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The Pool A Champion (Southwest) from Lake Charles, La. may have lost

their last pool game to Hagerstown, Md. (Mid-Atlantic) which forced a

three-way tie, but they managed came out on top based on the

tie-breaker rule and advanced to the U.S. Semifinal game. Lake Charles

defeated the Southeast champion, Tampa, Fl., 6-1 last night earning a

berth in Saturday's United States Championship. Going 5 2/3 innings,

Louisiana's Kennon Fontenot didn't seem to be as cool and collected as

he did in his last outing. But he still got the job done. "From what I

saw tonight, he gets ahead with the fastball and then gets you with the

curveball," Florida manager Joe McGuire said. "I was trying to get my

batters to step up in the box, but they would't listen."

 

 

Fontenot gave up two walks and two wild pitches in the first three

innings. The only run that Florida was able to put on the board was on

one of those past balls with a runner on third base. But after that run

scored and a talk with his coach, Fontenot seemed to settle in. He took

down the next five batters and this gave the rest of his team a chance

to battle back and battle back they did. With 3 runs scored in the

second, 1 in the third and another 2 in the fourth, they put the game

out of reach of Washington. Fontenot recorded 11 strikeouts, bringing

his total to 23 in 11 2/3 innings at the Little League Baseball World

Series.

 

 

When Kennon pitches, I was telling coach Joe (McGuire), he's

effectively wild sometimes," Southwest manager Charlie Phillips said.

"He does give me a few gray hairs every time he pitches."

 

 

Louisiana will take on Waipahu, Hawaii in the U.S. final. Games will

air live from Lamade Stadium on ABC, with the International title game

beginning at 12:30 p.m. and the U.S. title game at 3:30 p.m. and this

marks the first time since the Series expanded to 16 teams in 2001 that

all four pool champions advanced to the final weekend.

 

 

BOX SCORE

Tampa, Fl. 001 000 - 1 2 1

Lake Charles, La. 031 20x - 6 6 1

W - Kennon Fontenot. - Michael McGuire. S -Jordan Bryce. 2B - Beau Jordan (SW). HR - Jordan Bryce (SW).

 

 

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Despite building a 2-0 lead in the top of the first inning, the Northwest Region champ Mill Creek, Wash., couldn't overcome the hitting of the West champ Waipahu, Hawaii. Mill Creek will now be watching the rest of the Little League World Series from the stands. Tanner Tokunaga and Iolana Akau each hit two-run, first-inning home runs and Hawaii built a two-run advantage it never relinquished as it defeated Washington, 9-4, in a U.S. semifinal at Lamade Stadium. Hawaii (4-0), advances to Saturday's U.S. final where it will play either Florida or Louisiana.


"The next time we take the field there's only two U.S. teams left playing," Hawaii manager Timo Donahue said. "That says a lot." Back in pool play, Hawaii also trailed 2-0 in the first inning of a game against Florida, and held scoreless until the third inning. But this time, Hawaii got right back into the game.


Errors were costly for Mill Creek in first inning allowing Christian Donahue to reach first base. Then Tokunaga slammed a 0-1 pitch onto the hill over the center field fence thus tying !http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20884/TeamTalk.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9741|height=315|style=padding:8px;|align=left|width=210|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20884/TeamTalk.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9741!the game 2-2. This was followd by another error by Mill Creek as Winchester reached first base and Iolana Akau lined a two-run home run over the center-field wall, putting Hawaii ahead to stay, 4-2.


"When I was up I was nervous because I got beaned the last time," said Akau. "I just tried to get a base hit and came through." Washington managed to pull within 4-3 in the second inning on KJ Neaville's home run, but in the third inning, Winchester hit his first pitch down the left-field line for a home run. Kainoa Fong finished a three-run rally, hitting a two-run double and extending the lead to 7-3.


Washington had several chances to even things up with Hawaii. They had seven hits but left 11 runners on base including two in scoring position in each of the last five innings. Trailing 7-3 in the fourth inning, Washington loaded the bases with two outs, but scored only on a passed ball before Tokunaga, pitching in relief, ended the threat with a strikeout. Washington also had second and third with one out and the heart of its order coming up in the second inning, but was unable to score following Neaville's home run.



"One of those big hits could change the game," Washington manager Scott Mahlum said. "I felt like we had a chance to get more runs in the first inning and break it open, but Hawaii just hit a couple more out of the ball park than we did." "I just told the guys to be proud," Mahlum said. "We're the first team from Mill Creek to ever get her!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20885/ClassAct.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9741|style=padding:8px;|align=right|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20885/ClassAct.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9741!e. It was a once in a lifetime opportunity and a great experience."


The final blow for Washington to have a chance came in the in the bottom of the fourth as Winchester hammered a two-run home run shot to almost the same spot he had hit one in the third inning and extended Hawaii's lead (and final score) to 9-4. "I just go up there and clutch up and hit the ball," said Winchester, who has three home runs in four Series games. "We're just having fun."


Unlike the 11 runners left on base for Washington, Hawaii left just four runners on base and now will watch the Florida-Louisiana game to see if it can capture the World Series title like Ewa Beach, Hawaii did in 2005. The next time we take the field, there’s only going to be two U.S. teams left,” said Donahue, “and that in itself is saying a lot.”

The Washington team showed a lot of class at the end of the game. After the traditional Little League shaking of the opposing team hands, the whole team went in front of where the Hawaii team parents were sitting in the stands and applauded them. A very classy act to be sure.

*BOX SCORE

Mill Creek, Wa. 210 100 – 4 2 2

West Waipahu, Hi. 403 20x – 9 8 0*

W

– Caleb Duhay (1-0). L – Derrick Mahlum (0-1).* S* – Christian Donahue (1). 2B – Kainoa Fong (WP), Peyton McLemore (LC). HR – Tanner Tokunga (WP), Iolana Akau (WP), Pikai Winchester, 2 (WP) KJ Neaville (MC).

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Hagerstown, Md. (Mid-Atlantic), knocked off unbeaten Lake Charles, La. (Southwest), 6-4 on Tuesday. It got a gem of a pitching performance by Andrew Yacyk, who struck out eight Lake Charles batters while surrendering just one hit in five innings. Hagerstown’s top three batters – Ryan Byard, Yacyk and Zach Schreiber – proved that it may be the most lethal trio in the Little League World Series by going a combined 6-for-8 with si!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20818/Slide-home.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9721|height=246|style=padding:8px;|align=right|width=249|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20818/Slide-home.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9721!x RBI and five runs scored. And the Maryland champions put up four runs in the third inning and two more in the fourth against a pitching staff that had allowed just one run and three hits in two LLWS games thus far. Hagerstown went 2-1 in Pool A play. But, alas, none of it mattered.

Hagerstown’s 15-5 loss to Mill Creek, Wash., was too much to overcome as three teams tied for the Pool A lead. The tie-breaker went to which team surrendered the most runs in pool play. That was Hagerstown’s 21. "Our game against (Mill Creek), we were well aware of what we needed to do. We only needed, what, 27 runs,” Hagerstown coach Bill Abeles joked as he was corrected and told 17 by one of his players. “You start to overthink this wonderful game a little bit. We knew we wanted to win and leave on a positive note, but we knew it was going to be a bear to make the formula work in our favor.”


“It was a great experience. What an experience – win, lose or draw. I hope the kids always remember getting to play in the Yankee Stadium of Little League baseball.” Bryce Jordan went 2-for-3 with a run and an RBI for Lake Charles. Peyton McLemore had a two-RBI double.


*BOX SCORE

Lake Charles, La. 000 004 – 4 4 0

Hagerstown, Md. 004 20x – 6 8 1*


 

W – Andrew Yacyk (1-0). L – Gunner Leger (0-1). S – Josh Barron (1). 2B – Bryce Jordan (LC), Peyton McLemore (LC). HR – Ryan Byard (H), Andrew Yacyk (H), Zane Schreiber (H).


 

Pool A Records – Lake Charles 2-1, Hagerstown 2-1.

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Mill Creek, Wash (Northwest)., topped Jeffersonville, Ind (Great Lakes)., 3-2 in seven innings on Tuesday. The win, which was Mill Creek’s second straight after dropping its Little League World Series opener on Saturday to Lake Charles, La. (Southwest), earns it a spot in Wednesday’s single-elimination world quarterfinals. Mill Creek will face Waipahu, Hawaii (West) which went 3-0 in winning Pool B.


“It’s unbelievable to get to the (U.S.) semis,” Mill Creek pitcher Jason Todd said. “We’re going to be going up against a good team in Hawaii. It’s a great feeling to know that you’re moving on in the Little League World Series.” “We’re happy to be going on,” Mill Creek coach Scott Mahlum said. “We wanted to win or we didn’t want to play tomorrow. I didn’t want to back-door (into the quarterfinals).”


!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20747/GL-NW.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9707|height=303|style=padding:8px;|align=left|width=327|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20747/GL-NW.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9707!Alex Jondal was the Mill Creek hero on Tuesday. Down 2-1 in the fifth, Jondal hit an RBI single to plate Todd – who had doubled – to tie the game at two. In extra innings, Jondal hit a two-out, two-strike single over the head of Jeffersonville left fielder Brad Koerner to score Todd again, this time ending the game with the 3-2 victory. “I was thinking I needed to shorten up my swing with two strikes,” Jondal said of his game-winning RBI. “The past two games I haven’t done great, but I finally got into a hitting rhythm today. I was ecstatic. (I’ll) remember this for the rest of (my) life. It was great.”


Jeffersonville had its chances to advance. Like it did against Hagerstown, Md. (Mid-Atlantic), in its opener, Jeff led 2-1 after four-and-a-half innings, but couldn’t hold on. “We’re playing against the best teams in the United States,” Jeffersonville coach Derek Ellis said. “A bad pitch here and a blunder there, that will bite you against teams that are this good. You’re able to go that at state or at a regional. Here, you can’t give extra outs.”


Like he did against Hagerstown, Jeffersonville ace Drew Ellis had another great performance. After throwing a no-hitter in the loss to the Maryland champions, Ellis allowed just two runs on five hits against a Mill Creek team that scored 15 runs against Hagerstown on Monday. Ellis also struck out seven Mill Creek batters.

“I thought he did a great job,” Coach Ellis said. “He held those guys to one run. I’m very proud of what he did. He did a great job.”


Todd finished the game 2-for-3 with a game-tying home run in the bottom of the first inning. He scored all three of Mill Creek’s runs. Todd also pitched 5.2 solid innings, giving up two runs on five hits while striking out 11 Jeffersonville batters. “Jason battled out there,” Mahlum said. “He didn’t have his best stuff, but he threw a great game.” “He’s a pretty dogone good pitcher,” Coach Ellis said. “He has a nice curve ball and he throws it hard.”


Coach Ellis said that despite the winless trip to Williamsport, his league’s first trip since 1965 was far from a waste. “The kids are in good spirits,” Ellis said. “How could you not be after an experience like this? They battled hard. I’m extremely proud of those guys. It’s a memory I will never, ever forget. I’m sure it will hit me (in the future) what these kids have accomplished. Not many kids can say that they have played in the Little League World Series. These kids will always be associated with that.”


*BOX SCORE

Jeffersonville, Ind. 110 000 0 – 2 6 3

Mill Creek, Wash. 100 010 1 – 3 7 1*


  W – Alec Kisena (1-0). L – Christopher Wenger (0-2). 2B – Josh Burke (J), Drew Ellis (J), Jason Todd (MC). 3B – Austin Hines (J). HR – Todd (MC).


  Pool A Records – Jeffersonville 0-3, Mill Creek 2-1.

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The Little League Good Sport Award annually recognizes a Little League player who has demonstrated superior qualities of sportsmanship, leadership, a commitment to teamwork and a desire to excel. Kevin Trainor of Viera Suntree Little League in Melbourne, Fla., has exemplified all of those qualities, and this August at the 2008 Little League Baseball World Series in Williamsport, Pa., he will be recognized with the Little League Good Sport of the Year Award.


“Being a good sport has little to do with talent or ability and everything to do with character and attitude,” Stephen D. Keener, President and Chief Executive Officer of Little League Baseball and Softball, said. “Kevin is one Little League player who has demonstrated the ability to transform a potentially debilitating birth defect (Esophageal Artesia), into a willingness to lead by example and be a supportive teammate. These attributes nurtured through Little League often translate into success later in life, making Kevin a worthy recipient of this award.”!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20658/Good-Sport_KevinTrainor.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9679|height=258|style=padding:8px;|align=right|width=207|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20658/Good-Sport_KevinTrainor.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9679!


Kevin, 13, is the son of Kevin and Dorothy Trainor, and is a recent graduate of Manatee Elementary School in Viera, Fla. He will be attending Kennedy Middle School in Rockledge, Fla., this fall. A Little League participant since he was a league-age five-year-old, Kevin played much of this season at shortstop, second base and showed his greatest improvement as a pitcher.


“As coaches, teammates, umpires, and all that have come across him on the baseball diamond can attest, Kevin exudes all the qualities that constitute sportsmanship, respect and human decency,” Mike Neal, manager of the Viera Suntree Little League Diamondbacks and Kevin’s coach, said “There are times when he has had great success, and there are times when opposing hitters have had success against Kevin, but he handles both situations with the same unwavering respect for the game and with great sportsmanship.”


Kevin was born premature and without an esophagus. To date, he has undergone several medical procedures and surgeries to correct the birth defect.


“Playing Little League gives Kevin a sense of pride,” Kevin’s father, Kevin Trainor, Sr., said. “It has taught him about the importance of teamwork, having fun and enjoying the challenge of competition. His drive and determination are apparent to his teammates and coaches. The fact that Kevin has been named the 2008 Good Sport Award winner is a tribute not only to him, but also to the Viera Suntree Little League, along with league vice president Dave Zavetz and coach Mike Neal. Both have spent tireless hours instilling sportsmanship principles in every player under their tutelage.”


“I feel Kevin is a little more thankful than most because of the hurdles he’s had to clear in his brief life,” Mr. Trainor said. “When he found out we’d be going to Williamsport, he was shocked and tremendously excited. He’s looking forward to seeing the best players at his age in the world.”


 

The Little League Good Sport Award Program was established in 1989 to amplify the importance of Little League as a leadership training program, utilizing baseball and softball as a vehicle for instilling in children valuable principles, while never figuring in the youngster’s playing ability or personal statistics.

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Abby Contini of Dover, Ohio, will be recognized during the Little League Baseball World Series as the 2008 Little League Mom of the Year.


“My Mom should be the Little League Mom of the Year because of her commitment and dedication to our league,” Mrs. Contini’s son, Cory wrote when nominating his mother. “She is the assistant treasurer of our league, the secretary for my team, and runs our concession stand. She does all this and still finds time to be the best mom in the world.”

The Little League Mom of the Year Award was established in 1991 as a symbolic form of recognition and tribute to the millions of mothers in communities around the world who contribute their time to the Little League program.


!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20657/AbbyContini_Mom-of-the-Year.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9678|height=146|style=padding:8px;|align=left|width=146|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20657/AbbyContini_Mom-of-the-Year.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9678!“This year’s Mom of the Year truly represents the majority of Little League Moms,” Stephen D. Keener, President and Chief Executive Officer of Little League Baseball and Softball, said. “Responsible, dedicated and unassuming in tending to her tasks for Dover (Ohio) Little League, Abby Contini is the quintessential Little League volunteer because others notice and appreciate her commitment before she does. Her efforts have had a profound influence on her son, his team and their league, and Little League International is pleased to honor her with this special award.”


Each year, Little League players are invited to compose an essay that explains why their mothers should be the Little League Mom of the Year. From that group, one Little League mother is selected. Mrs. Contini will receive the award at the Little League Baseball World Series in Williamsport, Pa., scheduled for Aug. 15-24.


 

“Abby has been a great asset to Dover Little League,” Paul Monaco, Dover Little League President, said. “I’ve know her for 18 years, and she does whatever needs to be done for the league. We were pleased to hear that Cory nominated Abby, because the whole family is deeply involved in our program. I know she enjoys watching her son play, but she is always there to do things to help the league.”

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Fans and families are attending the 2008 Little League Baseball World Series in record numbers. The single-day attendance record for a non-championship day was broken this past Saturday here in illiamsport. "Broken" is perhaps not descriptive enough, however. Smashed is more like it.

 

"We heard that maybe our attendance would be down this year because of gas prices and a slowdown in the economy," Lance Van Taken, Senior Communications Executive for Little League International, said. "But those may be having the opposite effect, " Van Taken said. "People know they can attend the Little League World Series for free. Parking is free too. Where else can you feed a family of four for less than $20, and watch world-class baseball without paying a cent to watch the games?"

 

The previous record for a non-championship day was set on Saturday, August 18, 2007, when 27,986 fans attended games at Howard J. Lamade Stadium and Little League Volunteer Stadium. On Saturday, August 16 of this year's World Series, the total attendance for the day was 30,443, an increase of nearly nine percent.

 

Since 2002, the number of fans attending each day's events at the Little League World Series has been established using digital counters on the metal detectors at security checkpoints. Each fan entering the Little League International complex must pass through the security checkpoint. On Friday, the first day of the 2008 World Series, the attendance was 19,735.

 

The largest attendance on a championship day came in the final day of the tournament in 1989, when an estimated 45,000 people saw a team from Trumbull, Conn., defeat a team from Chinese Taipei for the title.

 

Millions more are watching games from home. All 32 games of the 2008 Little League World Series are being televised on ABC, ESPN or ESPN2. It will be interesting to see what the attendance will be at this years championship game on Sunday, August 24. The game will be televised on ABC and is scheduled to begin at 3:30 PM (EST).

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With six runs in the top of the first extra inning, Tampa, Fla.(Southeast), earned a berth in Wednesday’s single-elimination quarterfinal round with an 8-2 victory over Shelton, Conn (New England). Tampa, who will likely face Lake Charles, La. (Southwest), Wednesday, got a game-tying one-out home run from Kevin Merrell in the top of the sixth before exploding in the seventh.


“(Merrell’s) home run was the biggest hit of the game,” Tampa coach Joe Maguire said. “We don’t get the rest if we don’t get that one. After he hit the home run, going into the next inning I knew we were in good shape.” Danny Lastra opened the top of the sixth with his first home run of the Little League World Series and that opened the flood gates. “The way this team is, when one guy gets something started, they all get going,” Maguire said.


Ryan and Austin McCullers each had RBI doubles, followed by home runs by Brett Wilkosz and Merrell to cap things off. “The kids knew (this could have been it),” Maguire said. “They knew this could be their last game together. Tampa jumped on top when Merrell doubled and scored on a Lastra single. Merell finished 3-for-4 with two runs and two knocked in. Lastra was 2-for-4 with two RBI and a run. “(Merrell) has been playing with a hamstring injury for the last month,” Maguire said. “I give him credit for even being out there.”


Levi Gilcrease came in for Wyatt Reid, who pitched 4.1 solid innings, and picked up his second victory of the LLWS. Darren Miller pitched the seventh for his second save.“He’s got fight. He’s got a mean streak,” Maguire said of Gilcrease. “He’ll challenge anybody. He wanted to start today.” Shelton goes home with a 1-2 record, but nearly pulled off the upset after opening the LLWS with a 3-1 loss to Waipahu, Hawaii.

*BOX SCORE

Tampa, Fla. 000 101 6 – 8 10 0

Shelton, Conn. 000 110 0 – 2 7 0*

  W – Levi Gilcrease (2-0). L – Tyler Tice (0-2). S – Darren Miller (2). 2B – Kevin Merrell (T), Anthony Searles (S), Ryan McCullers (T), Austin McCullers (T). HR – Merrell (T) 2, Danny Lastra (T), Brett Wilkosz (T).


 

*Pool A Records *– Tampa 2-1, Shelton 1-2.

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Every time Rapid City, S.D. (Mid-West), had a rally on Monday, Waipahu, Hawaii (West), answered. To be more precise, Kainoa Fong and Keelen Obedoza answered. Waipahu’s eight and nine hitters combined to go 4-for-4, score four times and knock in three runners in the Hawaii champions’ 6-4 victory over Rapid City. Fong and Obedoza reached base every time they came to the plate and had a hand in every Waipahu run.


!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20646/double-play.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9675|height=260|style=padding:8px;|align=left|width=307|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20646/double-play.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9675!Waipahu has clinched Pool B’s No. 1 seed and will play Wednesday at 8 p.m. against either Mill Creek, Wash., Jeffersonville, Ind., or Hagerstown, Md. The opponent will be determined Tuesday. Waipahu broke on top in the second inning when Fong’s double knocked home Caleb Duhay. After Rapid City responded with three runs in the fourth inning, Fong singled and Obedoza walked to get a Waipahu rally started. After the two went to third on an error, Khade Peters knocked them both home with a single. Pikai Winchester later singled home Peters to give Waipahu a 4-3 lead.


Rapid City struck back with a Cale Fierro to tie the game in the fifth. That stage for Fong’s and Obedoza’s final heroics. Fong singled to open the bottom of the fifth – his third hit – then Obedoza hit his first home run of the World Series to give Waipahu a 6-4 win. Obedoza then came in to shut down Rapid City 1-2-3 to pick up a save. Rapid City finished its first LLWS 0-3, but had its best showing on Tuesday in its final game.


*BOX SCORE

Rapid City, S.D. 000 310 – 4 4 3

Waipahu, Hawaii 010 32x – 6 9 1*

  W – Jedd Andrade (1-0). L – Jesse Riddle (0-1). S – Keelen Obedoza. 2B – Kainoa Fong (W), Pikai Winchester (W). HR – Cale Fierro (RC), Obedoza (W).

 

Pool B Records – Rapid City 0-3, Waipahu 3-0.

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Mill Creek Remains Alive

Posted by ActiveTom Aug 19, 2008

Two days after scoring just one run on three hits, Mill Creek, Wash. (Northwest), showed the why it had a reputation as a high-powered offense in its 15-5 win over Hagerstown, Md (Mid-Atlantic). Mill Creek scored its 15 runs on 16 hits and eight extra base hits, including two home runs by Alec Kisena. Jason Todd and Alek Baumgartner also homered for Mill Creek, which is now 1-1 in Pool A play and just needs a victory over winless Jeffersonville, Ind., to advance to the next round.


!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20643/save-at-home.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9674|style=padding:8px;|align=right|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20643/save-at-home.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9674!“The bats came alive,” Mill Creek coach Scott Mahlum understated. “I’m very, very proud of these guys. That was our biggest fear after the first game, that we weren’t going to show people what we’re capable of. I’m very happy the guys responded, especially in a do-or-die game like today.” “Sometimes good teams just beat good team,” Hagerstown coach Bill Abeles said. “They did exactly what they wanted to do and we gave them a couple of extra outs (with errors). I have to hand it to them, they took it to us.”


Kisena went 2-for-3 and knocked home five runs. Both of his home runs came on two-strike counts. “I’m a good two-strike hitter,” Kisena admitted. Todd – the likely starting pitcher against Jeffersonville on Tuesday – went 4-for-4 with a homer, two double, four RBI and three runs scored in the win. “I knew I had to be at my best because I knew this could be our last (chance),” Todd said.


Entering the game, both teams had struggled offensively in pool play. In their first games combined, Mill Creek and Hagerstown combined for just three hits. On Monday, the two sides combined for 11 runs on 12 hits – in the first two innings. “We knew we had to come out strong and put up some good numbers,” Todd said.


The difference in the game was the relief pitching of Mill Creek. While Mill Creek scored seven runs in the seventh inning to break the game open, Mill Creek relievers surrendered just one run on three hits. Joakim Soderqvist, who struck out the side in both of his innings and got Mill Creek out of a bases-loaded jam in the second. “He was huge,” Mahlum said. Hagerstown needs a win over unbeaten Lake Charles, La., on Tuesday and some help from Jeffersonville to advance.


All four teams in Pool A are still alive for a berth in Wednesday’s single-elimination quarterfinal round.


*BOX SCORE

Mill Creek, Wash. 521 070 – 15 16 2

Hagerstown, Md. 310 100 – 5 7 1*

  W – Derrick Mahlum (1-0). L – Zane Schreiber (0-1). S – Alex Jondal (1). 2B – Jason Todd (MC) 2, Dan Kingma (MC), Jondal (MC). HR – Alec Kisena (MC) 2, Andrew Yacyk (H), Jason Todd (MC), Alek Baumgartner (MC).


 

Pool A Records – Mill Creek 1-1, Hagerstown 1-1.

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I first first learn about Canyon Lake Little League (South Dakota) third baseman Bill Hendricks at the Central Region Little League tournament in Indianapolis In., last month. It was there that I found out this 12-year old was going to enter Stevens High School as a freshman this fall.


According to his parents Craig and Concepcion Hendricks, after starting kindergarten that they really noticed that Bill was special. Each day Bill would look at his teacher's lesson plan and if any part of a lesson was missed, he would tell her. "He was reading her plan and going, 'oh, we didn't do this.'" Craig said. "That's when we knew he was on his way." So, after just two weeks in kindergarten, Bill advanced to first grade and later captured the Rapid City Spelling Bee championship while competing against older students. The next year, he attended second grade for just !http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20574/BillHendricks.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9658|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20574/BillHendricks.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9658!one day before moving up to the third grade.


Bill has maintained a straight A throughout school and has skipped two grades which is how he's able to enter high school in the fall. But the Bill's story doesn't stop here.


As the starting third baseman for Midwest champ Rapid City, S.D., he has been one of the driving forces in helping his team become the first from its South Dakota to reach the Little League World Series. "It's great to see a kid excel in that many different areas," Canyon Lake Little League president Dale Gisi said. "He's a great athlete and he puts a lot of hard work into everything he does."


His favorite subject in school is science and has taken first place in three consecutive science fairs. By the fourth grade, Bill had mastered the violin and then took on the tenor saxophone in the fifth grade. In the eight grade, he made the all-state band team.


I and the millions of people people watching the the Midwest Championship last month got to see and hear Bill play "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" on his violin and it was great. And seeing how he had never played the song before and was handed the sheet music a few hours ahead of time, it was really remarkable how well he did.


"He's studied hard and he's worked hard to get this far," his mom, Concepcion said. "Socially and academically, he has no problems. He gets along with everybody and the kids love him. They see him in the hallway and they say, 'hey, you're the smart kid in the class!' "


Bill also has a talent for tennis, Bill enjoys baseball the most. "Bill has a good, solid glove, he can drive in runs and he doesn't strike out a lot. He's a good kid and a good baseball player," Rapid City coach Jeff Minnick said. "He's always giving positive information to everybody and patting them on the back. He's a vital person to our baseball team."


In the Midwest final, South Dakota's starting Pitcher Cale Fierro had already struck out 12 batters but had to leave the game having reached the mandatory 85 pitch count limit. The


As Rapid City closed in on a historic win in the Midwest final, it was Bill holding the ball. Cale Fierro had struck out 12, but had to exit after reaching the 85-pitch count limit. Canyon Lake led 7-1, but Minnesota had the bases loaded and there was just one out. Bill entered the game calm and struck out his first batter. The second batter grounded out to end the game and send Canyon Lake to the Little League World Series. "I was thinking it's just another game and I just have to throw some strikes," Bill said. "When I'm really focused I don't think pressure really gets to me. I just get up there and do what I'm supposed to do."


During the parent meeting after the championship game, Bill's dad gave me a copy of a short story Bill had written and I include it here. Whatever Bill Hendricks does in life, I'm sure it will be remarkable.


 

Let's Play Lifelong Baseball!

By Bill Hendricks


 

Welcome to Little League Baseball! Today, we've got a lifetime match up: The Impressions and the Benefits. Let's get to the lineups!


 

Starting for the Impressions are:

  +Pitching - Respect

      Catching - Fun

      First Base - Determination

      Second Base - Cooperation

      Short Stop - Team Work

      Third Base - Competition

      Left Field - Encouragement

      Center Field - Thinking

and in Right Field - Leadership+


 

Starting for the Benefits are:

  +Pitching - Self Confidence

      Catching - Learning Skills

      First Base - Making Friends

      Second Base - Developing Coordination

      Short Stop - Positive Attitude

      Third Base - Life Lessons

      Left Field - Work Ethics

      Center Field - Helping Others

and in Right Field - Following Rules+


 

Let's Play Lifelong Baseball!

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Jeffersonville Loses Again

Posted by ActiveTom Aug 18, 2008

After losing their opening game despite pitching a no-hitter, the Great Lakes champion Jeffersonville Little League, lost to the Southwest team, Lake Charles, La. 9-0. Unfortunatly for Jeffersonville, this time it was a no-hitter by Trey Quinn from South Lake Charles Little League.


Jeffersonville now drops to 0-2 in pool play and will be eliminated from further World Series play if Hagerstowne, Md., (Mid-Atlantic) beats Mill Creek, Wash. (Northwest) today at noon. A loss to Hagerstown will guarantee a spot in the semi-finals for both Lake Charles and Hagerstown. There is a small ray of hope for Jeff if Mill Creek, which is 0-1, beats Hagerstown (1-0) today and then knockout Mill Creek in their final game tomorrow. Finally, Lake Charles would then need to beat Hagerstown tomorrow night and this would cause a three-way tiebreaker at 1-2. According to Little League rules, the three-way tiebreaker would be decided by the fewest runs allowed divided by the number of defensive innings played. As I said, it's a small ray of hope. But in Little League play, sometimes things just happen.


However, it will be much easier for Lake Charles for locking down a spot in the semi-finals by beating Hagerstown tomorrow night. Quinn who struck out 12 Jeff batters on his way to the no-hitter did so even after being hit on the wrist from a batted ball from Jeff's pitching ace, Dalton Duely. "I knocked it around like five times on the ground and grabbed the ball and made a nice throw," said Quinn whose wrist was still red after the game.


Quinn struck out twelve and allowed only two base runners (a walk and a hit batsman) in front of a crowd of 11,300 at Howard J. Lamade Stadium. Quinn said this was the first no-hitter he's ever had in Little League and his team's pitching coach, who also just happens to be his dad, said it was the best game his son has ever thrown. "Those guys were great hitters," said a proud dad, Dave Quinn. "The Washington kids the other night, they scared the death out of me. You treat opponents with respect, trying to compete and not get caught in the hype, but it gets emotional." “Our strength is playing hard,” Lake Charles Manager Charlie Phillips said. “We look to play hard the whole game.” Jeffersonville manager Derek Ellis declined to be interviewed after the game


 

This was the first of the four no-hitters thrown this Series where the pitcher's team won and the game lasted a full six innings. Jeffersonville's Drew Ellis suffered a 3-2 loss to Hagerstown on Saturday despite throwing a no-hitter.

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I recieved an email the other day from fellow umpire Neale Ferguson after he had read my blog. He  had such a good time he wanted to thank the organizers by putting together some   thoughts and observations of his experience. Below is what he wrote.




*Bow-Bo, Noodle, Biscuit and Wormy

  “It reminds us of   all that once was good, and it could be again.”*


As an adult, particularly as a parent, there is a certain pleasure in seeing a child do something for the first time. It allows us to shed for a moment the barnacle-like cynicism that as we accrue with age. So it was when the recent 9 & 10-year-old Little League Baseball Virginia State Tournament was held in my town the other week. It reminded me of what I love about kids’ sports when it’s done well. And very well it was.


They came from all over: in cars daubed in paint and streamers, in caravans from the furthest regions of the state. For some this had been the longest trip they’d ever made. For others it was yet another field among hundreds they’d played on since they were in Pee-Wee league.


Like society itself, the microcosm that is little league baseball is a melting pot of all shapes, sizes, colors, and wealth. One player is heard to exclaim with awe: “I’ve never played on a field with lines before.” The brashness of the city kids mixes with the old-world politeness of their country brethren. Tables at the opening dinner that had been reserved for each team were soon peppered with members from others as pins are traded and that most adult of abilities to relive and enhance sporting tales was practiced for the very first time.


There were the nicknames of course. Great ones. One of my favorites was Bow-Bo who hailed from Honaker. He couldn’t exactly remember why he received that epithet just that two of his friends had bestowed it upon him. Now he’s getting older, he told me quietly, he would like to be referred to as just “Bo”. There were also Noodle, Biscuit and Wormy whose names will forever echo in some backwater of my consciousness.


Although of extreme youth, make no mistake these kids could play ball. There were shortstops that were like vacuum cleaners in the way the ball would always end up cleanly in the glove no matter where they had to field it from. We were treated to the sights of sluggers who could put the ball over the fence but were still young enough not to try and fake indifference to their accomplishment.


Games were intense. Who could imagine that a 2-1 ball game between teams of 9 & 10 year olds would be so compelling? The players rose to the occasion as they struggled each inning to break the game open only to find their opposite numbers equally as resolute to keep them in check. Fans cheered, cowbells rang, the clink of the ball as it met the bat filled the air, high octave calls of “cut it” echoed across the field. Overhead an airbus climbed out of Dulles airport. A few saw it. No one heard it.


There were blowouts too, but some of these transcended the realm of the ordinary. Not because of the baseball but because of the way the suffering players maintained their dignity and their opposite numbers gave them their respect. During one mighty thrashing I heard the coach reminding his players that: “These guys are our friends. We play basketball and football against them.”


The players are told to put on their game faces. They do, but they last only as long as it takes to call “play ball”. Their faces betray the terrible excitement of the game. You can see them live and die a thousand times during the game: as they face each pitch, when they field the balls that come their way, and when they attempt that throw to first hoping to beat the runner.


There’s supposed to be no crying in baseball, but there was – just a little – and laughter – quite a lot – and there was every other emotion on display. The players wore them without self-consciousness: that was their privilege. It was there for everyone watching to see, and that was ours.


Being an umpire bestows a precious intimacy with the game and its players. Most vivid memories include a batter who swung wildly at his first two pitches but battled back by fouling off several strikes and leaving the balls to draw a walk. There was a look of intense relief, joy, pride, and amazement on that batter’s face as he made his way to first base. This was no face you’d see opposite you at the card table.


Never more is the evidence of fear and anticipation on show than when the game is on the line. Bottom of 6, two down, two on, and two runs behind: The batter takes his last instructions from the coach. His last question/pleading is overheard as I stood nearby: “I only have to get to first base… right??” I find myself recalling a phrase from an old poem in which “Its beauty and its terror” is used to describe an object. I think I now understand how something could have those two properties at once.


The end of a game became a bittersweet moment. Sweet because there was going to be another game tomorrow, bitter because we were one game closer to the end of the tournament. Soon there would only be 8 teams remaining, then four…


There is a horrible type of cliché that one usually hears at occasions like this. It generally takes the form of “The game was the real winner”, or “Everyone was a winner”. Well no, there was a deserving winner and it was the team from SYA East. However, this was just one end product of the 7 days.


The true value of an event like this is to be assessed as the sum of a host of smaller victories: to overcome, to achieve, to get back up and do it all again, to accept defeat with grace. The latter was no better demonstrated by the pitcher who, having just been hit out of the park, joined the throng at home plate to offer his hand in congratulations to the batter as he completed his tour of the bases.


While the kids were the feature event, some reflections on the adults is only proper. The horror stories of over-competitive or over-compensating parents are the stuff of dark legend. As an umpire I felt a little trepidation before the tournament started. However, this was a needless worry, as the parents took their cue from their players and were gracious and generous.


Was the players’ outstanding sportsmanship a function of their parents and coaches examples or were the kids the role models for the adults? It was both of course, although the tone of the week had been established by those responsible for organizing and running the tournament. This they communicated clearly to the managers and the officials. It was something they never let anyone forget for the duration.


Whether this is turns out to be their only tournament or they go on to many more, I hope that years from now Bow-Bo, Biscuit, Wormy, and Noodle will remember with advantages what feats they did during those tournament days, recall each others names, and their stories teach their sons. In doing so they too can once again dip themselves in those magic waters.


 

*You know we just don't recognize the most significant moments of our lives while   they're happening. Back then I thought, well, there'll be other days. I didn't   realize that that was the only day.” *


 

Thank you Neale for sharing this with us. I'm sure a lot of us can relate to what you've said but couldn't have said it better. - Tom

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Great Lakes  (Jeffersonville, IN), ace Drew Ellis pitched a no-hitter in  his Little League World Series debut. Unfortunately for him and his Jeffersonville teammates, Ellis walked three batters, hit  one and threw four wild pitchers and Southwest (Hagerstown, MD).,  pulled off a 3-2 comeback win in Pool A.


In the fateful fifth inning – with Jeffersonville leading 2-1 – Ellis hit one batter and walked another. Nick Karlen, then pinch runner Mark Grunberg then scored on wild pitches to give Hagerstown the lead for good, 3-2. “Drew got a little wild and (catcher) Josh (Burke) had trouble handling some of the fastballs, but what are you going to do,” Jeff coach Derek Ellis said. “(My hat is) off to Maryland for hanging in there. I thought we had it.” Derek!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20463/Derek-Ellis.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9629|height=249|style=padding:8px;|align=right|width=357|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20463/Derek-Ellis.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9629! Ellis said his pitcher got a little upset with the strike zone of home plate umpire Mark Bernstein, but that “the umpire was fair. (Drew) just got a little wild and (catcher) Josh (Burke) had a little trouble with some of the pitches.” “This (loss) stings a little bit,” said Ellis, Drew’s father, at the postgame press conference. “I thought we had it.”


“They’ve been very resilient all summer. They really do not quit,” Hagerstown coach Bill Abeles said of his squad. “They didn’t quit going into the …end of that game. We knew we had six outs to try to put the ball in play and we stole a game.”


A costly error hurt by Jeffersonville in the first inning. Hagerstown first baseman Zane Schreiber walked, then later scored when Jeff centerfielder Austin Hines failed to catch a pop up. Hines made amends, however, in the third inning when he hit a one-out homer to opposite field off of Hagerstown starter Andrew Yacyk to tie the score at one. Jeffersonville, which had only three hits of its own, took its only lead in the fourth. Chandler Dale led off the inning with a double and later scored on a Ben Shahroudi single.


Jeff got a runner to third base with one out of the sixth inning when Hayden Robb drew walk, went to third on two wild pitches by reliever Josh Barron. However, Barron got Burke to ground out to third base to end the threat and the game. “(Barron has been) a very solid closer for us,” Abeles said. “He’s got a nice little curveball and hits his spots. I know when I call a pitch to (catcher) Dalton Jobe, he’s going to hit it.”


Jeffersonville’s next contest is Sunday at 3:30 p.m. vs. Mill Creek, Wash. Mill Creek fell to St. Charles, La., on Saturday. Hagerstown will put its unblemished mark on the line against Mill Creek at 8 p.m. on Sunday.


*BOX SCORE

Jeffersonville*, Ind. 001 100 – 2 3 1

Hagerstown

, Md.100 02x – 3 0 1


 

W – Josh Barron (1-0). L – Drew Ellis (0-1). 2B – Chandler Dale  (J). HR – Austin Hines (J).


 

Pool A Records – Jeffersonville  0-1, Hagerstown  1-0.

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At this  time of the year, Williamsport  is the host of many great Little Leaguers. Kennon Fontenot of Lake Charles, La.,  is making the case that he is the best of them all. All Fontenot did in  Saturday’s 5-1 win over Mill Creek, Wash. – the World Series opener for both  teams – was strike out 15 of the 21 batters he faced, while giving up just one  run on three hits.


Fontenot struck out the first eight batters he faced with his fastball reaching 80 miles per hour. He also went 2-for-3 at the plate with a triple and a run scored. He reached base in all three of his plate appearances. Fontenot got plenty of help from brothers Beau and Bryce Jordan, who went a combined 3-for-6 and had a hand in four of Lake Charles’ five runs. Bryce Jordan helped the Louisiana champions get on the board first in a two-run second inning with a bloop single on the inning’s first pitch.


The next batter, Nick Abshire, singled on the next pitch and Lake Charles had runners on first and second with nobody out. After Jordan and Abshire pulled off a double steal, Jordan scored the game’s first run on Colton Hunt’s ground out to first base. Hunter Self followed with an RBI single and Lake Charles had a 2-0 lead. That was all Fontenot would need, but he got more in the third inning.


Fontenot got things started in the third with a leadoff triple, showing great speed to go along with his pitching and hitting ability. Fontenot scored when Beau Jordan doubled. Jordan then made it 4-0 when pinch hitter Peyton McLemore doubled him home. Mill Creek looked like it would make it a game in the fourth inning when Dan Kingma led off with a double. He later scored on a Jason Todd single. After issuing a one-out walk, Fontenot struck out the next two batters to get out of the jam. “I just had all my pitches and tried to hit the mitt and that’s what I did,” Fontenot said.


Northwest manager Scott Mahlum couldn’t get over the performance Fontenot had on the hill. “I don’t know how you prepare to face a kid that throws that hard and has that kind of control,” Mahlum said. “I don’t know how you prepare a team for that. The batting cages don’t throw that hard.”


Gunner Leger relieved Fontenot in the sixth, recording the final two outs of the game. Leger came in with runners on base and just tried to throw strikes, he said. He induced a pop fly and grounder to the second baseman to finish off the game. “I felt like a major leaguer,” Leger said.


Bryce Jordan scored his second run – an insurance run – in the fifth inning. He doubled then later scored on a passed ball. Lake Charles faces off against Jeffersonville, Ind., Saturday at 3:30 p.m. on ABC. Jeffersonville lost its opener, 3-2, to Hagerstown, Md., on Saturday.


Mill Creek will try to get its first win Monday at Noon when it plays Hagerstown.


*BOX SCORE

Mill Creek, Wash. 000 100 – 1 3 2

Lake Charles, La. 022 01x – 5 8 1*

  *W *– Kennon  Fontenot (1-0). L – Jason Todd (0-1). S – Gunner Leger. 2B – Beau Jordan (SC),  Bryce Jordan (SC), Dan Kingma (MC). 3B – Fontenot (SC).


 

Pool A  Records – Mill Creek 0-1, Lake Charles  1-0.

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My poor  favorite Pool B team from the Midwest, South    Dakota has only one more shot at winning a game at  the Little League World Series. They need to win to have any chance to advance with the possibility of a three way tie with New England (Sheldon, CT) and West (Waipahu, HI). A little luck couldn't hurt either. After falling behind 1-0 in the first inning, Shelton, Conn., scored  two runs in the second inning to take the lead, then broke the game open with  seven more in the fourth inning for a 9-4 win over the Chrystal Lake Little  League team from Rapid City,   S.D. on Saturday.




Rapid City’s Matt Minnick continued his hot hitting – now 17-for-22 since the Midwest Region began – when he tripled in the first inning. He later scored on a wild !http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20457/Get-the-ball-in.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9625|height=313|style=padding:8px;|align=left|width=333|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20457/Get-the-ball-in.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9625!pitch and the South Dakota champions had their first run and their first lead of the World Series. After being shut down by Cale Fierro in the first inning, Shelton took the lead with a two-out rally in the second, thanks to three singles and two Rapid City errors.


Eddie Kochiss, Jason Hafele and Matt Stoll all singled, but none of the Shelton runs were earned since all three eventually scored on Rapid City errors. In the fourth inning, Shelton also benefited from Rapid City errors. Shelton scored seven times on just three hits. Pat Murphy singled to get the rally started and Tyler Tice had a two-out RBI single to make the score 6-1. "It was kind of hard but we got through it and came back today and did our best," said Tyler Tice, who scored in a seven-run fourth inning. After another Rapid City error allowed two more Shelton runs to score, Marcello Ursini had the big blow – a home run to left field to give Shelton a 9-1 lead.


"You win 18 or 19 in a row to get here, and then you lose one and the shoulders drop," said Shelton manager Ed Szymansky, whose team lost 3-1 to Waipahu (Hawaii) Friday night in a game delayed 1 hour, 25 minutes by rain. "We had a talk in the room after last night. Don't look behind you, look ahead."


Rapid City fought back to score three times in the bottom of the sixth – thanks to an RBI double by Minnick and a two-RBI single by Jesse Riddle – but it wasn’t enough to keep from falling to 0-2 in Pool B. Shelton plays a final crucial Pool B game Monday at 6 p.m. against Tampa, Fla. Tampa is unbeaten in the pool after a 10-0 win over Rapid City.


Rapid City (0-2) closes out its World Series run at 3 p.m. on Monday against Waipahu, Hawaii. I’m afraid this will be the last game for Chrystal Lake but it will be a big one. The game will be televised on ABC rather than ESPN. Not the boys will really have something to talk about when the get home


 

BOX SCORE

    Rapid City, S.D.                        100 003 – 4 5 5

    Shelton, Conn.* 020 70x – 9 6 0*

    W – Bobby Moretti (1-0). L – Cale Fierro (0-1). 2B – Alec Winter (RC), Matt Minnick (RC). 3B – Matt Minnick (RC). HR – Marcello  Ursina (S).


 

Pool B  Records – Rapid City 0-2, Shelton 1-1.

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Through its region championship run, Waipahu, Hawaii, has had a formula for success: stellar pitching and defense, and creating runs. If its first game of the Little League World Series is any indication, Waipahu plans on using the same formula in Pool B play. Behind the same great pitching and defense – and some creative run-scoring methods – Waipahu won its LLWS opener, 3-1 over Shelton, Conn., on Friday.


Caleb Duhay pitched five complete innings, giving up just one hit – a solo home run by Eddie Kochiss – and allowed just four base runners. Duhay also struck out seven Shelton batters. “I was feeling pretty confident,” Duhay said. “(On) the home run, I hung my splitter.” Offensively, the West Region champions had just four hits – by four different Waipahu players.


Christian Donahue scored the game-winning run when he singled in the four inning, then went to second on a passed ball. On the same play, as the catcher threw back to the pitcher, Donahue stole third base. On the next pitch, Donahue scored on a wild pitch to make the score 2-1. Waipahu led the rest of the way. (Donahue) is actually one of our best base runners,” his father and coach Timo Donahue said. “The benefit he gets is that I’m always in his ear. He does get things going for us. It’s been that way this whole All-Star season so far.”


The Hawaii representative scored the game’s first run – in the bottom of the first inning – also on a wild pitch. Tanner Tokunaga singled for the inning’s only hit and later scored. Waipahu left the bases loaded in the first. “I give credit to (Kochiss),” Coach Donahue said. “When you look at it that way, you don’t get as upset.” Waipahu’s final run came on a solo home run by Pikai Winchester to lead off the fifth inning. “I was sitting on a fast ball and I hit it hard,” Winchester recalled.


“I think (the home run) was big, considering it was a close ball game throughout,” Coach Donahue said. “One extra run gave (us) a little more room to breathe.” After the game was delayed for two hours and 15 minutes, Tokunaga pitched the final inning – giving up just one hit – to put Shelton away. “I don’t think (the delay) had much effect,” Coach Donahue said.


Waipahu will face Tampa, Fla., in its next game on Sunday at 8 p.m. Tampa was also victorious Friday, beating Rapid City, S.D., 10-0 in four innings. “We’re expecting it to be another tough batted,” Donuhue admitted.


 

BOX SCORE

*Shelton, Conn. 010 000 – 1 2 2

Waipahu, Hawaii 100 11x – 3 4 0*

  W – Caleb Duhay (1-0).* L* – Eddie Kochiss (0-1). S – Tanner Tokunaga (1). HR – Kochiss (S), Pikai Winchester (W).


  Pool B Records – Shelton 0-1, Waipahu 1-0.

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South Dakota Drops Opener

Posted by ActiveTom Aug 16, 2008

Tampa, Fla., picked up where it left off in the Southeast Regional when it   beat up on Rapid City, S.D., 10-0 in four innings on Friday. Tampa, which beat   Mobile, Ala., 11-0 to win the Southeast Regional, scored eight runs in the top   of the first inning on Friday and never looked back.


Wyatt Reid and Kevin Merrell each had three-RBI hits - Reid a triple to score the first runs and Merrell a double to make the score 8-0 - as Tampa went through 12 batters in the first inning against Rapid City starter Tanner Simons. "After (the triple) we had the momentum," Reid said. "So we just kept hitting and put a bunch of runs on the board." The eight runs were more than enough support for three Tampa pitchers, none of which threw more than 20 pitches. Levi Gilcrease, Darren Miller and Merrell combined to throw a no-hitter against a team that averaged nearly 10 runs per game in their Midwest Region run. "I was calm. I felt good. I wasn't nervous at all," Gilcrease admitted.


 "They were hitting their spots well and keeping us off balance and kept us guessing," Rapid City assistant coach Steve Nolan said. Tampa scored two more runs in the second inning. After that, Simons, who went the distance, surrendered just one more hit. "He's a competitor and he fought back," Nolan said of his ace, who went 3-0 in the Midwest Region. "He had a case of the nerves, but he did a nice job of fighting."


Tampa will face Waipahu, Hawaii, at 8 p.m. on Sunday. Waipahu also won its opener, 3-1, over Shelton, Conn. Rapid City plays Shelton at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, with the loser likely eliminated from championship contention. "Despite the outcome, we're proud of (the team)," Nolan said. "These are a capable group of kids. When we step on the field tomorrow, I expect us to play loose and play focused."


BOX SCORE

Tampa, Fla. 820 0 - 10 8 2

Rapid City, S.D. 000 0 - 0 0 1

W
- Levi Gilcrease (1-0). L - Tanner Simons (0-1). S - Kevin Merrell (1). 2B - Merrell (T), Gilcrease (T). 3B - Wyatt Reid (T).



Records

- Tampa 1-0, Rapid City 0-1.

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The Little League World Series officially opened with the Parade of Champions to the tune of "It's a Small, Small World". Each of the sixteen teams marched in proudly carrying the regional championship flags and tipping their hats to their parents and fans alike. With teams from as far away as Japan, Venezuela, Guam, Saudi Arabia, and Hawaii, it is truely amazing to see how many parents and friends in the stands who have traveled hundreds of miles to watch their child play in this great event.


There is also a little history being made this year with a teams from Emila, Italy and Rapid City, South !http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20394/South-Dakota-Mid-West.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9611|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20394/South-Dakota-Mid-West.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9611!Dakota playing for the first time in Williamsport. I was with the Mid-West Champion South Dakota team at during their regional tournament in Indianapolis, IN a week ago and I spoke with Manager Doug Simons during their first batting practice at the complex. "The boys haven't been home in two weeks and had to stay in the dorms until we left for Williamsport so they really don't know the impact they have had back home in Rapid City". "We've gotten millions of phone calls and faxes" Simons said. "I just wish the boys could enjoy all of that but since they haven't been home, they can't see how much the community has been behind them."


I'm hoping to be able to sit with the South Dakota parents in their VIP section for one of their games. This section is the area where you always see a mom or dad caught on ESPN nervously watching their son up at bat or cheering on the whole team. I recieved a call before arriving at Williamsport from one of the parents I met in Indianapolis letting me!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20417/Dale-Gisi-Press.jpg|style=padding:8px;|align=right|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20417/Dale-Gisi-Press.jpg! know the President of their league wanted to fly out and watch some of the games but didn't have any place to stay and if I knew of any hotel that might have an opening. I told him that unless you book way in advance, there just aren't any rooms available. However, because my family wasn't coming this year, the room I have has a couch sleeper and if he was willing to sleep on that (Hey, I'm a nice guy, but I'm not giving up my king size bed) he was welcome to stay with me. I then recieved an email from the President, Dale Gisi and he was more than willing to sleep on the couch. This is the Little League way; we all do what we can for a fellow Little Leaguer!


Dale arrived late Thursday night after having to drive six hours to from Rapid City to Denver to catch his flight which was to Philadelphia and then another three hour drive to Williamsport. Add to that a two hour time difference, he was dead tired when he arrived. However, that didn't stop him from first driving up past the Little League stadium before heading to the hotel. "The lights were still on so I thought what the heck, I might as well have a look" Gisi said. He had that "kid in a candy store" look as we talked about Canyon Lake Little League and the team's quest to the World Series. I love the way Little League brings people together and the way I make new friends like Dale year after year.


 

This is my ninth year attending the Little League World Series and even after all this time, I still have the "kid in the candy store" look too!

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As part of my blog, I have been attempting to do some video interviews of coaches, umpires, players and even a Regional Director. We have now setup a separate page so that you can view the videos I have created thus far and I'll have more as the series continues.

 

 

I'm hoping that my blog and videos will give you a different perspective of the Little League tournament games from an inside point of view. If there is something you would like me to write about, please drop me an email at tom.mcgorty@active.com and I'll see what I can do.

 

 

To visit our Little League World Series Baseball video page, click here.

 

 

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Where's Holly??

Posted by ActiveTom Aug 13, 2008

I’m writing this blog entry on my Northwest flight to Williamsport and the  Little League World Series. While I’m looking forward be heading to the series,  I’m not as excited as I have been in years past. Don’t get me wrong, I love my  job with Active.com, the relationship we have built with Little League and  being fortunate enough to be able to attend the World Series every year. But  this year will be different; I won’t have my wife Holly or my stepson Chris  with me.


!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20122/Holly-Banner.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9563|height=292|style=padding:8px;|align=left|width=220|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20122/Holly-Banner.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9563!Holly and Chris have made the trip to Williamsport with me for several years and we would make the ten hour drive a relaxing two day trip. Holly and I even got engaged at the series in 2003 and in 2004 I had major surgery and couldn’t drive and spent most of the time in the back of our mini van sleeping while Holly had to do all the driving. At the series, Holly has been a tireless worker helping the Active team with everything from setting up our display tent, handing out pins, applying tattoos, taking pictures, and just being a great ambassador for Active. Holly is one of those people that can talk to anyone from a small child wanting one of our (or Dugout’s) tattoos’ put on their face; to a!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20123/Tom-Holly-Kiss-Scoreboard.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9563|height=254|style=padding:8px;|align=right|width=312|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-20123/Tom-Holly-Kiss-Scoreboard.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9563! Little League parent that wanted to know more about Active and eteamz and what we do; and to everyone at Little League headquarters including President and CEO Steve Keener. She has what you might call a “following” at the series. While I may know a lot of the same people at headquarters, district and league officials, etc., Holly knows all the “important” people, like the Security guys, the guys that drive the golf carts, the guys that check the Section 1 tickets, the guys who sell lemonade, the guys who have the “best” trading pins… ok, yes, she’s a flirt and a darn good one. It’s gotten to the point that when I meet up with someone I know and say “hi”, they only want to know, “where’s Holly?” We even talked about having a trading pin made that was just for her and it would be the “Where’s Holly” pin. I have a feeling that since she’s not going with me this year, the pin would be a highly collectable one. Sure wish I had gotten it created. But as you can tell, I’m really going to miss having Holly with me in Williamsport. She is so much more to me than just my wife; she’s what keeps me going day after day.


I’m going to miss having Chris with me too. For his part, he always brings a friend from home and just enjoys pin trading, watching some great baseball and meeting new people and just having fun. He is really bummed that he’s not going this year either. He made some friends in Williamsport over the years and has kept in touch with them and always looked forward to seeing them each year. But he’s also starting high school this fall and has already started his two-a-day workouts for football and can’t miss that either. He’s looking forward to being a freshman and he’s pretty excited about wearing the same football jersey as his brother did on Varsity; not just the same number 32 but the same jersey. Apparently the Varsity got new ones this year so the JV got the old ones which is certainly ok with Chris. But, I’ll miss him in Williamsport too.


 

Well, the plane is landing so I’ll close for now. Next post  will be from Little League headquarters and the World Series!

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Jeffersonville, Ind., is going back to the Little League World Series for the first time since 1965 after an 11-inning, 11-4 victory over Mount Vernon, Ohio. Jeffersonville scored seven runs in the top of the 11th after five straight scoreless innings. Drew Ellis had his first hit a single to!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19894/Great-Lakes-Champions.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=951|style=padding:8px;|align=right|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19894/Great-Lakes-Champions.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=951! open the 11th inning off of Alex Arck. Chandler Dale followed with a single up the middle. Ellis then scored the go-ahead run on a passed ball and a wild pitch.


The big blow came off of the bat of Austin Hines, his fifth home run of the Great Lakes Region tournament. Hines with 2-for-7 with three RBI. Ben Shahroudi was the hitting hero. The day after breaking his nose, the Jeffersonville second baseman went 4-for-6 and reached base in all of his at-bats. Shahroudi scored twice and knocked in a run. Dalton Duly, who relieved Chandler Dale in the eighth inning, threw four scoreless innings for the win. He struck out four and surrendered just two hits. Dale struck out six and gave up five hits in his seven innings.


Jeffersonville opens up play in Williamsport, Pa., on Aug. 15 against the Mid-Atlantic champion either Devon Strafford, Md., or Hagerstown, Pa. at Lamade Stadium at 8 p.m.


*BOX SCORE

Jeffersonville, Ind. 030 010 000 07 11

Mount Vernon, Ohio 120 100 000 00 4*

  W Dalton Duly (1-0). L Alex Arck (0-1). 2B Nick Hoar (MV). HR J.D. Orr (MV), Chase Springer (MV), Austin Hines (J).


 

Records Jeffersonville 4-1, Mount Vernon 2-3.

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Rapid City’s South Dakota state defeated Minnesota’s Coon Rapids, 7-1, to   advance to the Little League World Series, which starts Aug. 15. Canyon Lake   will be the first team ever from the state of South Dakota in Williamsport. “I’m   just numb,” Canyon Lake coach Doug Simons said. “I never thought this would   happen. It’s unbelievable. “I hope Rapid (City) is excited, because we’re   excited about be able to represent Rapid City in Williamsport. Hopefully they’re   proud of us.” “I’m really, really excited,” catcher Matt Minnick said. “I never   thought !http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19891/The-Midwest-Region-Champions.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9512|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19891/The-Midwest-Region-Champions.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9512!I’d get a chance to go to Wiliamsport. I’ve watched it on TV five years   in a row and I just never thought I’d make it there.” Infielder Logan Anderson   said he’s taken aback by what his team has accomplished. “I thought we’d have a   chance to be competitive,” he admitted. ”but I never imagined we’d dominate (the   Midwest Region) like we did. When all 13 guys hit, we can be a pretty dangerous   team.”



Canyon Lake got three straight two-out doubles in the fourth inning to overcome a 1-0 deficit. With T.J. Nolan on first and two outs in the fourth, pinch hitter Mark Petereit got a Canyon Lake rally started with an RBI double. Matt Minnick followed with his Midwest Region tournament-best sixth double to score Petereit. Immediately following Minnick’s double, leadoff hitter Tanner Simons made the score 3-1 with an RBI double of his own. Petereit, a reserve, epitomized why Canyon Lake was so successful in Indianapolis, Simons said. “It was totally typical (of our team),” Simons said. “Everyone has done everything I’ve asked them. The thing about this team right now is everybody is doing (his role), they’re not complaining and they’re playing where we need them. No one’s every questioned it. It’s been great.”



Simons said that, despite being blanked for the first three innings, he was never concerned that his team’s offense wouldn’t awake. “It was only one run,” Simons said. “If it had been five or six, I may have been a little worried. I knew we were going to score some time.” Canyon Lake added four more runs in the fifth inning, but the three spot in the fourth was all starting pitcher Cale Fierro needed. Fierro gave up three singles in the first inning, but eventually settled into a groove that allowed him to strikeout 12 Coon Rapids batters. “He threw a few two-strike off-speed pitches in the first inning and they hit that,” Simons explained. “So we decided to stay away from that.”



Minnick and Bill Hendricks went 2-for-2 and scored a run for Canyon Lake. Minnick, Canyon Lake’s nine hitter, finished the tournament 14-for-17 with six doubles and at least one extra-base hit in all six Canyon Lake games. “I wasn’t hitting good at the end of the (regular season), and I just started to hit,” Minnick explained. “I worked harder and now I’m hitting better.” “He hit the ball well the whole series,” Simons said. “In the state tournament, he didn’t hit very well. He came back and worked hard and today it showed.”



Anderson said he thinks expectations will probably be low for his team in the World Series. He believes that his team is capable of shocking the world. “(The Midwest Region) started to respect us when we started winning,” he explained. “All 13 of us and hit and field. Any one of us can come up and hit and get a rally started. We can do anything.” “I just hope we compete (in Williamsport) as hard as we did (in Indy),” Simons said.


BOX SCORE

Coon Rapids, Minn. 100 000 – 1 6 1

Rapid City, S.D. 000 34x – 7 9 0

W – Cale Fierro   (2-0). L – Jake Goedderz (1-1). S – Bill Hendricks (1). 2B –   Tanner Simons (CL), Fierro (CL), Mark Petereit (CL), Matt Minnick   (CL).


Records – Coon Rapids 3-2, Rapid City 4-1

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Defending Midwest Region champion Coon Rapids, Minn., is on its way back to   the region's championship game. This time it wasn't expected. Behind C.J.   Diedrich's pitching gem, the Minnesota champions upset heavily-favored   Urbandale, Iowa, 3-2. Coon Rapids will face Rapid City, S.D. - a 5-3 winner over   Columbia, Mo. - in tomorrow's Midwest Region championship game at Noon (EST) on   ESPN.


!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19737/CJ-Diedrich.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9490|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19737/CJ-Diedrich.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9490!Deidrich surrendered just two runs on two second-inning hits. He struck out six Urbandale batters without walking one. "He kept the ball down," Coon Rapids coach John Hagstrom said. "With him pitching, we're always in the game." The Coon Rapids offense gave Diedrich all the support he needed in the top half of the first inning. Alex Boxwell was hit by a Jonathan Eide pitch to open the game. Aspen Vetter followed with a double, which turned out to be the game's only extra-base hit, to put runners on second and third with nobody out.


After Urbandale got its first out, Justin Klingl followed with a two RBI single and Coon Rapids was up early. Klingl went to second, then third, on two wild pitches, making Seth Johnson's ground out good enough to get Klingl home for the third run."These kids just love to play baseball," Hagstrom said. "To them, it's just a game. They don't get too uptight about anything. They know how to do it. They've been doing it for a couple of months now."


No player in the game had more than one hit or one run.


 

BOX SCORE

    Coon Rapids, Minn. 300 000 - 3 6   1

  Urbandale, Iowa 020 000 - 2 2 1

  W - C.J. Diedrich   (2-0). - Jonathan Eide (0-1). 2B - Aspen Vetter (CR).


 

Records - Coon Rapids 3-2, Urbandale 3-2.

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Rapid City’s Canyon Lake Little League is one game away from becoming the first   South Dakota team ever to reach the Little League World Series. Canyon Lake   topped Columbia, Mo., 5-3 on Friday and now will face defending Midwest Region   champion Coon Rapids, Minn., on Saturday at 10 a.m. on ESPN.



“We’re happy to win the game and go on ESPN,” Canyon Lake pitcher Tanner Simons said. “It’s going to feel great to be on TV.” “It’s going to be my first time on television ever,” Hansen said. “It’s especially exciting because it’s on ESPN.” For the first four innings on Friday, it appeared that Canyon Lake’s dreams might not come true. Columbia led 2-1 after four innings and the Canyon Lake offense, which was averaging more than 11 runs per game and hitting over .400 as a team, was struggling to get to Columbia pitcher Ryan Bernskoetter. In the top of the fifth, however, Canyon Lake exploded for three runs to take the lead for good.



!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19735/South-Dakota-Wins.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9489|style=padding:8px;|align=right|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19735/South-Dakota-Wins.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9489!Tanner Simons, who went 3-for-4, opened the inning with a single. After Carter Wevik was hit by a Bernskoetter pitch, Cale Fierro doubled home Simons and Wevik to give the South Dakota champions the lead for good at 3-2. “He struggled the first two at-bats, but he came through big time in the last two,” Simons said. “He was big for us. That (double) was key.” Fierro later scored a fourth Canyon Lake run when Logan Anderson grounded out to the shortstop for the inning’s second out.



Four runs is all Tanner Simons – the starting pitcher – would need. Simons went the distance, giving up just seven hits while striking out seven Columbia batters. Simons tied a Midwest Region record with three pitching victories in five Canyon Lake games. “It was just like all year, another great job,” Coach Simons said of his son with his voice cracking with emotion. “I mean, how many guys can get three wins here. He’s done a great job all year for us.”



Simons got defensive help, particularly from backup second baseman Jonah Hansen, who made two diving plays to stop a Columbia fifth-inning rally. With one out, Hansen stopped a shot likely would have provided the Missouri champions with a run. He then threw from his knees to record the out. “I just tried to do my job and it just worked out,” Hansen said. “I thought about standing up (to make the throw), but I saw the runner coming down, so I had to get it there as fast as I could,” Hansen recalled. “Those were nice defensive play,” Simons said of Hansen. “We couldn’t have asked for me.” “They made some great defensive plays,” Columbia coach Mark Pfeiffer said. “They are a great, fundamentally-sound team and it has shown all week. I tip my hat to them.” Canyon Lake added an insurance run in the sixth when Matt Minnick singled and later scored on a Fierro single.



Despite Bernskoetter’s efforts, Canyon Lake had offensive heroes galore once again. Simons scored twice while going 3-for-4. Fierro had a double, a run and an RBI. Minnick, who has had an extra-base hit in every game in the region, went 2-for-3 and hit his first home run of the week. Logan Anderson had an RBI and stole a base. “We threw our best pitcher at them and they made the plays and got the hits and scored more runs than we did,” Pfeiffer said. “We didn’t give it to them. They won the game.



“(Bernskoetter) was absolutely very sharp,” Pfeiffer said. “They strung some hits together and they beat an awfully good pitcher. Ryan Bernskoetter is one of the best pitchers in this Midwest Region, there’s no doubt about it. They scored five runs. We didn’t.” Coach Simons said getting to play on ESPN is nice, but he will remind his team that it still has one win to go before it reaches its ultimate goal of going to Williamsport, Pa., for the Little League World Series.



“(Getting to the championship game) was our third goal,” Coach Simons said. “Our first one was to get here. Second one was to make the semis. The next one was to get on the ESPN game. Now, our next one is to get to Williamsport.”



*BOX SCORE

Rapid City, S.D. 001 031 – 5 11 0

Columbia, Mo. 020 01 – 3 7 0*

W – Tanner Simons (3-0).* L* –   Ryan Bernskoetter (1-1).* 2B* – Kyle Teter (C), Cale Fierro (RC). HR – Brady   Pfeiffer (C), Matt Minnick (RC).


Records – Rapid City 4-1, Columbia 3-2

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Jeffersonville/GRC is one win away from going to the Little League World Series   for the first time since 1965. Jeff will play for a spot in Williamsport, Pa.,   and for the Great Lakes Regional title against Mount Vernon, !http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19732/Indiana-Wins.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9487|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19732/Indiana-Wins.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9487!Ohio –a 2-0 upset   winner over Bowling Green, Ky. in the semifinals – on Saturday at 7 p.m. at   Stokely Field. The game will be played live on ESPN. Jeff beat the Ohio   champions 2-0 in the tournament’s opening game last Thursday. “I want to (beat   Kentucky) with everything I’ve got,” center fielder Austin Hines said. “We’re   going to win that game.” Drew Ellis wasn’t quite so polite about it. “We want to   kill them,” he said. “We really want to kill them.”



Austin Hines and Drew Ellis erupted for two home runs apiece. The offensive explosion led to an 11-6 win over Illinois champion Jackie Robinson West from Chicago. Jeff first two hitters scored five runs and knocked six in on Friday. “I like that 1-2 punch an awful lot,” Coach Ellis said. “We didn’t start that until the state finals.”
Eleven runs is the most the Illinois squad surrendered all season. Jeff also scored eight runs against Illinois earlier in the week. That is the second-highest total the Chicago team surrendered. And they did it against Darrien Clifton, who was clocked at 74 miles per hour during the game.



“We already saw him one time,” Hines said. “We hit him pretty good the first time, so this time was going to be even better. We can beat anybody.” “We’d seen him before, we got the hang of him pitching,” Drew Ellis said. “It says a lot about our team. We’re pretty solid at the plate. It says a lot for the character of this team in regards to hitting such a good pitcher twice.” Just like they did last time against Clifton, Hines and Ellis opened the game with back-to-back home runs. With Drew Ellis on the mound, that was all he needed. Although he gave up five hits – more than he had given up in the previous 38 – Ellis was in control of the game for five innings. He struck out 10 Illinois batters and gave up just one run.



“We’re playing against the best team in their states here,” Coach Ellis said. “Illinois (had) a great baseball team. For him to give up only five hits against a quality team like that, that’s a quality outing. He had great composure all night long. He had his blinders on. He was focused today.” Every player on the Jeffersonville roster who batted scored a run, except for Chandler Dale. Dale did, however, go 3-for-3 after struggling for much of the Great Lakes Region tournament. “It was just a matter of time before Chandler Dale got his bat going,” Coach Ellis said. “He’s rock solid. Every time he steps in the batter’s box, he’s giving it everything he’s got. He’s swinging the bat well again.”



For the first time in the tournament, the bottom of Jeff’s order produced. The bottom four in the lineup got five hits, knocked in four and scored four times. “I challenged those guys last night in the team meeting,” Coach Ellis said of Dalton Duly, Brad Koerner, Nick Thompson and subs Christopher Wenger and Tyler Sariscany. “They stepped up. They were key. They were big.” Jeff led 11-1 after five-and-a-half innings. A walk- and error-filled sixth inning allowed Illinois to score five runs and make things a little interesting, but Christopher Wenger – who has had a win and two saves in the tournament – struck out Steve Robinson and Keyshawn Carpenter to end the threat. “This is once-in-a-lifetime,” Coach Ellis said. “To get to this point is amazing in my mind.”



Ellis said that he’s heard talk about the possibility of his team going to the Little League World since they were 10-year-olds. “At the time, I kind of blew those things off,” he said. “Now reality is setting in that we have a chance. Tomorrow could be a really special day.”


Note: Jeff second baseman and pitcher Ben Shahroudi was hit   in the nose with a ground ball on Friday. Although the nose is broken, Coach   Ellis said he expects Shahroudi to play on Saturday.


BOX   SCORE

Jeffersonville, Ind. 200 405 – 11 12 2

Chicago, Ill.   000 015 – 6 7 1

W – Drew Ellis (2-0). L – Darrien Clifton   (0-1). S – Christopher Wenger (3). 2B – Dalton Duly (J), Clifton (I). HR – Austin Hines (J) 2, Ellis (J) 2.


Records –   Jeffersonville 4-1, Chicago 2-3

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For the second time in four games, Jeffersonville/GRC made an impressive   comeback at the Great Lakes Region in Indianapolis. On Thursday, however, it was   unable to keep it. After scoring three times in the bottom of the fifth inning,   Bowling Green, Ky., battled back to put up 11 runs in the top of the sixth to   earn a 16-6 victory and the No. 1 seed for Friday's single-elimination   semifinal. Jeffersonville fell to No. 2 with the loss and will face Jackie   Robinson West out of Chicago. Jeff beat the Illinois champion, 8-7 in a comeback   win on Saturday. Thursday's loss was Jeff's first in 17 post-season games. Ellis   has little doubt that his team will be rebound from it.



"We did a lot of goofy things today in this game," Ellis said. "We pitched a lot of kids who usually don't throw. We weren't stressed about the outcome of the game, and we still had a chance to win it. Yes, we wanted to win and we battled pretty hard. This team's character is solid. I'm not concerned about (the effects of the first loss). We're just going to concentrate on Illinois." Nacarius Shannon was Bowling Green's one-man wrecking crew. He produced a run in five of the six innings, going 5-for-5. He scored four times and knocked in two more runs. He also had the first RBI against Jeff ace Drew Ellis in 38 post-season innings. Shannon, who !http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19647/Kentucky-Champions.jpg?blogID=8913|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19647/Kentucky-Champions.jpg?blogID=8913!started on the mound for Kentucky, also had eight strikeouts in three innings. Sheldon Seaton went 3-for-4 for Kentucky, including a three-run homer, his third four bagger in two games.

Jeff trailed 5-3 heading into the bottom of the fifth. Through four innings, the Indiana champions had just two hits - home runs by Ellis and Chandler Dale. Hayden Robb produced the other run with a walk and two wild pitches. In the fifth, Austin Hines got things started with a one-out walk. After an intentional walk to Ellis and an out, Robb and Ben Shahroudi appeared that they would be the game's heroes. Robb doubled home Hines and Ellis to tie the game, then Shahroudi doubled to opposite field to score Robb with the go-ahead run.

"I have those two guys (in the heart of the lineup) to drive in runs," Ellis said. "They have some power, but they're usually not going to do that. They're usually going to hit doubles into the gap and hit pitches where they're thrown to them and hit it down the line. Austin, Drew and Chandler are going to get on base a lot. That's why they're (the four and five hitters), to knock in runs." Jeff had just four hits in the game against five Kentucky pitchers.

"You're going to have your ups and down," Ellis said. "Hopefully, tomorrow's not a down day. We just have to come out and see what happens." Even with the loss, Jeffersonville's goal of going to Williamsport, Pa., for the Little League World Series is still in sight. "Any win from here on out is icing on the cake," Ellis said. "If you would have told me that we would have been 3-1 and in the (semifinal) round when we jumped on the bus to come up here, I would have taken it."

 

BOX SCORE

    Bowling Green, Ky. 101 309 - 16 16   0

  Jeffersonville, Ind. 100 23 - 6 4 3

  W - Zack Sibalich.   - Austin Hines (0-1). 2B - Hayden Robb (J). HR - Drew Ellis (J), Chandler   Dale (J), Seaton Sheldon (BG), Christopher McDaniel (BG).


  Records - Bowling Green 3-1, Jeffersonville 3-1

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Columbia's Daniel Boone hit four home runs - three in a pivotal second inning -   to win its third straight game in the Midwest Region, 10-7 over Kearney, Neb.   The Missouri state champions have scored 32 runs during their winning streak   after scoring just two in their opener, a 12-2 loss to Urbandale, Iowa. "I'm   very happy with the way the boys have responded, played hard and put themselves   in position to win baseball games,," Daniel Boone coach Mark Pfeiffer said.



On Thursday, four different Daniel Boone players homered. Kyle Teter cut Kearney's 3-0 first-inning lead to 3-2 with a two-run homer in the second inning. In the third, the Columbia team broke it open with four baggers by Jacob Schmidt. Zach Watson in the decisive six-run third inning. The home run was Vaughn's fourth in four games in Indy. Vaughn also had a double in the contest. "That's four games in a row that he's hit a home run," Pfeiffer said. "I don't know if I've ever been around a 12-year-old who has ever done that. That's impressive." Watson went 2-for-3 with three runs batted in. Andy Devine and Michael Buxton each scored!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19644/C-Zach-Watson-and-P-Michael-Buxton.jpg?blogID=8913|style=padding:8px;|align=right|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19644/C-Zach-Watson-and-P-Michael-Buxton.jpg?blogID=8913! twice.

Every batter in the Daniel Boone lineup reached base at least once. Eight of the nine scored a run and seven different players knocked home a run. Daniel Boone stretched the lead to 10-4 in the fourth inning. Kearney, which finished winless in the region, fought back to within 10-7 in the fifth. With runners on second and third and one out, Andy Devine took the mound and got the next two batters out to end the Nebraska champion's threat. Devine then got Kearney out 1-2-3 in the sixth to secure the victory.

"That's a tough spot to come into," Pfeiffer said. They were hitting the ball well. He came in and did a nice job of changing speed, hitting locations and getting outs for us." Columbia will face Rapid City, S.D., in Friday's single-elimination semifinal game. It beat the South Dakota champion 17-16 in nine innings on Tuesday. "We know what we're going to get (against) them," Pfeiffer said. "They're a strong, fundamentally-sound team. "They hit the ball well. They field the ball well and they have good pitchers. We're going to have to bring that same kind of effort on our end, and we plan to do that." Ryan Bernskoetter, who picked up a win against Coon Rapids, Minn., will be Daniel Boone's starting pitcher Friday.

 

Kearney, Neb. 400 030 - 7 11 1

    Columbia, Mo. 360 10x-10 12   1

  W - Michael Buxton (1-0). L - Dakota Schriner (0-2). S -   Andy Devine (1). 2B - Jaime Vaugh (C), Ben Borer (K). HR - Kyle   Teter (C), Jacob Schmidt (C), Zach Watson (C), Vaughn (C).

 

Records - Columbia 3-1, Kearney 0-4

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Chicago's Jackie Robinson West clinched a spot in Friday's single-elimination   semifinal round of the Great Lakes Region in Indianpolis. A 7-3 victory over Mt.   Vernon, Ohio, gives the Illinois state champions a 2-2 mark in round robin pool   play and put them two wins away from the Little League World Series in   Williamsport, Pa. As it turned out, had West given up one more run - at any   point in the tournament - it would have failed to make it to the semifinal   round.



!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19637/Team-Illinois-talk-things-over.jpg?blogID=8913|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19637/Team-Illinois-talk-things-over.jpg?blogID=8913!The tiebreaker is determined comes down to head-to-head between to the two teams that have surrendered the most runs per inning. It turned out that Ohio, which has surrendered 17 runs in 24 innings for .70 runs per inning, and Wisconsin were the bottom two teams. Ohio's 7-4 come-from-behind win over Wisconsin gave Ohio the edge. West, which gave up 16 runs in 23 innings (.70 runs per inning), would have been head-to-head with Wisconsin if it had given up one more run - or if Ohio had surrendered one fewer - the tiebreaker would have come down to Illinois and Wisconsin. Wisconsin beat West, 4-1 on Monday. West's semifinal round opponent will be Indiana.

On Wednesday, Wendall Ferguson - despite giving up his first three runs in region play - was masterful again, picking up his second win during the week. Ferguson gave up two runs in the first inning, giving Mt. Vernon a 2-0 lead after one, but he settled down and gave just one more run on one more hit in 5.2 innings. He struck out 10 Ohio batters. Ferguson was also the offensive star. He went 2-for-4, scoring twice and knocking in three runs on a home run in West's four-run third inning that gave it the lead for good. Ferguson also doubled and scored in the fifth inning, giving West two crucial runs and a 6-2 lead. Marcellus Sneed hit his first home run of the tournament in the third inning. Darrien Clifton continued with his hot bat, going 1-for-2 with two walks. He scored twice and had a RBI double. Six different West batters earned a base hit. Diontrell Earls knocked in a run and scored another.

 

BOX SCORE

    Chicago, Ill. 004 021 - 7 7 0

  Mt. Vernon,   Ohio 200 001 - 3 4 4

  W - Wendall Ferguson (2-0). L - Jayben   Martin (0-2). S - Darrien Clifton (2). 2B - Ferguson (C), HR -   Marcellus Sneed (C), Ferguson (C).

 

Records - Chicago 2-2, Mt. Vernon 2-2

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Kansas state Little League champion Cherokee had its dream of going to the Little League World Series was dashed Wednesday as it fell to Coon Rapids, Minn., 7-3. Cherokee finished its Midwest Region pool play 1-3, one win short of reaching Friday's semifinal round. The Kansas champions, who went winless in the region tournament after winning the state championship in 2007, may have been the best Kansas team in more than a decade. There's little doubt it was the most improved team in the tournament. "I think the biggest improvement was the attitude of the kids," Cherokee coach Bryan Burdette said. "Our kids worked hard together. Once we got together, they did a good job. I do think the kids did a good job." Coon Rapids struck first Wednesday with a first inning three-run home run by Jake Goedderz. It added another run in the third inning and led 4-0.

 

Cherokee appeared to take the momentum in the bottom of the third when it scored all three of its runs. Home runs by Riley Ulery and Bryce Burdette sandwiched a Ryan Rakestraw walk. "Even on the (third-inning) outs, we had some good hits," Burdette said. "I thought, 'Here we go. Now we're going to get our bats going.' But (Goedderz) had a lot of movement on his ball and its hard to catch hold of sometimes." Ulery's home run was his first of the regional. "It was good to see," Burdette said. "He's one of those kids that you're confident that he's going to hit the ball solid. When he gets a hold of it just right, it will go a ways."

 

Bryce Burdette finished the tournament with four home runs in four games. He led the team in nearly every statistical category while it was in Indy, making a case to be the tournament's most outstanding player. "He's tough to get out," Coach Burdette said of his son. "When he gets on base he creates a lot of havoc. Catching, he's a wall. I'm very proud of him."

 

Coon Rapids pulled away in the end, hitting three more home runs in the final four innings. Cherokee went down 1-2-3 in the sixth inning, but not without a fight. "I was real proud of our kids all the way until the end," Burdette said. "We didn't have anybody look at a third strike. I was proud of the way they battled the whole week." The two-time defending Kansas champions could be considered a favorite to get back to Indianapolis in 2009. "We have four 11 year kids here, who have another year to mature," Burdette assessed. "I sure hope we're able to do it again next year. We had a lot of fun."

 

 

BOX SCORE

Coon Rapids, Minn. 301 102 - 7 6 3

Cherokee, Kan. 003 000 -3 3 0

W - Jake Goedderz (2-0). L - Jalen Merrell (0-1). S - C.J. Diedrich (1). 2B - Seth Johnson (CR). HR - Diedrich (CR) 2, Goedderz (CR), Ryan Hagstrom (CR), Riley Ulery (C), Bryce Burdette (C).

 

 

Records - Coon Rapids 2-2, Cherokee 1-3

 

 

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Wisconsin state Little League champion Appleton Einstein has been eliminated from the Great Lakes Region - by one run. After losing to Bowling Green, Ky., 18-3 on Wednesday, Einstein needed help from Mt. Vernon, Ohio. Not only was Ohio unable to beat the Illinois champion from Chicago, but if it had allowed one fewer run, Wisconsin would be playing in Friday's semifinal round. With three or four teams tied at 2-2, the tiebreaker comes down to a head-to-head tiebreaker between the two teams that gave up the most run. That is Ohio and Wisconsin. Ohio beat Einstein 7-4 on Sunday. But if Ohio had scored one more run, the tiebreaker would be between Einstein and the Illinois champion. Einstein beat the Chicago team 4-1 on Monday. Ohio gave up 17 runs in 24 innings for .70 per inning. Illinois surrendered 16 runs in 23 defensive innings - .69 per inning.

 

"It's frustrating," Einstein coach Ross Van Handel said. "But our boys battled all through district and state and (in the region) and we're proud of them. We're excited about the way they played." Einstein is the first team from Wisconsin to win two games at the Great Lakes Regional since 2005. A poor inning, in which they gave up six runs, against Mt. Vernon was the eventual death of Appleton. One poor inning on Wednesday against Bowling Green, Ky., ended its aspirations as well.

 

 

After scoring two runs in the second inning and four more in the third to take a 6-2 lead, Bowling Green broke the game open with a 12-run fourth inning. Seaton Sheldon hit his second home run of the game to provide three of Bowling Green's 12 runs in the inning. We just couldn't stop the bleeding," Van Handel said. "There's nothing we could do about it. Our pitchers threw strikes and they just hit the ball. We didn't get the outs when we needed. That's the way baseball goes sometimes." In the top of the first inning, it looked like it would be Appleton's day. The first four Einstein batters had base hits, producing two runs.

 

 

Brett Gruber picked up where he left off in the win over Illinois, leading off the game with a single. Mark Gajewski followed with a double - Einstein's only extra-base hit of the game - and Einstein had runners on second and third with nobody out. Connor Rolain and Frank Van Handel followed with RBI singles to give Einstein the early lead. Van Handel went 2-for-2 in the contest. "We were ready to play," Coach Van Handel said. "We got the bats going. We felt pretty good at the beginning."

 

 

BOX SCORE

Bowling Green, Ky. 024 (12) - 18 14 1

Appleton, Wisc. 201 0 - 3 7 0

W - Zack Sibalich (1-1). L - Evan Polce (0-1). S - Christopher McDaniel (1). 2B - Mark Gajewski (A), Hunter Rogers (BG), Sibalich (BG), Zach Borden (BG). HR - Seaton Sheldon (BG) 2, Nacarius Shannon (BG), Quintin Cooke (BG), Rogers (BG).

 

 

Records - Bowling Green 2-1, Appleton 2-2

 

 

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In one of the longest - and craziest - games in Midwest Little League Region history, Canyon Lake couldn't overcome a Missouri 12-run first inning. It couldn't overcome surrendering nine walks, two hit batters and two wild pitches and it couldn't overcome Columbia pitching in extra innings. The fact that it almost did says an awful lot about the South Dakota state champions. Canyon Lake dropped its first game of Midwest Region, 17-16 in extra innings to Missouri champion Daniel Boone Little League from Columbia. Canyon Lake is still 3-1 and has qualified for the region's single-elimination semifinals, which has been pushed back to Friday due to poor weather in Indianapolis. Canyon Lake's seed and its opponents for the semifinal is yet to be determined. It could be a one, two or three seed and Columbia is the most likely opponent.

 

"If we do see them again, I would expect to see the same energy and intensity and determination from both teams," Columbia coach Mark Pfeiffer said. "I just hope it's the same result." Columbia benefited from five walks, two hit batters and two wild pitches to score its 12 runs in the first. It also hit a grand slam and a three-run home run in the inning. "We just weren't prepared to start the game," Canyon Lake coach Doug Simons said. "They fought back and competed, but we just weren't ready to start the game. When you get down 12-0 like that, it's tough. We started off with a couple of different pitchers and that didn't work out," Simons said. "Then (we were forced) to use some pitchers (that we didn't want to use)."

 

Pfeiffer saw it a bit differently. "I've never been in a baseball game where you're playing teams at such a high level - and that's an outstanding South Dakota team - and you put 12 on them in the first inning," Pfeiffer said. "I thought that was tremendous." Thanks in large part to Cale Fierro and Jonah Hanson - and a nine-run second inning - Canyon Lake was able to fight back to send the game into extra innings. Fierro went 3-for-5 in the game. He hit two home runs and had the tournament's first triple. He knocked in four runs and scored three times. "We expected more of him earlier, so that was good to see," Simons said.

 

 

Hanson hit the first home run of his life on a 3-1 pitch in the fourth inning to pull the Rapid City team to within 14-13. On the 3-0 count, Hanson took what appeared to be ball four. The umpire called a strike, and Hanson got another chance. He made the most of it. "That was his first home run in a game ever," Simons said. "That was good to see. It was some redemption, You just have to battle through (calls)."

 

 

Canyon Lake has now scored 54 runs in 24 innings, by far the most in the region. In the loss, the South Dakota champions had 17 hits to Columbia's 12, and six extra-base hits to the Missouri team's two. "I think they are an outstanding hitting team," Pfeiffer said. "They swing at strikes and they keep their weight back, so they can hit any pitch you throw at them. We threw the kitchen sink at them and they still hit."

 

 

BOX SCORE

Rapid City, S.D. 291 103 000 - 16 17 1

Columbia, Mo. (12)02 011 001 - 17 12 3

W - Joe Walker (1-0). - Bill Hendricks (0-1). 2B - Jesse Riddle (RC), Logan Anderson (RC). 3B - Cale Fierro (RC). HR - Fierro (RC) 2, Bill Hendricks (RC), Jaime Vaughn (C), Ryan Bernskoetter (C).

 

Records - Columbia 2-1, Rapid City 3-1.

 

 

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It was a bittersweet ending for Bay City Southwest Manager Roger Phelps. Winless   and down 9-0 in the top of the sixth inning, his team didn't quit. It scored   four runs, but fell shorts, 9-4 against Ohio champion Mt. Vernon. It was sweet   because Phelps' crew fought to the very end. It was bitter because he felt his   team was capable of four-run innings throughout the tourney. "That's how we   usually play, we just didn't do enough of that," Phelps said. "That was the real   team."

!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19512/Seth-Freed-in-agony.jpg?blogID=8913|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19512/Seth-Freed-in-agony.jpg?blogID=8913!Southwest catcher Jacob Alarie had the biggest knock of the inning, a two-run scoring double - Southwest's only extra-base hit of the game. Branden Taberski, Gabe Mendoza, Taylor Schepper and Scott Badour each had their only hit of the game in the sixth. "These guys never quit and that last inning showed it," Phelps said. Mt. Vernon's Nick Hoar controlled most of the contest, holding Southwest to one hit in the first five innings. Hess also struck out 10 Southwest batters. "We didn't hit the curve ball, probably the whole tournament," Phelps said. "When you don't hit, you can't win."

For three innings, Southwest starter Taylor Schepper went toe-to-toe with Hoar, scattering four hits and giving up no runs through three. "We hung in there for a while with them," Phelps said. !http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19529/BayCitySW-Family.jpg?blogID=8913|height=206|style=padding:8px;|align=right|width=358|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19529/BayCitySW-Family.jpg?blogID=8913!"I'm proud of the kids." Phelps said the week was far from a failure or a waste of time. In fact, he said, his team learned some valuable lessons. "Some of these kids grew up this week," he said. "You don't always get what you want in life. Sometimes you have to learn to pick yourself up. I told the kids that is if this is the worst thing that happens in their lives (they should) be happy."


 

BOX SCORE

  Bay City, Mich. 000 004-4 6 1

    Mt. Vernon,   Ohio 000 63x-9 11 0

    W - Nick Hoar (1-0). - Taylor Schepper (0-1). 2B - Jayben Martin (MV), Jacob Alarie (BC). HR - Josh Edwards   (BC), Dylan Hess (BC).

 

Records - Bay City 0-4, Mt. Vernon 2-1

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Rain... Rain... Go Away!

Posted by ActiveTom Aug 5, 2008

The storm that has been forcasted and threating all week finally arrived   overnight and caused the Central Region tournament to be delayed for several   hours. I must be getting used to all the shouts, pin trading, towel slapping,   video games and all the other "fun" things that have been going on in the dorm   because I slept through the worst of the storm. Of course, not getting to sleep   until three in the morning may have something to do with that too. I knew when I   took on this blog project it would be something I'd enjoy doing. And when I was   asked to be a Team Host as well, I still new I'd enjoy it. What I didn't take   into account was the amount of time everything would take.



!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19429/Radar.jpg?blogID=8913|height=180|style=padding:8px;|align=left|width=226|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19429/Radar.jpg?blogID=8913!When I first arrived in Indianapolis I was full of energy; woke up at 6 am and was in bed around midnight. Now I'm lucky if I don't miss breakfast. I am lucky enough at least to have the same room in the dorm that I use during umpire school but the room is right next do to the Michigan team and boys will be boys!

!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19428/Rain-Rain-GoAway.jpg?blogID=8913|height=276|style=padding:8px;|align=right|width=210|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19428/Rain-Rain-GoAway.jpg?blogID=8913!

Anyway, after sleeping through all the thunder last night, I awoke this morning to find that we had about three inches of rain and it was still coming down fairly hard. At the morning Managers meeting, they were told that if the storm passed and the field could be put into playing condition, the four games scheduled for today would go on. In Little League, no inning may start after 11 pm. Stokely field is a very nice complex with lights so if at all possible, the games will all get in today. And the way I look at it, if the boys have been keeping me up until all hours, turnabout is only fair!

 

The games today were scheduled for 10:30 am, 1:30 pm, 4:30 pm and 7:30 pm. As   you can tell by the picture, the grounds crew are trying to get the standing   water off the field and it's a chore. According to the weather forcast, things   should be improving as the day moves on but the threat for additional rain   remains. Friday is an "open" day with no games scheduled so in the worst case,   games can still be moved out if needed. For now, we just wait.

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Kansas Loses To Iowa

Posted by ActiveTom Aug 4, 2008

Kansas state Little League champion Cherokee - the smallest town by a wide   margin in the Midwest Region tournament - almost pulled off the biggest upset of   the tourney. Cherokee led Midwest-favorite Urbandale, Iowa, 3-2 after five   innings in a bid for its second straight victory. However, Urbandale exploded   for six runs in the top of the sixth inning to pull off an 8-3 victory.


"I thought we had it," Cherokee star hitter and pitcher Bryce Burdette said. "I knew they would battle, but I did think we had it." "I was in the outfield thinking ‘just three more outs and we win,'" Ryan Rakestraw said. After the game, the two teams' demeanors couldn't have been more different. The Cherokee coaching staff praise its team, while Iowa coach Mike Lillard spent 15 minutes after the game questioning his team's attitude. "I think our kids are stepping up," Cherokee coach Bryan Burdette said. "They're taking advantage of this opportunity. Of course, we're disappointed to lose, but we have to keep our heads up because still have more ball to play."


"I'll tell you what, I really respect their coaches and their players," Lillard said. "I was here last year, and they just weren't a very good team. This is a totally different !http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19358/Dustin-Saporito.jpg?blogID=8913|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19358/Dustin-Saporito.jpg?blogID=8913!Kansas team. They really showed a lot of heart. They are a class act. If I was their coach, I'd be very proud of my team." "The way it looked the first day (in a 15-3 loss to Rapid City, S.D.), I think everyone was looking down on us," Bryce Burdette said. "I think we've gained some respect."


Cherokee entered the fifth inning down 2-0, but rallied with two outs. Riley Ulery got things started with a single. Then, Rakestraw - in a pinch hitting role - slammed a two-run home run to tie the game. "I went up there thinking ‘just get on base,' then I hit the home run," Rakestraw said. "That was a big one," Coach Burdette said of his outfielder. "He has that kind of ability. He's come up big at times." Bryce Burdette's following home run came as no surprise. It was his third in two days, this time giving Cherokee its first lead. "It was pretty exciting," Coach Burdette said. "I had a feeling something was going to happen. Of course, in my vision, I saw us holding them in the sixth."


Cherokee faces Coon Rapids, Minn., on Wednesday in what is essentially a play-in game toward Thursday's single-elimination semifinal round. "Our kids are resilient," Coach Burdette said. "I think they'll bounce back. Every time we've lost, we've come back (strong)."


Meanwhile, powerhouse Urbandale improved to 2-1, virtually assuring itself a spot in Thursday's semifinals. "The one thing about us - we didn't play a great game today - but when it counted, we got it done," Lillard said. "We could have easily quit. They came back and really showed me something."


BOX SCORE

Urbandale, Iowa 000 206-8 10 1

Cherokee, Kan. 000 030-3 4 2

W - Jonathan Eide (1-0). L - Jace Burdette (0-1). 2B - Jackson Ross (U), Ryan Yoder (U), Jonah Eide (U). HR - Ryan Rakestraw (C), Bryce Burdette (C), Trae Cropp (U).


Records

- Urbandale 2-1, Cherokee 1-2.

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When South Dakota Little League champion Canyon Lake was in a pinch Monday, it   turned to its pinch hitters. The Rapid City squad used four pinch hitters for   nine at-bats in the final two innings, in which Canyon Lake turned a 3-3 tie   into a 13-3 four-inning, blowout win over Coon Rapids, Minn. In eight of those   nine at-bats, Canyon Lake's pinch hitters reached base. In the other two, Mark   Petereit had a run-scoring sacrifice fly and Alec Winter laid down a perfect   sacrifice bunt.

"When everyone else is getting their turn, then I come up, I want to prove to the coaches that everyone on this team is good," Petereit said. "I think everybody who plays on this team can hit the ball and we all can do our part. "Everyone in the lineup can contribute," Tanner Hagen added. "We wanted to get those guys a few more at-bats today," Canyon Lake coach Doug Simons said. "They deserve it. We knew they could do it. They earned that 10-run rule. It was nice to see them help out."

 

After Cale Fierro reached on an error - one of six Coon Rapids errors in the   game - and Jesse Riddle was hit by a pitch to start the third inning, the pinch   hitters took over.Jonah Hansen beat the first baseman, who bobbled Hansen's   ground ball, to first base to load the bases. Petereit's fly ball to center   field then scored Fierro to give Canyon Lake the lead for good. Sub Tanner Hagan   followed with a two-RBI single, followed Winter's bunt that moved the runners   over. Matt Minnick, who went 3-for-3 with two doubles and a single, two RBI and   two runs scored, plated another run with a double to give Canyon Lake a 6-3   lead. The top of the order then produced the final four runs, capped off by   Carter Wevik's three-run home run to give Canyon Lake a 10-3 lead.

In the fourth inning, three of the subs - Petereit, Hagan, Winter - all singled and scored to force the 10-run rule and clinch Canyon Lake's spot in Thursday's single-elimination semifinal round. "We've worked hard on our hitting," Simmons said. "The other night I thought our defense won it for us (in a 9-8 win over Urbandale, Iowa). Our bats are coming alive. It's good to see." It was Minnick's third hit that scored Winter and sealed the victory. "He's really coming through," Simons said. "He's just stroking the ball."

Simons said he never doubted that his team could compete for a Little League World Series spot, but he is astonished by what his team has achieved over the last week. "I was hoping we could compete," Simons said. "We wanted to show what we could do and make it into the semis."

Canyon Lake faces 1-1 Columbia, Mo., on Tuesday in what could determine the Midwestern pool's No. 1 seed. The Rapid City squad can finish no lower than the No. 3 seed.

 

BOX SCORE

  Coon Rapids, Minn. 120 0-3 6 6

  Rapid   City, S.D. 127 3-13 12 0

  W - Tanner Simons (2-0). L -   Seth Johnson (0-1). 2B - Matt Minnick (RC) 2, Alex Boxwell (CR). HR - Carter Wevik (RC).

 

Records - Rapid City 3-0, Coon Rapids 0-3</p>

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Wisconsin Upsets Illinois

Posted by ActiveTom Aug 4, 2008

Wisconsin state Little League champion Appleton Einstein pulled off the biggest   upset of the Great Lakes Region championship to date Monday, a 4-1 defeat of   Chicago's Jackie Robinson West - a team considered a serious threat to win the   region. Einstein is now 2-1 in the round robin pool play and stands on the verge   of a clinch a spot for Thursday's single-elimination semifinal   round.



!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19356/Jackie_Robinson_SW.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9424|style=padding:8px;|align=right|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19356/Jackie_Robinson_SW.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9424!Einstein starter Connor Rolain was touched up for a home run by Chicago's Darrien Clifton in the first inning that gave Chicago a 1-0 lead. Clifton was pesky the rest of the day, going 3-for-3, but Rolain shut down the rest of the Chicago lineup, allowing just four hits while striking out 11 batters. "They're tough," Rolain said of the Illinois champions. "They're really good. I thought I could hold them to a couple (of runs). I was on tonight."


Rolain's coach and teammates were still buzzing about their aces' performance after the game. "The first time we saw (Chicago), they put the ball in play consistently against Indiana," Appleton coach Ross Van Handel said. "Connor did a fantastic job against a really good hitting team."



"He pitched a great game," Einstein second baseman Brett Gruber said. "His slider was working and he has a great fastball." Rolain also added some pop to the Einstein offense with a two-run home run to give his team the lead for good in the fifth inning. Gruber, who scored ahead of Rolain on the home run, also scored the game-tying run in the third inning. He went 2-for-3 and scored twice. "He's been struggling a little bit lately," Van Handel said of his leadoff hitter. "We're tough when he produces and he did tonight." "He's usually always on base, some way," Rolain said.



Even with a 2-1 record, Einstein isn't out of the woods. With the way things are shaping up, there is a pretty good chance that four teams will be tied at 2-2, but with Jeffersonville, Ind., sitting at 3-0, only three of those teams can advance. The tie-breaker would then come down to runs allowed. The Appleton squad faces Bowling Green, Ky., on Tuesday. Bowling Green, at 1-1, is one of those four teams fighting for the final semifinal spot. Van Handel said he's not going to get caught up in all of the possibilities. "If we get to 3-1, we're in and maybe with a better seed," he said. "We're going to throw out best pitchers and see what happens."


BOX SCORE

Appleton, Wisc. 100 000-1 4 2

Jackie Robinson West, Ill. 001 13x-5 7 0

W - Connor   Rolain (2-0). L - Marcellus Sneed (0-1). S - Evan Polce (1). 2B - Evan Polce (A). HR - Darrien Clifton (C), Connor Rolain (A).


Records - Appleton 2-1, Chicago 1-2.

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The dream still isn't dead for Bay City Southwest Little League's team.



Despite being 0-3 after an 8-2 loss against unbeaten Jeffersonville, Ind., there are scenarios that would send Southwest to Thursday's single-elimination semifinal round. Southwest Manager Roger Phelps said he can't worry about the "If Team A beats Team B" scenarios. "I try not to look at the (standings)," Southwest coach Roger Phelps said. "I just want my kids to play good baseball and give me the effort, which they have."



Bay City third baseman Hayden Clements said his team needs to take care of its own business Tuesday against 1-1 Mt. Vernon, Ohio, and let the scenarios take care of themselves. "We have to just try to go out and get a win," Clements said. "It would mean a lot to us to get at least one win in the regional tournament." "We have to come back and try to win tomorrow," Phelps added. "We have to stay positive. We're going to do anything we can to win. We need to try to play like we were when we won the state and play a little more relaxed. That's all we can do."



!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19350/Hayden-Clements-after-a-2nd-inning-HR.JPG?blogID=8913|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19350/Hayden-Clements-after-a-2nd-inning-HR.JPG?blogID=8913!Bay City was in the game against Great Lakes Regional favorite Jeffersonville for most of the contest. Bay City took an early 1-0 lead on a Hayden Clements home run with one out in the inning. It was Clements' first home run of the regional. "I haven't been hitting the ball as good as I can be hitting it," Clements said. "I gotta just keep putting the bat on the ball." "Hayden loves baseball," Phelps said. "Home runs happen when you put the ball in play."After Jeffersonville took a 3-1 lead on a hit batter and two singles, Bay City cut the lead to 3-2 in the third inning, but it had a chance to do even more damage. Leadoff hitter Seth Freed singled, and Brendan Taberski and Scott Badour walked to load the bases against Jeffersonville starter Ben Shahroudi. That forced Jeff to bring in its ace - Drew Ellis - who struck out three straight Bay City batters to get out of trouble. Freed did score on a wild pitch with two outs to cut Jeffersonville's lead to one. The Indiana champions then broke the game open with four runs in the fifth inning. "We gave them a battle for a few innings," Phelps said. "And that's a really good Indiana team."



Until the fifth, Badour had kept the heavy-hitting Jeffersonville lineup in check. Badour struck out 10 batters in his first outing since taking a line drive off of the chin in the first inning of Michigan's opener. "Scotty pitched a pretty good game after getting hit in the face," Phelps said of his ace.


BOX SCORE

Jeffersonville, Ind. 030 041-8 10   0

Bay City, Mich. 010 100-2 3 1

W - Ben Shahroudi   (1-0). L - Scott Badour (0-1). S - Christopher Wenger (1). 2B - Hayden Robb (J). HR - Josh Burke (J), Hayden Clements   (B).


Records - Jeffersonville 3-0, Bay City 0-3

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Down 3-1 in the third inning with their tournament chances  seemingly slipping away, Columbia’s Daniel Boone Little League team scored four  runs on two two-run home runs in the inning and beat Coon Rapids, Minn., 5-4  Sunday at Stokely Field in Indianapolis. Kyle Teter hit his two-run shot to tie the game at 3-3, then  Jaime Vaughn followed with his to give Daniel Boone a 5-3 lead. Teter and Vaughn both said they did not go to the plate trying to become the hero.

 


!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19242/SS-Kyle-Teter-makes-a-sliding-stop.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9405|style=padding:8px;|align=right|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19242/SS-Kyle-Teter-makes-a-sliding-stop.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9405!“I was just looking for a base hit, any way I could,” said Teter, who said he knew the ball was gone when he hit it. “I got lucky with a home run earlier this season, and this felt the exact same way.” “I was just thinking, get a base hit,” Vaughn said. “When I got down 0-2 (in the count), I (told myself to) just hit the ball hard.” Pfeiffer said Teter and Vaughn are two of his primary weapons because of that approach. “We preach to our kids not to swing for the fence, but try to hit the ball hard,” Pfeiffer said. “That’s what both of those kids did. They were just looking for a pitch to drive. It was just good hard hitting.” Pfeiffer’s biggest mistake of the day came just before the third inning, after Coon Rapids had taken the lead with a three-run third inning of its own. “I screwed up because I told the kids before the inning, ‘they scored three, so we (need to) score four,” Pfeiffer recalled. “I should have asked for six or seven.”Despite having lost its first game, 12-2 to Iowa, and being down 3-1, Pfeiffer never panicked.


“These kids are good hitters and they’re scrappers,” Mark Pfeiffer said. “They never get down on each other, so I felt okay (about being down 3-1).” Once it got a two-run lead, starting pitcher Ryan Bernskoetter made sure it held on to it. He pitched four-and-two-thirds innings, giving up just three hits while striking out 10 Coon Rapids batters. “Ryan Bernskoetter, except for about a 20-pitch span where he lost a little bit of his control (in the third inning), was superb,” Pfeiffer said. “He was throwing hard; his curve ball had good movement to it. He pitched an outstanding game.” The heroics of Teter, Vaughn and Bernskoetter could not have come at a better time.


With a loss, the Columbia team would have had to win its final two games of the Midwest Region’s round-robin play just to have a chance to advance to Thursday’s single-elimination semifinal round. Now, Daniel Boone is 1-1 – tied with four of the tournament’s six teams, including Coon Rapids. Only Monday’s opponent Rapid City, S.D., is unbeaten. So with a win over Rapid City, Daniel Boone would stand on top of the standings, at least temporarily. “You gotta get to that two win plateau to get to the semifinals, and that’s our goal,” Pfeiffer said. “If go down 0-2, you put your backs against the wall, so it was a big, big win for us.” “It’s pretty big for our team,” Vaughn added. “All we have to do is win one more game to get to the semifinals (to have a chance) to get to Williamsport (Pa.). That’s pretty exciting.”


 

BOX SCORE

  Coon    Rapids, Minn.* 003 001-4 4 2*

  Columbia, Mo.* 014 00x-5 7 0*

  W – Ryan Bernskoetter (1-0). L – Nick Hanzlik  (0-1). S – Joe Walker (1). 2B – Jake Goedderz (Coo), Nick Kiecker  (Coo). HR – Kyle Teter (Col), Jaime  Vaughn (Col),  Justin Klingl (Coo). </p>

Records – Coon Rapids 1-1, Columbia  1-1.

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After being shut out for the first nine innings of the Great Lakes Regional   tournament, Ohio champion Mt. Vernon exploded for seven runs in the final two   innings to beat Appleton, Wisc., and even its record at 1-1.



Mt. Vernon scored one run in the fifth, then six more in the top of the sixth to turn a 4-1 deficit into a 7-4 victory at Stokely Field in Indianapolis. First baseman and leadoff hitter Lucas Staten, who went 2-for-3 and played a major role in the comeback, said it was just a matter of time before the Mt. Vernon bats awoke. "We had to come back," Staten said. "We knew we could. We always come back in the late innings. I wasn't that worried. I knew we could hit. We were just in a little slump." Mt. Vernon coach Tom Gilbert admits that he wasn't so confident.



"T!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19236/Logan-Rhea-calls-timeout.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9402|style=padding:8px;|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19236/Logan-Rhea-calls-timeout.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9402!hat's the characteristic of this team, we score runs in bunches," Gilbert explained. "(But) when you're shut out for the first nine innings of a tournament, you start to wonder, are they nervous? Or if they're going to get into a groove at some point." Jayben Martin and Nick Hoar teamed up to produce Mt. Vernon's first run of the tournament. Martin led off the fourth inning with a leadoff double. After a wild pitch, a Hoar ground ball allowed Martin to score. "That was a big run," Gilbert said. "I think it allowed us to get rolling (in the fifth inning)."



After Appleton retired the first batter of the fifth, Staten got things rolling with a solo home run to close the gap to 4-2. Appleton starter Michael Villarreal walked Alex Gilbert and J.D. Orr, prompting the Wisconsin coach to bring in stopper Jared Dudley. Mt. Vernon apparently liked the change. Martin singled to load the bases. Hoar followed with another single to bring home Gilbert and cut the deficit to 4-3. Josh Edwards then did something he's never done, blasting a game-winning grand slam. Edwards said that crossed his mind as he approached the plate. "I was thinking that the score would be 7-4 if I hit a grand slam," Edwards recalled. "I've hit grand slams before, but I have never hit one to basically win a game, especially in a big tournament like this."



The Ohio champions are now two wins from reaching Thursday's single-elimination semifinal round. One more win could get the job done, but Coach Gilbert said he doesn't want to leave anything to chance. "We feel like we match up well with (Tuesday's opponent Bay City) Michigan, then we have a big game against Illinois on Wednesday," Gilbert conjectured. "We'll take them one at a time, though." "(The win was) big because we want to go to the Little League World Series and if we win three games we're guaranteed to go to the semifinals," Edwards said.

 

BOX SCORE

    Appleton, Wisc. 01 030-4 8 0

  Mt. Vernon,   Ohio 000 16x-7 10 1

  W - Josh Edwards (1-0). L - Jared   Dudley (0-1). S - Nick Hoar (1). 2B - Evan Polce (A), Connor   Rolain (A), Jayben Martin (MV), Lucas Staten (MV), J.D. Orr (MV). 3B - Rolain   (A). HR - Connor Gross (A), Staten (MV), Edwards   (MV).


  Records - Appleton 1-1, Mt. Vernon 1-1

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South Dakota Little League champion Canyon Lake has served notice – it  is a contender to go to Williamsport, Pa., for the Little League World  Series. Canyon Lake upset heavy favorite Urbandale, Iowa, in a  come-from-behind, thrilling 9-8 victory at Stokely Field in  Indianapolis. Canyon Lake has taken the lead in the Midwest Region with  a 2-0 record. Only Coon Rapids, Minn., is unbeaten, but it has played  just one game. When asked if his team should not be considered the  favorite to win the region, Canyon Lake coach Doug Simons didn’t shy  away from the question. “We should be one of them,” he admitted in a  rare instance of coach candor. “I thought Iowa coming in was the  favorite, but we showed that we’re here, too.”



“It feels really good,” pitcher Cale Fierro said. “With all of the other teams staying here (in the same dorm), they (now) know that we’re one of the best here.” After two innings, a Canyon Lake victory seemed unlikely. Urbandale scored four times in the first inning and three more runs in the second to take a 7-1 lead. Canyon Lakes, however, scored in every single inning, cutting the lead to four after two innings, then three after three, then to 7-5 before taking an 8-7 with a three-run fifth inning.



In the fifth, T.J. Nolan drilled a one-out home run to cut the Iowa lead to 7-6. Nolan’s knock was f!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19182/SD-Wins.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9395|style=padding:8px;|alt=Cale Fierro scores the winning run for South Dakota|align=left|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19182/SD-Wins.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9395!ollowed by three straight infield singles – by Logan Anderson, Mark Petereit and Alec Winter – and two wild pitches, giving the Rapid City squad its first lead. “I knew the kids wouldn’t give up,” Doug Simons said. “The kids just kept chipping away and chipping away. It felt great to come back like that.” “I knew that we could come back,” Fierro said. “I’ve seen us come through (too many) times to think we were going to quit.”



Urbandale, showing why it was considered the favorite, played small ball to tie the score after five-and-a-half innings. A walk, a sacrifice bunt and an RBI single by Jonathan Eide knotted the game at 8-8. With one down, Fierro single to left field. He then went to second on a wild pitch. Disgusted Urbandale pitcher Ryan Yoder lost sight of Fierro, who sprinted for second base and slid just under the tag of third baseman Jonah Hanson. Bill Hendricks followed with an infield single that plated Fierro with the winning run.



The idea to take off – and put himself a base from scoring the winning run – was all Fierro’s. “Make sure it’s real clear that it was Cale’s decision, not the first base coach’s,” first base coach Jeff Minnick said with a laugh. “I knew I was going to get there,” Fierro countered. “The pitcher was still upset about the wild pitch and he wasn’t even looking.” The bottom line is, “It was huge. It allowed the run to score,” Simons said.



Canyon Lake will put its unbeaten mark on the line on Monday against Coon Rapids, Minn. Coon Rapids is 1-0 and faces Columbia, Mo., on Sunday.



 

BOX SCORE

  Urbandale, Iowa 340 001-8 6 2

  Rapid City, S.D. 121 131-9 12 2

  W – Cale Fierro (1-0). L – Ryan Yoder (0-1). 2B – Yoder (U), Wevik (U).* HR* – Nick Ewing (U), Logan Anderson (RC), T.J. Nolan (RC).

  Records – Urbandale 1-1, Rapid City 2-0.</p>

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The tiny town of Cherokee  earned Kansas its first win in the Midwest  Little League Regional in five years with a 9-8 sixth-inning comeback win over Kearney, Neb., Saturday  at Stokely Field in Indianapolis. “A team from Kansas  hasn’t won here in (five) years, so this is really cool,” said Riley Ulery, who  knocked home the game-winning run in the top of the sixth inning. Cherokee – representing Kansas  in Indianapolis  for the second straight season – went 0-4 in last year’s tournament. Its coach,  Bryan Burdette, said that experience paid dividends in the win over Kearney.


“Having been in this atmosphere before, I think helped,” Burnette said. “It added to our composure to do the things we did today.” Caleb Spangler said his goal was to erase the haunting memories of last year by winning in 2008. “Last year we didn’t get a win at all. This year we were looking for some wins to wipe that away,” Spangler said. What Cherokee did was erase Kearney an 8-6 deficit after four innings. After scoring a run in the fifth inning on a Jace Burdette double that plated Travis Trayer, Spangler led off the top of the sixth with a solo home run to right-center field. Spangler sent Cherokee to the Midwest Region with a walk-off grand slam in the state championship game, an 11-9 win over Midland.


!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19181/CherokeeWins.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9393|height=370|style=padding:8px;|align=right|width=247|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19181/CherokeeWins.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9393!“I was in the same situation in the (state finals),” Spangler said, adding that he felt that experience paid off in Satuday’s win. “I was thinking I just wanted to hit the ball and see what happened.” After Spangler’s heroics, Trayer singled to start a two-out rally. A walk later, Ulery stepped to the plate. He lined a single to center field. Trayer rounded third and slid under a high throw for the winning run. Ulery was 0-for-3 with two strikeouts heading into his final at-bat. He just wanted one more chance.


“I kept on striking out, but I felt like I could hit the ball,” he said. “I wanted to be the guy (to come up in the clutch situation).” Coach Burdette said he had no doubt – even with the bottom of the order up in the sixth – his team was capable of pulling out the victory. “I have confidence in the bottom of the order,” the Cherokee head man said. “In the state championship game, we were in the same situation with the seven, eight and nine hitters (coming up) and down two runs. I think they drew on that experience and learned from that.” Ulery, Spangler and Trayer weren’t the only Cherokee heros.


Brothers Bryce and Jace Burdette went a combined 6-for-6 with two walks, four runs and three runs batted in. Bryce hit two home runs, one to open the game and another to lead off the fourth inning. Jace had an RBI double in the fifth inning. “I’m very proud of those two kids,” their father and coach, Bryan Burdette, said.


The Kansas champions are back in action on Monday against 2-0 Urbandale, Iowa. Cherokee essentially needs one more win – on Monday or Wednesday against Coon Rapids, Minn. – to advance to Thursday’s single-elimination semifinal round.


 

BOX SCORE

  Cherokee, Kan. 140 112-9 12 2

  Kearney, Neb.* 104 300-8 10 2*

W – Caleb Spangler (1-0). L –  Brady Staton (0-1). 2B – Dakota  Schriner (K), Austin Persinger (K), Jamieson Oertle (K), Jace Burdette (C). HR – Bryce Burdette (C) 2, Schriner  (K), Spangler (C). </p>

Records – Cherokee 1-1, Kearney  0-2.

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A poor first inning had Bay City Southwest playing catch up  for an entire game Saturday.


Now, after a 9-2 loss to Bowling Green, Ky., Southwest will be playing catch up for the remainder of the Midwest Region Little League tournament at Stokely Field in Indianapolis.


Southwest will likely have to win its final two games of pool play – Monday vs. Jeffersonville, Ind., and Tuesday versus Mount Vernon, Ohio – to advance to the tournament’s single-elimination semifinals, which start on Thursday.


“These kids, they don’t quit,” Southwest coach Roger Phelps said. “We knew coming down that there aren’t any bad teams here. We’ll come at (2-0 Indiana). That’s all we can do.” “We’re never down. We always come back. I think we can do it,” Southwest shortstop Scott Badour said with confidence in his voice. Southwest looked good out of the gate offensively.


Catcher Seth Freed opened the game with a single to right field and scored on Badour’s one-out double to the center field fence. Unfortunately for Southwest, the bottom of the first inning was still to come. In the half-inning, the Michigan champions committed two errors and issued two walks as Bowling Green scored five runs while batting through its lineup.


 

“The first inning was bad,” Phelps said. “That’s all I can  say. I don’t know if we were nervous or what. We should have been out of the  first inning in three batters. They haven’t played like that all year. I guess  it was bound to happen, but it was bad timing.” Bowling Green scored one run in  each of the second, third, fourth and fifth innings, while the Bay City squad  stranded a runner on third base in five of the six innings. 

Southwest did cut into Bowling Green’s 7-1 lead with a single run in the fourth  inning. Again, it was Badour who was the spark. He led off the inning with a  single, then scored on a wild pitch. Badour, who was hit in the jaw with a line  drive while pitching on Friday, went 2-for-3 with and RBI and a run with a welt  on his jaw. The medical report said that an inch either way could have meant a  broken jaw for Badour. “I really wanted to get back to help our team win,”  Badour said. “The doctor said I was only inches away from a broken jaw and I  would have been out for the rest of the tournament, so I got lucky there.”


Phelps, who praised Badour’s courage, said his slugging star refused to come out of the game after being hit on Friday night. “He didn’t want to come back last night. I told him, ‘You’re nuts. You’re going to the hospital.’ But that’s how Scotty is.”


 

BOX SCORE

    Bay City, Mich.* 100 100-2 5 2*

    Bowling    Green, Ky.* 511 11x-9 8 0*

    W – Christopher McDaniel (1-0). L – Justin Gorr  (0-1). 2B – Scott Badour (BC), Kollin Slachta (BC), Brian Feinauer (BC),  Seaton Sheldon (BG). HR – Grey Finwood (BG).</p>

Records – Bay City 0-2, Bowling    Green 1-1

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Indiana Remains Undfeated

Posted by ActiveTom Aug 2, 2008

Jeffersonville/GRC’s 15th straight victory – an  8-7 defeat over Illinois champion Jackie  Robinson West Little League from Chicago  – started with fireworks and ended with a pair of bombs.


Jeff took an early lead when Austin Hines and Drew Ellis opened the contest with back-to-back home runs off of Illinois starter Darrien Clifton. After giving up the lead – and trailing by as much as 7-3 – Dalton Duly hit a two-run monster shot off of reliever Mike Kendrick to tie the score at 7-7. Hines followed by drilling his second home run of the game to give Jeff the lead for good. “That was a battle,” Jeffersonville coach Derek Ellis said. “The kids showed a lot of heart and a lot of character.”


One Jeffersonville coach apparently saw it all coming. “(Assistant) Coach (Dave) Shahroudi told (the team) that Josh (Burke) was going get a single, then Dalton was going to hit the first pitch out of the ball park. That’s exactly how it happened” Coach Ellis recalled. “So we’re going to have to see if Coach Shahroudi has a crystal ball for (Monday’s game versus Michigan).” Hines said it was just a matter of time before Duly, who was hitless in Indy, would have an impact on the tournament. “Dalton’s been coming around,” Hines said. “We told him to keep his confidence up, then he comes around and hits the home run.”!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19167/HomeRun.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9388|style=padding:8px;|align=right|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19167/HomeRun.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9388! “It was awesome. It was amazing,” Duly said. “I was just trying to put the ball in play, but I happened to get a hold of it.” Officials at Stokely Field said Duly’s shot, which was at light-level when it left the park, was the longest and highest shot in at least 10 years in the Central Region finals. “It was a bomb,” Coach Ellis said. “It was some timely hitting. We needed that from Dalton.” Hines had a single to go along with his two home runs. He scored three times. “Austin Hines, you can’t say enough about that kid,” Coach Ellis said. “To come up big like he did, it wasn’t unexpected, but in this situation, (his performance was) pretty sweet.”


Hines and Duly weren’t the only hitting stars for Jeff. Drew Ellis went 2-for-3 and had a double to go along with his first-inning home run. He also scored twice.


Chandler Dale had a big two-run-scoring double to get Jeff within striking distance at 7-5 in the fifth inning. Christopher Wenger, who was Jeff’s third pitcher, picked up his first win of the playoffs. He gave up just one hit in two innings and struck out Illinois’ Keyshawn Carpenter to end the game. Jeffersonville is 2-0 with two games to play in the Midwest Region’s pool play. The victory over Illinois almost assures it of playing in next Thursday’s single-elimination semifinals. “It’s huge because history says that there’s never been a team with two wins (not) to make it into the (semifinals),” Ellis said. “We’re not scott-free yet, but it takes a little pressure off.”


Illinois coach Joe Haley, whose team appears to be the biggest roadblock on Jeff’s road to the Little League World Series, is confident that his team will recover from the devastating loss.


“The kids have been talking about basketball and other things they shouldn’t be worried about right now,” Haley said. “Now I think they’ll get some sleep and come back refocused.”


 

BOX SCORE

    Jeffersonville, Ind.* 201 023-8 8 1*

    Chicago, Ill.* 140 200-7 10 0*

    W – Chistopher Wenger. L – Mike Kendrick. 2B – Keyshawn Carpenter (C), Kendrick (C), Drew Ellis (J), Chandler Dale (J). HR – Wendall  Ferguson (C), Austin Hines (J) 2, Ellis (J), Dalton Duly (J). </p>

Records – Jeffersonville 2-0,  llinois 1-1

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In its Great Lakes Regional opener, even in a 6-5 loss to Wisconsin champion Appleton Einstein, Bay City Southwest showed why it is a champion.


Southwest overcame the loss of its starting pitcher and leading hitter, Scott Badour. Before being hit in the face with a line drive off the bat of Mark Gajewski, Badour had the game&rsquo;s first hit and scored the game&rsquo;s first run. Badour had a laceration to the face. He was evaluated by doctors in Indianapolis and it is believed by his coach and teammates that Badour will return for Southwest&rsquo;s next game, Saturday against Bowling Green, Ky.!http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19161/Scott-Badour.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9384|height=272|style=padding:8px;|align=left|width=409|src=http://community.active.com/servlet/JiveServlet/download/38-19161/Scott-Badour.jpg?blogID=8913&blogPostID=9384!


In its Great Lakes Regional opener, even in a 6-5 loss to Wisconsin champion Appleton Einstein, Bay City Southwest showed why it is a champion.


Southwest overcame the loss of its starting pitcher and leading hitter, Scott Badour. Before being hit in the face with a line drive off the bat of Mark Gajewski, Badour had the game’s first hit and scored the game’s first run. Badour had a laceration to the face. He was evaluated by doctors in Indianapolis and it is believed by his coach and teammates that Badour will return for Southwest’s next game, Saturday against Bowling Green, Ky.


Southwest overcame three errors, two of which came in the second inning when Appleton failed to score, thanks to a beautiful unassisted double play by Southwest first baseman Brian Feinhour. Southwest also overcame the brute strength of Gajewski, who went 3-for-3 with two runs batted in and scored twice. It also overcame a one-out base-loaded situation in the fifth inning, thanks to some stellar infielding. In the end, however, Southwest couldn’t overcome a bad hop in extra innings.


With two outs in the bottom of the seventh and runners on second and third, a Conner Gross ground ball hit the lip of the infield and skipped over the head of Bay City shortstop Logan Eby. Appleton’s Evan Polce crossed the plate to give Appleton the win.


“That’s baseball,” Southwest coach Roger Phelps said. “(Eby) is pretty sure handed at shortstop, but that took one big hop.” Phelps demeanor after the thrilling contest was more of a coach who had just won than one whose team was on the losing end. “That’s because the kids never quit,” he explained. “Both teams fought. You couldn’t have asked for a better game.” Phelps was most pleased with the way his team fought off the adversity of losing its star player. “They do what they have to do. They sucked it up,” Phelps said in admiration. “That’s what you have to do when someone gets hurt. Someone has to fill the hole and that’s what we did.”


Even with the loss, the Bay City squad is far from being eliminated. Most scenarios point to Southwest needing to win two of its final three games to make the semifinal round that starts on Thursday. “What we told them after the game is that we have another game tomorrow,” Phelps said. “You gotta come back.”


 

BOX SCORE

Bay City, Mich. 120 020 0-5 8 3

Appleton, Wisc. 102 002 1-6 6 1

W &ndash; Evan Polce. L &ndash; Taylor Schepper. 2B &ndash; Frank Van Handel (A). HR &ndash; Brian Feinhauer (BC), Mark Gajewski (A).

Records &ndash; Appleton 1-0, Bay City 0-1.

Bay City Southwest hitting star &ndash; Brian Feinhauer, 2-for-3, home run, 2 runs, 2 RBI


 

GREAT LAKES STANDINGS

Appleton, Wisc. 1-0

Chicago, Ill. 1-0

Jeffersonville, Ind. 1-0

Bay City, Mich. 0-1

Bowling Green, Ky. 0-1

Mt.Vernon, Ohio 0-1

  *Top Four Team Advance to the Semifinals

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