Archive for the ‘ISF’ Category

MEN’S WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP BROADCASTS TO 60 COUNTRIES

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Eurosport 2, Maori TV, and Rogers Sportsnet to deliver medal games

Plant City, Florida (USA); 29th July 2009: Another facet of the BackSoftball blueprint is being highlighted as international networks have come onboard to carry telecasts of the medal games from the International Softball Federation’s XII Men’s World Championship that has just been played in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan (Canada).

The announcement comes just one week after the conclusion of the World Cup of Softball 4 tournament from which the ESPN family of networks televised seven games to 146 countries and since the two medal games of the softball competition at the World Games in Taiwan were broadcast on TV as well.

Eurosport 2 will show the Men’s World Championship’s gold medal game to 46 countries throughout Europe plus twelve more in the Asia/Pacific region. In addition, the game will be simulcast on mobile devices. Maori Television in New Zealand will carry both the bronze and gold medal games. Rogers Sportsnet will also be showing both medal games throughout Canada.

All three of these networks’ telecasts will be on a tape-delay basis and scheduling is being done to provide multiple airings, with the first airing to take place today when Rogers shows the bronze medal game between Canada and New Zealand.

“As part of our BackSoftball campaign blueprint we have said that we would work to achieve greater television coverage for our sport around the world,” said ISF President Don Porter. “Through the cooperation and dedication of these networks that will be highlighting our marquee men’s event, plus the others that have just recently shown women’s competitions, we are significantly accomplishing exactly that.

“We appreciate their support, which is allowing well over 50 million people around the world to be exposed to our sport, in at least eleven different languages.”

Mathieu Lozar, Head of Eurosport 2 programming, said, “We are delighted to broadcast the Men’s Softball World Championship gold medal game on Eurosport 2 and Eurosport Asia-Pacific this year. Softball joins a growing list of exciting team sports, such as lacrosse, basketball, and volleyball, on Eurosport 2, and coverage of this final demonstrates our commitment to bringing European viewers the best in sporting action.”

“Rogers Sportsnet is thrilled to add the ISF XII Men’s World Championships to our lineup,” said Dave Akande, Vice-President, Content, Rogers Sportsnet. “It affords us the opportunity to offer international softball to our audience.”

“We are proud to be broadcasters of this year’s World Softball Championship held in Saskatoon, Canada,” said Maori Television Head of Programming Eruera Morgan. “Softball has been an integral part of our sports schedule for the last two years and to have this year’s world championships on our screen will definitely magnify our coverage of the sport.

“We have supported softball like no other broadcaster in the world has, because of our continuous success rate and high Maori participation in the sport at all levels.”

Maori Television is also having a one-hour documentary produced for them to air about the New Zealand Black Sox. That country’s national team had gone to Saskatoon as the defending ISF men’s world champions.

Softball was first featured in the Olympic Games in Atlanta in 1996 and last year’s competition in Beijing was very successful with a total attendance close to 180,000 and a continuation of the sport’s excellent record of no positive doping tests at any of the four Summer Olympics that the sport has been a part of.

A final decision on which sports will be added to the current roster of 26 at the 2016 Summer Olympic Games will be made at the 121st IOC Session in Copenhagen in October this year. The ISF has included a proposal for men’s fast pitch softball to be included in the Games as well.

Further information is available in the OTHER DOCUMENTS section of www.BackSoftball.com

For more information please contact ISF Director of Communications Bruce Wawrzyniak at brucew@internationalsoftball.com, +1 813 864 0100 or +1 813 453 8762 or David Alexander at David.Alexander@Calacus.com or +44 7802 412424.

‘Outstanding’ Marty Grant goes out a winner

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009


By TONY SMITH
The Press


GRANT’S GOODBYE: New Zealand pitcher Marty Grant hurls down one of his last pitches at the world softball championships in Saskatoon.

Black Sox coach Eddie Kohlhase has advised his senior players to let the disappointment of losing their world title dissipate before calling “time” on their international softball careers.

But veteran pitcher Marty Grant, 43, has already said the Saskatoon world series was likely to be his last after a New Zealand career stretching back 19 years.

Kohlhase put aside the sadness of failing to win a fourth world crown to lavishly praise Grant, of Nelson, who pitched the Black Sox into yesterday’s final with a 8-5 win over bronze medallists Canada.

“If that’s the last game Marty pitches [for New Zealand], then I couldn’t actually script a better finish for him. He was outstanding.

“I think [his career] has been immense. He’s been phenomenal for us the last couple of years [since coming out of retirement].”

Grant, who pitched a no-hitter when the Black Sox won the 2000 world final, now “rates right up there with the best we’ve ever had”, said Kohlhase, citing a galaxy of star pitchers such as Kevin Herlihy, Owen Walford, Michael White and Chubb Tangaroa.

“He’s in fantastic company. Marty’s a very proud New Zealander, a very emotional man, who takes great pride in putting on the black top.”

Grant, who missed the 2004 tournament victory through injury, wanted to go out a winner in Saskatoon in front of his wife Abbie, who has survived breast cancer surgery, and his son Cooper, 5.

He did as the Black Sox beat Canada with Grant throwing 112 pitches for four strikeouts and seven safe hits.

Kohlhase said Grant was available for the final but the coaches felt it was “asking too much for him to front up again after he went the whole game against Canada”.

They had “two fresh pitchers” in Heinie Shannon and Jeremy Manley and had started with left-hander Shannon.

“We wanted a good start and we saw Heinie as a guy who could hit good spots.”

Kohlhase said New Zealand’s pitching was a little inconsistent at times during the week but he felt Shannon and Manley had done reasonably well in the final.

The defeat is the end of an era for the Black Sox, who had won three consecutive gold medals since 1996.

Many of the key players, including captain Jarrad Martin, Thomas Makea, Brad Rona and Donny Hale, are in their mid-30s.

Kohlhase expects “a few of these guys will probably finish” before the next world championships in 2013.

Kohlhase said the loss did not change the fact “that this is a very good side”.

“To climb the mountain four times, for some of them, is such a huge ask. I don’t think people really appreciate the psychological effort that’s gone into them being here and performing like they have done this week.”

XII ISF World Championship – Complete Recap

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Non-stop Coverage for 10 Consecutive Day for the Fastball World by Al’s Fastball


(Al Doran, fastball’s “go to” guy for all of the information on the XII World Championships.

A huge thank you to Al Doran for his “wall-to-wall” coverage of the XII ISF Championships for the fastball world. A quick perusal of the recaps below give you an idea of his dedication to the game – every game – every batter – as it happened. We’ve been able to follow the action for the past 10 days thanks to Al. Whether we were at work, catching scores on our cell phones, or clicking that refresh button again and again as we held our breath for our favorite team – we could count on one thing – Al Doran would be there for us.

If you wish to send along your thanks, you can drop him at line, fastball (at) pmihrm (dot) com

Day 1 Results – FRIDAY JULY 17

1 10:00AM , DENMARK 4, BOTSWANA 1
2 11:00AM PHILIPPINES 4, GREAT BRITAIN 3
Click here for details of Games 1 and 2 at Al’s Fastball
3 12:00PM CZECH REPUBLIC 8, SOUTH AFRICA 6
4 1:00PM AUSTRALIA 7, VENEZUELA 0
Click here for details of games 3 and 4 at Al’s Fastball
5 2:00PM PUERTO RICO 9, INDONESIA 0
6 3:00PM JAPAN 10, MEXICO 3
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7 7:00PM CANADA 8, ARGENTINA 1
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8 9:00PM NEW ZEALAND 15, UNITED STATES 0
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Day 2 Results – SATURDAY JULY 18

9 11:30AM VENEZUELA 11 ARGENTINA 0
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10 1:00PM UNITED STATES 7 DENMARK 0
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11 1:30PM JAPAN 9 BOTSWANA 4
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12 3:00PM SOUTH AFRICA 7 INDONESIA 0
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13 3:30PM NEW ZEALAND 14 GREAT BRITAIN 0
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14 5:30PM PHILIPPINES 7 MEXICO 4
15 6:30PM CANADA 9 CZECH REPUBLIC 2
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16 8:30PM AUSTRALIA 10 PUERTO RICO 0
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Day 3 Results – SUNDAY JULY 19

17. 11:30am ARGENTINA 8, SOUTH AFRICA 0
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18. 1:00pm CZECH REPUBLIC 11, PUERTO RICO 4
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19. 1:30pm MEXICO 7, BOTSWANA 0
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20. 3:00pm GREAT BRITAIN 4, DENMARK 0
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21. 3:30pm CANADA 9, AUSTRALIA 6
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22. 5:30pm VENEZUELA 18, INDONESIA 0
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23. 6:30pm UNITED STATES 3, JAPAN 0
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24. 8:30pm NEW ZEALAND 8, PHILIPPINES 1 (5 inn)
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Day 4 Results – MONDAY, JULY 20

25 11:30AM AUSTRALIA 11, SOUTH AFRICA 2
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26 1:00PM DENMARK 6, MEXICO 4
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27 1:30PM UNITED STATES 9, PHILIPPINES 4
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28 3:00PM GREAT BRITAIN 4, JAPAN 3
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29 3:30PM ARGENTINA 8 , PUERTO RICO 6
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30 5:30PM NEW ZEALAND 10, BOTSWANA 0
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31 6:30PM CANADA 9, INDONESIA 0
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32 8:30PM VENEZUELA 9, CZECH REPUBLIC 2
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Day 5 Results – JULY 21, 2009

33 11:30AM UNITED STATES 2, BOTSWANA 1
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34 1:00PM PUERTO RICO 16, SOUTH AFRICA 7
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35 1:30PM NEW ZEALAND 16, DENMARK 0
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36 3:00PM ARGENTINA 2, CZECH REPUBLIC 1
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37 3:30PM GREAT BRITAIN 7, MEXICO 6
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38 5:30PM AUSTRALIA 10, INDONESIA 0
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39 6:30PM CANADA 5, VENEZUELA 4
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40 8:30PM JAPAN 5, PHILIPPINES 0
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Day 6 Results – WEDNESDAY JULY 22

41 11:30AM ARGENTINA 15, INDONESIA 1
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42 1:00PM PHILIPPINES 4, BOTSWANA 0
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43 1:30PM AUSTRALIA 5, CZECH REPUBLIC 1
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44 3:00PM JAPAN 14, DENMARK 7
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45 3:30PM CANADA 7, SOUTH AFRICA 0
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46 5:30PM VENEZUELA 13, PUERTO RICO 2
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47 6:30PM NEW ZEALAND 13, MEXICO 1
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48 8:30PM UNITED STATES 7, GREAT BRITAIN 6
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Day 7 Results THURSDAY JULY 23
(last day of pool play – playoffs begin Friday)

49 11:30AM DENMARK 2, PHILIPPINES 0
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50 1:00PM CZECH REPUBLIC 12, INDONESIA 5
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51 1:30PM UNITED STATES 10, MEXICO 5
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52 3:00PM BOTSWANA 5, GREAT BRITAIN 1
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53 3:30PM AUSTRALIA 8, ARGENTINA 0
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54 5:30PM VENEZUELA 10, SOUTH AFRICA 1
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55 6:30PM CANADA 8, PUERTO RICO 1
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56 8:30PM NEW ZEALAND 5, JAPAN 3
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Day 8 Results – FRIDAY JULY 24
(First day of playoffs)

C1 1:00PM A3 VS B4 Japan 7, Argentina 6
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C2 3:30PM B3 VS A4 Venezuela 10, Great Britain 3
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C3 6:30PM A1 VS B2 Australia 7, New Zealand 0
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C4 8:30PM B1 VS A2 Canada vs. USA
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Day 9 Results – SATURDAY JULY 25
(Second day of playoffs)

C5 1:00PM WINNER C3 NEW ZEALAND 10, LOSER C1 JAPAN 6, 8 inn.
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C6 3:30PM WINNER C4 USA 8, LOSER C2 VENEZUELA 1, 6 inn.
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C7 6:30PM WINNER C3 AUSTRALIA 2 WINNER C4 CANADA 0
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C8 8:30PM WINNER C5 NEW ZEALAND 7, VS WINNER C6 USA 3
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Day 10 Restults = SUNDAY JULY 26

BRONZE MEDAL GAME:
C9 12:00PM WINNER C8 NEW ZEALAND VS LOSER C7 CANADA
Click here for play-by-play details at Al’s Fastball.

C10 3:00PM WINNER C9 VS WINNER C7 NEW ZEALAND v. AUSTRALIA
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Australia no-hits New Zealand in world men’s softball final

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

Oh, no! Oh, yes! Australia no-hits New Zealand in world men’s softball final

BY KATHRYN WILLMS,
THESTARPHOENIX.COM

Adam Folkard pitched a no-hitter as Australia ended the reign of New Zealand on Sunday in Saskatoon, winning the ISF World Men’s Softball Championship. Photograph by: Greg Pender and Liam Richards, The StarPhoenix

SASKATOON — As Australia and New Zealand prepared to do battle in the world softball championship final, the question of the day was whether Australia’s young pitching studs, Adam Folkard and Andrew Kirkpatrick, could quell the explosive Kiwi bats once and for all.

Folkard answered that question all on his own.

The 22-year-old pitched a no-hitter to propel his team from a modest place in the annals of softball history to the top of the world. The upstart Aussie side stomped all over the old world order, the three-time defending champion Kiwis, to win its first gold medal.

“It’s great,” said Folkard, in characteristic understatement, before deflecting the praise. “The fielders were great. It’s got to come back to them as well.”



Australia ended the reign of New Zealand on Sunday in Saskatoon, winning the ISF World Men’s Softball Championship. Photograph by: Greg Pender and Liam Richards, The StarPhoenix

The Australian team established itself as a contender early in the tournament, going 6-1 in the round-robin, but broke from the pack after defeating its toughest competition, New Zealand 7-0 on Friday night and Canada 2-0 Saturday.

Folkard and coach Bob Harrow admit that they probably surprised a lot of people by upsetting the favourites, but that had been the plan all along. Harrow says this team is 20 years in the making, from the days when Australia imported Canadian pitchers to show them the ropes. Years later, they’re seeing the payoff in the best generation of young pitchers in the world and their first gold.

“I was quietly confident that we could do it,” said Harrow. “These guys have been put together, molded.”

After 10 days of heart-breaking losses and miraculous recoveries, the championship came down to Round 2 of a classic battle of the Pacific. Two nights before, Australia and New Zealand had faced off for the first time. The result changed the entire course of the tournament. In six innings, Australia devastated the Black Sox both physically and mentally. Folkard kept New Zealand to one hit Friday as the Kiwis, looking like shells of their former selves, struggled on routine infield plays, committed errors and, more worryingly, never got their aggressive hitting game off the ground.

While Australia advanced to beat Canada enroute to making the final, the loss propelled the Black Sox down the path of most resistence. To make the final, they played heart-stoppers against Japan, the United States and Canada, eliminating all three teams to be the last one standing. Their signature swagger gone, the Sox worked themselves back into form with every at-bat, every inning, every game. When they took the field on Sunday afternoon, they had played nine hours of ball in just more than a day, but finally looked strong. The well-rested Australian squad hardly seemed to notice.

Lead off hitter Thomas Makea nearly destroyed Folkard’s no-hitter from the top, walking on his first at-bat and reaching third before the inning ended. It was downhill from there. The Kiwis would reach base only one more time, on a walk, before being stopped in their tracks.

The Aussies, meanwhile, took advantage of some early Black Sox fielding errors to take the lead. Nick Shailes scored in the second off an errant throw to third. He struck again in the fourth after getting on base on a fielding error. The Aussies continued to jack up their lead , but Tyron Bartorillo put the nail in the coffin with a home run in the bottom of the sixth inning. Folkard struck out three in a row, bringing his game tally to 10, to end the game in the top of the seventh. Heinie Shannon, who allowed three runs, one earned, on four hits, took the loss.

The Kiwi side accepted the blow stoically as they shook hands with their rivals.

“Second is a bitter pill to swallow,” admitted head coach Eddie Kohlhase. “Five years of planning . . . It’s a funny old game, but today, they deserved to win a world championship.”

Kohlhase pointed out New Zealand’s Michael White was the last pitcher to deliver a no-hitter in the final. It was 1996, in the game against Canada that started the Kiwi’s three-championship run.

Brad Rona, the Kiwi third baseman who distinguished himself as one of the best hitters in the tournament with a 76 on-base percentage, didn’t want to think about the fact that that era is over.

“(The silver medal) won’t go on the mantle piece,” he said with a grin. “It’ll be tucked away where I’ll never see it again.”

kwillms@sp.canwest.com

© Copyright (c) The StarPhoenix


Team Australia celebrated a gold-medal on Sunday in Saskatoon at the ISF World Men’s Softball ChampionshipPhotograph by: Liam Richards, The StarPhoenix

Canada settles for softball bronze

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

From the National Post
By Darren Zary, Canwest News Service


Team Canada saluted their fans following their tournament-ending loss versus New Zealand at the ISF World Men’s Softball Championship in Saskatoon
Photograph by: Liam Richards, The StarPhoenix

Canada loses to New Zealand in semi-final of men’s softball worlds

SASKATOON — To counter New Zealand’s traditional Haka warrior dance, Team Canada players and coaches wrapped arms around shoulders in the pitching circle and together sang an inspiring rendition of O Canada on Sunday.

However, the home-run trot, not the Haka dance, would prove to be Canada’s demise.

The defending world champion Kiwis erupted for six runs in the bottom of the fifth inning – including three homers during a span of four batters – to erase a 4-2 deficit for a 8-5 victory before an estimated crowd of 5,000 fans at Bob Van Impe Stadium.

Australia defeated New Zealand 5-0 in the final.

It was the same song and dance for the Canucks, who settled for bronze with the loss as they closed out their 2009 International Softball Federation world championship run.

“It all happened in a hurry,” Team Canada coach Mark Smith said of New Zealand’s big fifth inning. “They’re a team that really feeds on their own momentum. They’re world champions for a reason.

“They do this over and over. They believe in themselves. They’re a very well-coached team. They’re disciplined. There’s no shame in being beat by a team like that. Offensively, they can take the ball out of the park, (Nos.) 1 through 9 in the lineup.

“If you give up eight runs, you’re going to lose the ball game. We scored five and, normally, that’s enough to win. It wasn’t today.”

A week of sunshine may have left them with a bronze tan, but the Canucks were looking for a slightly different colour of medal Sunday, playing the ISF world softball championship in their home country.

It wasn’t to be. The Kiwis made sure of that.

“They’re the best hitting team in the world and they proved that today,” said Team Canada infielder Keith Mackintosh, whose team had lost its first of two playoff lives with a 2-0 loss to Australia on Saturday night.

“We were really let down after [Saturday’s loss]. We felt we had a really good opportunity to put ourselves in a really good spot … But it is what it is. We threw it all on the field and left it there.”

Canada jumped ahead 1-0 on a solo homer by their top hitter of the tournament, Ian Fehrman. New Zealand answered right back in the bottom of the inning with a pair of runs off Canadian starter Sean Whitten, thanks to a double by Nathan Nukunuku and RBI single by Brad Rona.

Canada made it 2-2 in the third on an RBI single by Ian Fehrman and later went up 4-2 in the top of the fifth when Fehrman smacked a two-out shot down the first-base line to score a pair of runners, Jeff Ellsworth and Ryan Wolfe.

“I may have had a good week, personally, by putting the ball in play most of the time and a few key hits, but we came up a little short at the other end,” said Fehrman, who was 4-for-4 with two RBIs at the plate.

Todd Martin, who replaced Whitten, had a solid outing going until the bottom of the fifth when he gave up back-to-back homers to Nukunuku and Jarrad Martin before walking Rona. Dean Holoien faced two batters in relief, giving up a two-run blast on his first pitch to Donny Hale and single to Travis Wilson. All of a sudden, it was 6-4.

Patrick Shannon hit a single up the middle and Daniel Milne stoked a double off reliever Trevor Ethier to finish the assault and give the Kiwis a commanding 8-4 lead.

“That was the difference,” said Fehrman. “We had just put a rally together and took a two-run lead and then put together their big inning there. We were playing catch-up ball all week and we just couldn’t do it anymore.

“We left a few too many guys on. Against a good team like that, you’ve got to make it count.”

Canada cut the lead to three when Jody Eidt’s double in the sixth scored Derek Mayson, but that’s where it ended.

“We came from behind so many times this week that it didn’t really bother us,” said Eidt. “We could have folded up the tent, but we scored the next inning and gave it everything we had.

“If you at the scoreboard, we scored in four different innings. If you would have told us, before the game, we could do that, we’d be happy with that.”

Marty Grant pitched a complete game for New Zealand, allowing seven hits, three walks and striking out four.

Dean Holoien, who gave up two runs and two hits while facing just two hitters, suffered the loss. Ethier allowed two hits and struck out two in two innings of relief work.

“With a lineup like that, they can explode on you at any time and they did that,” said Ethier.

“It’s tough. No question it’s disappointing.”

Saskatoon Star Phoenix

Aussie Gold !

Sunday, July 26th, 2009


Australia 5, New Zealand 0

Gold – Australia
Silver – New Zealand
Bronze – Canada


(click logo to visit the official ISF XII World Championships website)


(Al Doran, fastball’s “go to” guy for all of the information on the XII World Championships.

ISF XXII World Championship – New Zealand v. Australia in Gold Medal Game

Sunday, July 26th, 2009


New Zealand vs. Australia for the gold.


(click logo to visit the official ISF XII World Championships website)


(Al Doran, fastball’s “go to” guy for all of the information on the XII World Championships.


Digital clock shows local Saskatoon time. Editor’s note: Projected game start time: 4:45 pm Saskatoon time.

ISF XXII World Championship – New Zealand Tops Canada in Bronze Medal Game

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

New Zealand topped Canada, 8-5 on the strength of a 6 run outburst in the 5th inning and advances to play Australia for the gold.

Bronze to Canada.

ISF XXII World Championship – Day 10 – July 26 – Final Day !

Sunday, July 26th, 2009


(click logo to visit the official ISF XII World Championships website)

Digital clock shows local Saskatoon time.

SUNDAY JULY 26

BRONZE MEDAL GAME:
C9 12:00PM WINNER C8 NEW ZEALAND VS LOSER C7 CANADA
Click here for play-by-play details at Al’s Fastball.

* Editor’s note: Game started about an hour late, at 1:05pm instead of 12:00 noon, due to a little bit of rain this morning. It’s underway now, though.

C10 3:00PM WINNER C9 VS WINNER C7 NEW ZEALAND v. AUSTRALIA
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball

A World Champion is crowned !


(Al Doran, fastball’s “go to” guy for all of the information on the XII World Championships.

Champs Chatter – The official Newsletter of the ISF XII Men’s World Championship – Day 10 – July 26, 2009

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

PLAYOFF EDITION – FINAL DAY

Click here to view PDF version of “Champs Chatter”, the official Newsletter of the ISF XII Men’s World Championship – Day 10- July 265, 2009.