Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Maddy’s Photos of a different kind

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

It is no secret that Maddy is my favorite fastpitch photographer. Readers of this column have shared kind words about her work as well, and have noted some of her other “special event” work posted at her website, www.maddysphotos.com.

Though it’s not fastpitch, I thought I would share a link to her most recent work, and her blog post about it, called “When Walls Come Tumbling Down”. I’ll leave it to Maddy to tell the story. (click link above for blog post).

Link to the gallery itself is at the end of Maddy’s blog post. (“Walls” above)

Update: Thursday evening, November 12, 2009: Maddy’s Photos of this event are now featured on the BizBash.com website. Click logo below to view article and photos there.

ASA Announces Hosts for 2010

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Thanks to B.Ree for the updated list of ASA National tournaments for 2010:

Men’s Class A Fast Pitch – Salem, Ore.

Men’s Class B Fast Pitch – Salem, Ore.

Men’s Class C West Fast Pitch – Salem, Ore.

Men’s Class C East Fast Pitch – Owensboro, Ken.

Men’s 40-Over Fast Pitch – Prescott, Az.

Men’s 45-Over Fast Pitch – Fresno, Ca.

Men’s 50 –Over Fast Pitch – Prescott, Az.

Newfoundland Softballer to Carry Olympic Torch

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Flame arrives in province today; will be in metro area on Friday
http://www.thetelegram.com/index.cfm?sid=302177&sc=83

JOHN BROWNE
The Telegram

Local softball legend Ross Crocker hasn’t decided if he is going to walk, jog or run when he gets to carry his 2010 Olympic torch for 300 metres in Mount Pearl on Friday.

“I’m going to do what I’ve got to do,” he said with a laugh.

Crocker joked that his first concern is “running that far.” Making sure he doesn’t drop it “might be number two,” added the Softball Canada Hall of Famer.

But then his remarks took on a more serious tone.

“It’s a big deal … a great honour,” said Crocker. “Until you actually do it, it’s hard to describe your feeling.”

Crocker, a Molson Brewery employee, was one of only 10 people from across the country chosen by the brewery to become a torchbearer.

“To be selected by your co-workers and to be able to carry the torch on behalf of all of them is quite the honour,” added Crocker, who will get to keep the torch that he will be carrying from Roosevelt Avenue to Commonwealth Avenue sometime around noon.

Details of the St. John’s and area portion of the run were announced at a news conference Tuesday at St. John’s City Hall.

A number of province’s most prominent sports personalities will participate in the Olympic Torch Relay, which gets underway around 7 a.m. at Cape Spear.

Besides Crocker, some of the others taking part are Paralympic swimmer Katarina Roxon from Stephenville and provincial rugby coach Dr. Pat Parfrey of St. John’s.

Roxon says being a torchbearer is “the opportunity of a lifetime.”

“I am absolutely thrilled, honoured and humbled to participate in such an extraordinary event,” said Roxon, the youngest member of the Canadian team to compete in the 2008 Beijing Paralympics. She will carry the torch during the Bowring Park celebration portion of the run.

The Olympic flame, which arrives in Labrador City-Wabush today, will spend five days visiting 41 communities in this province. The relay will involve 330 torchbearers throughout Newfoundland and Labrador, finishing up in Port aux Basques on Sunday.

“Growing up in this beautiful province has been one of the greatest blessings and experiences that life has offered to me,” said Roxon, who is training to try and make the London 2012 team “I realize this each time I travel outside this province. It is truly an honour to represent this province on the world stage and now to carry the 2010 Olympic Torch is by far one of the greatest highlights of my life and swimming career.

“I would like to especially thank God, my family, supporters over the years, the swimming family in Newfoundland and Labrador and Swimming Canada for the various opportunities and support provided to me.”

The Olympic flame will visit 10 communities in St. John’s and area including Cape Spear, Petty Harbour, Goulds, Conception Bay South, Manuels, Chamberlains, Topsail, Paradise and Mount Pearl.

On Friday, after the flame makes an appearance at the Cape Spear National Park, it heads for a dory ride in Petty Harbour. The torch will be at O’Donel High School in Mount Pearl at 11 a.m.

At 2:10 p.m., well-known provincial curler Mike Adam will slide down the ice with the Olympic torch at the Re/Max (St. John’s Curling Club). Then the torch is off to Quidi Vidi Lake for a brief spin in a rowing shell at 3:20 p.m. before it heads to Signal Hill at 4 p.m.

The major celebration in St. John’s will be begin 5 p.m. at Bowring Park, where Parfrey will light the community cauldron.

The Honourable Gary Lunn Minister of State (Sport) will be on hand for the ceremony, along with Premier Danny Williams and St. John’s Mayor Danny Williams. Entertainment will include Masterless Men, Gregory Charles Choir and East Rock Crew.

Overall, the Olympic Torch Relay will cover 45,000 kilometres in its 106-day journey across Canada, making it the longest domestic relay in Olympic history. The relay will visit over 1,000 communities and places of interest.

jbrowne@thetelegram.com

Decatur Shootout 2010 – June 18-20

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Decatur, IL

The Decatur Pride will be hosting the 2010 Decatur Shootout June 18-20 at Borg Warner Field in Decatur, Illinois. We are looking for 8-10 teams with a round robin/playoff style format that will be determined based on the number of entrants. All teams will be guaranteed 4 games.

Any ISC or ISC II along with ASA Major and ASA Class A teams are welcome. Interested teams should be able to play on Friday night if at all possible with both diamonds being utilized.

We will be partnering with our local Convention & Visitors Bureau to obtain discounted lodging for out of area teams. We are also currently working on corporate sponsorship for this event and hope to have an announcement soon.

Any interested teams should contact Scott Standerfer at the email address below for further information.

Scott Standerfer
Decatur Pride Softball
standerfer(@)mchsi.com

Olympic flame arrives in Canada in advance of Vancouver Games

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

A non-fastpitch sports story – and salute to our friends in Vancouver –

From the Los Angeles Times

The Olympic flame completed its journey from Greece and landed in Canada early this morning. The first two torchbearers were two-time speed-skating gold medalist Catriona Le May Doan and triathlete Simon Whitfield, who won gold for Canada at the 2000 Sydney Games and silver at Beijing in 2008.

They handed it off to rower Silke Laumann, a three-time Olympic medalist, and diver Alexandre Despatie, a two-time medalist and the first Canadian man to win an Olympic diving medal.

The Vancouver Olympic website has a nifty section about the torch relay, with an interactive map, videos and stories on some of the 12,000 folks who will carry the torch across the country and back in time for the Feb. 12 Opening Ceremony.

Among the higher-profile torchbearers: NHL standout Sidney Crosby, who is scheduled to carry the flame in his home province of Nova Scotia on Nov. 18. Crosby was left off Canada’s Olympic team for the 2006 Turin Games but that won’t happen this time.

— Helene Elliott

Bat maker found liable for player’s death

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

After 12 hours of deliberation, a jury sided with the parents of former Miles City American Legion baseball pitcher Brandon Patch in a civil suit over the player’s death during a 2003 game in Helena.

Aluminum bat maker Hillerich & Bradsby Co. failed to provide adequate warning as to the dangers of the bat used by a Helena Senators player during the game, at least eight of the 12 Lewis and Clark County jurors agreed Wednesday.

Hillerich & Bradsby Co. was ordered to pay $792,000 to Patch’s estate, which is represented by his mother, Debbie Patch, who filed the suit. Those funds were allotted to cover the lost earnings Patch would have made had he lived, and the pain he suffered from the injury before he died about four hours after being struck in the temple with a batted ball.

“This was for Brandon and the kids on the field,” Debbie Patch said after hearing the ruling. “We just hoped we could get the truth out for more people to see.”

In the verdict read in District Judge Kathy Seeley’s courtroom, the jurors found the company, which makes Louisville Slugger bats, liable for failing to warn users of the danger of its aluminum bats and that this failure caused the accident that killed 18-year-old Patch.

A third decision was that the bat was not defective. Attorneys representing Debbie Patch argued during the week-long trial that the bat used on July 25, 2003, was defective because it was more dangerous than the average user would expect.

Another $58,000 was awarded by the five-man, seven-woman jury to parents Debbie and Duane Patch for their mental grief and funeral expenses. The original suit, filed in June 2006, did not seek a specified amount.
Duane Patch shook and sobbed as the verdict was read. He clutched his wife in an embrace as they both wiped tears, and he repeatedly pointed to the sky, as if to his son.

“That’s a grand slam,” Duane Patch said as he hugged one of the family’s attorneys.

Debbie Patch said they went into the suit unsure but hoping to prevail. When the jury went into a second day of deliberation, she wasn’t sure if that would be in her favor. She said it was never about the money.

“We just want to save someone else’s life,” Debbie Patch explained, adding she hopes other players and parents now will get adequate warning about the dangers she perceives with aluminum bats.

While the Patch family doesn’t have set plans for the funds, there has been talk of putting on a wooden-bat tournament in Miles City. That American Legion team, the Mavericks, only uses wood bats now.
“We should go back to the way baseball is supposed to be played,” she said.

All teams should use wooden bats, the way professional players do, Debbie Patch added. Aluminum bats have been scrutinized because of the internal wall structure and because their weight is more evenly distributed than wooden ones, making them easier to swing harder and faster.

Attorneys for Hillerich & Bradsby Co. argued any other bat would not have hit the ball differently; in fact, they said, most bats on the market at the time would have struck the ball harder. Patch’s death was a tragic accident, they said. The defense lawyers declined comment after the verdict was read.

Baseballs hit with aluminum bats, such as the one used in that American Legion game, only give pitchers milliseconds to respond in a defensive stance, the plaintiffs said. Plaintiff’s attorney Joe White said the average time needed by a pitcher to defend a batted ball is 400 milliseconds. Patch had 378 milliseconds to respond, he said.

Eyewitnesses called by the plaintiffs said they could not see the ball between the time it left the bat and when it ricocheted off Patch’s head. Patch collapsed on the mound. He died as a result of his injuries about four hours later.

“Brandon was with us,” Debbie Patch said. “No. 11 showed up all of the time. He knows I wouldn’t stop.”

Reporter Angela Brandt: 447-4078 or angela.brandt@helenair.com

Boys of Summer – July 9 – 11, 2010

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

October 27, 2009
Denmark, WI USA

Hello all,
The Boys of Summer Tournament has always invited back the teams from the previous year to compete in this prestigious event. We again invite all 2009 participants back and you will be given priority over any new
entries. With the depletion of the field of teams at the ISC level over the last couple of seasons, I suspect there will be some holes to fill.

At this point, it is undetermined how many teams will be accepted, so if you are interested, please respond with your intent at your convenience. For any team or fan that has been to this event, it would be hard to argue that it is the strongest regular season tournament each summer. Our intent is to keep it that way.

Thanks for all your interest.

July 9 – 11
Boys of Summer – Denmark and Circle Tap, WI
Amount of Teams based on interest
Format: Round Robin into single elimination
Entry fee: TBD
Contact: Zakk Flash – zakkflash@greenbaynet.com – 920-676-2448
UIC: Hank St. Clair – hstclair@ameritech.net – 216-533-5209

Zakk
zakkflash(at)greenbaynet.com

Possible ISC Changes For 2010 Season

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

With the recent influx of notices of teams ceasing operations for 2010, the ISC is taking steps to ensure that the ISC World Tournament remains a healthy and viable event that has appeal for teams, fans, host cities and the ISC.

Any proposed changes will require approval by both the ISC Executive Committee and then the full ISC Board of Directors. Our goal is to have this process completed and announced in the next five weeks.

Without going into specifics, some or all of the following may be impacted:
* PRAWN rules for 2010
* Out of Region fees
* Berth allocations to our five regions for Qualifying tournaments
* Team rankings
* Structure of both the ISC World Tournament and the ISC II Tournament of Champions

Because of the above, we suggest that teams take the above into consideration in discussions with prospective players until everyone knows exactly what changes will be implemented.

We are committed to making an announcement as quickly as possible.

Ken Hackmeister
Executive Director
www.iscfastpitch.com

Zack, Sorenson headline ISF HoF + World Championships every two years

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Two items of note that we want to draw your attention to in particular from the ISF Congress in Venezuela.

The first is the election of the legendary Darren Zack to the ISF Hall of Fame. Darren, who will be inducted into Softball Canada’s Hall of Fame in November and will become a member of the ISC Hall of Fame next August, won ISF gold in 1992 and two silver medals in 1996 and 2004.

Congratulations Darren!

Joining Darren will be Mark Sorenson, the former captain of the New Zealand Black Sox. Mark won triple ISF Gold in 1996, 2000 and in 2004 at home in Christchurch.

Congratulations Mark!

Also, we note with interest that the ISF passed a Canadian motion that calls for World Championships to be played every two years in every category, beginning in 2012. The schedule will see Women’s and Junior Men’s in 2012 (even years) and then Men’s and Junior Women’s in 2013 (odd years). With North Shore City, New Zealand being named the host of the 2013 Men’s World Championship, we eagerly look forward to seeing who will be the host in 2015.

Keeping York County’s softball history alive

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Former York County fastpitch softball players still meet to share stories from their glory days.
By DAVE SOTTILE
Daily Record/Sunday News




Former men’s fastpitch softball player Dave Lehr played in various York County leagues when he was younger. Now he has embarked on a mission to preserve the sport’s history from the 1940s up to the 1980s. (Daily Record/Sunday News – Bil Bowden)

When the thought popped into Don Runkle’s head, he wasn’t completely sold on it.
Years had gone by, many more years than some would care to acknowledge.

Even so, Runkle wondered if decades later, would men’s fastpitch softball players from the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s in York County consider getting together for a reunion?

“It was just sort of a wild idea I had,” Runkle said. “We all played ball together for many, many years. We weren’t all on the same teams, but we played in the same leagues. We knew the same people.”

So in 2006, Runkle organized a softball old-timers luncheon for veterans of York County’s community, church and industrial fastpitch leagues.

And to his surprise, the idea caught on and has turned into a regular occurrence.

“We had 18 guys show up that first time,” said Runkle, a Dover resident. “Since then, things have just sort of mushroomed. It’s not always the same people, but we meet every three months. We have the fellowship of being together and swapping stories.

“When we got together at the end of September, we had 33 people in attendance. We look at it as our third anniversary group picture.”

Among those who show up at the Old Country Buffet restaurant in York for each gathering is Dave Lehr, who pitched for various teams from the mid-60s through the early years of the 80s.

“I guess you could say I’m the youngest of the old-timers since I’m only 61,” said Lehr, who started off as a bat boy 50 years ago for some of the other

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players who attend the luncheons. “I was born and raised in York on Vander Avenue in a row home, and my backyard extended was Girard Park.
“That was the home field for Stambaugh’s and Girard A.A., so I grew up around the guys such as John Erney, Dick Rawlinson and George Powell, three of the greatest players our area has ever known.”

The softball old-timers meet on the first Monday of the month every three months.

“Dave is the youngest, and our oldest guest is Tom Horn, who’s 92,” Runkle said. “The majority of the guys are in their late 70s and early 80s, and I’m 81.”

Runkle played baseball, too, back in his day. In fact, he saw time with the Susquehanna League’s Frysville squad in 1949, but softball was his love. He spent more than 20 years patrolling outfields for teams in the Industrial League.

“Met-Ed had a team. Caterpillar had a team. There was a team sponsored by the York Wallpaper, Co., where I started,” Runkle said. “We probably had somewhere between eight and 12 teams in the Industrial League, and the Community League had more teams.

“A lot of the guys played softball well into their 40s, but I had to get out around 36 because my knees just couldn’t take it anymore.”

Although he stood just 5-feet, 4-inches tall, Lehr was a pitcher who learned from a master in Erney — the Columbia resident and York County legend — who was inducted into the Pennsylvania Softball Hall of Fame in 1984.

“I was always pestering him with questions like, ‘How do you grip the ball to throw a rise? How do you grip it to throw a drop?'” Lehr said. “He told me, ‘Put the ball where you want it when you want it’ and that was the key to being a successful pitcher.”

His love of fastpitch softball has sparked Lehr’s pursuit of compiling a memory book, something he wants to share with others.

“I came across some scrapbooks from back in the day, five of them full of newspaper clippings and photographs,” Lehr said. “I’m trying to make copies of all the stuff for all of the guys who come to our meetings.

“Someone needs to preserve the history of men’s fastpitch softball around here. We’re talking about a four-decade span of time from the late 1940s through the mid-1980s.”

Lehr’s plans for comprehensive look back at men’s fastpitch softball in York County took a back seat to his health, though, during the summer, when he underwent a heart transplant.

“A year and one day to the day of my second heart bypass surgery, I get the call from the University of Maryland at 3:45 in the morning saying, ‘Get down here. We’ve got a heart for you,'” Lehr said. “I was on the waiting list since Dec. 9 and had the surgery on June 19.”

Lehr spent 24 days in the hospital before being released. Now that he’s feeling better, he expects to pick up his work on the softball history project.

In fact, earlier this week, Lehr, Runkle and nearly a dozen other members of their group traveled to Sunbury, site of the Pa. State Softball Hall of Fame.

It’s the common love of the sport — even after all these years — that keeps the former players gathering together.

“We get together for the friendship and the camaraderie, but I like the guys to share stories, too,” Lehr said. “I came on board in the fall of 2006, and Don Runkle said to me, ‘Dave, I don’t know how to get these guys to respond and open up when they get there.’ I said, ‘I’ll take care of that.’

“So I told them, ‘We want you to share some stories. If you won’t, you’re going to have to listen to me, because I have them.’ I was definitely blessed with the gift of gab.”