes, and though it ended in cool
fashion, I would not have minded at ALL to stay for eight innings, nine innings,
10 innings, whatever. OK, here’s what happened in the home seventh: sr. SS
Kyle Monaghan, the leadoff hitter, draw a walk and promptly stole second on
the first pitch. Jr. CF Doug Sponsler then grounded to sr. SS Ben
Garcia. Garcia thought briefly about trying to gun down Monaghan at third,
but an out would not have been a sure thing and Garcia went to first instead. En
route to third, Monaghan slightly twisted his left knee and there was a brief
delay. During that stoppage, Garcia walked to Mastbaum’s bench and asked coach
Steve Lesh, “What’s he done?” He was referring to the next hitter, jr. 3B
Chris Schroeder. He’d gone 1-for-3 with a first-inning single. Garcia’s
idea was to walk Schroeder to set up a doubleplay possibility. Lesh opted to
play it straight and Schroeder walked anyway on four pitches. Next up was sr. 1B
Johntae Grove (two walks, strikeout). Grove quickly fell into an 0-2
hole, then flared a game-winning single to shallow rightfield. The Indians went
appropriately nuts, then respectfully calmed down to go through the handshake
line. I can’t emphasize enough what a proud day this was for the Pub, in all
areas! Even the field, located in Andorra and maintained by the 21st Ward group,
was in tremendous shape. Roxborough’s pitcher was sr. RH Destry Kiker,
normally the catcher and making just his second start of the season. He allowed
two hits and three walks while striking out eight, with six of the Ks coming in
the last three innings. He said he likes to pace himself and it showed (smile).
He even helped himself in the visiting seventh as sr. LF Julio Medina
singled with one out, then stole second and third with frosh C Nick Sanchez
and then soph 2B-3B Keith Ribot batting. Sanchez fanned and Ribot sent a
hard hopper up the middle. Moving slightly to his left, Kiker made the stop and
tossed to first to preserve the shutout. ‘Boro had two other defensive plays of
note. In the fourth, Schroeder snagged a liner and fired to first for a DP. In
the fifth, sr. RF Fernando Press made a sprawling catch of a low liner.
Mastbaum’s hurler was sr. RH Julio Escalante; like Kiker a small RH (but
even shorter). He surrendered four hits and seven walks while fanning four, and
he caused the Indians to leave eight runners on base in the first three innings.
In an oddity, Monaghan twice was retired at the plate: in the first on a
bases-loaded forceout (throw by soph 3B Ryan Collins, who later had to
depart with a hand injury) and in the fourth on a super effort by Garcia. The
play began as Sponsler was picked off first. Garcia made the tag between first
and second and then rifled a throw home to Sanchez, who applied the tag for the
unusual DP. Once when Jorge Flores was batting, his teammates, evenly
divided, kept yelling “Hor . . . Hay” back and forth again and again. Good
stuff. Both teams had 11 players in uniform. This was the first 1-0 Pub game
since '03, when Lamberton edged Penn, 1-0.One last time . . . congrats to all
involved. I enjoyed this one immensely. Thanks . . . Now back to the Penn
Relays.
APRIL 26
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Bonner 10, Carroll 0
Never would have predicted a blowout, especially after learning upon
arrival that five of Bonner's players, including three starters, would be
serving one-game suspensions for blowing off last Friday's practice after a
puzzling loss to O'Hara. At least all four (maybe all five?) of the guys were
running around making last-moment preparations for proms, and coach John
Fleming said he probably would have excused the absences if the guys had
bothered to tell him ahead of time. Live and learn. Hopefully. Not always a
given (smile). I already wrote a story this spring about sr. RH Sean
Fitzgerald and, lo and behold, he almost earned another one. Fitz took a
no-no into the sixth inning, when leadoff man Steve Brouwers, a sr. SS,
inside-outed a groundball single between first and second for a clean hit. Jr.
LF Chris Lisowski followed two batters later with a sinking liner to CF
that fell in front of sr. Mike Dunn. But that was it and, truthfully,
there were very few almosts. Fitzgerald fanned just five, but his mates played
errorless ball and turned two doubleplays and one of those was ultra-important
because it came in the first inning after Brouwers and jr. RH Chris Dengler
drew leadoff walks. Fitz even issued another free pass (his last of the game) to
the cleanup hitter, sr. C Andrew Szalejko, but then got jr. 1B-RHP
Kyle "Baked Ziti" Baker on a looking strike three to terminate the
threat. The first-inning DP was started by sr. 2B Mike Coleman, today's
inkman, and the ever-impressive middleman was sr. SS Brian Meagher.
Coleman, normally the LF, had to switch because of the suspensions. A lefty
swinger and the No. 2 hitter, he went 3-for-4 with three RBI on, in order, a
double, single and single (one apiece each time). His teammates slugged four
homers. Fitzgerald went yard to dead CF leading off the second, then three more
came in the fifth and there easily could have been some nasty fireworks. The
pitcher was Baker, who throws rather hard with not much effort and could be
someone to watch down the line. Dunn led off the inning with a liner over
Brouwers' leaping attempt for a single. Coleman was retired on a chopping single
and sr. C Ryan Hunt mashed a two-run homer to left-center. The next pitch
was way up and way in and way sizzlin' and jr. 1B Tim Dougherty was lucky
to get out of the way. The plate ump figured there was a message in there
somewhere and issued immediate warnings to both head coaches. Meanwhile, if the
bat had been wood, Dougherty would have squeezed it into sawdust as he stalked
around the plate area, waiting for the warnings to be issued. Then, bam!, he
homered to right-center and we'll strongly assume he enjoyed the HELL out of it.
Two batters later, soph 3B Matt Gallagher sent a blast to left-center.
The sun was bright and roughly out in that direction, so I'm not completely
positive, but it looked as though the ball hit the right edge of the school
building, about halfway up. In this same inning, another warning was issued to
Carroll's sr. 3B, Andy McDonnell. As the home-run hitters neared third,
McDonnell kept making slow walks to make sure he was in their way. Very strange.
And, of course, inexcusable. Early in the game, I made the roundabout walk to
deep CF to hang out briefly with the Grill Guyz and take some pics. Also had a
nice talk with ex-Friar Mike Shalon, a feisty overachiever now at Temple.
As Bonner came to bat in the fourth, the guys in CF belted out "Take Me Out to
the Ballgame" followed immediately by a chant of, "E-A-G-L-E-S! Eagles!"
Versatility. Gotta love it. Also, and I forgot to write down when this was, a
Bonner kid was on first and a kid bellowed, "He's stealin'!" The runner indeed
bolted. "I told you he was gonna steal! I gave you the chance! I know my
baseball!" Carroll was listless throughout. Hardly any noise or energy. Coach
Fran Murphy had a LONG talk afterward with the Patriots. I could make strong
guesses about some of the topics that were broached.
APRIL 25
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
SJ Prep 6, Roman 2
At one point sr. RH Matt Leddy, bound for Elon for
football, innocently/kiddingly asked whether he was going to get a baseball
story. It was explained to him that the basketball all-star doubleheader, in
Conshohocken, had to be my story for the DN, and that I would have written about
this game if not for yesterday's postponement. Then later, and he COMPLETELY
understood, I said to Matt, "With all due respect, I think Tom Elliott
would have given you a pretty good run for the ink." Elliott is the Prep's sr.
SS and leadoff hitter and he went 3-for-4 with two doubles and two RBI. As
important as those contributions were, he was even better in the field. Elliott
made an impressive charge play to end the second inning, shortly after he'd
taken a bullet from sr. C Pat "That's What I'm Hawk Talking About" Murphy
to get a pickoff out at 2B. The skill Elliott showed on the grounder was
especially appreciated because two nearby Hawks (they, ahem, happen to be
brothers -- smile) had just bobbled theirs. In the third, sr. 1B Ken
Sowisdral and jr. CF Will O'Mara reached base on one-out infield
singles and sr. 2B Pat DiGiovanni sent a slow hopper toward SS. Elliott
came charging in, made a barehanded scoop while leaning WAY over and fired to 1B
for the out. Larry Bowa, Jimmy Rollins, you name the SS and he would have
been proud to call this one his own. Wonderful play! Leddy then got jr. 3B
Ricky Nau on a called third strike and he would go on to retire six more in
a row. The string was broken when jr. CF Dan LePera drew a walk to open
the sixth. Two outs later, the shutout disappeared when jr. C Adam George
fired a two-run homer off a tree above the centerfield fence. It was only the
third hit for Roman and, as mentioned, the other two were of the infield
variety. Leddy then walked sr. SS John Caputo before regrouping to strike
out frosh DH Cody Yoka. Soph RH Aaron Haas worked a mostly
uneventful seventh. Roman's starter was jr. RH Sean Quigley. The game's
second batter, sr. LF Nelson Russom, cracked a solo homer off a tree
above the fence in left-center. The Hawks scored one and two, respectively, in
the fourth and fifth vs. Quigley, then added two in the sixth against jr. LH
Greg Reed. The total could/should have been three, but soph 2B Brett
Tiagwad was called out for missing 3B. Murphy had a nice sacrifice bunt in
the fifth and I think I heard 1B coach Eddie Turner comment that the
Hawks had failed in every previous attempt at successfully getting one down this
season. This one was followed by a two-run single by sr. 3B Matt Tiagwad.
The Tiagwads are not the only brothers in the Hawks' lineup. Soph RF Tim
Edger hits eighth and sr. CF Bill Edger, bound for Holy Cross to play
WR, hits ninth. When I asked Tim how many times a day he reminds his big brother
that he bats before him in the lineup, all he did was flash a gigantic smile.
For about 30 seconds (ha ha). Roman is having a rough go of it. The projected
top two hitters have long been missing (star jr. CF Dom Joseph should be
back in action Monday after resolving some school issues; jr. Rich Yoka
is hurt) and sr. RH Ryan Weber, expected to be the pitching ace, has
struggled due to a combination of upper arm tenderness and flat-out
non-performance (which he freely admitted). In a late-game appearance, Weber did
make a nice play on a difficult one-hop shot to 3B, so that was good to see.
Roman coach Joe Tremoglie made a bold move about midway through
the game, yanking a player off the field in mid-inning. The player three times
had failed to carry out fundamentals. This game was played at Roman's field
because the original site, Ashburn in deep South Philly, was unavailable. And it
truly was unavailable. I know. I went there first and a college game involving
the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia was taking place. Thanks to
Roman's AD, Dave Falcione, for telling me where to go during a phone
call. (Many times, I'm sure, he has wanted to tell me "where to go" in the
time-honored sense -- ha ha. This time he limited his directions to baseball.)
As one of my old bosses once said, "Silary, if someone's not mad at you every so
often, you're not doing your job." Words to live by.
APRIL 24
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Bodine 12, Penn 2 (six-plus innings)
Some days the trail leads to multiple places, and I even get to
see a game. I started out in Roosevelt Park, across the street from the Wachovia
Center and hard by I-95, expecting to see Roman-SJ Prep. But the mound and plate
area were covered at 2:20, and no one else was around (70 minutes early, yes),
but I just had that feeling and a phone call confirmed the postponement. Next
thought: Carroll-Bonner. Spoke with Carroll coach Fran Murphy on his cell
phone. That one was off, too. Called the office and Ed Barkowitz read me
the master schedule on the trusty website. Frankford was at GAMP. Drove over to
GAMP's field. Nobody there. Pulled to side of street, fumbled through papers and
placed a call to Dave Connolly, the Pub baseball chairman. He said only
one game was on: Bodine at Penn. By this time it was 2:40. Made it in plenty of
time. (And thanks to the woman at Penn, who kept trying and trying to confirm
for me that the game indeed was on, and finally got an answer. Think she said
her name was Hampton/Hamlin? Something like that. Anyway, she was clutch. Thanks
again!) Made it to 11th and Cecil B. Moore with time to spare -- for what turned
out to be the only game of the day in city baseball -- and the trip proved to be
productive. Rumors had been circulating about Penn having a 15-year-old lefty
with pro potential. And then, in recent days, I'd received an e-mail from
Swenson coach Shawn Williams confirming that Penn indeed had a goodie,
who'd been clocked by a scout at the game between the two at 79-80 mph. The
kid's name is Guiceppy Cruz (gotta love that off-the-wall spelling of the
first name). He's about 6-2, 160 pounds, and has a very fluid motion. He began
this game in LF and went to the mound cold to start the fourth inning. Except
for a few pitches, I can't imagine he approached 80 today, but I liked his
delivery and patience in the face of MANY errors and he did register eight
strikeouts in three-plus innings (the 10-run rule halted the game with nobody
out in the seventh). He'll be 16 late next month and, though, he's a Philly
native, he has spent chunks of time in Santiago, Dominican Republic, where he's
enrolled in a baseball academy headed by former major leaguers. He's a savvy kid
and I hope he stays around so everyone can monitor his progress, and have fun
doing so. Also, here's hoping he gets the word on the tryouts for the Pub's
Carpenter Cup team. In a brief conversation, I explained to him what the
tournament is, and how it works, and that some of the games are played at CBP.
He sounded excited. Meanwhile . . . the ink went to Bodine sr. RH Rob
Wieckowski, who today played 1B and pitched, but mostly considers himself a
SS. The 5-8, 135-pound Rob pitched the first three innings before yielding to
sr. LH Jesse Steinberg and, honestly, was nothing special on the
hill. (He's not really a fan of pitching, but does it to help the team.) At bat,
he went 2-for-3 with two doubles, two walks and three RBI. His first double was
legit and went to right-center. His other two-bagger was a fly to left-center
that should have been caught -- no one ever got over to it. Also impressive was
sr. 2B Fawaaz Fields, the leadoff batter. He picked up four RBI on just
one hit (smile). His two-run single came in the third. He also got RBI on a
groundout and the fielder's choice that ended it. Despite the 12 runs, Bodine
had just six hits. Penn's jr. C, Steven "Snap" Wheelings, posted three
hits (two in the infield) and a stolen base. Cruz went 1-for-3 although he
smacked the ball on his two outs. The weird development of the day involved
Penn's Christian Banks, a sophomore CF. While striking out in the first,
he threw his bat and was warned. Next time up, he lined a hit to left-center but
was called out for throwing his bat again. Well, not throwing it so much as
permitting it to fly out of his hands. Banks was called out and a promising
inning came to a halt. The ump also warned him: If it happens again, you're out
of the game. Banks fanned in the fifth, but luckily held onto the aluminum. Penn
has brothers in jr. SS Andre Wessels and frosh 2B Collin Wessels.
They look nothing alike and some Lions were not even aware of the relationship.
Meanwhile, sub Marcellous DeShields is not related to assistant Walter
DeShields. Penn's new coach, Michael Alexander, is doing a nice job
mentoring his players. Once I heard a guy curse -- nothing brutal -- and he put
an immediate stop to it. Among the spectators was Penn jr. PG Orie Johnson,
who's maybe 5-foot/5-1. He promised me the hoop Lions will make the playoffs
next season (smile). My strongest memory of Penn baseball: One year in the late
'70s/early '80s, all three of the Lions' starting outfielders threw lefthanded
and batted righthanded. Weird, right? One of those guys, Raymond Washington,
could absolutely fly and spent some time in the Pirates' farm system. Penn's
coach back then? None other than Bob Peffle, the mastermind of
Frankford's current dynasty.
APRIL 21
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Malvern 11, Penn Charter 0
In roughly the 2 hours it took to play this one, the weather
went from sunny and partially chilly to cloudy and cold -- with a hint of rain
thrown in. What never changed? The game's one-sided nature. PC is mostly young
with scant experience and is quite the average team when the pitcher is not jr.
LH Mark Adzick, a first team All-City performer last year. Malvern,
meanwhile, has a core of brassy veterans and, on this day at least, showed
energy and emotion to match its skill/production. Afterward, the Friars went
into shallow rightfield, gathered in a circle with their arms around each other
and rocked back and forth while going, "Woo! Woo! Woo!" Coach Mike Hickey
said with a smile, "I asked them to show a little more juice, and that's what
they came up with." I wasn't scheduled to write for the Daily News today, but
night editor Chuck Bausman freed up a respectable chunk of space so some
ink went to sr. LH Tom Grandieri. The surname should be familiar. His
brothers, Fran, Chris and Brian, were/are basketball stars and Tom
even played for Malvern. But his primary sport is baseball and that's what he'll
play at Villanova as an OF-1B-P. The all-lefty Tom bats leadoff and runs well
and -- who knew? smile -- he's quite the hurler, also. He went the distance
while allowing four hits (two did not leave the infield) and striking out nine.
He is especially nasty vs. lefties, thanks to sidearming and even what bordered
on submarining. He also posted the game's best defensive play in the sixth.
Frosh SS Mark Rhine hit a chopper about halfway up the first-base line,
maybe 10-15 feet off it. Grandieri scrambled over, smothered the ball, then made
a push-flip with his left hand to sr. 1B Tim McEndy. I was slightly
screened out on the back end of the play, but the reports from all precincts
indicated there'd been a pretty good thwack at the bag. Later, his teammates
were trying to convince McEndy his face was swelling up badly. Grandieri breezed
through the first four innings. In the fifth and seventh, he got two outs apiece
in bases-loaded situations. Three came on whiffs and one on a popup. That's
big-boy pitching, folks. PC's starter was sr. RH Sean Rust. If this is
possible, his stuff was too nice, especially with regard to location. Rust threw
almost no pitches to cause the Friars any cases of nerves and, in time, they
were really digging in and ripping away. Malvern scored four in the second and
five in the fourth. In a rarity, much of the damage was done by the bottom third
of the order: No. 7, jr. C Pat McGinley, went 2-for-4 with three runs
scored; No. 8, sr. RF Joe Rawlings, went 2-for-2 with a sac fly and two
RBI; and No. 9, jr. CF Joe Buckley, of kicking fame, went 2-for-3 with
three RBI. Up top, Grandieri had two hits total and one was a two-run single in
the fourth. PC's other two pitchers were soph RH Mike Carroll (no hits in
1 1/3) and sr. RH Alec Hannah (one hit in 1). Carroll was touched for an
unearned run. Before the game, PC coach Rick Mellor, my great-guy PC
classmate from WAY back, asked if I wanted to throw some batting practice. Then
afterward, he wanted to know if I could take a spot in the lineup and help raise
the team's batting average. Yo, Rick, I can only do so much (ha ha). Rick, by
his own admission, has never been much for tedious chores. He had no roster
available (grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!), but told me to see Adzick's mother because
she had prepared one. Indeed! Late in the game, Mrs. Adzick walked over and
handed me a roster complete with home addresses and parents' names. Legendary. I
said to her, "Paperwork is not Rick's strength." She smiled and responded, "I
know. That's why I did this."
APRIL 20
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Conwell-Egan 9, La Salle 5
One by two by three the La Salle players arrived at the field,
after making the long walk downhill from the building, and I kept saying to
myself, "Hmm. Where's Matt Zielinski?" He was nowhere to be found, even
as the Explorers whisked through a quick BP, and then it was team-pic time. "You
know Matt's not here," said assistant Joe Falcone. He explained the
reason and coach Joe Parisi later confirmed it: "Z" had suffered a
sprained left ankle in Tuesday's practice while stepping on a teammate's foot in
a baserunning drill. The sr. LH was our Pitcher of the Year in '05 and he's
bound for Richmond and this one shaped up as a serious goodie with first place
in CL North on the line . . . oh, well, it's only April. There will be other
goodies and the outcome will mean much more. Matt did arrive from rehab in time
to read the pre-game prayer, and he was on hand throughout. But the pitching
duties went to sr. RH T.J. Foley and the Eagles solved him to the tune of
eight runs and 13 hits (four doubles) in four innings. No need for much
play-by-play, but you do need to know that C-E's headliner (and the ink
recipient) was the 5-9, 157-pound cleanup hitter, sr. CF John "Slappy" Malloy.
(John's teammates are now calling him that because our ol' buddy, Kevin
"Sparky" Cooney, of the Bucks County Courier Times, said in a recent story
that John looks like a slap hitter -- smile). Malloy, who throws and bats
lefthanded, went 5-for-5 with a double and four RBI. He contributed, in order, a
smacked double to left-center, a groundball single to center, a groundball
single to right, an infield single off a shot that ate up the second baseman,
and a slicing single to left. Each hit, except for his fourth, yielded one RBI
apiece. He also made a fine running catch in way-out-there CF. His third hit
came in a five-run fourth, right after sr. 3B Ryan Terry powered a
two-run double to left-center. Another run scored on a wild pitch and the fifth
checked in on sr. 1B Mike Rugghia's chopping single to third, providing
an 8-2 lead. C-E's starter was sr. RH Ryan Buch, a transfer from
Pennsbury. The DH, jr. John McDonald, is a Neshaminy expatriate. Buch
showed some gas, but had trouble locating his curve and moved to RF after a
40-pitch marathon in the third that saw him drill batters in succession and then
walk the next two, chasing in two runs. The reliever was jr. RH Bob Marozzi,
another will-o'-the-wisp. He fanned sr. DH Jared Carter to leave the
bases loaded, and relied on some good defense to post scoreless innings in the
fourth and fifth. In the sixth, La Salle answered with consecutive RBI singles
from sr. SS Will Phillips, sr. RF Bill Warrender and jr. C Sean
Saverio. But on Saverio's hit, Phillips tried to score and Buch made a
terrific throw from RF to nail him (effective catch-tag by sr. C Rich Dupell),
then Marozzi proceeded to whiff sr. 2B Jeff Liberatore (ringing triple in
the second; great at-bat to draw one of the bases-loaded walks in the third) on
three pitches. The seventh yielded an interesting development. After two quick
outs, sr. LF Steve "Woodrow" Ullrich (no idea what that means, but
that's what his teammates were calling him, along with "Woody" -- Woodrow sounds
more unique, right?) and sr. 3B Ryan Creter reached on errors. With the
leadoff man, sr. CF Mike Villari, batting, both runners took off on trots
and Creter was gunned down at third to end it. What in the world was going on?
Why would the guys try to steal with two outs and two strikes and their team
down by four? There could only be ONE explanation -- they weren't trying to
steal. They were moving only because they thought the count was full. C-E coach
Rich Papirio said afterward he'd heard a wrong count given out a couple
pitches earlier -- 2-1, when it was 1-1. Ouch! I happened to see the plate ump,
Russ Somebody, in the parking lot as I was leaving and he said he had NOT
made a mistake. "Everything's my fault, right?" he added. Whoa, take it light,
my man. I was just relaying one version of the events, and trying to get his. He
said he was going to check his indicator to see what count was on it, but before
he could fully reach back for it, he said he'd erased it. As we mentioned, La
Salle was down four runs and this was the final out, but a good hitter was up
and more would have followed. COULD have gotten interesting. There were several
outstanding defensive plays, and several "almosts." C-E sr. SS Brian Herman
made a brilliant play on a bad-hop grounder and Villari made a tumbling catch of
a shot to deep CF. Terry came within a whisker of an all-timer at 3B, when he
sprawled to smother Villari's grounder and then was just late with the throw.
Also, Villari ran and ran and ran into right-center and made a dive and, oh!,
saw a liner by Buch barely tick off the end of his glove. Miscommunication
yielded a goodie in the fifth. Right along the fence fronting C-E's bench,
Creter caught a foul popup while crashing against Saverio. In the fourth, Dupell
was hit on the shoulder by a slow curve and went to first. La Salle's coaches
maintained Dupell had leaned into the pitch and, finally, after at first
resisting and insisting, "No need for help; I saw it and got it right," Russ
Whoever indeed cross-checked with base ump Gene Otto. You know where this
is going, right? Dupell was summoned back to the box. Next pitch? Up and in
fastball. And it plunked him -- you've got it -- on the shoulder. Dupell did not
look too pleased (smile). I guess because the game was interesting, it did not
seem like it was taking a brutal amount of time. But I didn't leave until just
about 6:30 and was unable to wolf down a No. 2, no onions, at the McDonald's
wedged between Ogontz and Cheltenham avenues, across the parking lot from the
famous Littleton's Diner (my dad loved that place), until maybe 6:37. And, yo,
reasonably pleasant drive-thru worker, how come no napkins in the bag? (smile)
APRIL 19
PUBLIC LEAGUE
GAMP 7, Edison 0
The game's first pitch to jr. CF Brandon Henson was
nowhere close to the plate and Carlos Maldonado, a star last year for
Edison, said with a shake of his head, "It's gonna be a long game." Henson then
walked and jr. C Eric Funaro got hit with a pitch. "It's gonna be a long
game," said jr. C John Fuentes. "See," Maldonado said, laughing. "He
thinks so, too!" So, what time do you think we all walked away from Edison's
field? At 6:30? At 7? A shade after 5:15. There were a few errors and Edison
unraveled slightly in the final two innings, but this one was mostly clean and
enjoyable and it stood out in stark contrast to yesterday's 20-error mess. Soph
RH Foster McKoskey went the distance for GAMP and carried a
no-hitter into the fifth inning. With one away, jr. 1B Joshua Guzman
turned on a high fastball and sent a shot toward left. The ball bounced,
comfortably, in front of sr. LF John Dunn for a clean single and, after a
pitch or two, Guzman yielded to a pinch-runner, jr. Victor Melendez. Pfft.
Immediately, McKoskey fired to jr. 1B Andrew Caines and Melendez was a
wide-margin pickoff victim. Edison got something going to start the sixth on an
infield single by soph 3B Luis Beato and a hard single to LF by jr. RH
Alex Reyes. Jr. 2B Edwin Padua hit a rocket to Caines and Reyes was
double off first. Jr. SS Javier Lafuente drew a walk and jr. CF
Luis "Ricky" Marquez followed with a chopper up the middle. While sprawling,
McKoskey made the stab and flipped to first to end the threat. McKoskey is a
short-armer and does not throw too hard, but he walked just one (and struck out
two) and few Owls made hard contact. Also, his fielders were guilty of just two
errors and neither one made a difference. Funaro made a big play to help out
McKoskey in the second. Sr. RF Omar Torres was on second and tried to
move up on what would have been a wild pitch. Funaro pounced on the ball and
gunned down Torres. GAMP scored two in the first, one in the second, three in
the sixth and one in the seventh. In the first, after Henson and Funaro reached
base, sr. RF Ryan Challender bagged an RBI on a looping single to
left-center. He was rubbed out at second, though, on an excellent relay from
Marquez to Lafuente to Padua. Jr. SS Anthony Venafro followed with a sac
fly to LF. No real hitting heroics thereafter. GAMP had three more RBI and they
came on -- nothing exciting, troops -- a HBP, squeeze bunt (by Henson) and
bases-loaded walk. Soph 2B Stefan Thompson walked in all four plate
appearances. Edison's starter was jr. RH Gary Santos. He left with no
outs and the bases loaded in the sixth. He fanned four. After one particularly
shaky call, one of Edison's players said to me, "You should write an article . .
. Umpires Questionable." Everyone was laughing mostly because he paused after
the first part and then blurted out the second. I brought out the lawn chair,
but never wound up using it. I left it against the batting cage and, lo and
behold, Edison manager Lissette Ayala opened it a little and used it as
kind of a desk for her scorebook. I took a picture. Oh, I also snapped a pic of
a tree right next to the field that was apparently struck by lightning sometime
soon. Funaro and Fuentes are quality catchers. Both should be candidates for the
Carpenter Cup squad.
APRIL 18
PUBLIC LEAGUE
King 16, Fels 7
This game featured teams at/near the top of Division C, but you
never would have guessed. As I left the premises, a few people said with a
smile, "Be kind, OK?" Not entirely possible, folks. These squads combined for 18
hits, eight walks, 25 strikeouts, seven wild pitches, 20 errors, 18 stolen bases
and four hit batsmen. It was like someone drove stakes through my eyes -- big,
sharp stakes -- during parts of this game (smile). But the players on both teams
mostly appeared to have fun and no one ever stopped competing or having hope,
and the weather was beautiful, and I had no place better to be, so what the
heck, right? I was not able to write something for the DN, but a deserving ink
recipient would have been King's John Johnson, a sr. RF. A righty thrower
and lefty swinger, the solidly built Johnson went 4-for-5 in the No. 5 spot with
a triple and three RBI. He also stole two bases and showed great instincts by
running home when the plate was left momentarily uncovered. King's pitcher was
frosh RH Jose Rivera, a small kid with a sweeeeeeeping curve and
sneaky fastball. He also led off, going 3-for-5 with a double and RBI. Rivera
struck out six of the first eight batters and, after that sixth one, he laughed
out loud on the mound. I didn't get the impression he was trying to embarrass
the batter; he just found something funny about the strike-three swing. King
assistant Duane Stith, father of sr. C Duane Stith, went out to
talk to Rivera about the indiscretion and then, for whatever reason, Fels
started to have some success offensively. Rivera did finish with 15 strikeouts,
though. Amazingly, only one of Fels' runs came courtesy of an RBI. The batter
was sr. RF Oliver Hernandez, who finished 2-for-3 with a walk. His RBI
came on an infield single. The Panthers' only extra base hit was a double by the
leadoff batter, soph CF Edgardo Lozano. Stith, a veteran, collected three
RBI on a single, fielder's choice and groundout. He made some impressive throws
to second base, but for some strange reason threw lollipops to 1B on strike
three wild pitches/passed balls. He's better than that, and he knows it.
Christopher Rivera, a frosh SS and Jose's cousin, went 2-for-5 with an RBI.
Only four of King's runs were earned; three of Fels' were. Fels jr. RH Bob
Byle at one point muttered, "You would pick THIS game to come see me." Soph
2B Billy Seltner is an All-Public bowler. Had fun exchanging some
thoughts with Fels' manager, Chamron Kim. Very nice young man. King frosh
Bryant "Chip" Davis used a wood bat in a pinch-hitting appearance. He
went down looking.
APRIL 17
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Ryan 7, Wood 6
The lower levels of the Pub came to the Cath. At least in part
it did. First, because Ryan's infield was quite a mess with bare spots and
uneven grass and dandelions and such. Second, because the Raiders made four
errors in the second inning alone (ouch). Overall? The fact that it wound up
being competitive and came down to the last out overshadowed most of the game's
failings. Ryan did some early smokin' and I thought it was going to be one of
those high-scoring affairs. The fences are WAY out there in left and center and
the Raiders slammed two homers. In the first, jr. LF Rob McArdle drew a
one-out walk against sr. RH Tim Colbridge and sr. 3B Chris Dolan
hit a rocket to left-center. He circled the bases and scored without a play.
Ryan got one more in the frame as sr. 1B Sean Carchidi singled to
center, moved to third on a steal/error combo and scored on a chopped infield
single by soph SS Nick Ferdinand. With one out in the second, soph CF
Andrew Lacovara ripped a shot to within footsteps of where Dolan's ball had
gone. He bagged an EASY solo homer. Here's the sequence for Ryan's third:
one-out single to CF by sr. C Matt Amato, groundball single to LF by
Ferdinand, RBI single to CF by sr. RF Pat DelVecchio, infield roller by
jr. 2B Seth Magagna to load the bases, walk to sr. RH Mike
Miller (he got the ink) to force in a run, bloop single to RF by
Lacovara to scored the third and final run of the inning. That came against jr.
LH Mike McCauley, who overall was very effective. He worked the
final 3 2/3 innings and allowed just two hits while striking out four. Colbridge
led off Wood's three-run second with a triple and frosh LF Jim Heilman,
the leadoff batter (3-for-4), later collected an RBI on a chopped grounder that
stayed in the infield. But overall, Ryan was giving out gifts like crazy and it
would take another 15 minutes to explain what happened, so let's forget it
(smile). Miller, a sinkerballer, departed after six innings and gave way to sr.
RH Tom Steigerwald. With one out, sr. 3B Chris Crawford, a lefty swinger
who starred last year in the Carpenter Cup, mashed a shot to right-center that
likely would have yielded a homer if the Vikings had not been trailing by four
(also, if Crawford had not been battling a cold/virus/something; he was coughing
all afternoon). Sr. DH Mike Washeleski lined a single to CF and Colbridge,
now at 1B, drew a walk. Steigerwald regrouped to fan sr. RF John Bonner,
but the No. 8 hitter, soph CF Kyle Schwab, sent a liner deep toward the
LF corner. McArdle gave chase and made a yeoman attempt, with a dive, to catch
the ball, but he couldn't quite get it and a two-run double resulted. That
brought about another pitching change, with jr. LH Jim Edelman replacing
Steigerwald. Sr. 2B John Schwartz got ahead in the count, but then went
down swinging. Crawford, who goes about 6-3/6-4, was impressive on a
second-inning grounder by Dolan, hardly a slowpoke, that was tight to the line
and behind the bag. He made the l-o-n-g throw in perfect fashion. When Wood's
starting 1B, jr. Dan Slocum, made a mini-leap to catch a popup, a
teammate yelled out, "You got three inches off the ground!" Slocum smiled and
held up four fingers. Jim DiGuiseppe, the older member of Wood's
father-son coaching tandem, at one point asked the plate ump to give out the
count more often. "I'm an older guy now and I have a learning disability," he
cracked. Ryan Carchidi's dad, Joe, spent many years as a prominent CL
basketball ref. Ex-Ryan coach Mike Lake, now an assistant at La Salle
University, was on hand to check out Crawford. Wood left its bag of baseballs on
the team bus. Luckily, the driver returned. Also on hand for part of the game
was Ed Hughes Sr., who pitched in the Phillies' system and fathered a
son, also Ed, who was a standout QB-pitcher for Ryan in the late '70s and
then experienced success at Bucknell. Ed Jr. still holds the city record for
pass attempts in a game, at 55. Ed the Dad, for my money, was a shining example
of how parents should be -- supportive, but never a meddler. He cared for Ryan's
field back in the day and I know its present condition had to shock/disappoint
him.
APRIL 13
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
North Catholic 6, Dougherty 3
The webmaster sometimes works in mysterious ways. Thus, my
first Northern Division tilt of the season involved squads that had yet to enjoy
a win. Was it a bad move? No way! The pitching was respectable, there was very
little sloppy fielding and some balls were stung in clutch moments. What more
can you ask for?! Then, back at the crib, Mrs. Webmaster, who handles
computer issues at her company, was able to terminate a week-plus of frustration
by showing me how to move the Team Pics from one program to another in cropped
fashion. Before, she kept saying, "I don't know picture programs." But when she
finally gave it a whirl, she had it figured out in 2-3 minutes. Dames. Ain't
they amazing? (Ha, ha. Let's hope I remember what she showed me.) The ink went
to jr. LH Derrek Etsell, who goes 6-3, 185, and hits 95 on the radar
guns! Just kidding. Despite his size, he doesn't throw too hard at all and his
main pitch is a knuckle-curve. His dad, Jeff, was a star LHP for North
('77; pitched squad to CL and City titles) and Alabama and even spent some time
in the Astros' system. Derrek held Dougherty scoreless through five and a sixth
inning run was highly tainted. In the seventh, though, the Cards finally broke
through in earned-runs fashion. Etsell caused his own ills to some extent
because he issued a one-out walk to the No. 9 hitter, soph 2B Rich Garcia.
A wild pitch moved Garcia to second and sr. SS Dennis Higgins blasted a
double to deep left-center. Sr. LF Chris Rolon grounded out and sr. 3B
John Myers delivered an RBI single to left. Backup LF Jim "Mr. Chirper"
Quinn, now a senior and long known throughout the league (world?) for his
non-stop encouragement, made an excellent play with a forward dive and tried to
convince the umps he'd made the catch. Almost, but not quite. Losing pitcher
Kevin McGovern, a jr. LH, sent a flyball to CF to end it. Etsell fanned 10
in a five-hitter while walking three and plunking one. His future will be as a
lefty-swinging first baseman, though, and he broke a scoreless tie in the fourth
with an RBI single past SS. It was preceded by jr. SS Chris Bonecorse's
triple into the rightfielder corner, then followed by a hit batsman (sr. C
Mike Constantine) and a two-run double to deep right-center by soph RF
Chris James. Through five innings, McGovern had issued just one walk, but
Bonecorse and Etsell milked freebies to start the sixth and a huge price was
paid as sr. 3B Sean Murphy (it's a rule: every FB-baseball team at North
must have a Murphy -- smile) inside-outed a hard drive down the rightfield line
for a two-run double (third on the throw). He held there as Constantine grounded
out and then came home as James' popup (probably should have been snagged) fell
for an RBI single in CF. McGovern showed good stuff overall. He has filled out
some from last year and appears to have a shade more velocity. He's the brother
of Sean McGovern, formerly a star pitcher and QB for Dougherty (and about
to graduate from Gwynedd-Mercy. Congrats, Sean!) Their dad, John, is an
assistant to CD boss Joe Kerrigan Jr. The defensive play of the day was
made by Rolon, who ran hard toward CF and made a sprawling catch of a fifth
inning liner by jr. CF Ryan Nally. Meanwhile, one of the best names ever
for a baseball player belongs to Dougherty's jr. catcher, Jon Swing. He
enjoyed hearing that McDevitt once had a basketball player named Rodney
Basketbill. Eleven of the game's strikeouts came from the teams' last three
hitters. Former Central High ace Pete Whittle is working with North's
pitchers. Two of the attendees had Best Teammate connections. Sean McGovern
nominated and worked hard behind the scenes for Bryan Cole, our first
winner in '01. And John Paffen, a catcher for North, finished in strong
runner-up fashion when he was a senior in '03. We'll again have the contest
later this spring, so think of worthy candidates, OK? Thanks.
APRIL 11
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Haverford School 11, Episcopal 0
I knew this was going to happen. I KNEW this game had a chance to be
one-sided and that the Penn Charter-Chestnut Hill tilt had a chance to be a
sweetheart. This wasn't. That was. So, why did I make a late switch and head for
Haverford instead of Chestnut Hill? Just trying to spread things around, troops.
Some seasons I don't see either team and since they were playing each other . .
. Oh, well. It happens. Was this one a worthless endeavor? Hardly. I got to see
a dominating pitching performance by jr. RH Mike Galetta (four-hitter,
nine whiffs, two walks) and, man, was he bringin' it!! He has been clocked at 92
mph and everyone seemed to agree he was hitting the high 80s today. Mike is
strong at 205 pounds, and his lower body is especially solid, but he's only 5-10
and scouts (and college coaches, by trickle-down effect) tend to hold lack of
height against righthanders. So perhaps with that in mind, Galetta is thinking
he wants to be an everyday player in college. His other position is 3B, he
swings lefty and he hits third in the lineup. Can he hit? Oh, yes. In this one
he went 4-for-4 with a double and he's hitting a shade over .500. Interestingly,
sr. OF Ryan Fitzpatrick ran all four times for Galetta, the first three
times as a two-out courtesy runner and the last as an official pinch-runner (Galetta
then came back via the re-entry rule). Fitz collected three steals and scored
three runs. Two Churchmen used sensible approaches to have some success. Sr. CF
Charlie Barks, a lefty swinger, shortened up and sent a pair of singles
down the leftfield line. Soph SS Doug Ammon also stayed calm and simply
stroked a single to right-center in his first at-bat. He lined out to CF in his
next at-bat. Ammon looked very smooth on a third inning grounder and I was
hoping a few more balls would be hit his way, just to get a chance to make
further judgments. Didn't happen. Tell you what, though. In the second inning,
sr. CF Nick Tom hit a ball as hard as humanly possible directly at Ammon
for an out. What a bullet!! As Nick came back to the dugout, one of his
teammates said, "You gotta go to church this Sunday." Barks also had an
interesting/scary fielding moment. In the second, jr. LF Jared Cohen hit
a drive to center. Barks ran back and flipped/disappeared over the low wood
fence while chasing what wound up as a two-run homer. He was uninjured. The
highlight of HS' six-run fourth was a three-run homer to right by sr. C Eric
Pender. Pretty sure I heard Pender telling someone he'd be going to Amherst
next year. In the fifth, Pender helped to preserve the shutout by putting up a
serious roadblock at the plate after Barks' single. Jr. RF Greg Satell, a
backup, was jarred to his very core as he thumped into Pender. Episcopal's
starter, soph RH Elliot Faust, has pretty good size (maybe 6-4, 225??)
and could be decent in time. Late in his stint, he took a line drive on his
right Achilles tendon. Ouch! Sr. RH Rick Brooman worked the last two
frames. He is one of several guys on Episcopal's squad who looks VERY young
(smile). HS sr. RF Kevin Kerr went 3-for-4 with a double and an RBI. Two
of EA's basketball starters are on this squad, Barks and sr. OF Tim Ivory
(unavailable due to tender hamstring). Late in the game, Charlie noted glumly,
"This isn't like basketball, is it?" And then, as the game was winding down,
Charlie pointed to a bench beyond the CF fence and said, "Gerald (Henderson)
came to watch us." I put the camera on 10X zoom and pushed the button. It's the
next to last pic in Special Photos. You'll have to trust me that the guy on the
bench is indeed G. Just like I had to trust Charlie (smile).
APRIL 10
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Kennedy-Kenrick 4, Carroll 3
There's no such thing as an uneventful game between these spirited
(bitter? hands at each other's throats? -- smile) rivals, and today there was an
eventful pre-game. Carroll's bus was involved in a minor accident shortly
after leaving the school and a second bus had to be summoned, assuring that the
game would not start until shortly after 4 o'clock. Not much time was required
for the first controversy. In the home first, sr. C D.J. Santoro reached
base on an infield error (his father is a K-K assistant and keeps the book; he
scored it a miscue and figured son would give him a hard time later -- smile)
and moved to third on a passed ball and then a wild pitch. Frosh 3B Christian
Walker -- yes, a freshman bats third; impressive! -- worked a walk in quite
mature fashion and sr. 1B Kevin Lawrence followed with a grounder to sr.
SS Steve Brouwers. Walker was forced, Santoro scored easily and Lawrence
was safe at first. Um, momentarily. Carroll coach Fran Murphy came
zipping out of the dugout and told plate ump Mike Finney that Lawrence
should be out because Walker had failed to slide or otherwise get out of
Brouwers' way. There was a discussion of decent length involving Finney and base
ump Paul Fricker -- these guys are two of the VERY best, by the way --
and then up went Finney's fist. Doubleplay. Inning over. I happened to take a
picture of the play and it showed that Walker indeed did not slide. Did he mess
with Brouwers' chances to complete the doubledip? Can't tell you, troops. Can
tell you this: the K-K coaches were not ecstatic. OK, now where do we go? . . .
To Birthday Boy news. K-K sr. RH Dennis Morgan turned 18 today, and he
came within one batter of a complete game. He got the ink, but not the new bat
he was hoping for. Ha, ha. He said he got a rain check on that. Playing for the
first time EVER in front of his grandmom, and with a half-dozen total family
members on hand, the 5-11, 150-pound Morgan allowed six hits and three walks
while striking out three, and his fielders committed just one error. He's pretty
much a pitcher/throw-to-spots guy and only once all game (first inning) did he
allow a leadoff runner. Much to be said for that. K-K tallied twice in the third
and sixth against sr. RH Andy McDonnell. McDonnell hurt his own cause in
the third by failing to catch a high popup (he should have been called off).
That happened with one out and jr. SS Tom Mahoney followed with a nifty
bunt single as the runner, sr. 2B Zack Capaldo, alertly went all the way
to third. Mahoney then thieved second and, eventually, Santoro was issued a
late-in-the-count intentional walk. Walker, showing poise, rifled a groundball
up the middle for two RBI. In the sixth, Lawrence reached on a bobbled grounder
and jr. LF Carlo Petrillo slammed what should have been an RBI double to
left. The ball rolled through an open area out of the main playing field,
however, and Lawrence was sent back to third. Frosh RF Mike Lubanski --
yes, he's the brother of 2003 K-K star Chris Lubanski, now a big-time
prospect in Kansas City's system -- milked a walk. McDonnell departed in favor
of jr. RH Tim Collins. His first pitch resulted in a two-run, groundball
single to LF by jr. DH Mike Fazio. A balk moved up the runners and Morgan
fell into a two-strike hole (honestly, I forget if a ball or two had been
thrown). Anyway, a suicide squeeze was ordered -- yes, with two strikes and
nobody out -- and Morgan could not make contact. Lubanski was an easy out, then
Collins whiffed Capaldo. Phew, what a sequence. Carroll's second inning run came
on a one-out walk to sr. 2B Dan Maley, a steal, a wild pitch and Brouwers'
RBI groundout. In the fifth, the No. 9 hitter, jr. 3B Chris Dengler, hit
a one-out rope to LF for a double. Sr. C Andrew Szalejko followed with a
left-side grounder. Mahoney made a nice stop and had the play right in front of
him, and he strikes me as one of those VERY reliable shortstops. But this time,
he threw the ball wide of third and Dengler trotted home. Visiting seventh:
Morgan appeared to be marching home in strong fashion as Brouwers and Dengler
were retired on routine grounders. But Szalejko milked a walk, McDonnell singled
and jr. RF Chris Lisowski sent an RBI single to right-center on a 1-2
count. Morgan and Mahoney flip-flopped positions and the batter was jr. 1B
Kyle "Baked Ziti" Baker. He pinged a grounder to Walker and McDonnell was
tagged out as he tried to get to third. K-K is now 11-0 overall while Carroll is
only 2-3. The Patriots will add to their games total over the next few days
during a trip to Virginia. Carroll went out very quickly in the fourth. As the
Wolverines returned to the dugout, one of them quipped, "Weren't we just in
here?" Had a nice pregame chat with Carroll assistant Tim Noone (or Tim
No One as Hockey Puck once pronounced his name -- smile) as we waited for
the team bus to arrive (he came separately). We were ultimately joined by
Carroll's new pitching coach, ex-Penn Charter star Joe Larkin. It was
nice to see both of them.
APRIL 7
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Bodine 14, Univ. City 4 (5 inn.)
Nothing close to crisp, classic baseball, but a good time was
had by most. Bodine, a first-year program, is coached by Joe Stanley, a
starter for a championship team at Roxborough in the late 1960s and most
recently the chairman of Pub baseball (he's also the football honcho). The
Jethros (nah, the official nickname is Ambassadors) have a decent mix of kids
with some talent and baseball know-how. This was a website-only game, so there
won't be any ink and I had serious doubts it would be played at about 1 p.m.
because it was raining pretty hard at my house. But things cleared up and the
field wasn't messy at all (could use a lawn mower, though -- Bodine plays in
Fairmount Park near 33rd and Oxford) and the kids on both teams appeared to
appreciate the chance for attention. Our pleasure, troops. Jr. CF Andrew
Rosado led Bodine by going 3-for-3 with two doubles and two RBI. Also, in a
weird way, he ended the game in the bottom of the fifth with a strikeout. Hmm.
How? Well, the ball was a shade outside and it skipped off the glove of reserve
catcher Kadeem Wood, a 5-1, 110-pound frosh and a VERY cool kid (smile),
and soph C Andres Hernandez scampered home with the run that created a
10-run differential. Hernandez, a lefty swinger, walked three times and fired a
groundball single to right for an RBI. I also liked sr. LF Fawaaz Fields.
He went 3-for-4 with two doubles and an RBI and showed good speed & instincts as
he maneuvered his way around the bases. Sr. 1B Rob Wieckowski, also a RHP,
struck out in his first at-bat, but then hit the ball hard three times. The
contact yielded a single, a triple/E-7 combo that enabled him to circle the
bases and a seed of a liner that was misplayed for an infield error. Sr. RF
Dwayne "Big Daddy" Smith (and we do mean big -- smile) collected two RBI on
groundouts. The pitcher was jr. LH Jesse Steinberg. He had some control
issues (six walks, one HBP) while yielding four hits and striking out eight. He
does not throw particularly hard, but can be effective. UC's best player is jr.
C James Allie, a solidly built kid with passion for the game and
take-control qualities. He went 2-for-3 with a pair of RBI doubles, one down the
rightfield line and the other to left-center. Sr. RH David Mullins
pitched the first four innings and worked exclusively from the stretch. He had
some trouble finishing off batters after jumping ahead. UC's 1B is frosh
Aaron Gilbert, who's brand new to baseball (and is the brother of Gratz
basketball starter Sean Gilbert). He's quite strong and could wind up
crushing balls once he makes some mechanical adjustments. Meanwhile, how can you
not love Kadeem Wood? He might be smaller than he says, but he started the game
at one very important position (SS) and ended it at another (C). He batted
second and walked all three times, and followed with three SBs total. He had a
smile on his face all game, especially after he dashed toward the mound and made
a great catch of a low popup. He was disappointed that the somewhat trusty
camera was not in the ready position. Sorry, my man! (smile) The Jaguars had a
spirited discussion about the sound made by aluminum bats. Cling? Clang? Ding?
Ping? There were some others, too. Not sure what consensus they reached. I'm
going with ping. Maybe even bing.
APRIL 5
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Frankford 10, Central 3
Well, it was cold and windy and I had to pee for about the last
four innings (smile), but this was still a worthwhile experience. Got to see
some good performances, it's always enjoyable being around the lively Frankford
bunch and there was even a classic small-world development because Central
manager Kristina Paulk is the older sister of promising Saul LHP James
Paulk, a soph. I was able to do a story on this one for the good, ol' Daily
News and the ink went to sr. C Ramon Reyes. He's a terrific player and
gentleman and has done part in the classroom as well, so the likes of West
Chester, East Stroudsburg and Widener are in touch and I have a feeling his
interest will greatly mushroom. Coach Bob Peffle said Ramon makes his
best throws to 2B in the 1.8/1.9 area and that's outstanding. Also, I love that
he tries to block in-the-dirt pitches even when no one's on base, just to stay
sharp. Hitting? Phew, man, he did that today, too. He slammed hits in his first
four at-bats, then took good-natured busts when he fanned in his fifth at-bat.
His day: two-run double off the very top of the thick concrete wall in
left-center; two-run double down the rightfield line on a protect-the-plate 0-2
swing; RBI single to left-center; groundball single to center. I love catchers
who have the instincts and athletic ability of middle infielders (which Ramon
was earlier) and he's a classic example. Frankford's starter was sr. LH Edwin
Burgos. He went the first five innings, allowing all three runs (two
earned), seven hits and two walks while striking out 10. Eight of his Ks came
with men on base; good sign of dial-it-up toughness. Soph RH Esteban "Shorty"
Meletiche, a transfer from Saul and the brother of Saul star Enrique "No
Nickname That I'm Aware of" Meletiche, finished up with two frames of
no-hit, three-K work. In the leadoff spot, Shorty went 3-for-4 with a walk, an
RBI and three runs scored and Burgos, at No. 2, went 2-for-4 with a double, HBP
and an RBI. The rest of the hits came from the final three spots. Frosh OF
Edwin "Tito" Rohena went 3-for-4 with a double, jr. OF Jeffry Bru
(someone tell this kid that letters don't cost anything in case he wants to
expand his name to Jeffrey Bruce -- smile) and soph 3B Jon Bracero
went 2-for-4 with a double and an RBI. The Pioneers' best defensive play was a
7-4-6 out stretching from sr. Jose "Pinky" DeLeon to Meletiche to sr.
Richard Jimenez. That followed a hard single by soph P-DH Aaron
Esbensen, a strong kid with a quick swing. How strong? In the second,
Esbensen (or Asbestos, as the home plate ump butchered his name reporting a
lineup chance) sent a deep drive off the top of the wall in dead center. The
ball bounced over maybe a 10-foot fence atop the wall for a homer. Blast and a
half, folks! I'm guessing the cement wall is 20 feet high. Sr. C Joe
Magdovitz also hit two balls hard for singles (and one RBI) and I LOVE how
close he gets to batters while down in his crouch. In my days as a catcher in
youth baseball and later medium-pitch softball, I always did that. It drives
some batters nuts!! Always a good thing!! Ha, ha. Central has an interesting mix
of players. Every guy seems to be 6-2 or 5-4. Very few in-betweeners. The two
shortest guys, sr. RH Nick DeLeo and soph RH Micah Winterstein,
pitched first and third. They sandwiched Esbensen, also a RH. Frankford had just
10 players in uniform, but they made enough noise for 30 with singing and
clapping and, until the home plate ump put a stop to it, brushing against some
kind of hollow metal instrument with a metal, well, brush. I asked the Frankford
kids what the instrument is called and got about eight spellings!! Ha, ha. It's
pronounced "weera," I think. I'll poke around on the Internet. Found it. It's
spelled "guira." And several variations thereof!! Ha, ha. It was prominent last
year thanks to the mom of ex-star SS Luis Alicea. One of the fans took
possession of it and the noise continued, to a smaller degree. Frankford sr. 1B
Juan Carlos Torres kiddingly told me he's no longer slow and I can stop
referring to him as "Calendar," as in that's what you need to time his runs to
1B. After DeLeon grounded out, I went over and said in front of both of them,
"Juan Carlos, you can now give the calendar to Pinky." They were telling me
something about a foot race one/both had with assistant Juan Namnun, but
I missed it. Maybe we'll have to schedule an official race (smile). "Peff" --
coming off hip surgery -- said he will no longer coach wrestling at Frankford
and will leave the job to his replacement this past winter, Chris Vicente.
Bob has coached three sports forever each school year (also soccer at La Salle
HS) and has done a spectacular job. Meanwhile, here's the instrument I'm talking
about . . .

APRIL 4
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Saul 12, Prep Charter 1 (6 inn.)
Well, this Pub season is already a success. The reason? I think
we've found a pitcher with worlds of promise. Jot down the name James Paulk,
in case he winds up with a Division I scholarship in two years and/or draws
sincere interest from pro scouts. Paulk, a soph, is a lefthanded pitcher. He
said afterward that he goes 6-3, 173, but he appears to be even taller and he's
almost a body double of Penn Charter lefty Mark Adzick, a first team
All-City honoree last year as a soph. Paulk will have to add some velocity and
savvy, of course, and going against the weak lineups in Division B can give a
guy a false sense of security (and maybe cause me to overestimate his potential
-- smile). But there's MUCH to like about him: smooth delivery, the
sinks/dips/fades on fastballs all good lefties seem to have, a respectable
breaking pitch, competitive spirit, etc. Because of the 10-run rule, Paulk had
to work just six innings. He allowed four hits and two walks while striking out
10. He was up in the strike zone every so often and the Huskies did hit a few
balls hard, but hey, it's early April (smile). Few guys are at their best at
this point of the season. PC opened the home first with singles by sr. P-INF
Bill McGovern and soph C Michael Barianna. McGovern was erased
in a strikeout/caught stealing doubleplay and Paulk got the third out on another
K. With one out in the fourth, jr. SS George Whitleigh admittedly sent a
rocket to left-center for a double. A passed ball allowed Whitleigh to advance
to third and sr. CF Dan Cavalieri followed with a sac fly to right. When
the inning ended, Paulk showed a hint of frustration as he came to the bench.
Nothing over the top. Just enough. I liked that he was disappointed about having
lost his shutout. Paulk benefited from two nice defensive plays. In the third,
McGovern hit a groundball up the middle. The ball glanced off Paulk and went to
sr. SS Enrique Meletiche. He made the scoop, stepped on the bag and fired
to first for a doubleplay. McGovern led off the sixth with a hard hit to
right-center. He posted a double, but was gunned down at third on relay throws
from sr. CF Andrew Phipps, a sub, to sr. 2B Jim Starrett to
jr. 3B Steve Pownall. Excellent play! PC had a woeful day in the field.
No other way to say it, folks. The Huskies were guilty of 14 errors and many
could have been easily avoided with a shade more concentration/patience/skill.
Saul's big hit was a fourth-inning, three-run homer by soph LF Ian Cogan.
The frame began as jr. CF Josh Kellerman walked and Meletiche slammed a
single to left. Cogan then sent a shot to center. The ball skipped over
Cavalieri's head and Cogan circled the bases. In the fifth, Kellerman received
credit for a two-run double on a semi-liner into left-center that was dropped by
an on-the-gallop Cavalieri. (It could have been an error and Kellerman thanked
us for the generosity -- smile). Starrett, in the No. 8 hole (his father, Jim,
played for Penn Charter), went 3-for-4 with an RBI. The McGovern brothers did
the pitching for PC. Bill and Sean, a soph RH, went three innings apiece.
Neither was particularly sharp and both were victimized by the brutal fielding
(and Bill caused some of his own problems on pickoff throws). He'll have much
better days, no doubt, as the season goes on. In one of the Special Photos,
you'll see that football goalposts are stationed a short distance behind third
base, in fair territory! Talk about a lawsuit waiting to happen. PC basketball
coach Dan Brinkley was among the spectators. Whitleigh had a rough day at
SS as Saul baserunners kept crashing into him, and even unintentionally spiking
him. Meletiche's brother, Esteban "Shorty", is now a soph at Frankford.
Enrique said his brother was uncomfortable at Saul last year and decided the
agriculture/cow milking thing was not for him (smile). PC frosh 1B Josh
Brydges has to wear sweatpants and a blue shirt as he waits for school
officials to get him a uniform that fits.
APRIL 3
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Bonner 4, SJ Prep 2
Don't you detest weather people? Do they ever get a forecast
correct? As soon as I heard predictions for darn near a monsoon this morning, it
was crystal clear to me this game would be played (smile). Because they were
concerned about traffic miseries caused by the Phillies' home opener, Prep folks
pushed back the starting time to 4 o'clock and, truth be told, it did start to
rain almost the instant Bonner's team arrived in a van at maybe 3 o'clock. But
the rain never came close to reaching brutal proportions (and even stopped at
roughly the midway point) and though it was definitely chilly, this one was a
pleasant experience. First I must ask: Why in the world did Prep's coaches let
sr. RH Matt Leddy throw 121 pitches in the first few days of April? Yes,
he's a big, strong kid (bound for Elon for football), but I doubt even a major
leaguer would be allowed to throw that many pitches in his first meaningful
appearance of the season, and the training regimens for those guys are much more
advanced than what can be found at the high school level. Anyway . . . The ink
went to sr. RH Sean Fitzgerald. The start went to soph RH Bill
Hollingsworth, but he departed with two out and one run home in the second
after his third walk of the inning. The bases were loaded, but Fitz immediately
induced a flyout to end it and almost cruised from there to the wire. He allowed
just one hit and one walk until two were out in the seventh, and the No. 9
hitter, soph 2B Brett Tiagwad, was the only guy left. Tiagwad sent a
groundball single to left, sr. SS Tom Elliott delivered an infield single
(sr. 2B Matt Kern could only smother the ball) and sr. C Pat "Half of
Hawk Talk" Murphy (2-for-4, also a lineout) ripped an RBI single to left.
Sr. RH Rob Graham replaced Fitzgerald and needed only three
pitches to end it, with a strikeout. Bonner scored twice in the first and
fourth. Sr. CF Mike Dunn and sr. LF Mike Coleman posted singles to
get things started and a grounder by sr. C Ryan Hunt was mishandled. Kern
sent a sac fly -- a liner, actually -- to center and the next run scored on a
wild pitch. Two hits plated runs in the fourth, though each was of the
infield/scratch variety. Hunt and Kern did the delivering. Leddy did have one
big-boy showing. Coleman led off the third with a double to left-center (sr. CF
Bill Edger came close with a headlong dive) and Hunt earned great
appreciation from his teammates by sending a move-him-up groundball to the right
side. Leddy plunked Kern and walked sr. 1B Steve DeBarberie to load the
bases, but then racked up two consecutive strikeouts. Bonner sr. SS Brian
Meagher was very impressive. He's listed at 6-1, but appears taller because
he's thin and his legs make up about three-fourths of his body (smile). He could
glide and gun (not to mention vacuum) and after one impressive play a teammate
hollered, "He's so sexy!" I asked jr. backup C Tim Dougherty, standing
nearby, whether he'd heard the comment. Just to make sure there was no
confusion, Tim, a buddy of Huck's from way back, assured me the comment
was uttered because Meagher is "so smooth." Phew! Good thing we got that
straight. If the ladies do swarm all over Brian, we'll have to report that at a
later date. Ha ha. Two of the top defensive plays were turned in by Preppers.
Sr. 3B Matt Tiagwad did an excellent charge-and-gun job on Hunt's slow
grounder in the sixth. In the seventh, soph RH Aaron Haas came in to
pitch and Leddy went to 1B. Again a grounder found Tiagwad. The throw again was
strong, but it was low and Leddy engulfed it on one difficult hop.
MARCH 30
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Franklin Towne Charter 19, Olney 3
Phew! A couple more of these and I might have to start covering
lacrosse (smile). This was my first visit to the baseball trail this spring and,
boy, was it difficult. These days, almost every visit to a Pub game is risky
because the quality is often poor, and the chances of seeing a good one are
reduced even more when you drop down below Division A and/or see a game late in
the week (because teams' aces usually start the early-week games). Anyway, Olney
has just 10 players and only one, jr. Felix Madera, is something close to
a headliner. But this was his day to catch, not pitch (tough double on the arm,
right?), at least at the start, and sr. RH Eric Cruz just didn't have it.
Soph CF Keith Rycek grounded out to start things off for FT, a charter
school in Bridesburg, but then it was walk, walk, walk and walk and the score
was 1-0. Cruz deserved a better fate after that because he did induce a popup
and a groundball. Unfortunately, the grounder went right through an infielder's
legs and the Coyotes came out of the visiting first with a 4-0 lead. Top of the
second? Did you have to ask? OK, let's count this up . . . FT sent 21 batters to
the plate and Olney used four pitchers. Believe it or not, the two Olney errors
were inconsequential, as far as scoring rules go, so all 15 runs were earned! FT
drew 10 walks in the frame and one guy was plunked. Jr. 1B John Plumley,
jr. 3B John Carroll, soph 2B Mike Skinner (as a pinch-hitter) and
Rycek posted RBI by drawing bases-loaded walks. Sr. LF Sean Pastelnick
and frosh 2B Jason Krajewski stroked two-run singles. Carroll fired a
two-run double down the left-field line. Sr. RH Javier Muniz and
soph C Joe Gilbert had RBI apiece on singles and sr. RF Ray Ostrowski
got one on a groundout. Two runs did score on errors, but those guys would have
checked in anyway. As much as humanly possible, Olney coach Barry Strube
tried to avoid sending Madera to the mound. But with two outs and the bases
still loaded after back-to-back walks brought in runs No. 18 and 19, he HAD to
make the move. Otherwise, the inning might have lasted until Saturday. Madera is
small (maybe 5-8?), but he threw hard and well. He ended the carnage with an
immediate strikeout (the ball got away from Cruz, now the catcher, but he merely
stepped on the plate for a force) and racked two more Ks in a 1-2-3 third
inning. Also, he led off the home third with a deep shot to centerfield that
resulted in a triple. Cruz followed with a groundball single to left for an RBI,
stole second and later came around on a looping single to center by frosh 3B-P
David Montero. Montero was immediately erased in a well-executed rundown,
as Skinner made the putout. Muniz pitched all three innings for FT. He fanned
five and allowed four hits. I can't imagine he was fully concentrating with a
19-1 lead after two at-bats. When Olney's William Rodriguez, a sr.
handyman, was plunked leading off the home first, a teammate yelped, "That's
four games in a row! You're on a roll!" Guess what? Rodriguez was also hit in
his next plate appearance. Sean McAleer, a star linebacker at George
Washington (class of 1986), coached first base for FT (he's an administrator).
When Sean stopped a foul groundball by sticking out his knee, a Coyote piped up,
"Way to get in front of it!" McAleer shot back, "Unlike some of you guys." The
kids all laughed and/or groaned. In the latter stages of the second-inning
circus, FT coach Kyle Riley ordered his players to play
station-to-station baseball. Classy move.