On the Trail With Ted

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 Observations, notes, etc., on games I've seen during the 2008 season . . .

 


MAY 8
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Kennedy-Kenrick 10, Carroll 5
  Great day on the trail! Lots of cool elements to the game itself and I even got to see the CL's best grounds crew (smile). Latshaw/McCarthy Field, in Norristown, is also used by Saint Joseph's University and the entire infield was covered with a wet tarp (not TOO much water, though) when the Wolverines arrived. What to do? Work as one to remove it, of course. With first-year coach Tom Sergio (great to see him again!) calling the shots and pitching right in, the tarp was removed and, yes, we soon were ready to go. Tom was a first team All-City infielder for the old Bishop Kenrick and a member of its last graduating class, in '93, before the merger with Archbishop Kennedy, which was in Conshohocken (but was never a CL member). He wound up playing pro ball and advanced as high as Class AAA. In the not-too-recent past, the teams from K-K and Carroll often hated the ground each other walked on. This one was spirited, but tame overall. One moment of cube-busting: After sr. LF Brandon Evangelist, who's not a very big guy, muscled up and powered a solo homer to left in the fifth, a Wolverine could be heard yelling, "That's a REAL fence! . . . This is a REAL field!" as Evangelist completed his home-run trot. Seems that opponents appreciate Carroll's phone booth of a field only when they're hitting cheap homers there (smile). DN ink went to jr. 3B Christian "Ya-Ya" Walker, a strong, play-for-keeps guy who has already committed to South Carolina. In the teams' Tuesday meeting, he was issued FIVE walks -- four intentionally, one as a pitch-around. In this one he went 3-for-3 with a walk, solo homer to dead left and two RBI. He also made good plays and showed great hustle/instincts in the first inning. With two down, after a single, he got a steal sign from "Serg" and was steaming for second when sr. DH Sal Spera lofted a popup into shallow LF. The ball was dropped and Walker came all the way around to score, easily. (By the way, Ya-Ya was hung on him nine years ago by his 1-year-old sister, Emily, who couldn't say Christian. REALLY couldn't say it. Ha, ha.) K-K sent 18 batters to the plate in the fourth and fifth combined (10, then eight; four runs apiece) and sr. 2B-CF Matt Marino provided the highlight both times: a two-run single, then a two-run triple on a sinking liner on which frosh LF Greg DiSanto made an all-or-nothing, coming-forward dive. He even went head over heels. Two other K-K guys totaled two hits for the day. Jr. CF Evan Basile, one of two guys in the game to throw lefthanded but bat righthanded (Carroll sr. LH Andrew Candelore was the other), had two singles and one RBI. Sr. RF Nick Guardino doubled and singled. Howevvvvver, the coolest moment of the day was when sr. Shane Giongo, wearing No. 77 and the day's only lefty swinger, was sent up to pinch-hit to lead off K-K's sixth. Most of you know about the tragedy that rocked Shane's family about five months ago (here's that page). He's a very popular young man and has shown incredible strength through everything. Well, Shane and his Body by Babe Ruth jumped all over the first pitch, sending a rocket off the top portion of the fence in rightfield. He lumbered into second to loud applause and then, showing good baserunning instincts, got to third during/after a groundout. Check out the reaction of jr. 3B Neil Gilman. After the game, it was again fun to watch the Wolverines deal with the tarp. Kids will be kids, of course, and they were diving around on assorted air bubbles. K-K's pitchers were jr. RH Steve Hopwood (four innings), jr. RH Ed Skilton (two) and jr. RH Steve Mahoney (one), who moved in from shortstop. The last two combined for shutout ball. Candelore was yanked one batter after Evangelist went yard. Soon thereafter, K-K's trainer brought over something cold to put on his arm. What was it? Well, the Wolverines neglected to bring along ice (or water, for that matter), so the trainer got some water ice from the stand and put it into a plastic bag. Sergio, coaching third nearby, heard Candelore say, "Is this water ice?" Sergio then said, kiddingly, "Yeah, and we'll put a cherry on top of it later." Earlier, as the Patriots grouped before an at-bat, they concluded the session by yelling "Hits!!" A player deadpanned, "Now that's some words of wisdom." Gilman was impressive with two hits, including a two-run single in the fourth. He shows Walker's gritty tendencies. Soph 1B Seamus Finnegan singled and doubled. In part because coach Fran Murphy is now going with more youngsters, this is likely Carroll's shortest/thinnest group of lineup players in school history. With two games remaining, the Patriots (6-6) are in danger of missing the playoffs for the third time in four seasons. Carroll will finish 8-6 (its last two are against West). Wood is 8-4 with two games against Neumann-Goretti remaining.

MAY 7
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
La Salle 7, North Catholic 3
  Not a horrible game, but certainly no prize-winner. As the Falcons arrived, a couple of them were commenting about how nice it would be to play on a field that's just a litttttttttt-le bit better than Piccoli Playground's. Then the game began and quality fielding was mostly a mystery. I felt bad for these guys because it appears, in some cases, that they expect bad bounces no matter the venue. A gun-shy infielder rarely makes the necessary play. The Falcons committed five of their six miscues on grounders and La Salle scored only one earned run all game. The afternoon began with a trip to Strawberry Mansion for Devon White's press conference. En route, Germantown Academy AD Jim Fenerty called the cell phone to say that GA had offered to replay the "illegal part" of Tuesday's wild and crazy game at Malvern. That'll happen May 20. My thoughts? In general, I think it's a little nutty to re-finish a game that did not involve a protest. But if there's EVER a time to do so, this is it considering how important GA's illegal hopscotching of pitchers was to the outcome. GA is to be commended. And don't forget, Malvern waited and waited and waited for four GA starters (including two starters) to arrive from AP tests before the game could finnnnnnnally start at 5:39, so maybe, just maybe, this is some sort of a gentlemanly payback. Anyway, the press conference at Mansion went well and then I called The Wife at work. "Guess what. You're going to flip a coin three times to decide where I'm going for baseball today. Heads for North-La Salle. Tails for Mastbaum-FLC." I could hear the coin bouncing off her desk. The sequence was La Salle, FLC, La Salle. Next stop, Montgomery County. Right after I parked my car, I could hear some nearby players discussing the GA-Malvern memory-maker. I let them know about the finish-it-later update and down to the field it was. Um, then back up it was. Coach Joe Parisi wanted me to see La Salle's new field, which is in a way-back corner of the campus and will be ready for '09. We hopped in the golf cart and headed over. The field and setting will be beautiful, looks like! Of course, some pics were snapped. La Salle's pitcher was sr. LH Matt "Boot(s)" Day. He went the distance, allowing seven hits and four hits while striking out eight. He did some of his best pitching in tight spots, bearing down and doing a great job of hitting spots (even some slightly off the plate for strikes -- smile). His mates supported him to the tune of just one error. North's starter was soph RH Ryan Etsell, a quick worker (about 8 seconds between pitches) with a long, lean frame and that easy kind of delivery that somehow yields good-zip fastballs. Scouts love guys like this. Here's hoping he doesn't get overworked because his pitch count today was 130. Etsell is also an impressive lefty-swinger. His two hits (one a double) were mashed. North's only RBI on a hit came in the seventh when sr. CF-1B Chris James (of FB-wrestling fame; pretty darn good in baseball, too) powered an RBI double to deep left-center. Another Falcon to watch is frosh C Mike "Zoom" Zolk, another lefty swinger. I liked how he carried himself at the plate, and behind it. All kinds of talent and savvy. (His dad and uncles were athletes of note at Frankford.) Only two Explorers (soph 1B Joe Harvey and sr. LF Jeff Murtha) had as many as two hits. The only extra base hit was a double by sr. 3B Mike Higgins in the fifth. North's new coach is Nick Chichilitti, who was a vacuum cleaner of a shortstop for Ryan's '84 champs. He also played back then for a Bustleton American Legion team coached by Parisi and the two had fun busting each other's chops beforehand. Late in the game, a Falcon fan up behind me (third base side) was complaining loudly/jauntingly about the lack of porta-potties at La Salle's field. "Fifteen thousand for tuition at this place and you can't find a bathroom out here!" he railed. "You gotta go back up to the school. What's with that?" I was sitting on the grass not too far from Parisi at that point. He looked over and noted, dryly, "It's only $14,000." He then told the guy the same thing, in friendly fashion. North had only 12 players in uniform. When Etsell was yanked from the mound in favor of sr. SS Bob Hopkins, there was nary a sound of appreciation from the bench guys. The same spectator yelled something like, "Keep it down over there, all right!" (I didn't write it down, but those words are sticking with me.) He then proceeded to express HIS thanks to Etsell as Ryan moved to shortstop. The day's best pic, all things considered, is this one: It shows serious hops -- well, semi-serious (smile) -- by La Salle's middle infielders, sr. 2B Frank(ie) Pierson and jr. SS Tyler Freeman. Sr. Andrew Wood, who has had some decent hitting days but sat out this one, handled prayer duties. "I gotta find SOME way to get my pic on the website," he cracked.

MAY 7
UPDATE ON GA-MALVERN . . .
(Game report now posted below this update)
    Ever have one of those gnawing feelings that something just isn’t right? I had one last night, right up until 2:30 a.m. The question: Had Germantown Academy pulled a fast one en route to upsetting Malvern Prep, 4-2, in an Inter-Ac all-timer? Through the entire last two innings, a span covering eight batters (five in the sixth, three in the seventh), coach John Duffy, a former situational lefty reliever in the minor leagues, kept alternating senior lefty Colin Kish and soph righthy Slater McCue back and forth between the mound and first base. Malvern’s lineup was set up righty-lefty-righty-lefty-etc. and Duffy wanted the best possible matchups with so much on the line. (Malvern would have clinched a title tie with a win.) But it certainly appears that he broke the rule. I remember something similar in a Catholic League final involving La Salle way back -- a pitcher was not allowed to return to the mound from the field -- and last last night, I found this notation in MLB rules: A pitcher may change to another position only once during the same inning; e.g. the pitcher will not be allowed to assume a position other than a pitcher more than once in the same inning. Upon waking up this morning, the question became: Is there a similar directive in National Federation rules, which are followed by the Inter-Ac? First to help was Dave Connolly, the chairman of Public League baseball. He had on hand the ’06 Federation rulebook and here’s what the meaty part says: A player may be removed as pitcher, and returned as pitcher, only once per inning. Later, I contacted Fran Murphy, coach at Archbishop Carroll and the Catholic League’s baseball moderator, and he confirmed that the ’08 rulebook contains the exact same wording. Oh, baby! The Inter-Ac has no specific chairperson for each sport. Everything is decided by a committee of all the ADs. Whether this will “go anywhere” is very much up for debate since Malvern coach Mike Hickey did NOT lodge a protest during the game. I also spoke with him this morning and he said, “I thought it was highly unusual, but I’m not what you’d call a rules expert. I didn’t know enough to bring it up. When the ump allowed it, I assumed he knew what he was doing.” The plate ump was Terry Spratt. In a conversation with Gene Otto, who assigns/supervises the umpires, Hickey said later this morning that he confirmed that Spratt had erred in allowing the many moves. I was standing near the cage for pic-taking purposes. All he really said to Duffy as the maneuvering began was that Kish and McCue would not be allowed to throw warmup pitches each time they came back to the mound. The Inter-Ac ADs are meeting this morning about other matters. You KNOW this situation will be brought up – I also talked this morning with GA’s Jim Fenerty and Penn Charter’s Paul Butler, and with Malvern’s Kurt Ruch via email – and we’ll let you know later today/tonight if there are further developments . . . Click here for the outcome.

MAY 6
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Gtn. Academy 4, Malvern 2
  This was an all-timer even before GA coach John Duffy unfurled his alternating-pitchers strategy in the sixth and seventh inning (smile). Some members of each team were taking advanced placement tests and, as you probably know, GA and Malvern are not exactly next-door neighbors geographically. The Malvern test-takers just had to walk out to the field. GA’s had to be part of a two-vehicle motorcade. Knowing about the test, the teams had agreed a while ago to push back the starting time from the Inter-Ac’s standard 3:45 to 5. However, a van containing four baseball players, including two starters, and three tennis players (they also had a match) did not arrive until 5:31 and the game didn’t start until 5:39. So, all game, this thought was bouncing around in everyone’s head: Will the game move quickly enough to keep darkness from getting in the way? The answer: Barely. The sun eventually set behind GA’s bench (first base side, maybe a 45-degree angle from the plate?) and was largely obscured by a tree as early as the sixth inning. It wasn’t dark by the end, but this game could not have continued much longer. Legendary! One thing really bothered me as we finally got set to start. The coaches and umps held their ground rules meeting right at the plate and, after ALL the waiting around, jr. LH Tim Cooney had to wait some more to start his actual in-earnest warmups. Move to the side!! (smile) Anyway, Cooney was not his usual self. He started most batters with curves that didn’t nestle into the strike zone and the Patriots were mostly on his fastball. A radar gun clocked him as high as 82 just once. He was mostly 80-81, but down to 79 by the end of his three-inning stint. He MIGHT be experiencing forearm tenderness. He was wearing a brace of some kind right around the upper part of his forearm and the slight bulge could be seen beneath his dark blue undershirt. (Malvern coach Mike Hickey told me Wednesday morning, “He was not 100 percent.”) GA jumped him for two apiece in the first and second innings. Soph 2B Sean Coyle got things started with a double over the head of sr. LF Alex Olah and Sean’s brother, jr. SS Tommy, then drew a walk. Sr. LH Colin Kish followed with a sac fly to center and, three batters later, sr. LF Pete Rosa fired an RBI groundball single into rightfield. Sr. CF Steve Boland singled with one out in the second and Sean Coyle added another hit, also a single. TC hit into a force, then Kish again helped himself, this time to the second power, by smacking a two-run single to right. Here’s what makes me think Cooney was fighting tenderness of some kind or another: He departed after pitching a 1-2-3 third. Anyway, Malvern used four more pitchers; all were sr. RHs – Rick Kazigian, Jordan Lawrence, John Gentile and Chris Cowell. The first came out of the pen. Gentile (2B) and Cowell (3B) were starters at other positions. GA almost scored in the seventh against Cowell, but jr. RF Timmy Vernon was tagged out near the plate at the back end of one of those draw-them-into-a-meltdown jobs. After singling in a pinch-hitting role, jr. Matt Ricci took off for second in delayed fashion. Gentile, back at 2B by then, did a perfect job, running straight toward Vernon and finally tossing to jr. C Mike Lubanski to get the out and prevent further damage. Malvern’s two runs scored on a smashed single to left by sr. DH Nick “Bus” Busillo in the fourth inning. The Friars did little else against Kish. As the sixth began, I heard Duffy say to McCue, who’d begun the game as GA’s DH, “If the first guy gets on, you’re in there.” Cowell, bound for Richmond, singled hard to right. McCue went to the mound and Kish strolled over to first, dislodging sr. Mike Nemeth. From then on, they switched back and forth, batter by batter, through the entire sixth and seventh innings. Each time, they had to exchange their regular gloves for first baseman’s mitts. Here’s the sequence, and you’ll know whether the batters were lefties or righties just by knowing which guy was pitching:
Lubanski, grounder to short vs. McCue.
Busillo, strikeout vs. Kish.
Jr. pinch-hitter Rob McCabe, squibbed infield single near the mound.
Frosh 1B Dennis Mitchell, looking strikeout vs. Kish.
(Seventh inning now)
Jr. RF Leon Stimpson, looking strikeout vs. McCue.
Soph SS Tyler Young, foul popup (caught by sr. C Joe Conaway, one of the late arrivals along with Boland) vs. Kish.
Gentile, strikeout vs. McCue.
   Duffy said he used the strategy because he wanted the best possible matchups in such an important game. Malvern (7-1) would have clinched a title tie with the win. GA is now 6-1. Their overall records are 33-2 and 23-3. In Delaware Valley high school history, do you think two teams with 55 combined wins (going into the game) have ever met as early as May 6? Incredible. Anyway, this was truly a classic game, especially when you consider the almost-dark and alternating-pitchers scenarios, and through the years, you’ll find thousands of people who’ll claim they were there. Actual attendance? Not the greatest judge of this, but I’d say at least 150. Maybe close to 200 if you count people who saw bits and pieces, but didn't hang for the 2 hours, 11 minutes.

MAY 5
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
O’Hara 3, Bonner 2
  While the jury is still out on whether the owner/webmaster of TS.com is a jinx to Bonner sr. LH Conor Kerins, it’s definite one phrase cannot be used: good luck charm. The krafty Kerins suffered through one wickedly bad outing last season (also vs. O’Hara, by the way) and I happened to be there. This was my second look at Bonner this season, but Kerins didn’t pitch the first time around so today was the 2008 test. End result? Well, he didn’t lose, but neither did he win. Conor has mostly been dominant this season thanks to a decent (not stupendous, but tailing) fastball and the ability to mix speeds for strikes. His performance today was slightly uneven, witness that he needed 98 pitches to get through six innings and that he surrendered nine hits, with five of them going for extra bases. On the positive side, he blew away 10 and got two of them with runners on second and third in the sixth after jr. 3B Kevin Sack collected his third double (on a hot grounder down the leftfield line) and jr. SS Andrew Onimus, a lefty swinger, sent a hard single to center and then thieved second. We’ll stay late-game: Bonner’s pitcher in the home seventh was sr. RH John Condo. With one out, jr. 2B Tom Coyle sliced a single to right and that brought jr. C Bill Pace to the plate. Already, Pace was 2-for-3 with a double and one RBI. Smack! He powered a liner pretty much right at sr. RF Matt McGillian. One BIG problem: the sun was directly in McGillian’s eyes. As the ball came off the bat, McGillian lifted his glove to shield his eyes and it was obvious right away that he wasn’t seeing it. The ball whizzed over and Coyle easily scored the winning run, with Pace getting credit for another double. Even if McGillian HAD seen the ball, I’m not convinced he would have caught it. It was a shot. Nevertheless, I’m sure the Friars will bemoan the circumstances. O’Hara scored singletons in the fourth and fifth. With two away in the fourth, Sack sent a sinking liner to left. It was one of those all-or-nothin’ jobs and sr. LF Bob Callan went for the catch. The ball hopped past him for a double, then Onimus crunched an RBI triple to right-center. The fifth featured jr. RF Tom Moore’s one-out bunt single and Pace’s two-out RBI double to right-center. O’Hara’s starter was sr. LH Joe Sessa. He yielded singletons in the third (on sr. 1B Bill Hollingsworth’s RBI double) and fourth (on a SB/E combo with McGillian running). This surprised me when I checked the number afterward, but Sessa allowed just four hits. The Friars did rope into some outs. Sessa gave way to jr. RH Russ "The Horse" Trojan after McGillian began the sixth with a bolt of a single to left. McGillian then stole before Trojan, who’s no small guy, immensely helped himself by fielding sr. CF Matt DeBarberie’s bunt and firing to third to get the out. The Friars still had a chance when a bloop single by the No. 9 hitter, jr. 2B Dan Williams, created first and third with two away. Trojan induced a popup to end the threat. Bonner’s seventh was basically uneventful. Among the legends in attendance: TWO former O’Hara head coaches, Bill Dugan and Frank Allison; the ever-present John “J-Mac/Blade/Lefty” McCauley; O’Hara girls’ basketball coach Linus McGinty (quick thought: is this school EVER going to appoint a new boys’ coach??); and ex-Bonner pitching whiz Tom Stauffer. Tom, a HARD-throwing lefty, was the Pitcher of the Year on our first DN All-City squad in 1978. He was a ninth-round draft pick, but opted to attend Temple. (Freaky occurrence: though it went to voicemail, I realized later that at almost the exact time I was talking with Tom, a former DN basketball Player of the Year from around that time called my cell phone. Phew!) Meanwhile, check out the mustache on Bonner jr. RH Ryan Haley, who's not the No. 1 student in his class for nothing!! Gotta love the ingenuity (smile). When O’Hara coach John Coyle arrived at the field, he seemed surprised to see me. “Guess you’re here to see Bonner,” he said. No doubt I wanted to see Kerins, but just the Bonner-O’Hara aspect was an attraction and I told John that. “Yeah, that’s true,” he responded. “If we can’t get excited for this one, we don’t have it in us.” They did. They do.

MAY 2
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Penn Charter 14, Haverford School 7
  Since when have these schools started playing baseball in the lower levels of the Public League? (Well, except for committing numerous errors.) One of my thoughts was to attend Southern-Gratz because I hadn't seen either team. However, Gratz had forfeited just the other day due to a player shortage and that created lots of hesitancy, so off to this one it was. (Gratz forfeited again.) At one point in this one, Steve Koplove, father of PC eighth-grade varsity player Kenny Koplove, asked why I'd chosen to attend. I mentioned that it was the day's only Inter-Ac game and that it was either this one or Southern-Gratz. So, quite late in the game, he quipped, "You might make it to Southern-Gratz. For their basketball game next season." (smile!). Talk about slow-moooovvvvving. The game started at 3:45 and didn't end until 7:03. Because I'm a very smart PC grad, I know that translates to 3 hours, 18 minutes. The clock hit 5 p.m. with one out in the visiting third. The 2-hour mark was reached with one out to go in the home fourth, just as Kenny Koplove relieved PC's starter, sr. RH Mike Carroll. What took so long? Did you have to ask? How about 26 walks, 23 strikeouts and six HBPs. That's 179 pitches even if nothing else had happened on those assorted at-bats!! So, I can only imagine how many TOTAL pitches were fired/flipped. The home plate ump wasn't bad, but he definitely had a penny-pinching strike zone and that only contributed to the length. Some tidbits: Despite scoring 14 runs, PC left 17 runners on base, including three apiece in FIVE innings . . . PC scored five of its runs on bases-loaded walks . . . Jr. SS-RH Mark Rhine, the leadoff batter, posted two hits and four runs scored and pitched no-hit, shutout ball (perish the thought) over the final 2 1/3 innings . . . jr. 3B Rob Amaro, batting second, reached base in all six of his plate appearances, thanks to singles that sandwiched FOUR consecutive walks . . . Two guys -- jr. 1B Steve Harrington and jr. 2B Mike Massaro -- had five plate appearances apiece without putting the ball into play! Harrington had one whiff and four walks; two of the free passes produced RBI. Massaro's sequence: HBP, K, HBP, K, BB. Oh, and in the seventh, Harrington yielded to sr. OF Zach Smith and he, but of course, drew a walk . . . After popping out once and fanning twice, soph DH Mick Foley crunched a three-run homer out onto Lancaster Avenue. He then whiffed again before sending a semi-liner to short . . . HS hit a pair of homers: soph DH Matt Lipson for three runs (to dead left) in the second and frosh 3B Vince Rondolone (same area, low liner) for two runs in the fifth . . . Two Fords -- leadoff man SS-RH Will Katzka and the No. 9 hitter, frosh CF Mike Washington -- reached base three times apiece via walks (two) and HBPs (one) . . . Jr. LF Kevin Eberly was the only Ford with two hits (both singles). Carroll whiffed all three batters in the first, but never was comfortable thereafter and yielded to Koplove, whose first pitch was launched within footsteps of the CF fence (and caught by jr. CF Jack Nazarewycz. Koplove and Rhine exchanged positions three batters after Rondolone ripped his HR. Haverford's starter was soph RH Matt Lengel, who appeared to be throwing quite hard. He also uncorked one of the all-time curves, buckling not only the knees of jr. LF John Ryan (two hits, including an RBI double), but also his entire body. Overall, though, his "control" was non-existent and he pitched just two innings. The next hurler was Katzka. His offspeed stuff was effective at times, but he did surrender seven runs. The mopup-duty guy was jr. Chris Luminais (loom-uh-nay), who HAS to be about 6-6, 280. He's not completely coordinated yet and his body will need some work, but he fired some peas and I guess we'll see how much he wants to make something of this pitching stuff. Meanwhile, it was during the second inning that I got a cell-phone call from DN crime reporter Dave Gambacorta about all of this Marvin Harrison stuff. At THAT time, the indication was that the police were looking at Marvin as the shooter. Man, was that distressing. Through his time at Roman, Marvin was always a gentleman and could not have been more appreciative in later years when he was inducted into Roman's HOF. When the game ended, I called Dave in the office and offered to stop by a bar owned by Marvin on a small street just below 28th and Girard. As I approached the door, a guy stepped outside and identified himself as the bouncer. We had a friendly conversation, he expressed his disbelief at the whole thing and that update was provided to Dave for tomorrow's paper; also some later quotes from Roman basketball coach Dennis Seddon. (Marvin was the Catholic South hoops MVP in his senior season of 1990-91 and I was always told he was a tremendous youth baseball player, as well.) What an afternoon and evening. A crazy baseball game and a disturbing allegation -- again, it's very early in the process; the story will probably change numerous times -- about one of the nicest superior athletes you could ever hope to meet . . . Let's end this on an upbeat note. Check out the photos of HS assistant P.J. Vanni, a former baseball player at O'Hara ('97), and La Salle High FB assistant Brett Gordon, a star QB at La Salle ('98) and Villanova. Tell me they weren't separated at birth (smile).

MAY 1
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
SJ Prep 6, Judge 2
  April showers bring May drizzle-plus. Grrrrrrrrrrrrr. During baseball season, these are the days I hate. The weather ying-yangs are talking all morning as if the afternoon is going to bring about a visit to Postponement City. But it never quite happens and you get your hopes up and you go to the game and there's just an occasional hint of spritzing and then, just as you're thinking, "We might get through this one with no real effect on the play . . . ", boom, it rains hard enough for folks to break out their umbrellas and, perhaps, just maybe perhaps, to influence the outcome. Here's the deal: It began to rain shortly into the home fifth, with Prep sr. 2B Brett Tiagwad on second (bunt single, steal) and sr. 1B Aaron Haas at bat. Judge sr. LH Steve Stout whirled to second in a pickoff attempt and fired the ball into centerfield. Did the wetness cause the miscue? Couldn't have helped. Haas went down looking, then sr. SS Tim Edger smashed a hard groundball to left, tying the score at 2-2. Jr. 3B Jeff Lynch followed with a sinking liner to center. Sr. Matt "The Juggler" McLaughlin was in the vicinity, but it was one of those better-play-it-safe jobs and the ball hit almost at his feet for a single. Edger and jr. pinch-runner Ryan Eden moved up on a wild pitch and Stout then walked sr. DH Pat Malloy. (Again, were moist baseballs part of this? The WP and BB were only his second of the game in each category.) With the bases loaded, jr. RF Perry Russom hit a chopper to sr. 3B Tim Ashenbrenner for a force at home and out No. 2. Jr. CF Dan Turner followed with a hopping rocket toward sr. 1B Dave Walkovic. It ate him up. Might have even taken a wicked hop because of the wetness. Anyway, it went through untouched for a two-run double and a wild relay throw (wetness conspiracy theory again, anyone?) allowed a third run to score. Sr. C Dennis Murphy followed with an infield single for an RBI (and run No. 5 of the frame) and Stout was replaced in favor of sr. RH Jim DiLisio, the starting RF. Jimmy D, by the way, retired all four batters he faced. Stout, who can't be more than 5-7, toughed his way through some early trouble, forcing the Hawks to strand four guys in scoring position through four frames. Tiagwad (hard single, two steals) had scored a first inning run on Lynch's groundout. Prep's pitching was done by jr. Kevin Gillen (five innings) and soph RH Tom Carbone. Gillen, who's slight but crafty and just quick enough, was up in the zone early and was fortunate not to suffer more early damage. In the first, Ashenbrenner's two-out double to left and a likewise-smoked single to center by soph DH Kevin Conroy plated a run. In the fifth, sr. SS Nick Petroski fired a blast to deep center. It's tough to be sure when you're so far away, but Turner, who also throws lefty, appeared to think he was going to get it as he ran toward right-center. Never quite got there. Ashenbrenner was issued an intentional walk and Conroy followed with another rocket. This one -- again, at least from where I was stationed; far end of the third base dugout -- had the look of a hit off the bat. It was, for an RBI double. Gillen brassed his way out of the inning just fine, fanning DiLisio and sr. 2B Tom Carey. Carbone, who wasn't on the squad earlier this season (maybe he's a JV callup?) showed decent size and strength and the day's best heater. Four of his six outs came on whiffs. Yes, he'll bear watching. After spending the first three innings on Prep's side, I then moved to Judge's and neglected to take along my jacket. So, shortly after the rain came, I looked over to Prep's side and saw maybe 5-6 bats leaning against the outer wall of the dugout. Guess what was draped over them, for protection-from-the-rain purposes? Yeah, my jacket! (Look in the background of this photo.) Glad to help, guys. When I retrieved it after the game, it smelled like aluminum (smile).

APRIL 30
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Dobbins 12, University City 11
  Toward the end of this one, a UC player walked over and said, "This is the best game you've seen all season, right?" Well, it was hardly the best played, but it was the most entertaining -- for MANY reasons -- and most enjoyable and it appeared that all of the players had fun. What a great afternoon! It began at St. Joseph's Prep with the goin'-to-Penn State press conference for T Mark Arcidiacono, and that was purely wonderful. Mark handled himself in perfect fashion -- I still get nervous talking in front of two people; can't imagine what it's like in front of maybe 75 -- and his large, energetic family added a great ingredient. After a short visit with hoops coach Speedy Morris and Lebanon Valley-bound point guard Joe Meehan, who was hanging out in Speedy's office, it was off to baseball. But where? I had three games in mind. On the way to my car, a couple of Prep's baseball players yelled out and requested coverage of their tilt at Judge. I was thinking of that one or O'Hara-North, and I even went about 7-8 blocks north on 18th Street before . . . can't do it. Something was drawing me to Dobbins-UC. Made a left turn. Out to 29th. Down to Girard. Turn left at the zoo. Maneuver over toward 48th and Grays Ferry, UC's home field. "Field" used loosely. The place was a mess. In the infield alone, there HAD to be a couple thousand dandelions. At least. There were no lines and there were large puddles near third and first. UC coach Rich Mitchell said the rec center's leader disappeared about two weeks ago and no one has come to replace him. Kudos to Dobbins coach Glen Goldberg, who ordered his players to begin using their gloves to carry load after load of dirt to the third base area to try to cover the water. Finally, UC's guys joined in, and then a combination of dirt and mulch (there was a pile behind the backstop) were used to repair both areas. When he first arrived, ump Jim Scott was thinking of postponing the game because of the poor conditions. He finally relented (he had to work alone) and the game got rollin' at 3:40, 25 minutes late. About four-fifths of the way through the cleanup process, one of UC's guys appeared with a rake and broom, which he said he'd gotten from a guy up the street. The rake got broken and the guy was a little disturbed when he showed up to claim his items. Someone gave him $10 (Goldberg, I think) and he was satisfied. He also hoped the players would learn a valuable lesson about the importance of returning borrowed items. So . . . the game started and there was almost a tripleplay right away! With jr. 1B-C Terrell "Mouse" Barringer on third and jr. 2B Ralston Thomas on second, frosh SS Fred Jones sent a liner to center. Jr. CF T.C. Muse made the catch and easily doubled Thomas with a throw to jr. SS Kadeem Wood. Meanwhile, Barringer had neglected to tag in normal fashion. He finally ran back and tried to score and Wood's peg to jr. C Matt Lowery had him! One problem. Barringer's hard slide caused the ball to trickle out. Yup, it was going to be one of those games. Thank goodness! Crisp and clean? Hardly. There were 13 walks, 14 errors and 19 stolen bases, but there were also some good plays and clutch, ringing hits and funny occurrences/one-liners were a constant and I could have watched this game deep into the night. It was just SO MUCH FUN! After a Mustang was picked off, UC jr. 1B Kevin Garris drew major laughs when he roared at the kid, "Go to your room!" (Kevin's dad, Tyrone Garris, was a ballsy point guard for William Penn and later a D-I star for the University of New Orleans.) As the UC seventh was about to begin, soph LH Demetrius "Meech" Robinson turned toward the outfielders and said, "Outfield, be on y'all horse!" In the half-inning before that, Dobbins sr. 3B Toyre Fredericks -- a lefty thrower, by the way -- asked coach Mitchell, "What inning is it?" Mitchell said, "Bottom of the sixth." Fredericks said, "I don't even know why I asked. I don't know what that means, anyway." Counting what was nearly the TP, UC turned FOUR DPs behind frosh RH Nasir Mitchell. Wood, a frisky kid with ability and personality, was involved in all of them. Dobbins' best player is Barringer. He'd been having arm trouble recently, so he started this one at 1B. He can run and hit and he displays all kinds of savvy and he can DEFINITELY play college ball. His dad comes to the games to shoot video and tapes will be available for all who want them. On size, he probably projects as a college second baseman. (Bloomfield College, in New Jersey, is already showing an interest, and he has one year left.) Mouse had two doubles in this one and also hit a rocket to deep LF. As the seventh began, UC owned a 10-9 lead. Robinson opened with a grounder to Wood, and he was ruled safe at first on a very close play. Soph C-RF Brian Gibson, the No. 9 hitter, then clobbered an RBI triple to center. Barringer followed with his shot to left and . . . oh, baby, Gibson ran right home. Goldberg had just explained to him -- about 27 times! -- about the need to tag up on a ball to the outfield. One out to go for a UC victory. Thomas managed an infield single and went to second on a tacked-on error. Boom! Jones powdered an RBI triple to center. Soph DH Iziah King lofted a popup in front of the plate. It was dropped and that made it 12-10. On to the home seventh. Jr. RF Ekeem Thompson and soph 2B Jimar Hill (4-10, 86 pounds) reached on consecutive infield miscues, creating a first and third situation. Hill then stole second, and Thompson was able to frolic home when the Mustangs botched the situation. Lowery fanned and Muse popped out to shortstop. Two down, Hill on third. Goldberg then made an incredibly bold decision, calling for intentional walks to Wood (two hits already) and sr. LF Jermaine Kamara (two hits already for three RBI). "They hit the ball hard all day," Goldberg said. "We had to NOT face them and take our chances." When I asked if he'd pondered the decision, oh, about seven times, he said with a smile, "About 150 times." With the bases now loaded and the WINNING run now in scoring position, Garris sent a high popup toward first base. Ballgame! Huh? En route to second, Kamara had jostled jr. 1B Darryl Clark and Scott called him out for interference! It was a tough way to end it, but Kamara was definitely guilty. One last time: This was a treat. Good luck to all the kids involved (here's Dobbins) and thanks for the fun 2 1/2 hours, roughly.

APRIL 29
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Neumann-Goretti 9, Conwell-Egan 2
  How frustrating was the '07 season for N-G? Well, the Saints did enjoy three wins in the ol' Southern Division (RIP), but they all came against a team, West Catholic, that is now riding a 63-game league losing streak. At least the Saints were going with youth, and at least that youth was showing promise, and at least a star from another school decided to transfer because he missed his grade-school/youth-ball buddies and he no longer felt like making the daily trek to Broad and Vine. Yes, Roman's loss has very much been N-G's gain. Soph LH Mark Donato happens to be one of the area's top youngsters and he was showing impressive skill even in the summer after eighth grade while playing in the semi-pro Pen-Del League. Though he still likes hitting the best -- the 6-1, 195-pound soph bats and throws lefthanded; he plays 1B when not on the hill -- and holds down the No. 3 spot in the order, he's most valuable as a pitcher. Any time he starts, the Saints are hopeful of marching to victory. And not faintly hopeful, either. Donato is pitching with a tender upper left arm and, as examined in my DN story, has been advised to shut things down for three weeks to a month. The soreness is resulting from shoulder tightness, he has been told. His velocity today was only 83-84 (two MLB scouts were on hand; well, briefly), but he has been known to reach the high 80s. Unsettled by a strong wind that was blowing pretty much straight across from first base toward third, he started off in shaky fashion, walking two of the first three batters and even uncorking two wild pitches. He was impressive thereafter, though, relying largely on a late-count curve that had serious bite (and was helped by the wind). Donato gave up four hits (only one was thumped) and three walks while striking out nine. Oddly, six of his Ks came against the two guys at the top of C-E's order. The one noteworthy frame in this one was the visiting second. N-G sent 12 batters to the plate and scored eight times. The victim was sr. LH Kevin Cahill, who, honestly, was only partially responsible. Yes, Cahill walked three in the inning and served up some hard-hit balls. However, the Eagles committed three miscues and at least two more plays could/should have been made. This was VERY unEganish baseball, troops. Jr. C Joey "The French" Armata started things with a ringing triple to right-center. His second time up, he lofted a popup near 1B. Due to the wind and a minor stumble and who knows what else, it wasn't caught and it went for an RBI single. Soph 1B Mike Riverso then got the eighth run home with a bolt of a double to deep left-center. Other RBI hits were delivered by soph 3B Al Baur (single for one) and Donato (single for two). Jr. LH Steve "Summer" Verano got the last out, then pitched three scoreless frames (Donato and Osano reached him for doubles). Osano's seventh inning RBI double soured the two inning stint of jr. RH Andrew Schaefer, who did pick off Osano right afterward. C-E's best at-bat of the day was turned in by sr. LF Chris Bartuska, who appeared off the bench and did a nice, hang-tough job before sending a medium-hard single to LF while leading off the sixth. Frosh C Daulton George then followed by ripping a single to center and both runners moved up on Schaefer's chopper. Donato escaped with a strikeout and another chopper right back at him. N-G's lineup included one freshman (RF Dom Riverso), four sophs (Donato, Baur, M. Riverso, LF Reno Regalbuto), two juniors (Armata and 2B Billy Fulginiti) and two seniors (Osano and CF Dan Behlau). Hard to believe, but N-G/Neumann has not had a winning CL season since at least 1999 and has not appeared in a regular playoff since '97. The program is on the serious upswing, though, which is a credit to coach Lou Spadaccini (a headliner during the school's last glory period; he earned first team DN All-City honors as an OF in 1991 and '92) and his staff. As for C-E, well, there won't be much of a wait for a chance at redemption: The teams battle again Wednesday afternoon at the site of the former Neumann. On the photo trail today, I kept going in one direction and good opportunities kept presenting themselves in the other. And the plate ump got in the way a couple times. Grrrrrrrrrrr. But if you want a chuckle, check out the sunglasses that were being worn by C-E's manager, Arie Berry-Johnson. She added the artwork herself. Next stop: getting a patent for these babies, then marketing them!! (ha ha)

APRIL 25
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Central 18, GAMP 4
 
Sr. RH Mike Braun throws fine in warmups. Once the action begins? Hey, you might know better than I do. In a highly unusual development -- and it was something I feared ahead of time -- I had to leave this one before it ended to head to Franklin Field and cover the distance medley in the Penn Relays. This one, played at the GAMP Grounds (7th & Packer) in South Philly, started at 2:45 and rolled through 5 1/2 innings (in almost two hours) before I decided it was time to leave, just to be safe. The score at that junction was 11-2, so a LOT happened afterward. Wonder what time the game ended? The big development for Central was the tidy pitching performance turned in by sr. RH Micah Winterstein, who has experienced some shoulder miseries. Micah went the first five, allowing three hits and two runs (none until the fifth). He was perfect through 2 2/3, although the Pioneers did hit some shots. GAMP's starter was jr. RH Eugene Aversa. Oddly, Aversa did not throw too hard from the mound, but showed decent arm strength later when he switched to catcher and gunned out two would-be basestealers. Central's highlights -- again, remember, I wasn't there for the Lancers' last at-bat -- were a two-run homer to right-center by jr. C Tom Capewell in the third (classic lefthanded swing!), a two-run single to center by jr. CF Ian "I've Left That Courtesy-Runner Stuff FAR Behind" Lewis and a three-run triple by Braun to center in the sixth. Sr. RH Foster McKoskey was pitching at that time and the ball was a shot; it cleared the head of sr. CF Jon Sheridan. In the GAMP fifth, jr. DH Ron Malandro was plunked, frosh SS Dom Raia (it was great to see his dad, Dom, a former first team All-City infielder for Southern!) powered a ground-rule double to center, soph 1B Joe Coppola lofted a sac fly to CF and, two batters later, soph LF-3B Nick Coppola collected an RBI with a groundball single to center. At one point, a hard slide into second dislodged the bag and maybe five minutes later, GAMP coach Art Kratchman and others were still trying to fix things. Finally, Malandro drew a lot of laughs when he bellowed, "We got a $62,000 piano, and we ain't got second base!!" (For the unaware, GAMP's focus is music.) A Central student named Carmen Carangi showed up with no shirt and painted chest. That'll do it for this one. If I missed anything legendary, please send an e-mail and I'll add it to the report. Thanks.

APRIL 24
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Frankford 6, Northeast 0
  On the day the Frankford football (and overall) community honored legendary coach Al Angelo one last time with a wonderful, well-attended funeral service a short distance away at St. Martin of Tours, the baseball squad also did itself proud in this battle against a long-time rival. Because of this game, attending the burial and making it back in time for the start would have been iffy. But I did drive to Frankford right after the service with the desire to see the procession of cars (maybe 50?) pass by the football stadium, as was one of Al's desires. Watching that was pretty emotional and it's assumed people noticed the black bunting draped across the iron gates at the entrance. After changing from appropriate funeral-attending clothes to my usual street-person look in the locker room, I made a quick trip to the nearby McDonald's for a No. 2, no onions (it's one of the few McDonald's not nestled into a city block WITHOUT a drive-thru; believe me, I know 'em all -- smile) and was stunned to see inside a guy who was an exact facial double of John Marzano, another famous sports person (our DN City Player of the Year in '81 for Central; later a major leaguer and media stalwart). Back at the field, there was an early wacky moment when a guy yelled from a passing car, "You suck!!" That was it. Just those two words. Not sure if he meant Frankford or Northeast. Or, maybe he was some guy from, say, Lincoln, who hates both schools (smile). While standing earlier outside the football stadium, baseball boss Juan Namnun mentioned that his starting pitcher would be RH Edwin "Tito" Rohena, returning from a recently injury that dislocated his right pinkie. Juan said Tito would be monitored closely and might not wind up pitching THAT long. The reason for concern was unfounded. Rohena, mainly due to a hopping fastball, sliced and diced the Vikings to the tune of a two-hitter with just two walks. After star SS Esteban "Shortie" Meletiche made a wild throw for a two-base error on the first play of the game, the Pioneers then played mistake-free ball. And no Vikings advanced even as far as second base thereafter. The two hits were a smash off Rohena's spike in the first inning by lefty Brian Susten in the first inning and a well-placed, deadened-perfectly bunt by SS Jose Delgado in the third. Rohena fanned seven and helped himself several good defensive plays. In the second, lefty RF Hayden Underland sent a grounder toward 1B that took a bad hop off the body of Frank Donato. The ball bounced toward 2B Gabriel Cedeno, who gathered and fired to a covering Rohena. Great play! With Delgado (walk) on base to lead off the sixth, Rohena gloved 2B-relief P Lance Lempert's bunt and lasered to first for a doubleplay. Frankford scored one apiece in the first, third and fifth and capped the day with three in the sixth. Meletiche, leading off, went 3-for-4 with a fielder's choice and three runs scored. Big hits: C Robinson Rodriguez' RBI double in the third, RF Jose Burgos' double to lead off the fifth, Donato's two-run double in the sixth (he was out stretching) and Rohena's ringing triple to dead CF right after that. Rohena rounded third on the play and was almost gunned out by C Tim Freiling. And that, folks, provided a chance for a vintage funny. Watching from the area behind Northeast's bench, sub Seth Lempert thought the call was incorrect and exploded up off the little chunk of wood that fronts the small hill. He ran toward the fence fronting the bench and, whoa, caught his feet as he tried to hurdle said bench. He stumbled hard into said fence and those in the area laughed heartily. As did Seth. Well, after knowing for sure that he was OK. Just messing around, I told the subs and managers I got a picture of it. Several attempts to get Seth to try a reenactment so we COULD get a photo -- you know, for posterity's sake -- were declined (smile). We did get photos of manager Lindsey Ryan wolfing down a pre-game hoagie and of another manager, Megan Sariego, checking her makeup (and confirming her beauty). Their attempts to get us to not post the photos had no chance of succeeding (ha ha). Northeast's starter, Susten, was yanked after walking Rohena to start the third. Quite the quick hook, but he had walked three and surrendered three hits to that point and had saved himself major damage by logging two pickoffs. The first run should not have happened, as Freiling well knows. With the bases loaded in the first, Rodriguez sent a chopper to 3B Alan "A.J." Logan that could have yielded a doubleplay. One problem: Freiling had that exact same thought to such an extent that he neglected to catch the ball before trying to gun it to first. Hey, it happens. A late-game highlight occurred when Robinson sent a wicked foul ball directly at Namnun, who was coaching at third base. Juan showed good vertical as the ball whizzed right beneath him. Another injured Pioneer, Jon Bracero (two smallest fingers on his right throwing hand), made a late-game appearance, drawing a walk, stealing second and later scoring. Among the legends in attendance: basketball point guard (and future Hollywood megastar) Malik Ballard, and alumnus Kenny Miller, who posed for this classic photo in '05 with two schoolmates (right at the top of the page).

APRIL 23
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Phila. Academy Charter 7, Furness 0
  No wonder Dave Pachucki, a 5-10, 185-pound senior lefty bound for Eastern University (he also plays CF and bats leadoff) was not THAT excited after this one. In only the last year-plus, this was his SEVENTH no-hitter counting four for these guys (two each season) and three last summer for a Legion team in Lower Southampton. Early, it appeared Pachucki would sail through this one with not even a hint of a problem and face the minimum 21 batters. And that would have been a weird coincidence because the Furness players, in lieu of their regular tops, were wearing black T-shirts with No. 21, in white, over the heart area. They did so to honor the memory of Tony Brown, brother of jr. RH Sam Byrd, who died in the past few days. Sam said Tony never played high school sports, but wore No. 21 on assorted basketball/baseball rec league teams. By the way, due to the usual issues that sideline kids, Furness had just 10 players in uniform for this showdown of Division D unbeatens, played at Conwell and Roosevelt Blvd. As Pub followers know, D is quite the barren area when it comes to top-quality players (not enough kids truly have an interest in baseball, and those who do can't find playmates and/or get too late of a start), but PAC is respectable and Furness can hang, especially with Byrd on the mound. Pachucki was overpowering. And scary. Falcons were backing out of the box pretty much from the outset and those who did hang tough were often just flailing away at pitches everywhere/anywhere. Pachucki realized this, of course, and many times used the take-'em-up-the-ladder approach. The first 11 Falcons struck out and no foul balls were even hit until RF Shayne Aviles, the No. 8 hitter, managed to fight one off. Furness made contact just eight times and four of the foul balls did not leave the cage. The non-K outs through six innings: Byrd ended the fourth by popping out to frosh 2B Trevor Newcomb; frosh 3B Ryan Gonzalez (walk, SB on what should have resulted in a pickoff out) was gunned down at third by sr. C Bobby Ropars to end the fifth after coach Eric Weinstein figured he'd better hope for a bad throw and mad dash home rather than expect a hit near the bottom of the order (the play was close; Gonzalez MIGHT have beaten the throw); and soph RF Dijon McNeill chopped out to jr. SS Taylor Vanderwoude to end the sixth. Here's what happened in the seventh: jr. SS Naim Fox whiffed; sr. C Anthony Traverse drew a four-pitch walk; Byrd sent a hopper to Newcomb that MIGHT have wound up as a game-ending doubleplay if he had not bobbled; Gonzalez fanned; and with soph CF Montez Brown batting, Pachucki whirled and rubbed out Traverse on a pickoff throw to Vanderwoude. All things considered, even the overall response to the no-no was rather tepid. Maybe it was too easy? Maybe the 20-odd spectators didn't realize what had happened? Who knows? PAC is accustomed to crunching its opponents, witness that not until this week (also vs. Overbrook) was it forced to go the full seven innings this season. Meanwhile, I am NOT accustomed to seeing no-hitters, especially seven inning versions, so this was a treat. It had been almost five full seasons. In that one, La Salle lefty Dan Waters twirled a no-hitter against Carroll in a Catholic League semifinal. In all these years, I can remember having seen just one other full-length no-no and that occurred on May 13, 1983, when St. Joseph's Prep righthander John Calabrese, a senior, shut down Bonner, 2-0, in a game at Lighthouse Field, Front and Erie. It was a makeup that occurred on a Friday afternoon and was the Hawks' third of the week. To that point Calabrese had pitched just eight innings all season for coach Joe Malizia, exclusively in relief. He had a perfect game for 6 1/3 innings; that was ruined by a throwing error on a grounder. The final out of the game was made on a popup by Mike Sundo, now an assistant at O'Hara. Anyway . . . as for today's runs, PAC scored one apiece in the third (Ropars' sacrifice fly) and fifth (a single to left/error combo off the bat of jr. 3B Tony Summers), and then burst through for five in the sixth as Byrd tired and hurt himself with four walks. One to Ropars forced in a run, and it happened after he was almost struck out on a two-out, two-strike curve that was judged by plate ump Joe Lieberman to have circled the dish. At that point, Weinstein lightly kicked over a large trash can and a PAC sub said from the bench, "It's called anger management." (smile) Summers followed the walk with a ringing, three-run blast to left and Vanderwoude later scored at the back end of a play that began with a caught-stealing at second. The day's best defensive play was made by Fox, who ran into shallow left-center to snag a popup with his back to the infield.

APRIL 22
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Malvern 5, Penn Charter 1
  So, in the Famous Spectators Contest, who was today’s winner? Do you go with Ruben Amaro Jr., ex-major leaguer and current assistant GM for the Phillies? Or do you go with Matt Ryan, the Boston College QB who’s about to become a very high pick in the NFL draft? Ruben was in the house because his nephews, jr. 3B Rob Amaro and frosh sub Andrew Amaro, are his nephews. Matt was on hand to watch his brother, jr. LF John (also a QB) and PC assistant Mike, who was also a QB in his playing days (but at Malvern!). Ruben (’83) and Matt (’03) are PC grads and they saw an entertaining game. The headliner was another guy who could be famous someday, jr. LH Tim Cooney. Even as a soph, Cooney was the league’s co-MVP and a second team DN All-City pick. He has the necessary juice on his fastball, but his strength lies in his ability to throw three pitches for strikes and especially lock guys’ knees with a nasty curve. Jr. C Mike Lubanski, the brother of former Kennedy/Kenrick all-timer Chris Lubanski (now a Royals’ farmhand), twice had to smother wicked curves in the dirt and throw to first for K/2-3 jobs. He wasn’t able to pull it off a third time. Cooney finished with 12 whiffs and all four hits against him were singles. PC got its run in the third as jr. SS Mark Rhine sent a groundball single to center, Rob Amaro grounded into a fielder’s choice, jr. C Doug Fleming walked (with Rob then yielding to Andrew for running purposes) and jr. DH Jack Nazarewycz directed a medium-oomph single to center. For the game, no other Quaker got as far as third base. Malvern scored one apiece in the first and third and Lubanski collected both RBIs. Neither ball was stung, but we doubt he cares (smile). The first hit was a blooper to right. In the third, jr. 3B Chris “Goose” Gosik was a one-out plunking victim and then stole second as Cooney was drawing a walk. A wild pitch moved up both runners and that forced coach Rick Mellor to go the infield-up route. Lubanski followed with a popup to shallow left against jr. RH Billy O'Boyle, a soft-tosser who did exactly what his coaches asked: keep them off-balance and keep us in it. The first reaction was that the ball should have been caught because it was up there a WHILE. Right at the end, Rhine, with his back toward the infield, made a diving attempt that came up a little short. Base hit. Two-nothing lead for Malvern. Rhine followed by making a nice play on a grounder by sr. DH Nick Busillo (scoop, touch the bag, gun to first). The next half-inning of note was the visiting sixth. Here we go: walk to Lubanski; hard single to right by Busillo, with Lubanski to third; wild pitch to frosh 1B Dennis Mitchell, with Lubanski holding and Busillo moving up to second . . . MAYBE!! Fleming’s throw was strong and true and Busillo was not nearly in time. However, ump Russ Lickfield said Rhine missed the tag and no amount of grumbling was going to change his mind. OK, here’s more: Mitchell grounded out to jr. 1B Steve Harrington (tag play in the baseline with the runners holding) and Mellor opted to issue an intentional walk to jr. CF Leon Stimpson. Malvern coach Mike Hickey summoned sr. LF Alex Olah, a lefty swinger, to pinch-hit for sr. LF Chris Crowding in the No. 9 hole. The man is a genius! (smile) Olah whistled a liner to deep CF and all three runners scored; Olah was gunned down at the plate on a fine relay from sr. CF John Walton to Rhine to Fleming. Here’s that pic. There was one more noteworthy occurrence. Pitching the seventh for PC was eighth-grade RH Kenny Koplove, who’s 14 years old and goes 5-8, 115 pounds. His brother, Mike, a product of Chestnut Hill Academy (after starting his high school years at PC), has pitched in the majors and is now with the Dodgers’ AAA team in Las Vegas. Kenny showed several kinds of deliveries, including sidearm and borderline submarine, and began by hitting Gosik on the upper left arm. Plate ump Art Chapman awarded Gosik first base and Mellor immediately popped off the bench, claiming Gosik never moved. There was then an extended, ahem, discussion that also involved Lickfield. Anyway, Gosik stayed at first and then . . . and then . . . and then . . . Koplove struck out the next three hitters – Cooney, Lubanski and Busillo!! Pretty amazing. Tidbit time: When PC was taking BP before the game, Mellor was doing the pitching and GA’s girls’ lacrosse team was walking behind the cage en route to the field where their game would be played. Mellor hit Rob on the upper arm with a slowball, then said to him with a laugh, “I want them to think you’re tough.” During the game, there was a slight delay when a softball sailed onto the field. As Stimpson went over to pick it up, Hickey quipped, “Leon’s going to sign that ball before he throws it back. ‘Hi, ladies, my phone number is’ ” Good stuff. Leon had a good laugh when I relayed that story after the game. Thanks to jr. P-INF Joe Price, of wide receiving fame, for helping with the IDs for Malvern’s team pic. It took forever (smile) because Malvern has more players than the Phillies. Literally! Also, the Friars have already played 25 games (24-1) and 22 more are on the schedule. Whoa!! It was great to see Matt Ryan a few days before the most important moment of his life. He was a pleasure to cover (also a quality basketball-baseball player) and truly unaffected, and all who know him are 100-percent happy for him. All the best, Matt (and thanks for posing for today's assorted photos -- here's the one with his brothers.)

APRIL 21
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Judge 7, O'Hara 2
  One question: Why is the scoreboard at O'Hara's new field painted green? You think Bonner would paint its scoreboard red and/or blue? (smile). Another question: What's with the intensity of the wind currents at this place? The new field is WAY at the back of the property. There was hardly any wind in the parking lot, but as people walked back and back and back, they experienced winds that were stronger and stronger and stronger. This sounds like a story for Sue Serio (ANYbody but Hurricane Schwartz). With the wind blowing straight in from center, or sometimes from left toward the first-base line, this one figured to be low-scoring. Since I'd never seen him before, it was impossible to figure soph Kevin Conroy into the equation. Judge coach Tim Ginter indirectly likened Conroy, a pitcher-shortstop, to the Phillies' Chase Utley, in that the ball just happens to sound different coming off his bat. Batting cleanup, Conroy fired a pair of right-through-the-wind triples to center and right and the latter was the highlight of a five-run fifth. Conroy walked and notched an infield single in his other two plate appearances. This was his first pitching start and he fared well in that endeavor, too. Under a limit of four innings or 75 pitches, Conroy talked his way into going five. He allowed three hits, with a bunt and an infield roller among them, and struck out six. He helped himself with an easy pickoff (sr. 1B Bob Zanneo did the run-him-down duties) and jr. C Kyle Levocz provided assistance with a strong throw to wipe out a would-be basestealer. O'Hara's starter was veteran lefty Joe Sessa, a sr. The Crusaders were on him just enough to retain confidence, and enjoy some production, through the early frames, then they pounced in the fifth -- with MUCH help from O'Hara miscues. Zanneo opened with a looping single down the rightfield line and sr. CF Matt McLaughlin tried to bunt him up. Sessa had a sure out in front of him, but bounced the throw to second. After jr. SS Nick Petroski sent a flyball to center, sr. LF Andrew McHale (recognize some of these names from other sports??) milked a walk to load the bases. Sr. 3B Tim Ashenbrenner grounded to jr. 3B Kevin Sack. Sack's throw for a force at the plate was slightly offline, but jr. C Bill Pace should have caught it, as he acknowledged. (His own glove had broken, so he was using a teammate's.) Conroy followed with his three-run rocket and sr. 2B Tom "Hidden Ball" Carey later added a sac fly. (Click here to see why Tom "earns" this nickname. Some day, we'll get the REAL story out of him -- ha, ha, ha.) Sr. RH Dave Walkovic pitched the sixth and seventh for Judge. O'Hara hit two shots in the sixth, but McHale, headed to Albright for football, used his speed to make an easy catch on one of them (well, the wind helped, but the ball appeared to be a sure hit off the aluminum). O'Hara scored in the seventh on an infield single/error combo for sub jr. RF Evan Higgins, which was followed by Coogan's hard single to left. OK, one more question: Which of the guys mentioned above accounted for O'Hara's fourth inning run with a sacrifice fly? Go ahead, take a guess . . . Kevin Sack, of course. As in "Sack-rifice fly."

APRIL 17
UPDATE ON KRISTEN'S TICKETS . . .
  The tickets Kristen (see below the Edison-Lincoln report) won on the radio are for Bunnystock, at Campbell's Field in Camden.
  Here's a link to the website about it.
  (Well, as it turned out, Kristen nixed the tickets. The station wanted her to drive to Bala Cynwyd to pick them up. Wasn't worth it.)

APRIL 17
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Edison 15, Lincoln 3 (6 inn.)
 
Even if the game itself is ugly, there's no such thing as a bad experience watching Edison baseball. The team always is filled with characters and I enjoy translating their assorted, rapid-fire Spanish sentences into English -- well, except for the occasional curse words (smile). High on the list of this year's wacky guys is soph 1B Brian "Chubz" Santiago, who gets that nickname from his beefy body. He also has quite the elaborate haircut and after I took a pic of the left side of his head, he added, "Yo, what about the right side?" When that was finished, he nudged a teammate and said, "The papparazi are after me." Ha, ha, ha. Good stuff! In an oddity, three of the starting Owls wear glasses. Not sure I've ever seen that. Coach Larry Oliver's squad is regrouping after the graduation of some quality seniors. The lineup includes four sophs and two juniors. One of the seniors was the starting pitcher, RH Alex Lajara, who has a Body by Chubz (almost) and uses his strong legs to get decent pop on the ball. He went the first five innings and could have ended things there, but he yielded a two-out RBI single to sr. 1B Adam "Pop" Goncharksy (he looks about 30 years old) and that made the score 11-2. Lajara was running out of steam by that point; he walked three in the inning. Lajara allowed four hits while fanning five. Soph Elias Crisostomo finished up. Lincoln's pitchers were jr. LH Sean Cross (1.2 innings) and soph RH Joe Boerner (rest of the way). Cross redefined soft-tosser and Boerner was one of the slowest workers in world history. Even with no one on base, he was taking 18-19 seconds between pitches. Phew! The Railsplitters are going through a challenging period right now because Charles Boyd, the football QB as well as a varsity basketball/baseball player, is in the hospital with injuries suffered in an auto accident. In tribute, the players are wearing yellow No. 9s on the sleeves of the shirts beneath their black sleeveless jerseys. Get better quickly, Charles! Edison hit some hard balls, but Lincoln contributed greatly to its demise by committing six errors; most came at inopportune moments. The top of the order paced Edison: Crisostomo, who began the game at third base, went 2-for-4 with a double, sac fly and three RBI; soph C Orlando Rodriguez slammed a pair of two-run doubles (both of the ground-rule variety); and soph SS Jonathan Colon (also decent with the glove-arm) collected two RBI (admittedly on groundouts, but at least he did his job). Sr. OF Joel Hernandez also had two hits. The game ended in true-downer fashion for Lincoln. With the bases loaded, a runner was picked off second as Crisostomo gunned to Colon. Oh, baby. Meanwhile, let's play the Relative Game with Lincoln's guys. Jr. SS Michael Ulmer (RBI single, mostly solid defense) is the grandson of the man who's likely the most famous fast-pitch softball player in Philly history, George Ulmer. Now retired and living in Florida, George was the TRUTH as a pitcher. He's nationally famous, in fact. Sr. OF Kevin Adamson is the brother of Bryan Adamson, a first team All-Pub OF for Northeast in '04. Kevin is hearing impaired and attends Lincoln because the school has a special program. Goncharsky's uncle, Mike Goncharsky, was a third team All-City DH for Northeast in '90. Lincoln's most impressive player aside from Ulmer was soph C Dylan Gallagher. He was into the game throughout, both mentally and verbally, and really took a shot on play at the plate, holding onto the ball for the out (throw by jr. RF Michael Vazquez). This game was played at Max Myers Playground, along Bustleton Ave. a shade above Roosevelt Blvd. (and it's where George Ulmer did most of his best work in Philly's main softball league). Lincoln's field no longer exists because the new school is being built on that part of the campus. Edison's scorekeeper is Julio Lajara, Alex's brother. Their dad, Alex, was also on hand, which was nice to see. Alex was wearing a long-sleeve shirt (not white, but cream-colored; close enough) under his game jersey and was told to take it offf by plate ump Bill Hall, at the request of sr. DH Gary Hutchinson, just as the home third began. Edison's overall leader is sr. OF Antonioray "Sunshine" Rodriguez, who's also a character. During football season, I took a pic featuring Sunshine and female player Christiana Morales and kiddingly said in the caption that Sunshine was Christiana's "future husband." Sunshine said his real girlfiend gave him a hard time, playfully. He then added with a laugh, "And she's never going to forgive YOU." Many folks in that club (smile).

APRIL 17
FAMILY TIDBIT
Luck of the Latvians
  Kristen, my daughter, called at 9 o'clock this morning and was very excited. "Dad, I won tickets on the radio!" Of course I asked her, "For what?" And her response was, "Ha, ha, ha. That's the thing. I don't know!!!" Shortly before arriving at school, she happened to turn on Wired 96.5 and these were the first words she heard. "Call in now if you want to win the tickets." She did. And did. The guy never said what the tickets were for, and she was too embarrassed to ask (smile). Kristen told me, "They said they don't even have the tickets yet, but they'll send them out when they do." I tried calling 96.5's listed number for requests for about 45 minutes, off and on, to see if someone could provide an answer. It just rang and rang and rang. So, anyway, Kristen is a winner. And we're at a loss to tell you specifics.         

APRIL 16
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Conwell-Egan 11, McDevitt 2
  Daulton George owes everyone about 35 minutes. Only a freshman, George is good enough to be on C-E's varsity and we'll assume he'll have an excellent career for the Eagles. But with this game an instant from ending due to the five-inning, 10-run rule, George made an unwise decision and his error wound up causing the game to go the full seven and another half hour-plus. George was playing catcher in relief of jr. Pat Sevick. With C-E up, 11-0, repeat, 11-0, and the bases loaded with two out, repeat, two out, George tried to pick a runner off FIRST base. Oh, baby. The ball skidded into rightfield, allowing soph P-INF Drew Siegfried and sr. 3B R.P. Boyle to frolic home and reduce McDevitt's deficit to nine runs, of course. Sr. RH Andrew Sinon was on the doorstep of concluding a five-inning one-hitter with 10 strikeouts when the boo-boo occurred. Much later, I kiddingly asked Sinon whether George had yet offered a public apology. "There will be no acceptance," Sinon cracked. That was not the only head-scratching development. With McDevitt down, 8-0, in the home first, Siegfried led off by reaching first on an error. Then, he was thrown out trying to steal. Yes, with his team down, 8-0. I doubt Drew would have been allowed to run on his own there. Truly mystifying. Now, let's move to the very end of the proceedings. One thing George's error did was give a late foul ball an opportunity to plunk down on the roof of a house directly across a small street from McDevitt's field in a small section of Glenside/Edge Hill that's actually in Abington Township. As the teams gathered for their post-game talks, the umps walked to their cars and were confronted by a woman who lives in the house. She was irate about the foul ball and wondered why the umps were allowing that kind of stuff to happen. Understandably, the umps were not real interested in being blamed for this. (My car was not far away. I heard/saw pretty much the entire exchange and even took a picture.) The woman was African-American and claimed the umps were being short with her -- her perception, of course -- because of her race. The woman and one of the umps went at each other with voices raised, big-time. Thankfully, all died down and the woman had to walk past my car to head back to her house. We talked for several minutes and all was calm. She is VERY frustrated because she said her house has been pelted for 13 years. I suggested calling McDevitt, the Archdiocese, even the township to extend the fencing above and around the cage. Lucky for her, most batters hit righthanded. Her house is primarily susceptible to lefties' foul balls. I feel sorry for this lady, but there was no way the umps should be charged with the responsibility of protecting her house. She must not be very familiar with the ins and outs of sports, or she would have known that. Here's hoping she gets some relief despite her off-the-charts display, especially her "charge" that appeared to be TOTALLY baseless. Meanwhile, Sinon was gassin', folks. He showed the best fastball I've seen so far this spring. He was recently clocked at 84-86 and had to be at least in that neighborhood today. He also showed a knee-buckling curve. Drawbacks: he often worked behind in the count and did walk six, including three in the fifth. He struck out 10 and allowed only an inside-out single to sr. CF Matt Davis (yes, of website writing fame!) in the third. Davis, the No. 9 hitter and basketball point guard, throws lefty but hits righthanded. He was late on a couple of earlier fastballs, causing a teammate to tell him, "You're on him! . . . Kinda." The base hit followed. Another of McDevitt's players, jr. RF Luke Sawick, has also written for this website. He's the Lancers' QB (and the basketball manager) and his good fortune did not match Davis'. At one point he came over and said with a smile, "I'm beginning to think you're bad luck. This was my first strikeout today. And in football, you came to the game when I threw my first interception." Hey, I do what I can (smile). Meanwhile, good luck to Luke's brother, T.C., a former website writer and McDevitt product. He's about to join the Marines. Siegfried, who led the Lancers' FB squad with six interceptions, was hit hard. No excuses. He just was. The Eagles sent 12 guys to the plate in the first and collected eight hits. At least six were shots, as was a sac fly to left by Sevick. The first two batters, jr. SS Sean O'Hara and jr. CF Ben Keller, had two hits apiece in that frame. O'Hara produced a triple and a two-run single. Keller bagged an RBI on an infield single and two more with a triple to right. Sr. DH Chris Bartuska and sr. 1B Rick Horn stroked singles for RBIs. C-E's other highlight was Horn's two-run homer to right in the second against sr. RH Matt Fisher. Sawick got turned around on the play (more fuel for the jinx theory -- smile) and the ball kept rolling and rolling. As C-E's fourth was about to end, McDevitt pitching coach Dorn Taylor, a former major leaguer (27 games total for the Pirates/Orioles) and product of Upper Dublin HS, called time and went to the mound with the idea of removing Fisher due to a sore shoulder. Fisher talked Taylor into letting him finish and he did get the last out on one pitch. Soph RH Vince Raffaele (one inning) and sr. RH Sean Doyle combined for shutout ball thereafter. Because of rules involving the DH, Fisher was forced to play 1B in the fifth. Boom! Wouldn't you know it? He had to glove a wide throw and Keller plowed into him. Luckily for Fisher, he was hit on his left side; appeared to be OK. At one point I asked Taylor what he thought of Sinon's performance. "He flies open a little on his fastball. If he slows down his delivery, he could be very good. Especially since he has that nice curveball." Dorn then pointed to McDevitt jr. RH Steve Harris, who was sitting on the bench in street clothes, and said, "That kid doesn't throw as hard as Steve." Say what?! Harris, an early-FB-season transfer from Judge, wound up being McDevitt's leading receiver and No. 2 in picks behind Siegfried. He underwent an operation on his left shoulder after the season ("It happened when I was in ninth grade; should have had it taken care of before this") and has not yet received medical clearance. He said he hopes to have it in time for next week's games. If he truly does throw harder than Sinon, watch out. One last tidbit: McDevitt's No. 5 hitter was frosh C Matt Conroy. McDevitt AD/FB coach Pat Manzi said Conroy has a good chance to also start in FB and basketball next school year, and that he's an excellent hockey player as well. Oh, wait. One more "last" tidbit (promise): Thanks to Davis and Sawick for agreeing to pose for a photo showing them ready to bunt with pencils. Pencils. They're writers. Get it? (I'm a kid at heart. Always up for something goofy -- smile.)

APRIL 14
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Franklin Towne 4, Phila. Elec. 2
  Yo, call the cops! Nah, it wasn't that bad -- well, not completely -- but things did get a little messy at Vogt RC, in Tacony. Two adult PE fans, upset by some calls that went against their squad, gave plate ump Bernie Spano and then the base ump (Marlon Tatom? not positive on his name) a hard way to go verbally. And then, as the sixth inning was about to begin, one of the guys walked down the small hill behind the cage and pressed right up against the chain-link fence, giving Spano more grief close range. Spano roared, "You're in my territory now!" He then placed a cell-phone call to police. He did not, he said, report the problem as an emergency. He merely mentioned he'd appreciate it if someone would come by in case further trouble developed. No one showed up by game's end. Neither did any more problems. So, what set off the two guys? First, in the frosh DH Sam Petrowski, the No. 3 hitter, mashed a two-run triple to right-center but then was called out by Spano for missing first base. Oh, baby. I asked PE coach Mark Olkowski after the game if he'd asked Petrowski whether he missed the bag. "He said he thought he hit it," Olkowski said. The Chargers were hot. Without success, of course, they tried to argue that the base -- FT has "loosies" -- was not in the correct location as Petrowski arrived in that area. Spano wasn't havin' it. Soon, when Spano mentioned that he'd soon need a fresh baseball from FT (as the home team), one of the PE fans hollered, "You need another set of eyes!" There were some other biting remarks, then more later on when a call at second base on a would-be forceout went against PE. That one was made by the base ump, who happened to be wearing sunglasses. He might have heard about that a few times (smile). Even way back in the first inning, a close call had gone against the Chargers. With sr. SS Luke Moscinski on third, Petrowski sent a flyball to sr. Keith Rycek. Rycek's throw was decent and true (though he tweaked his shoulder on it) and Moscinski was tagged out by sr. C Joe Gilbert. Tough to be sure from the pic, but Moscinski could have helped himself with a more evasive slide. DN ink went to Rycek, who ranks third in his class and is bound for Temple with designs on becoming a college math professor. Nice! He was the ultimate hero in FT's three-run sixth, which went like this: sr. LF Mike Croft reached base on a scratch single and stole second; jr. 1B Mike Confair fanned; sr. 2B Jim Dailey scored Croft (he came in limping due to a pulled hamstring) with a single to center and took second on the throw; jr. RF John Meyers reached on a bobbled grounder, then stole second; Rycek brought them both home with a well-struck single to center. Moscinski lunged for the ball, but couldn't quite get it. Rycek was rubbed out in a rundown, by the way. The pitchers were FT jr. RH Jason Krajewski and PE soph RH Chuck Fitzgerald. Both runs against Krajewski, who showed some zip, were unearned. He allowed five hits and two walks while fanning eight. He hurt himself by making a low, unauthoritative toss on a first inning comebacker and it enabled PE to jump ahead, 1-0. He made amends with a smoked RBI single down the leftfield line in the fifth. Fitzgerald surrendered seven hits and three walks (all in the first six batters) and toughed up enough to force PE to strand seven guys in scoring position. Though the PE folks were upset with Spano, he did cut the Chargers some slack. In the sixth, soph LF Carl Dansi ripped a shot to right that became a single and three-base error. As he crossed the plate, the excited Dansi whipped off his batting helmet and fired it off the cage. Spano could have ejected him. Perhaps knowing how much trouble THAT decision could have caused, Spano merely advised Dansi not to do it again. FT tries to start its home games at 2:45, but PE was nowhere close to on time. The Chargers hustled through infield-outfield, then were gracious enough to pose for the team pic right before the ground-rules session. Thanks, guys. PE's coaches are Mark Olkowski (head), Matt Pooler and Chris "Gator" McCoy (assistants). All three are Huck's buddies and The Huckster asked me to make sure I took a picture of them. But of course! FT's players almost always call each other by their last name, and even call coach Kyle Riley just "Riley." Yo, where's the respect, troops?? (smile) When Rycek was batting one time, I said kiddingly to Skinner, the on-deck batter, "That's your buddy, right? You can call him Keith." Mike responded with a laugh, "That's how we do it, Ted!" At least he didn't call me Silary (ha ha). Just to make me feel good, he did throw in a Keith while continuing to encourage Rycek. Considering everything that occurred, this was, so far, the most interesting Trail stop of the '08 season. Let's have more! (Let's NOT have near-involvement by police.)

APRIL 11
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Furness 16, Lamberton 1 (3 inn.)
  Well, folks, it was back to South Philly today and we had a rerun. Not of the major police activity that took place yesterday during the Dougherty/Neumann-Goretti game. The rerun happened on the field as Furness, like N-G, uncorked a 10-run first inning. By the way, this game was played at 25th and Jackson, just three blocks south of N-G's field. Must be something in the water. Baseball at the lower levels of the Pub is routinely brutal and this one was hard on the eyes, not to mention one-sided. Lamberton has only 11 players and many are soaked (not just wet) behind the ears. The coach, Lou D'Alonzo, is a GREAT guy and formerly was the head football coach at Olney and Southern. He's now the defensive coordinator at Marple-Newtown, in Delaware County, while still teaching at Lamberton. He remained upbeat through the butt-whipping and said, "You just try to squeeze any hints of positives from this that you can. Like that catch in rightfield. That was nice, right?" As Lou well knew, it was routine. But that's the point: In the Pub's lower levels, the making of routine plays is often cause for celebration. Lou mentioned that his players are all quality kids and give him no problems, so there's much to be said for that. His catcher had to work after school today, which necessitated moving the usual SS, sr. Andre Graves, behind the plate. That meant an inexperienced kid to play the infield's most important position and, well, he struggled badly. Furness' scoring went 10, 0, 6 and there were no outs in the third when the game concluded. All of those runs were accumulated on just six hits. Only sr. C Anthony Traverse had more than one: an RBI double his second time up in the first, and a single to left in the third inning. Also in the first, jr. 3B Sam Byrd ripped a misjudged RBI double to CF and soph SS David Izzi brought in three runs with a single/error combo; he got credit for two RBI. Oddly, despite the score, Lamberton soph RH Nigel Wilson notched five of his six outs on whiffs. Wilson walked six and plunked two and the Blue Devils were guilty of 10 errors. The last ended the game as soph CF Montez Brown trotted home from third base, following an overthrow. Moments earlier, he'd rocketed a true blast to right for a two-run triple. Furness' pitcher was frosh RH Ryan Gonzalez, who began the school year playing football for Southern. He had little trouble pitching a no-hitter as most of the BDs just not did not have smooth swings; most displayed those choppy, hesitant hacks that often come a split-second late, even on pitches that aren't that fast. Gonzalez struck out seven and only one ball was put into play. With one out in the first, soph SS Basil Garcia walked, went to third on an SB/E-2 combo and scored on Graves' groundout. The only other baserunner, soph RF Tyree Hudgins, was picked off after getting hit by a pitch. That play went 2-3-6 as Traverse fired to soph 1B Charles Hayden, who then flipped to Izzi. Furness jr. 2B Naim Fox was hit with a pitch in his first at-bat -- in one of his many braids. "Nah, it got me in the neck, too," he claimed with a laugh. Late in the game, 5-2 frosh Chris Trainer was summoned to serve as a pinch-runner and trotted out to first base. One problem. As many yelled out to him, the runner had been on SECOND base (smile). One of Furness' subs, soph Dijon McNeill, is the son of ex-Franklin point guard Thomas "Reggie" Faison, who earned second team DN All-City honors as a senior in '82. Furness' coach, Eric Weinstein, teaches at Southern. Lou mentioned that Marple Newtown has an impressive football website. He wasn't kidding. Check it out: www.marplenewtownfootball.com. While Lamberton was getting organized before the game, two Furness players seized the opportunity to stretch out in the stands and I, of course, seized the opportunity to take their picture.

APRIL 10
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Neumann-Goretti 12, Dougherty 1 (5 inn.)
  Not all of the loud noises in the western part of South Philly were being made by aluminum crushing cowhide. At roughly 5 o'clock, there was gunfire a few blocks from N-G's field (located at the old Neumann site, 26th and Moore) and MANY police cars came speeding past north on 25th (under the railroad overpass) and/or west on Moore. At least a dozen. In all, maybe 20 police cars came past by the time the late arrivals got involved -- this time at normal speed, with no sirens -- 10 to 15 minutes later. The incident did not happen close enough to the field to cause much concern, but all of the noise and urgency did make for some entertainment. Meanwhile, let's say you're N-G coach Lou Spadaccini. Are you thrilled that your team scored 12 runs in five innings, or disturbed that it left 11 runners on base??!! That's right. The Saints stranded two in the first, then three apiece in the second, third and fourth. While it's tough to make TOO definitive an evaluation off this game, considering that Dougherty remains a have-not despite the best efforts of coach Steve Carr and his hangin'-in-there players, N-G appears to be headed VERY MUCH in the right direction. The headliner is soph 1B Mark Donato, a sweet-swinging lefty with serious pop. He's a transfer from Roman and even starred last season. He's also N-G's top pitcher and shows much promise in that area as well. Today's starter, RH Al Baur, is also a soph. His dad, Al, was a first-magnitude RH for Southern in the mid-80s and spent some time in the Phillies' farm system. Al Sr. goes about 6-6 and Al Jr. is now about 6-2. "He used to be short and pudgy. Now he's growing like a weed," Dad said. Two more soph lefty swingers, Reno Regalbuto and Michael Riverso, play LF and RF, respectively. With all of that being said, the Saints' spiritual leader, for good reason, is jr. C Joe Armata. I like his arm, but more so his presence. He nurtured Baur and truly ran the show. Plus, I always LOVE it when a catcher shows off his arm early and Armata twice tried pickoff throws to first when the game's third batter, jr. LF Bill Eberhart, reached base on an infield error. Neither one was successful, but he might have been playing a slight game of possum. Eberhart tried to steal and was rubbed out easily. Armata later posted another gundown. N-G dropped a 10-spot in the very first inning against sr. RH Steve Halbherr, sending 15 batters to the plate. Phew. The highlights were two-run singles by jr. 2B Bill Fulginiti, sr. CF Dan Behlau (the leadoff hitter, he'd started the proceedings with a walk) and Donato. In his first at-bat, Donato sent a rocket to the WAY-back part of RF. Sr. Dave Boginsky made the catch in front of a large bush. Mark's grandfather, Walt Grady, who happens to be my wife's first cousin, came over and said with a smile, "Stick around, Ted. Later, he's going to put one on the building." Not today, but I wouldn't bet against it down the road (smile). Steve Halbherr departed after the 13th batter in favor of his brother, Joe, a soph LH who'd been playing 1B. He wound up pitching 3.1 innings. He allowed two runs, four hits, walked six and plunked two, but as previously mentioned, he stranded ELEVEN. Gotta love that. Is that a city record for four innings?? The tough-luck batter of the day was sr. 3B Aggie Osano. (His real first name is Agapito, but he prefers "Aggie" and it rhymes with foggy.) He SMOKED three balls, but two were caught. The last was a sinking liner to CF, on which sr. Joe Gallagher made a nice lunging catch. Baur's line showed four hits, five strikeouts and one walk. He worked ahead and actually PITCHED and his velocity will no doubt increase as he fills out. Sr. C T.J. Dormer reached him for two of the hits. At one point, Huck called my cell phone with a question about the rules concerning DHs. He'd been called by someone at the Bonner-Judge game. Gene Otto, the supervisor of the umps, was handling the bases in this one and, since our game was between innings, I called him over and handed my cell through the fence. Gene in turn gave the phone to the plate ump, Pete DeIuliis, who Gene credits with being the rules authority. Pete talked to Huck for a while and the pitcher got to throw a few extra warmups. Sorry for delaying the game, troops, but if you have the technology and "ingredients" to avoid a problem, might as well do so, right? In the photo set, you'll find two pics of Dougherty's manager, Jena Huynh. She didn't want the second one posted, where she's holding a bat, but the players overruled her. Sorry, Jena. Majority rules (smile). Here's the other one.

APRIL 9
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
SJ Prep 6, La Salle 1
  Wait, isn't this against the law? A complete-game performance with hardly any hits/walks? Don't all faint at once (smile). Doing the honors was sr. RH Aaron Haas, also the football QB. Early in the game, it did not appear that Haas was throwing THAT hard (no scouts with radar guns were on hand) and his success was somewhat puzzling. But he just kept rolling and rolling along, always pitching ahead in the count and doing a great job of hitting spots while changing speeds. His outing wound up being quite the no-muss, no-fuss clinic and it was a pleasure to watch. He recorded "only" five strikeouts, but walked just one and that came in no-harm fashion (two out, nobody on) and surrendered only two hits, a shot to right-center for a single by sr. DH Andrew Wood in the second and a solid single to center by sr. 2B Frank Pierson in the sixth. Sr. Stefan Longo, just inserted in CF for -- you got it -- defense, bobbled the ball and Pierson got to second; he still got credit for an RBI. Sr. Tim Edger, a natural CF now playing SS because jr. Stephen Bruno is no longer part of the program, had opened the gate by making a low throw on sr. CF Matt Abel's inning-opening groundout. (Fact is, Bruno, a first team Daily News All-City honoree in '07 -- we put him at the DH spot -- is no longer part of the school. The Audubon, N.J., resident has just enrolled at Gloucester Catholic, a long-time powerhouse. We wish him good luck there.) Overall, Edger had an excellent game. He fielded three other balls cleanly and showed a gun on his throws and at the plate he went 2-for-3 with a walk, double, triple and two RBI. He did contribute a "funny". In the second, with one out and Wood on first, sr. LF Jeff Murtha fanned on a ball in the dirt. Murtha, of course, was automatically out. But as he ran toward first, Wood was rumbling to second. The throw by sr. C Dennis Murphy was in plenty of time, but when Edger made the snag, he just stepped on the bag, as if he thought the play would be a forceout. Uh, no. As a true CF just helping out his squad, he's forgiven (smile). La Salle's pitcher was jr. LH Shawn O'Neill. He appeared to be really BRINGIN' it early, but too many pitches were in the preferred hitting area and the Hawks were in tee-off mode. As La Salle coach Joe Parisi noted in a late inning, "Our guys are taking first pitches for strikes and their guys are hacking them into the gaps. Our guys have been told about it, but . . . " O'Neill, whose father, also a lefty named Shawn (and quite a fun-to-be-around character), was the pitching stalwart for Judge's 1976 City Champs, is an incredibly quick worker. Even with guys on base, he was delivering pitches about seven seconds after taking return throws from his catcher. Phew! O'Neill went six innings, surrendering six hits (four for extra bases) while fanning four and walking three. He has a tremendous pickoff move, and it enabled him to nail two guys. Sr. 2B Brett Tiagwad, in the leadoff spot, went 1-for-2 with a double and walked twice. Haas had no hits, but collected two RBI on a groundout and sac fly. The Hawks added a three-spot in the seventh after RH reliever John Bernhardt issued three consecutive walks to start the frame. Dennis Hart, who coached third for Hawk boss Chris Rupertus, is quite the fortune teller. With Russom on second in the sixth, Hart yelled out to him, "Here comes one in the dirt! See it out of his hand!" The very next pitch indeed was in the dirt and Russom scampered to third. A slide was unnecessary, but he uncorked one anyway and a certain amateur photographer was quite appreciative (smile). Next, Russom ventured too far off the bag and survived a mini-rundown. Finally, he WAS rubbed out when Turner (brother of Eddie, the 1B coach) inside-outed a screaming liner to jr. 3B Tyler Freeman, who stepped on the bag for a doubleplay. At one point, after O'Neill made a pickoff throw to 1B, a Prep sub yelled out to the baserunner, "Get dirty!" He was smiling, witness that a teammate added, "It's hard to get dirty when you're a step off the base."

APRIL 8
INTER-AC LEAGUE
Gtn. Academy 4, Penn Charter 1
  Though we’ll all, no doubt, make return visits to Crappy Weather Land this spring, today brought a nice change. The temperature was pleasant, the sun was almost always out and the action was snappy (nevertheless, three of the game’s five runs were unearned.) The overall theme: Oh, brother!! GA started two sets, jr. SS Tommy and soph 2B Sean Coyle, and sr. LHP Colin and soph 3B Keenan Kish and jr. RF Timmy Vernon has been preceded by a couple of quality brothers (Pete "Paco" and Billy). Meanwhile, PC’s starter, sr. RH Mike Carroll, is the brother of ex-PC ace Matt Carroll; jr. LF John Ryan is the brother of Boston College super-QB Matt Ryan (THEIR bro, Mike, is an assistant to PC coach Rick Mellor); jr. 3B Rob Amaro has a brother, frosh INF Andrew Amaro, on the squad (THEIR dad, David, is the brother of Phillies’ assistant GM Ruben Amaro; both were in attendance); and PC eighth-grade P-INF Kenny Koplove is the brother of ex-major league pitcher Mike Koplove (now at AAA with the Dodgers). Oh, and the base ump, Ed Kerrigan, is the brother of Joe Kerrigan, the former Phillies’ pitching coach. (There might be other "combros" I forgot to mention. If so, email them to me at silaryt@phillynews.com and I’ll add them later.) DN ink went to C. Kish, who hurled the first six innings and then yielded to his brother, a righty who already throws quite hard even though he weighs just 160. He never would have admitted it, of course (smile), but Colin was probably fretting a little when Keenan’s first pitch of the seventh was smoked by jr. SS Mark Rhine for a double down the leftfield line. Any hopes of a PC uprising were quickly dashed. Sr. CF John Walton was retired on a comebacker, R. Amaro struck out looking and jr. C Doug Fleming (it’s hard to imagine there’s a better defensive catcher in the area; he has a strong arm and smothers pretty much EVERYthing with non-stop body sacrifices) popped out to T. Coyle. Colin is bound for Florida Southern and expects to serve both on the mound and in the outfield. He bats third and went 1-for-2 with an intentional walk. Several scouts in attendance clocked Colin in the high 70s, low 80s, the same speed attained by Carroll. Colin helped himself with a pickoff in the second inning and then started a doubleplay in the third. The run against him was unearned as jr. 2B Mike Massaro reached on Keenan’s bobble, was wild pitched to second and later scored on Walton’s single to center. That ball was a sinking liner and sr. Steve Boland did briefly have it as he dove. The ball became dislodged as he hit the grass. Base hit, baby. There was a weird sequence in the sixth. With two away and runners on first and second, GA coach John Duffy made a mound visit as jr. 1B Steve Harrington, said to be a nationally recognized squash whirlwind, prepared to hit. As Duffy talked to Colin, Keenan made a beeline for the bullpen mound behind GA’s bench and threw some quick warmup pitches. Mellor, like many, wasn’t sure if a rule was being broken, but he knew things didn’t “look” right, so he came out to inquire after the mound visit concluded. While THAT discussion was taking place, Keenan, now back at third base, had a catch with someone standing off to the side. Very strange, right? The plate ump allowed it all. Not sure if he was right or wrong. Just telling you what happened. Though Harrington milked a walk, Duffy stayed with Colin and was rewarded when Massaro flied to center. GA scored two in the fourth and fifth, as singles by sr. C Joe Conaway and T. Coyle did the respective tricks. TC’s single was followed by an intentional walk to Colin Kish. Conaway then grounded to Amaro, who threw home for a force. The play became a doubleplay when TC was hit with an interference call. Here’s the pic. See if you think TC’s slide was over the top, location-wise. The day’s best defensive sequence occurred in the second. Conaway singled hard to right and then went to third as Harrington mishandled Fleming’s throw on an attemped pickoff. Soph 1B Slater McCue then drew a walk. Quite promising, considering no one was out. Zip! Conaway was picked off third by Carroll and Fleming gunned down McCue on a K/CS combo. Kenny Koplove did not get into the game, but had some impressive moments. He knows some of GA’s guys from outside competition and was feeding tips to Mellor and pitching coach Gerry Sasse. About one of GA’s batters, he said something like, “Not very aggressive. Won’t swing until he has two strikes.” Out of the mouths of eighth-graders . . . Gotta love it.

APRIL 7
PUBLIC LEAGUE
Roxborough 14, Saul 4 (6 inn.)
  Both schools are located in Roxborough and many of the players know each other, so this one figured to be fun from that standpoint alone. Plus, some of Roxborough's better football players also play baseball and they're personable, quality kids, so that was another reason to attend. Both starting pitchers were sophs and, early at least, they threw rather hard, especially for a Pub division not called A and considering the temperature  was still quite nippy. They should experience some success over these next two seasons. Roxborough has more pure hitters and, in time, imposed its will to bring the tilt to a halt with one out in the home sixth, thanks to a four-spot. DN ink went to frosh SS Chris Sponsler. I wouldn't ordinarily write about such a young buck, but the 6-foot, 170-pound Sponsler went 3-for-3 with a double, sac fly and three RBIs out of the No. 3 hole. Also, I remembered that Chris' brother, Doug, an '07 grad, had been home-schooled during his time as an Indian and figured that maybe Chris was doing the same and that it could make for an interesting story. As it turns out, Chris "attends" a cyber charter school (as did Doug as a senior). Legendary, eh? The pitcher, LH Andy Shields, went all six. His concentration appeared to drift at times and his breaking stuff wasn't always sharp. Not bad, though. Not bad at all. He struck out 11 while yielding five hits, three walks and three plunks. A good sign was, he forced Saul to strand four in scoring position. A lefty swinger, he batted cleanup and went 2-for-3 with a sac fly and a pair of RBI singles. The FB headliners, all seniors, are 3B Adrese Hicks (leadoff), CF Stephen Tucker (second) and C Amir Boler (ninth). All three strike me as the kind of kids you'd be happy to have on any team you ever thought of coaching, in any sport. Hicks had just one hit, but scored three runs. Tucker slammed an RBI double about two-thirds of the way up the screen in dead left. Boler made an authoritative catch and tag on a play at the plate and ended the game with a two-run single to left. Roxborough's team has 13 players, seven whites and six blacks. When we took the first of two team pics, Boler and Tucker were next to each other in the front row. Then, Stephen quickly switched places with Shields after noticing, and mentioning, that doing so would make the photo perfectly balanced (racially). He even said lightly, "Make sure this is the one you post." Maybe the School District can find a way to honor this young man (smile). Tucker is a big fan of the website pics. He even noted that I've posted photos "of birds just flying by." Ha, ha, ha. Guilty as charged. Speaking of photos, sr. 2B Fran Filewicz (2-for-4, double, two runs scored) hopefully now has something he can post on MySpace. And soph RF Mackenzie Whalen is probably still rubbing assorted spots on his body; he was drilled three times by pitches. Saul scored a first inning run on a groundout by sr. 1B Ian Cogan. It was a weird play. He sent a ball up the middle. It hit the rubber and bounced straight up, enabling Shields to get the out. Soph RF Tim Herrmann also had an RBI on a 1-3 groundout. RBIs via hits went to sr. SS Jon DeMalavez (single) and jr. 2B Steve Reyes (double to LC that probably should have been caught). RH Matt Horvat is a big-'un. He'll need to redefine his body to some extent and just flat-out learn more about pitching, but there ARE possibilities. The other Saul hurler was RH Herb Steinberg, who is quite small. He had a nice pre-game talk with Rox sr. 1B Pat Cummiskey, who said, "We've known each other since we were 1 year old." Later, I happened to mention to Horvat that Whalen had been plunked three times, he smiled and said, "The worst thing is, I did it to him twice and he lives right down the street from me." During Saul's BP session, Cogan, while pitching, was drilled by a line drive right in his back. He declined the offer of a rubdown from one of Saul's managers, Joseph Rodriguez. Later, I heard Ian tell a teammate, "It felt like a body shot from Mike Tyson." (smile) Chris Schroeder, star P-SS for the '07 Injuns, was on hand to coach first base. Saul is again being coached by Rich Eanes, who stepped aside last year (in favor of Rich Weiss) to help relatives with severe health problems. Weiss still cares about the Razorbacks. He sent an email at 8:28 wanting to know the link to the website report. Yo, calm down, buddy!  Here's the usual sequence of duties: story for DN, game recaps for DN and site, game pics for site, story for site, team pics, etc. It's now a shade after 11. I'll send Rich the link momentarily. If he's asleep, he can catch up tomorrow (smile).  

APRIL 3
CATHOLIC LEAGUE
Bonner 8, Ryan 7
  We're gettin' there, gang. At times today, the baseball was as good as it gets. We were treated to quality pitching for a decent portion of the game, plus there were some three-star fielding plays and more than a few clutch at-bats. One problem: where can I buy some new fingers? A few of them snapped off my frozen hands (smile). Compared with weather conditions for this one, which happened to be the first game on Bonner's impressive new field, yesterday's La Salle-Roman tussle felt like mid-July. Man, was it chilly! The sun declined to appear and every so often, reasonably strong winds blew in from dead leftfield. Kudos to all of the players for hanging in there a