Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Maritime Fastball League makes return to capital

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

From The Guardian

Fawcetts host Fredericton, Brookfield this weekend
The Guardian

After eight years, the Maritime Fastball League makes its return to Charlottetown this weekend with six games.

The Hunter’s Ale House Fawcetts will host the Fredericton Fastpitch Club and the Brookfield Elks today and Sunday at City Diamond.

The Fawcetts recently completed their successful exhibition games with a 4-1-2 record.
They are hoping the league and selected tournaments will help them prepare for the 2009 national senior men’s fastpitch championship in St. Thomas, Ont.

Mike Bishop and Mitch Hardy will be toeing the rubber for the Fawcetts this weekend.
Both pitchers were dominant throughout the exhibition schedule.

Hot-hitting Chris Craig and Steven Larter will look to jump start the sluggish Fawcetts offence against some of the Maritime’s best pitching.

“The fans should expect low scoring tight ball games,” said the Fawcetts’ Mark Arsenault.
The Fawcetts will host team for the 2010 nationals.

This weekend’s schedule:

Today – 1 p.m., Fawcetts vs. Fredericton; 3 p.m., Fredericton vs. Brookfield; 5 p.m., Fawcetts vs. Brookfield.
Sunday – 10 a.m., Fawcetts vs. Fredericton; 12 p.m., Fredericton vs. Brookfield; 2 p.m., Fawcetts vs. Brookfield.

Player’s Eye View – NorCal Travel League – Stockton

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Here is another edition of “Player’s Eye View” , from our friend Kevin Nishinaga, writing about the recent Northern California travel league weekend. It’s a personal diary of sorts, so should be read in that context. Nonetheless, I thought players and fans would enjoy it.

Here’s an excerpt:

Game 2 for Saturday was against taylor farms, the team that won the best of the west tourney two weeks ago. They scored 8 in the top of the first, on two homeruns, two balls off the fence, another hit or two, and one error. I had a swinging bunt single to lead off our half of the first, but got thrown out trying to steal second. I think everybody but the umpire thought I was safe. I think the ump didn’t get a good look because the area around second was sooo powdery that when I hit the dirt there was huge dust cloud. I got a faceful of dirt like I’ve never had before. I made a few plays at short, but also mishandled a slow roller for an error that turned into a run. Later in the game I twice faced a pitcher who tried out for team USA this year. That guy threw really hard and I struck out the first time, grounded to third the second time. We lost 11-3, and I later found out that at least three of the guys they had there play for team USA — Stephen Pinocchio, Nate Devine, and Chase Turner? (http://www.usasoftball.com/folders.asp?uid=4604). I think in the one game our pitcher gave up 3 homeruns and at least 5 balls that either hit the fence or one-hopped it. And the fences there are pretty deep, ~300 ft. I was 1 for 3 in game 2.

Click here for the entire post.

Editor’s note: Kevin, add Marcus Tan to that list of Team USA players on the California A’s. They will be playing at the ISC World Tournament in August. No shortage of talent on that club.

Thanks also to Kevin for some additional scores, for his “Fat City” team:

Fat City 9, Rude Pac 5
Taylor Farms 11, Fat City 3
Rockers 8, Fat City 0

Fat City 12, Rez Dawgs 5
Fat City 10, Funky Monkey 3
Fat City 10, Nielsen Gamblers 8

Fat City competed against “B” teams on Saturday and wound up winning the “C” division.

Click here for our earlier post with other Stockton scores, for the California A’s Taylor Farms team.

Click here for our earlier edition of “Player’s Eye View” of the Best of the West tournament in Santa Barbara.

Editor’s note: We invite others who blog or write about their fastpitch experiences to submit material for “Player’s Eye View”. Send to jim (at) fastpitchwest (dot) com.

Aramark captures first-half title

Friday, June 19th, 2009


(click logo for original news story)

June 18, 2009 by YH-R Sports

YAKIMA, Wash. — Carl Apts’ suicide squeeze bunt in the bottom of the 10th inning brought home Jason Schiebner with the winning run as the Aramark Monsters edged JRW & Associates 3-2 at Gateway Complex on Wednesday night to capture the Yakima Adult Men’s Fastpitch first-half title.

Dave Drotzmann, last year’s International Softball Congress Division II MVP while pitching for a California team that won the national championship, struck out 16 for JRW & Associates. Aramark finished the first half with an 8-2 record to 7-3 for JRW.

JRW 000 002 000 0 — 2 7 1
Aramark 010 010 000 1 — 3 2 2

Dave Drotzman and Grow; Sam Karr, Mark Seward (6) and Root.
Highlights: Drotzman (JRW) 91/3 IP, 16 K, 2 BB; Tim Fischer (JRW) 4-5, 3 3b; Karr (A) 52/3 IP, 4 H, 9 K, 0 BB, 1 ER; Seward (A) 32/3 IP, 3 H, 0 R.

June 16 ISC Rankings – Kitchener still the 1

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Rank Team Name

1 Kitchener Rivershark Twins

2 Broken Bow Patsy’s
3 Aspen Interiors
4 The Farm
5 Jarvis Gamblers
6 Midwest Stampede
7 Vancouver Grey Sox
8 Allbaugh, Inc
9 Midland Explorers
10 St. Thomas Centennials
11 Dominican Republic
12 Pueblo Bandits
13 NY Gremlins
14 Dolan & Murphy
15 Kegel Black Knights
16 Owen Sound
17 Quad City Sox
18 Bar of Appleton
19 Saskatoon D’Backs
20 California A’s
21 Bar of Green Bay
22 Thomson Merchants
23 Ashland Mets
24 Winterset A’s

Grant back for another inning

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009


(click logo for original news story)

By WAYNE MARTIN – The Nelson Mail


SHOOTING HIGH: New Zealand Black Sox pitcher Marty Grant is hoping to claim his fourth title at the world softball championships in Canada.

It’s nice to feel wanted.

That’s part of the reason why seasoned Nelson softballer Marty Grant will be on the plane with his Black Sox team-mates in two weeks bound for the world championships in Saskatoon, Canada.

The 42-year-old world champion pitcher is heading to his fifth world series and bidding to become one of an elite group of Black Sox to have claimed four world crowns.

Former captain and catcher Mark Sorenson is the only Black Sox player to date to have achieved the honour, although joining Grant in Saskatoon are coach Eddie Kohlhase and players Jarrad Martin and Thomas Makea all have three wins to their name.

It’s significant for Grant on another count too after he officially retired from international softball in 2006. Or so he thought.

Instead, the continuing lure of playing on the world’s biggest stage and a timely approach from the Black Sox coaching staff have encouraged Grant to make one more bid for title No4. But this time, he stresses, will definitely be his last as a player.

It was by no means a straightforward decision to commit himself to another campaign.

It has meant months of hard work, usually on his own, and some occasional self doubt as he’s tried to muster the enthusiasm and energy to keep himself on course.

There have also been some significant personal challenges, with his wife Abbie now recovering from successful breast cancer surgery, as softball has sometimes been forced into the background.

Injury stopped him from playing in New Zealand’s 2004 triumph in Christchurch, although he remained an important part of the squad, and Canada would now be an appropriate way for Grant to sign off on a remarkable international career that began back in 1992.

“After 2004, the prospect of trying to play at the top level for another five years was one of the things that challenged me,” he said.

“At that time, I didn’t really know whether I had it in me to be competitive year in and year out. In the last two years since I’ve come out of retirement, I’ve sort of been a little more selective in my play and still being able to coach and be involved with the family has given me the opportunity to turn up at the airport in two weeks’ time and head off to these world champs.

“I guess it was more about managing my career a little.”

Grant is now the senior hand among a Black Sox pitching roster that includes rising star Jeremy Manley, former Samoan international Heine Shannon and youngster Thomas Enoka. He’ll be the oldest pitcher to represent New Zealand at a world series, beating Kevin Herlihy’s bid as a 40 year old in 1984.

“I’m reasonably surprised about how well the body’s holding up and my role’s changed a bit, I guess, in the team,” he said.

“At one time I was the starter and the man they gave the ball to, but now my role’s changed where, if we get in any trouble, I’m more of a relief role.”

He’s excited about the prospects of a team he describes as experienced, athletic and extremely fit.

He’s also enthusiastic about the team’s strike power.

“We can hit. The hitting lineup of this team is as good as it was in 2004 and I think we averaged eight or nine runs a game at that tournament. Anyone who’s facing that lineup is going to have to be on guard.

“We’ve also got great defence and we’ve got solid pitching. And we’ve got belief, so I think that it’s a very strong team. It’s my belief and I think Eddie would agree with this, too that there’s an opportunity for this team to go on and win many more in the next decade if that’s what they want to do.”

The Black Sox head to Canada on June 28 and complete a 14-game buildup in Toronto before the opening pitch is hurled in Saskatoon on July 17.

Winning is important for Grant, and a big part of that process is being mentally prepared.

Memories of his first failed world series bid in Manila 17 years ago are branded indelibly into his psyche.

“We’ve been honest in our analysis of ourselves as a team and with regards to sport, you’ve got to have that edge and the edge is having that mental preparation and that desire and not looking too far forward and making sure that we do the little things right.”

Editor’s note:

I first saw Marty Grant pitch twenty years ago, at the 1989 ISC World Tournament in Kimberly, Wisconsin. He was a youngster of 22 then, just arriving in the U.S. and the phenom pitching for the local Green Bay club, All Car Wisconsin, if memory serves me. The fans turned out in droves to see the young kid from New Zealand pitch. Twenty years later, in 2008, there was Marty again, dazzling the hitters on the main diamond at Sunset Park, Kimberly, Wisconsin, at the ISC World Tournament. He was pitching in that one for the So Cal Bombers, enroute to a sixth place finish overall. Marty earned second team All World honors in that one, showing that at the age of 42, he can still perform at the highest level of the game.

-Jim Flanagan

Bids for Olympic Softball, other sports for 2016

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009


(click banner for original news story)

A lot at stake for these games
By John Powers
Globe Staff / June 16, 2009

Though the voting won’t take place until October, this is a crucial week for the four remaining bid cities for the 2016 Olympics and the seven sports vying for two places on the program. For the first time, the vast majority of International Olympic Committee members (an estimated 94 of 107) will get briefings and a chance to question the candidate cities at the Swiss headquarters in Lausanne well before they have to make a decision at their annual session. Unlike at voting time, this week’s activities will have “no heads of states, no flashy videos, no presentation of fancy athletes,” says IOC president Jacques Rogge.

Still, it’s a priceless chance for the contenders to do some lobbying and for the sports federations to make their case to the IOC’s executive board, which will choose two of them in August for the main body to approve this fall. While baseball and softball, both lopped off after Beijing, have gotten most of the attention, golf and seven-a-side rugby have the inside track, according to the IOC program commission’s evaluation. With the IOC reportedly preferring one individual and one team sport open to both genders, those two both fit the bill, particularly considering the criteria – wide appeal, universality (i.e. practiced globally), inexpensive infrastructure, no doping.

Golf, which last was on the program in 1904, would offer 72-hole competition for 60 men and women with the world’s top 15 players given automatic berths, would arrange its tour schedules around the Games and employ nearby courses. “To be the first gold medal winner in 112 years? Definitely,” said Colin Montgomerie, who says he’d play at 53. Rugby, dropped after 1924, would have tournaments for both genders using existing stadia. Each of the other five sports has a drawback. Softball and baseball require separate (and unique) facilities. Karate would be the third martial art (judo and taekwondo) on the program, squash televises poorly and roller sports aren’t universal. If the membership turns thumbs-down on the two proposed sports, the others will be reconsidered.

(more…)

Hotel Info for GlowWorm Tournament – San Antonio TX

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Here is the hotel information for the glowworm tournament:

please go to http://cwp.marriott.com/satap/glowworm/
or call 1-800-marriott

there are two hotels:

Residence Inn San Antonio Airport

1014 NE Loop 410
San Antonio, Texas 78209 USA
Phone: 1-210-805-8118 starting @ 99.00

Courtyard San Antonio Airport
8615 Broadway Street
San Antonio, Texas 78217 USA
Phone: 1-210-828-7200 starting at 89.99

If you have any question about the hotel or tournament please call me (210)854-6409

Thanks
Ruben Rios

Softball Olympic pitch feels like a hit for 2016

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Editor’s note: A different point of view here than in another article on the subject.


(click logo for original news story)

Softball team getting ready to go to bat
LAURA WALDEN / Sports Features Communications

LAUSANNE, Jun. 16: ‘Team Softball’ was confident it had done its best in the presentation to the IOC executive in pursuit of a return to the Olympic Games programme in 2016.

ISF president Don Porter said: “The presentation went very well and we’re quietly confident. The culture and aspirations of the International Softball Federation and those of the IOC are indivisible. We share a common culture … and the same DNA.

“Softball shares all of the IOC’s principles. They are part of our DNA, not just adopted for special occasions such as today.”

Accompanying the president were BackSoftball co-chair and member of the IOC Women in Sport Commission Donna de Varona; Malaysia’s Low Beng Choo, ISF deputy secretary-general; South Africa’s Lynn Alexander, international athlete and coach; Danielle Stewart, Australian Olympic bronze medalist at Beijing 2008; and Gergana Hanjiyska, Bulgarian softball federation secretary general, coach and player.

Softball had been in the Olympics from 1996 to 2008 but was voted off the Games roster in 2005 at the IOC Session in Singapore. The sport has grown considerably since then and created notable opportunities for women on the African continent and the Middle East.

Handjiyska, athlete ambassador from Bulgaria, said: “I guess you could say that I am typical of the new breed of national softball administrators in the 21st century. We bring modern-day skills, attitudes, and influences to our work and the promotion of our sport.”

The presentation included updates on the opening of three regional training centres, peak Japanese viewing figures of the gold medal game in Beijing 2008, the inclusion of a world class men’s fast pitch Olympic competition and a full wheelchair competition for the Paralympic Games in 2016.

The team reminded the board of the clean doping record of no positive tests at the Olympics since the sport’s debut 12 years earlier at the Atlanta Games.

Decisions on the two sports to be put forward for consideration on the vote will be decided in Berlin August 13-14 during the next IOC executive board.

Keywords: ISF, Don Porter, Donna de Varona, Low Beng Choo, Lynn Alexander, Danielle Stewart, Handjiyska,

For more information contact:

Laura Walden (lwalden@sportsfeatures.com)
Keir Radnedge (kradnedge@sportsfeatures.com)

Portland Rose Cup and Classic Tournaments

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

2009 Rose Cup
June 20/21 – Delta Park
ISC & ISC II Qualifier

Teams:
Midwest Stampede – Bondurant, IA
Vancouver Grey Sox – Vancouver, B.C.
Columbia River Rockers – Portland, OR
Innovative Communications – Salt Lake City, Utah

Saturday June 20th Schedule:
Columbia River Rockers vs Vancouver Grey Sox – 8:30am Jubitz Field
Innovative Communications vs Midwest Stampede – 8:30am Pepsi Field
Vancouver Grey Sox vs Innovative Communications -10:30am Jubitz Field
Columbia River Rockers vs Midwest Stampede 12:30pm – Jubitz Field
Columbia River Rockers vs Innovative Communications – 2:30pm Pepsi Field
Vancouver Grey Sox vs Midwest Stampede – 4:30pm Jubitz Field

Sunday June 21st Schedule:
#1 seed vs #4 seed – 9:00am Jubitz Field
#2 seed vs #3 seed – 9:00am Pepsi Field
Championship Game- 11:00am Jubitz Field

2009 Portland Classic
June 21/22 – Delta Park
B/C Division

Teams:

Group A
Cleon’s Auto – Seattle, WA
Pirates – Portland, OR
JRW & Associates – Yakima, WA

Group B
S/O Bandits – Medford, OR
R.C. Merchants – Portland, OR
Yakima Gamblers – Yakima, WA

Saturday June 20th Schedule:
Cleons vs JRW – 8:30am M&W Field
Cleons vs Pirates – 10:30am M&W Field
Pirates vs JRW – 12:30pm M&W Field
Bandits vs Merchants – 8:30am Budweiser Field
Gamblers vs Merchants – 10:30am Budweiser Field
Bandits vs Gamblers – 12:30pm Budweiser Field
——Cross Over Games—–
Cleons vs Bandits – 2:30pm Budweiser Field
JRW vs Merchants – 2:30pm M&W Field
Pirates vs Gamblers – 4:30pm

Sunday June 21st Schedule:
#4 seed vs #6 seed – 8:30am Budweiser Field
#3 seed vs #5 seed – 8:30am M&W Field
#1 seed vs 4/6 winner – 10:30am Budweiser Field
#2 seed vs 3/5 winner – 10:30am M&W Field
Championship Game – 12:30pm M&W Field

Golf, rugby and roller sports outpacing softball in Olympics Bid

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Click here for original news story.

The 15-member board will meet in Berlin on Aug. 13-14 to choose two sports to submit for ratification by the full membership in Copenhagen.

Baseball and softball are seeking a return to the Olympics after being voted off the program for the 2012 London Games in 2005. The five others failed to get enough votes in 2005 for Olympic inclusion.

The IOC program commission has been evaluating the seven sports, attending their major events and assessing their strengths and weaknesses.

Golf and rugby sevens have received the highest reviews from the panel, a senior Olympic official with direct knowledge of the findings told the AP. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the report has not been completed or made public, said roller sports figured higher than baseball and softball.

Still, the decision in August will be up to the executive board, making Monday’s presentations crucial.

“It’s a very open race,” Rogge said. “There are supporters of all seven sports both inside and outside the EB (executive board). I can say any of the seven would be good in the Olympic program.”

He said the IOC is looking beyond the individual merits of each sport.

“We are looking for an added value — wide appeal, especially for young people, universality, whether infrastructure is costly or not,” Rogge said. “And, first and foremost, there must be a big fight against doping. This is a very important aspect.

“We also are looking to see if the sport or two sports fit well into the puzzle of the Olympic program. Do they bring something extra to the cohesion of the Olympic program?”

Golf is bringing retired Swedish great Annika Sorenstam, winner of 10 majors, and European Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie to push its case.

Softball’s team in Lausanne includes American star Jessica Mendoza, an Olympic gold and silver medallist who has been helping develop the sport in the Middle East and other areas.

“One of our biggest strengths is that the Olympics is the pinnacle of our sport,” she said. “Little girls grow up dreaming of becoming an Olympian.

“An athlete’s goal is to represent your country in the Olympic Games. Adding 120 female athletes to the docket also does a lot for equality in the Olympics.