Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Japan travels long-distance to play in NAFA World Series

Saturday, August 7th, 2010


(click banner for original news story at OttoinFocus)


Written by Bob Otto on August 6th, 2010

The Waseda University men’s fastpitch softball team from Tokyo, Japan, will be playing in the NAFA World Series 23-Under Division, Aug. 13-15, in Des Moines, Iowa. Waseda won the 2005 AA Division, and is looking to win another championship in its four World Series appearances.


Courtesy Photo

By BOB OTTO
NAFA Reporter / Photographer
botto3 (at) verizon.net

“For our team, this is a real privilege to play a team that cares to travel that far to play ball.” – Rich Markham, manager Westerville Capitals

TOKYO, JAPAN – Stadium Lanes of Duluth, Minnesota will travel 314 miles to Des Moines, Iowa to play softball. That’s a short drive compared with Waseda University’s travel plans.

The Tokyo, Japan University fastpitch softball team will fly 6,313 miles to Chicago, Illinois, then board a bus for another 307-mile jaunt to Des Moines – site of the 2010 North American Fastpitch Association (NAFA) World Series.

All for the love of playing fastpitch softball. And for the opportunity to once again lay claim to a World Series championship. Waseda will play in the 12-team, Age 23-Under Division (Aug. 13-15) that features top young men’s teams from Canada and the U.S.

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Canada’s Jay Sim passes away

Saturday, August 7th, 2010

From the Saskatoon Star Phoenix

One of world’s best softball catchers

Had strong arm. Named to Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame

By CORY WOLFE, Postmedia News; Saskatoon StarPhoenix August 7, 2010

Once regarded as the world’s best softball catcher, Jay Sim died unexpectedly on Tuesday.

Sim suffered a heart attack while walking with his wife, Barb, at a lake north of Saskatoon. He was 52.

“It’s shocking,” said pitching legend Gene McWillie, who hurled thousands of pitches into Sim’s mitt. “That’s one of the last things I would have expected, to see him pass away this early. It’s a shame. We’ll miss him.

“Saskatoon will miss him.”

Born and raised in the city, Sim became a key contributor to the national program. He was a member of the last Canadian team to win the softball world championship with a dramatic comeback victory in 1992.

“He was a guy who came out of nowhere and became probably the best catcher in the world,” said local softball organizer Keith McLean. “He caught the best pitching staff in the world probably better than anybody ever could.

“When you’re catching guys like (Mike) Piechnik and McWillie and (Rob) Guenter in their prime, it becomes a matter of being a general and running the game. That was one of his big strengths.”

Sim also owned a deceptively quick release. Opponents who thought they’d found a weakness in Sim’s game soon learned otherwise, said Mc-Lean.

“He had a unique way of throwing the ball to second. As soon as teams saw that, they thought they would steal. But after one attempt, they never tried again. He had a gun to second base.”

Sim’s achievements earned him a spot in the Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame in November 1992, just eight months after he retired from softball. The previous spring, he helped Canada win the world championship in the Philippines.

“Winning the world championship was the dream of any fast-pitch softball player,” Sim said at the time. “And the way we won it, it was probably the most exciting game I’ve ever played in.”

Down 3-0 to New Zealand in the fifth inning, Canada tied the game with a three-run homer by Jody Hennigar. Mark Smith’s two-out, two-run double lifted Canada to victory in extra innings. Canada has not claimed the title since.

Sim also earned gold for Canada at the 1987 Pan-American Games, the 1989 Challenge Cup in Saskatoon, the 1990 Pan American qualifier and the 1991 Pan American Games.

“I felt really confident with him behind the plate,” said McWillie. “I had no worries at all when Jay was back there. I enjoyed it and I knew that I could depend on him to do the job.”

The two rarely spoke on the diamond or in the dugout, added McWillie. They didn’t have to.

“We were just on the same page. I very seldom shook him off as far as signals -and I’m a pretty independent guy. But he had a good feel for me and what I liked to throw. I was really comfortable with Jay.”

Off the field, Sim was always jovial and a committed family man, said McWillie.

“I didn’t hear him say bad things about other people or anything like that. He was very honourable. I was shocked and saddened to hear of his passing.”

Explosive game attracts 50,000 fans

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

From the Camden Advertiser:

Fourth in a series by Australia’s Mark Long:


Mark Long is a former Australian softballer who pitched Australia’s first World Championship U/19 Gold medal win in 1997. He created and now manages Australia’s leading high school based health program Eat It Work It Move It.

Fifty thousand spectators walked through the gates in Saskatoon for the ISFs last summer.

Not bad for a sport supposedly in palliative care for at least the last decade.

Why did they come?

Because there is nothing like top line fastpitch softball.

It’s fast, it’s explosive and it has a rich history.

This series of articles started with a reflection piece on the Aussie Steelers transformation from rookie to gold medallist.

But the role the international game has to play in the rebirthing is bigger than any one country, one organisation or even one event.

The landscape has changed since last summer.

The International Softball Federation (ISF) has moved all of their World Championships from a four-year to a two-year cycle.

The next under 19 boys event will be in 2012 (Argentina) with the men travelling to New Zealand in 2013.

The pressures that this will place are yet to be seen.

The regional qualification process which was implemented after the 1996 event in Midland, has capped current ISF World Championships to 16 teams and was designed primarily to stop the blowout of substandard teams entering the world’s leading event, while tightening up the qualification process for the Olympics.

The idea of events similar to Saskatoon’s highly successful version taking place every other summer is a mouth watering prospect.

The money required in this post Olympic era, though, to get 16 teams from around the world, is a concern.

Attracting host cites presents another potential concern, as tradition has it that the hosts cover the accommodation and meal costs of all participants- players and officials.

This formula delivered some challenging financial issues for the hosts in 2001 when Sydney hosted the under 19 boys event.

Most observers, including some insiders, would safely predict that the world’s number one softball nation (using current rankings), will steer clear of any hosting opportunities for a long time to come.

Participation at the recent Women’s ISF event required some innovative ideas including the Great Britain team winning their airline tickets in a competition.

Challenging times for the normally better-funded women’s national team programs leaves some to wonder how the men’s programs will cope.

If the biennial approach fails financially, an eight-team series featuring the top four placegetters from the preceding ISFs with the next top team from Asia, Africa, Europe and South America would sustain visibility and the tighter competition would be an easier sell to fans, sponsors and potential corporate partners.

Enough of the doom and gloom though – unlike many new products, the history book of the 44-year-old ISFs reads like a who’s who of the game Stofflett, Herlihy, White, Walford, Zack, Meredith and Sorenson.

The list goes on.

Arguably every well known player can be linked to the world’s premier event and it is the legends that give the event its stature.

Let’s not muck about here – if you could take a softball novice or potential investor to only one event, it would be the men’s ISF.

The sheer power and speed are unparalleled, while the patriotism of international play feeds the electric atmosphere.

Previously, I’ve written about both versions being at a crossroad; the post Olympic path for the women and the obvious need for reinvigoration with the men.

The prospect of Jennie Finch, until her retirement, last week facing off against Australia’s women and Adam Folkard going head-to-head with Team USA’s men in a double header at Oklahoma City was something to set the pulses racing.

The format ticks so many boxes from a marketing standpoint the best available product; a top line venue and a well known brand, credit to Finch and her team mates on the US national team.

They have marketed themselves better than anything the men have ever done bar the King and His Court four-man team.

Three hours, two international games, capacity crowd and the creation of a product that can be packaged and once established, sold to broadcasters across multiple territories.

What it does highlight is that both versions of the game bring more than a little to the table.

There is unquestionably no better time to unify the brilliance and skills of both sides of the game to ensure it survival.

Whatever the brand ASA, ISC or NAFA advocating across a cluttered sports market with one voice is a critical aspect.

Some will roll their eyes and see a landscape littered with problems.

Who gets top billing and plays second, the men or women?

Easy, rotate it.

The pitching plates at different distances.

Just interchange them.

Home run fences.

Depending on the venue, use portables or meet in the middle.

The potential is far more exciting than the triviality of the problems.

In 1999 at the Pan Am games, both the men and women featured.

Reportedly, the US men and women spent a reasonable amount of time talking about how they could pick each others pitches and the similarities of the game.

Imagine the master class for an observer as Michael White spoke about pitching with Lisa Fernandez and Dot Richardson talked hitting with Shawn Rychcik.

At a junior level, the prestige linked with the excitement of representing your nation is best captured in Disney’s 1994 hockey themed movie, The Mighty Ducks 2.

The pride in the USA stencilled across the chest inspires the same emotion as the maple leaf or silver fern for Canadian and Kiwi boys and girls.

It’s the beginning of the international pathway to the top of the tree.

Ryan Brand, Tyron McKinney, Rhys Casley, Andrew Kirkpatrick, Adam Folkard and Tyson Barkman are just some of those who have plied their wares at the Junior ISFs.

Interestingly, the first and second edition of the Junior ISFs in 1981 and 1985 featured both male and female play – side by side.

The key point of difference for the international game is that it does capture the attention of some of the less avid softball fans around the world and at times places the sport in the view of non softball followers.

The importance of ensuring that every time the best in the game meet, a deliberate effort to package the showdown as an event is paramount.

To play international matches in front of no more than a handful of fans is a wasted opportunity and one of the very few unforgivable acts the game’s administrators can commit.

Unforgivably it still happens too often.

Whatever it takes – the game must go to the people, before the people will come to the game.

Instead of playing the waiting game to see how the new international calendar looks, now is the perfect time to think long term and create another angle to market the highest standard of play to keep the game moving along.

Whether it is the male and female double header at ASA headquarters in Oklahoma or a Canada v USA series in the fabled ballparks of Kimberly, Midland, Saskatoon or Kitchener; well co-ordinated and promoted with high standards, the possibilities are endless.

It will take time and it will look different to how it looked in the “golden age” but that’s fine we live in different times.

An annual mini World Cup-styled event featuring the USA, Canada, Australia, NZ possibly Japan and a South American team during the northern hemisphere summer when many of the world’s leading players are already there would minimise costs.

In the right location, locked in for three years it would grow and attract large crowds.

Packaged correctly, it wouldn’t be out of place on ESPN and it could one day bankroll some of the other initiatives needed to restore the game to its former glory.

Provided they stand as one, 50,000 fans last summer can’t be wrong.

Live Ustream of 2010 Canadian Midget Boys Championship Tournament – Diamond 4

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010


Free video chat by Ustream

Ballparkradio Live Tonight from Stratford Ontario

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Kyle Smith/Ballparkradio will broadcast live tonight, from the Canadian Midget Boys Championships, Tuesday Aug 7, 2010 @ 7:00 pm EDT (4pm on the west coast)

Kyle is working on “one day’s rest”, just back from the Erie PA tournament where he broadcast this past weekend. Kyle will be broadcasting live each night this week, including the finale on Friday afternoon, and will be joined in the booth by Blair Setford and Joe Todd.

More great coverage from Ballparkradio.

The tournament is also streaming video via a live webcam on Ustream, and archiving games already played (the tournament started Sunday). Click here for links to the webcams, at two different diamonds, and note the archives of past games.

Be sure to check out the great website put together for the organizing committee for this tournament.

(Click logo below)


California, Utah teams win ASA Fastpitch national championships

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

From the Statesman Journal, Salem, Oregon


Bakersfield’s Eli Salazar slides under Italian Athletic Club pitcher Tyson Barkman for a run Sunday in the bottom of the seventh inning of the ASA Men’s A Fastpitch national championship at Wallace Marine Park. Italian Athletic Club of Stockton, Calif., beat Bakersfield, Calif., 6-5. (Timothy J. Gonzalez | Statesman Journal

Click here for some great photos of the tournaments.

BY BILL POEHLER • STATESMAN JOURNAL • AUGUST 2, 2010

The if-necessary games became necessary Sunday at Wallace Marine Park.

After losing in the first championship game Sunday, the Italian Athletic Club of Stockton, Calif., held off a late challenge from the Bakersfield Silverhawks of Bakersfield, Calif., to win 6-5 and clinch the ASA Men’s A Fastpitch national championship, the team’s second title in three years.

In C competition, Wasatch Properties of South Jordan, Utah, defeated Wolfpack of Las Cruces, N.M., 10-1 and 4-2 to win the ASA Men’s C Fastpitch national championship.

“This is my first time being at the ASA like this,” said Italian Athletic Club pitcher Tyson Barkman. “They beat us the game before. To stay ahead and win and grunt this out was definitely a big win.”

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Italian Athletic Club and Wasatch Properties ASA National Champs at “A” and “C”

Sunday, August 1st, 2010

The Italian Athletic Club nipped the Bakersfield Silverhawks 6-5 to claim the A/B National fastpitch championship Sunday at Wallace Marine Park in West Salem.

Meanwhile,Wasatch Properties downed the Wolfpack twice to win the C Western Nationals, 10-1 and 4-2.


Thanks to Kary Moore for this info.


Italian Athletic Club pitcher Tyson Barkman celebrates with teammate Dean Walter after they won the ASA Men’s A National fastpitch tournament against the Bakersfield Silverhawks 6-5, at Wallace Marine Park, on Sunday Aug. 1, 2010. (TIMOTHY J. GONZALEZ | Statesman Journal)

Italian Athletic Club, Wasatch Properties win titles at Wallace Marine Park fastpitch tournament

BY BILL POEHLER, STATESMAN JOURNAL • AUGUST 1, 2010

The Italian Athletic Club nipped the Bakersfield Silverhawks 6-5 to claim the A/B National fastpitch championship Sunday at Wallace Marine Park in West Salem.

Meanwhile,Wasatch Properties downed the Wolfpack twice to win the C Western Nationals.

Wasatch won the first game 10-1 and the second winner-take-all game 4-2.

Earlier Sunday behind the stellar pitching of Andrew Putnam, the Bakersfield (Calif.) Silverhawks defeated the Italian Athletic Club 8-1 to force a second game between the teams.

Putnam allowed four hits and one walk in six innings of pitching in the win. Eli Salazar and Robert Ramos both had two

Read more:

Cobourg wins OASA Great Lakes Tournament

Sunday, August 1st, 2010

Editor’s note: We’ve bumped this back up, as lots of Sunday scores to report – scroll to end as they are in chron order.

Click here for OASA photos, cap tip to Al’s Fastball.


Thanks to Blair Setford for this info.

Sat 9 am
Gm 5
Waterdown Hammer 3
St. Thomas Storm 0
WP Tim Neill 7inn 4hits 11Ks 2BB
LP Luke Leahy 6inn 3runs 5hits 2Ks
Waterdown Joe Thorton home run; Brett Witzel RBI; Tim Coe RBI

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Las Cruces NM Advances to title game at ASA “C” Nationals

Sunday, August 1st, 2010

LAS CRUCE NM, WOLFPACK ADVANCE TO CHAMPIONSHIP ROUND

LC Wolfpack have advanced to the championship round going 4-0. With a strong performance from pitcher Tony Mancha and a balances hitting attack, the Wolfpack beat JRW and Associates 2 -1.

They they came back on Thursday to defeat Houston Carnage 4-2. The Wolfpack then beat a stingy K-Club team 4-3. Saturday evening in one of their stranger games of the year. The Wolfpack started the first inning by putting up 9 runs against a strong Utah team with ex-Larry Miller Toyota players. Utah didnt die there putting up 10 runs within the next 3 innings. The Wolfpack were able to scratch two more runs in the sixth inning to win 11-10 an advance to the Class C Mens Championship game starting at 1:40pm.

Softball pitching legend Zack extends career to play with son

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

From the Star Phoenix
BY JORDAN HARTSHORN, THE STARPHOENIX JULY 31, 2010

During the course of our 10-minute chat, Darren Zack signed three autographs and shook hands will half-a-dozen other wellwishers. He greets all of them warmly, stranger or friend. Shouts of “Hey Big Zee” are met with a congenial smile of acknowledgment.

At 49 — 50 in August — Zack doesn’t look the part of a man who once dominated the softball scene, or one who could attract a fan following. He now boasts a balky knee under his 6-foot-4 frame and won’t be pinch running anytime soon.

But make no mistake about it — Zack is a rare, and towering talent of a pitcher, still relevant in his sport as he nears the half-century mark.

“There was a time when nobody could touch it,” said Zack, honest and not arrogant. “A couple years there I was swinging the ball hard.

“Time is catching up with me, man. It does hurt when you start off — the older you get the harder it is to get back into it.”

Zack is in town competing at the Canadian Native softball championship on the Whitecap Dakota First Nation. He’s competing with his hometown Garden River First Nation in Ontario in the senior men’s division. And while this team may represent the grassroots of his talents — he says he “grew up on the diamond” back home — he doesn’t lack for international renown.

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