Archive for the ‘ISF’ Category

Black Sox hail elite hitter

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

By TONY SMITH
The Press

Designated hitter Donny Hale joined an elite group when he clubbed a bases-loaded grand slam home run in the Black Sox’s world softball championships demolition of Denmark in Saskatoon.

Among the men mobbing Hale after his huge hit in the third inning was Black Sox assistant-coach Dave Workman, who slugged a grand slam homer in the same Canadian city 21 years ago.

“Dave was quick to tell Donny he’s now part of an elite club,” Black Sox pitching coach Jim Wana quipped after the 16-0 four-innings thumping.

Softball statisticians flicked through the record books last night to discover Hale was only the sixth New Zealander to hit a grand slam at a world championships.

Cliff Joseph was the first, against Hong Kong in 1984. Workman (versus Cuba) and Dave Wall (against the United States) did double damage in 1988, as did captain Jarrad Martin (South Africa) and Thomas Makea (Venezuela) in Christchurch in 2004.

Hale, who brought home Nathan Nukunuku, Travis Wilson and Martin yesterday, celebrated his feat by recording a perfect 1.000 batting average against the Danes, with three hits from three turns at bat.

It was Hale’s second home run of the tournament, and he finished the game with five RBIs (runs batted in).

Wilson whacked his fourth home run in Saskatoon and could have had a grand slam himself but two runners scored on the previous delivery, a wild pitch. The Black Sox collected 12 safe hits, with Hale backed by top-order men Makea and Nukunuku, who had two hits from three plate appearances. Makea also clouted a homer.

Denmark took just one safe hit off Black Sox pitcher Jeremy Manley.

However, pitching coach Wana was equally pleased that Manley appeared to be over the illegal pitching problem that had troubled him in the series.

Manley threw 56 pitches and was only called illegal once for an apparent breach of the rule requiring hurlers to hold the ball in the glove for two seconds before pitching.

Wana said the New Zealanders had worked hard to ensure they pitched legally but he felt the umpires were being “a little inconsistent” with some of their rulings.

However, he said “all teams are getting called, it’s not just us”.

Wana said New Zealand had such a strong hitting lineup that the umpiring crackdown on opposition pitching “was helping us more than it’s helping anyone else”.

The Black Sox have now scored 63 runs in five games and amassed 56 safe hits, including 15 home runs at an average of three per game.

Wilson has four and Hale, Makea, Nukunuku, Martin and outfielder Gareth Cook two each. Makea leads the batting averages with six hits from nine at-bats for a .667 average, followed by Wilson and Brad Rona (8/13 .615), Hale (7/13 .538), Nukunuku (8/16 .500) and Martin (6/14 .429). Wilson heads the RBIs stakes with 10, followed by Hale and Martin on nine with a gap to Rona and Makea on five.

The Black Sox, which play Mexico today in Pool A, and Canada, which squeezed out Venezuela 5-4 yesterday in Pool B, are the unbeaten teams.

Live Scoreboard at ISF Website

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Live scoreboard at the official ISF website.

Editor’s note: It does not auto-refresh, so you need to click refresh to see upates. (refresh, of course, being those two little arrows on your browser that make the page re-load)

Want more than the line score? Click here to get the links to Al Doran’s text play-by-play.


(Al Doran, fastball’s “go to” guy for all of the information on the XII World Championships, sitting right by home plate)

Champs Chatter – The official Newsletter of the ISF XII Men’s World Championship – Day 6 – July 22, 2009

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Click here to view PDF version of “Champs Chatter”, the official Newsletter of the ISF XII Men’s World Championship – Day 6 – July 22, 2009

Text version after the jump. (more…)

ISF Worlds – Looking Ahead

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Game of the day on Wednesday? That would have to be the 8:30pm game in Pool A between Great Britain and the USA. The USA has won four in a row after an opening night shellacking at the hands of New Zealand. Great Britain started slow, dropping their first two, including a one run loss to the Philippines that they wish they could have back, but has won three in a row since then, with the tournament’s biggest upset to date, the win over Japan Monday night. They showed some intestinal fortitude Tuesday with a come-from-behind win over Mexico Tuesday, after Mexico took a lead with a 4 run 5th inning.

The Great Britain v. USA game Wednesday has big medal round implications. Want to sneak peek to see who the two play Thursday? I’ll save you the trip:

UNITED STATES VS MEXICO
GREAT BRITAIN VS BOTSWANA

Let’s cut to the chase – New Zealand has been taking batting practice all week, waiting for the playoffs to begin, with the top spot locked up. Second place — and with it the all important “double life” is decided Wednesday night at 8:30pm. If Great Britain wins, then they will have beaten the other two teams who would have at least 2 losses, and would grab the 2 spot and double life, with the USA and Japan in 3rd and 4th.

A couple of people told me last fall that “Great Britain is a better team than people realize” . They have already proven that, most notably with the win over Japan. But they could take European softball to a whole new level with a win over their former colony Wednesday night.

If the USA wins, then 2nd is theirs and 3rd and 4th could be up for grabs amongst three or four teams, with Japan and Great Britain the favorites. But Great Britain’s lingering concern is that the opening day loss to the Philippines could come back to haunt them.

* Great Britain is 3-2 with games remaining against the USA and Botswana. Likely result, either 5-2 or 4-3. Great Britain beat Japan but lost to the Philippines.
* Japan, at 3-2, has the worst of it, playing New Zealand Thursday, after Denmark on Wednesday. Barring an upset of epic proportions, Japan finishes 4-3, or 3-4 if they stumble against Denmark. Japan beat the Philippines but lost to Great Britain.
* The Phillipines are 2-3, but play Botswana and Denmark, so likely 4-3 or 3-4. The Phillipines beat Great Britain but lost to Japan.
* Denmark is 2-3, with Japan and the Philippines left. Likely result is 3-4, or 2-5. Win out would put them at 4-3, but their hill appears the toughest to climb.

Pool A? The biggest game – other than Canada’s win over Australia was Tuesday night when Canada fought off Venezuela. Canada finishes with South Africa and Puerto Rico and should run the table, Australia holding the 2 spot and double life, while the South American countries, Venezuela and Argentina appear poised to grab the 3 and 4 spots. Venezuela has the easier road, playing the same two teams Wednesday and Thurdsay as Canada, just in reverse order, Puerto Rico and South Africa. Should Venezuela win out, they would finish pool play at 5-2. Argentina, on the other hand, still has to play Australia, and then a gimme versus Indonesia. Argentina could finish 3-4 and still get into the medal round. For Venezuela fans dreaming about Argentina upsetting Australia, and both clubs finishing 5-2 – remember that the Aussies drilled Venezuela on opening day, 7-0. The double lifes are going to Canada and Australia.

Have a different view? Email me, jim (at) fastpitchwest (dot) com

Click here to view past ISF World Champions

Botswana won’t go down quietly at world softball championship

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

From THE STARPHOENIX
BY KATHRYN WILLMS
JULY 22, 2009

It was quiet morning at the ballpark on Tuesday as the United States and Botswana took the field for the first game of the day. Fans settled in for a long day of ball, coffees in hand, chatting among themselves. Two hours later, the same crowd was on the edge of their seats as a 0-4 Botswana team took its best shot at upsetting the 3-1 Americans. A morning round-robin formality had morphed into an epic battle between David and Goliath.

The United States were the first to get on the board. Shortstop Don Garvey got his team’s first hit, a single, and then utilized his speed to round the bases in quick succession before stealing home. Botswana responded in the top of the third by loading the bases but pitcher Travis Price struck out the final batter to save his team’s lead. After another inning stalemate, Adam LaLonde was walked to first then hit home by a Kyle Magnusson single. Botswana launched its attack in the sixth. Gomolemo Tshelametsi hit a single to get on base and was brought home on a double by Obusitswe Lekgothu. Lekgothu would, in turn, swiftly steal third but U.S. closer Paul Koert delivered two easy outs at first and struck out a final batter to stem the Botswana tide. Botswana couldn’t manage the tying run in the seventh, leaving one batter on base at the close of the game. The Botswana team out-hit the Americans 3-2.

“Because we have been scouting on how these guys play and hit, we decided it’s not about striking out guys,” said Botswana’s starting pitcher Tony Moyo, who allowed two hits and struck out five. “Let’s hit the spots and play a defensive game. If we get guys on base, let’s turn it into runs.”

The only people not surprised at the tight contest were the Botswana players. Moyo confirms what everyone at Bob Van Impe came to realize on Tuesday morning: Botswana came to compete.

“The U.S. team, Denmark, Mexico, Philippines, Great Britain,” said Moyo, “they were actually teams that we had targeted to play brilliantly against. With five losses down, things haven’t gone our way. This game we said let’s go full out. We have nothing to lose.”

Botswana may have the worst record of the tournament — now 0-5 — but a careful review of their its round-robin games shows Moyo’s optimistic take is far from misplaced. All tournament, the Botswana team has kept games close, flashing potential on both sides of the plate and refusing to roll over in the face of even the most intimidating opponents. It lost to Denmark 4-1, Japan 9-4, Mexico 7-0 and New Zealand 10-0.

Winning pitcher Travis Price, who allowed three hits while striking out nine in six innings pitched, was giving props after the game, clearly relieved that the U.S. escaped its flat play to earn a win.

“We never take any team lightly,” he said. “Their starting pitcher kept us off balance. We played solid defence but they hung around. They’re a decent team.”

Botswana is refashioning itself as a spoiler for the remaining games of the round-robin. It takes on the Philippines today and Great Britain Thursday, two teams with long-shot playoff aspirations.

“Nobody should get it easy,” said Moyo. “A win for us will just justify that we qualified to come here.”

kwillms@sp.canwest.com

© Copyright (c) The StarPhoenix

Canada edges Venezuela in ISF Men’s World Championship Thriller

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

(Saskatoon,SK) – The Canadian Senior Men’s National Team showed a lot of character withanother come-from-behind victory against a tough opponent, as they came back from a 4-3 deficit to edge Venezuela 5-4. After Canada took 2-0 and 3-2 leads,Venezuela came back to take the lead and the momentum going into the sixth.Canada scored a pair of runs in the top of the sixth to regain the lead, andheld on for the victory in front of a raucous crowd.

Earlyin the game, Venezuela starting pitcher John Garcia and Canadian starter SeanWhitten (Maddox Cove, NL) shut down the opposing hitters, retiring the side inorder in each of the first two innings. In the top of the third, Jeff Ellsworth(St. Lawrence, PEI) registered the first hit of the game, lashing a single toright field. After being sacrificed to second on a bunt by Sean O’Brien (St.John’s, NL) and advancing to third on an illegal pitch, Ellsworth came in toscore on an infield single by Ryan Wolfe (Melbourne, ON), beating the throw ofthe shortstop. Keith Mackintosh (Melfort, SK) then hit a single to centerfieldto place runners on the corners, and Ian Fehrman (Townsend, ON) drove in a runwith a single through the right side past a diving second baseman, givingCanada a 2-0 lead.

Keepingup with Canada every step of the way, Venezuela scored two runs to tie thegame, both scoring on a homerun just over the fence in straightaway centerfieldby Rafael Flores. Canada broke the tie in the bottom of the fifth. Ryan Wolfeand Keith Mackintosh hit back-to-back singles before Fehrman ripped a single tothe right side of the infield, allowing Wolfe to score from second and givingCanada a 3-2 lead.

Afterpitching four solid innings, Whitten was relieved by Todd Martin (Bracebridge,ON) in the bottom of the fifth. Martin surrendered three straight singles asVenezuela produced two runs to take a 4-3 lead, which lead to Martin beingreplaced by Trevor Ethier (Saskatoon, SK), who struck out two batters to getout of the inning.

Inthe top of the sixth, Stephen Mullaley (Freshwater, NL) hit a fly ball toshallow centerfield, and the centerfielder seemed to have made a great divingcatch, but the ball popped out on the landing as Mullaley reached second on thedouble. Jeff Ellsworth then sacrificed Mullaley to third, and Sean O’Brien hita single to centerfield to push Mullaley to the plate to tie the game. With RobGiesbrecht (Landmark, MB) pinch-running for O’Brien, Dale Levy (St. Mary’s, ON)drilled a pinch-hit double to right that was misplayed by the right fielder,allowing Giesbrecht to score all the way from first, giving Canada the 5-4lead.

Afterthe first Venezuelan struck out in the bottom of the sixth, Joe Vilchez hustledinto second for a double, and was replaced by a pinch-runner, who moved up tothird on an illegal pitch. Ethier was able to force the next hitter to groundout to first without allowing the runner to score, followed by a huge strikeoutmuch to the delight of all of the fans in attendance. Ethier kept the momentumin the bottom of the seventh, striking out a hitter and forcing a ground outright back to him to end a very tight ballgame.

SeanWhitten pitched four solid innings for Canada, allowing two runs on only twohits with seven strikeouts. Todd Martin allowed two runs on three hits withoutrecording an out, while Trevor Ethier allowed only one hit over three inningsand struck out five. At the plate, Ryan Wolfe, Keith Mackintosh and Ian Fehrmanall collected two hits for Canada, while Stephen Mullaley, Jeff Ellsworth, SeanO’Brien and Dale Levy each added one.

Withthe win, Canada sits atop the Pool B standings with a 5-0 record, and will takeon South Africa (1-4) at 3:30pm on Wednesday.

Inother Day 5 action, the United States edged Botswana 2-1, Puerto Rico outscoredSouth Africa 16-7, New Zealand defeated Denmark 16-0, Argentina nipped theCzech Republic 2-1, Great Britain trimmed Mexico 7-6, Australia beat Indonesia10-0 and Japan defeated the Philippines by a score of 5-0.

Forgame results and tournament standings, please visit the tournament website at http://www.2009worldmensfastpitch.com/

Formore information, please contact:

GillesLeBlanc
Manager– Marketing and Communications
SoftballCanada
(613)797-7171
gleblanc@softball.ca

ISF Standings After Day 5

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009


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

Pool A

New Zealand 5-0

United States 4-1

Great Britain 3-2
Japan 3-2

Philippines 2-3
Denmark 2-3

Mexico 1-4

Botswana 0-5


Pool B

Canada 5-0

Australia 4-1

Venezuela 3-2
Argentina 3-2

Puerto Rico 2-3
Czech Republic 2-3

South Africa 1-4

Indonesia 0-5

(Top 4 teams from each pool qualify for the medal round)

XII ISF World Championship Day 5 – July 21

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009


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

Digital clock shows local Saskatoon time.

Day 5 schedule:

JULY 21, 2009

33 11:30AM UNITED STATES 2, BOTSWANA 1
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
34 1:00PM PUERTO RICO 16, SOUTH AFRICA 7
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
35 1:30PM NEW ZEALAND 16, DENMARK 0
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
36 3:00PM ARGENTINA 2, CZECH REPUBLIC 1
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
37 3:30PM GREAT BRITAIN 7, MEXICO 6
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
38 5:30PM AUSTRALIA 10, INDONESIA 0
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
39 6:30PM CANADA 5, VENEZUELA 4
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
40 8:30PM JAPAN 5, PHILIPPINES 0
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball

Follow all the action on Al’s Fastball. Al Doran is in Saskatoon, has the best seat in the house and is posting play-by-play updates throughout the tournament. Click logo below to go to his website, then click the links on the left hand side for each game.

Click here to see the view of the playing field that Al Doran enjoys.

Previous scores after the jump. (more…)

Matakauri’s YouTube Videos of ISF World

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Thanks to Mr. Matakauri for sharing his videos of the ISF on YouTube:

Opening Ceremonies

Black Sox vs Botswana
From: matakauri1 |
2009 World Mens Fastpitch Softball Champs. Brad Rona at bat scoring Donny Hale on base hit to centre field.


Canada vs Australia



Bostwana Dugout

New Zealand v. Great Britain
(You can probably tell who is up to bat !)

Champs Chatter – The official Newsletter of the ISF XII Men’s World Championship – Day 5 – July 21, 2009

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Click here to view “Champs Chatter”, the official Newsletter of the ISF XII Men’s World Championship – Day 5 – July 21, 2009