Ballparkradio Interview with Great Britain’s Coach Russ Snow

July 22nd, 2009



(Russ Snow, coach of Great Britain’s ISF squad)

Click here to listen to a brief (podcast) interview with Great Britain coach Russ Snow, on Ballparkradio.com.

Jim Flanagan of Ballparkradio caught up with Russ Snow, while he and fellow coach Dave Chavez were driving over to the ballpark for their big game tonight against the USA. Russ and Jim were teammates on the Vista Bombers from 1990-1993. Russ went on thereafter to pitch for the Long Beach Painters and Larry Miller Toyota in additional ISC World Tournaments, and then won several national ASA Masters titles in the Masters division.

Russ’s wife lived and had a business in England, so Russ found himself splitting time between the USA and Great Britain. He discovered the European leagues, or perhaps it discovered him. The end result was Russ pitching, and later coaching there, for club teams, and eventually, the National team. His squad took third in the European championships last summer, behind Denmark and the Czech Republic, but has them positioned to be the only European team to make the playoffs in the XII ISF World Championships.

The interview is relatively short, but we hope you enjoy it.

The file is a standard *.wav file and should play automatically on any Windows computer. (Give it a moment to load and open Windows Media Player)

Click here to view other posts at Fastpitchwest about Russ Snow. Regular readers of the Morning Brief may recall Russ being the subject of some news stories about the fires that burned his ranch in Escondido.

Editor’s note: Someone asked me if Ballparkradio was in Saskatoon. The answer is no, we did the interview by phone.

XII ISF World Championship Day 6 – July 22

July 22nd, 2009


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

Digital clock shows local Saskatoon time.

WEDNESDAY JULY 22

41 11:30AM ARGENTINA 15, INDONESIA 1
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
42 1:00PM PHILIPPINES 4, BOTSWANA 0
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43 1:30PM AUSTRALIA 5, CZECH REPUBLIC 1
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
44 3:00PM JAPAN 14, DENMARK 7
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
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
Click here for details at Al’s Fastball
48 8:30PM UNITED STATES VS GREAT BRITAIN
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.


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

Previous scores after the jump. Read the rest of this entry »

Looking Ahead – Part II

July 22nd, 2009

We continue our look ahead at the playoff possibilities on Day 6, the second to the last day of pool play. Click here to view “Looking Ahead – Part 1”

News as we go on Wednesday, July 22, 2009, the second to last day of pool play:

(Pool B) * Argentina defeated Indonesia today, a game that they were expected to win and did. Argentina now at 4-2, with a big game against Australia tomorrow. The Argentines will finish no worse than 4-3 and appear playoff bound after an 0-2 start. Likely seed: B4.

(Pool B) * Australia beat Czech Republic, 5-1 today, so goes to the final day of pool play with a 5-1 record. Last opponent of pool play is Argentina. At best, AUS goes 6-1, at worst 5-2. Makes the AUS v. ARG game Thursday interesting, since ARG now 4-2. An Argentine win would give them the same record, and a head to head win over AUS. Australia will enter the game as the favorite, and can lock up the 2 spot and double life with a win. Likely seed: B2

(Pool A) * Philippines beat Botswana, 4-0 today, so that evens the ledger for them at 3-3 with Denmark on tap for tomorrow. Four teams with fewer losses than the Philippines (NZ, USA, GB and JAP) Japan (3-2) has to face NZ Thursday, and Great Britain (3-2) has to play the USA, so it’s conceivable that Japan, GB and Philippines could all wind up with 4-3 records, with two of the three advancing to the playoffs. All eyes on the USA v. GB game tonight at 8:30 pm. Great Britain is hot, coming off an upset of Japan and a come-from behind win over Mexico, while the USA, despite their now impressive 4-1 record, barely slipped past Botswana 2-1 yesterday and appeared flat, at least offensively. Likely seed: A3, A4 or none. [GB v. USA game with big implications]

(Pool B) * Canada mercy ruled South Africa, 7-0 this afternoon, to run their record to 6-0, with Puerto Rico tomorrow. They have locked up the top seed, which means that the two unbeatens, New Zealand and Canada would not face each other unless in the finals, a repeat of the 2004 ISF title game. Canada got a couple of scares from Australia and Venezuela, so will have to approach each game with those in mind. They are certainly more battle tested than the Black Sox, who are still looking for anyone to give them a game. Seed: B1

(Pool A) * Japan rallied from down 6-3 to beat Denmark 14-7 this evening. That improves their record to 4-2 and may save their spot in the playoffs. They’ll face New Zealand tomorrow, so likely finish 4-3. All eyes on GB v. USA. Likely seed: A3 or A4, depending on the USA/GB game.

(Pool A) * The USA (4-1) squad has rebounded nicely since that opening night rout at the hands of New Zealand. Pete Turner’s squad has reeled off four straight wins, including a big one over Japan, and a strong pitching performance to beat a tough Botswana team yesterday, 2-1. Though winless, Botswana has two strong pitchers and has been “in” most every game they’ve played. The USA controls their own destiny for the playoffs, and can grab the other coveted “double life” alongside New Zealand by beating Great Britain tonight. Likely seed: A2

(Pool A) * Great Britain (3-2) plays the biggest game ever for its program tonight against the USA. A win would give them the 2 spot and double life — remarkable for a team that was not on anyone’s radar coming in to the tournament and an outside chance of making the playoffs. Great Britain barely qualified for the tournament, finishing third in Europe behind Denmark and Czech Republic. Both of those teams appear to be out of playoff contention, while the Brits are enjoying the time of their life, and coming into tonight’s game with some momentum having won three in a row after starting 0-2 with losses to the Philippines and New Zealand. Likely seed: A3 or A4, depending on tonight’s game

See the next post in Morning Brief for a podcast of brief interview with Great Britain’s coach, Russ Snow, a special to Ballparkradio. The interview took place by phone, as coach Snow was headed to the main complex for tonight’s game.

As of early Wednesday evening, 6pm Saskatoon time:

Pool A Notes:

1. New Zealand – 5-0 – in a league of their own, at least in this pool
2. USA – 4-1, big game vs. Great Britain tonight
3. Great Britain – 3-2 – big game vs. USA tonight
4. Japan, 4-2, New Zealand tomorrow

5. The Phillipines are 3-3 with Denmark left, so they’ll finish either 4-3 or 3-4. Their game vs. Denmark is a “Must Win” to have a shot at sneaking in. The Phillipines beat Great Britain but lost to Japan. They’ll need the stars to align to get in:
*USA win over Great Britain Wednesday night
* New Zealand win over Japan Thursday
* Win by Philippines over Denmark Thursday

That would leave Japan, Great Britain and the Philippines all 4-3, with only two of the three advancing, based on tie breaker formula.

Pool B Notes:

1. Canada, 6-0, locked up top spot, plays Puerto Rico.
2. Australia 5-1, plays Argentina Thursday. A win Thursday locks up the 2 spot and a double life. A loss throw things in disarray.
3. Argentina, won Wed, now 4-2, Australia tomorrow. If Aussie continue strong play, Argentina falls to 4-3.
4. Venezuela is 3-2, with Puerto Rico and South Africa remaining (Venezuela beat Argentina). Venezuela likely to finish at 5-2 and wind up as the 3 seed.

Standings After Day 5 after the jump. Read the rest of this entry »

ISF World Championships on Twitter

July 22nd, 2009

Need to catch up on the XII ISF World Championships ?

Click Twitter logo below and scan the headlines.

Not familiar with Twitter? Read more at our earlier post “Tweet Tweet”. In short, it’s short messages with fastpitch news – which you can read online, respond to, and/or get directly on your cell phone’s text messaging system.


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

Matakauri’s ISF YouTube-a-Palooza

July 22nd, 2009

XII ISF World Championship YouTube videos from the Matakauri Channel. He’s everywhere !

(Click YouTube logo below)

Black Sox hail elite hitter

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

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)

Western Canadian Bantam Championship

July 22nd, 2009

Ball players make the switch to Fastpitch at Western Canadian Bantam Championship

From The Daily Graphic

Posted By Eric MacKenzie

The Toba U16 softball team will act as host for this weekend’s Western Canadian Bantam Boys Fastpitch Championships at the John Blumberg Softball Complex, and will feature four local residents on the roster.

Zack Waldvogel, Chad Miller, Shane Dewis and Landon Thomson have all been added to the provincial squad for the nine-team tournament, to which teams will travel from four provinces and the Northwest Territories to take part.

The players that call Portage and the surrounding area home are all baseball players-turned softball players, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have experience to draw from.

Take Waldvogel, for example, whose older brother, Tanner, and father, Gregg, are both key pieces of the Portage Phillies men’s team, while Tanner also just returned from the U19 International Men’s Softball Championship in Prince Edward Island where he was a member of Team Manitoba.

Seeing first-hand the success that his family members have had in the sport, the youngest Waldvogel said he’s looking forward to making his debut at the inter-provincial level.

sports.dailygraphic@shawcable.com

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

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. Read the rest of this entry »

ISF Worlds – Looking Ahead

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