ISC II Eligibility Rule Revisions

April 7th, 2009

ISC announces appeals process for players in ISF competition

April 7, 2009 – The International Softball Congress is announcing a modification to existing ISC II eligibility rules for players and pitchers who compete in the ISF World Championship.

The modified rule will enable players or pitchers who play in the ISF World Championship to file an appeal for ISC II eligibility. ISF pitchers and players must follow the same appeals process in place for those named on the ISC II Ineligible Pitchers List or PRAWN list or who competed in the most recent ISC World Tournament, Canadian Senior Men’s National Championship or ASA Major National Championship. Pitchers and players who have previously been classified as eligible for ISC II are exempted from having to appeal.

The rule change was approved by the ISC Executive Committee.

Under the previous eligibility rules, pitchers and players who competed in either of the most recent Pan Am championship or the ISF World Championship were not eligible to play in ISC II competition, effectively a four-year ban with no avenue to appeal. The rule change provides the ability to appeal.

The stipulation with regard to the Pan Am championship has been deleted as men’s fastpitch is no longer a part of the Pan Am Games. Pitchers and players who participate in the Pan Am qualifier will be governed by the ISC II Ineligible Pitchers List along with the requirement for all international region pitchers and players to be approved by the ISC prior to playing in ISC II.

At the time when the Pan Am/ISF rule was conceived in late 2003, it wasn’t believed that any ISC II pitchers would be members of a national team, but with the continued “internationalization” of fastpitch, there are at least three pitchers currently at the ISC II level who would have been unable to continue to play in ISC II for four years under the old rule. In addition, interest has been expressed by some international teams about playing in the ISC II Tournament of Champions, which they would not have been able to do prior to this change.

The updated Eligibility Rules are reproduced below and can be found in the ISC II section of the ISC website at www.iscfastpitch.com.

For further information on the ISC, please contact

Ken Hackmeister
ISC Executive Director
iscken@comcast.net

or

Jim Williamson
ISC II Vice-President
jrwilliamson@foodfacility.com

ISC II Eligibility Guidelines

Below are the Guidelines for ISC II eligibility for teams, position players and pitchers. Please note that all eligibility issues must be resolved prior to any team, player or pitcher participating in any ISC II Travel League, Regional Qualifying Tournament or Championship Tournament. See below for submitting appeals.

Teams:

Teams that competed in the previous year’s ISC World Tournament, the previous year’s ASA “Major” Tournament or the previous year’s Canadian Senior Men’s Championship and are returning at least 70% of their roster cannot play in the ISC II Tournament of Champions unless an appeal is granted.

Appeals will be considered through the process outlined below until June 1 of the current year.

Position Players:

Any player who participated in the most recent ISF World Championship, the previous year’s ISC World Tournament, the Canadian Senior Men’s Championship or the ASA “Major” National tournament or is an ISC “PRAWN” cannot play in the ISC II Tournament of Champions unless an appeal is granted. Appeals will be considered through the process outlined below until June 1 of the current year.

Pitchers:

Any pitcher that participated in the most recent ISF World Championship, the previous year’s ISC World Tournament, the Canadian Senior Men’s Championship or the ASA “Major” National tournament or is an ISC “PRAWN” or whose name appears on the ISC II Ineligible Pitchers list published in the ISC II section of the ISC website cannot play in the ISC II Tournament of Champions unless an appeal is granted.

Appeals will be considered through the process outlined below until June 1 of the current year. Note: Appeals for pitchers/players in the most recent ISF World Championship must be filed by June 1, but evaluation will not begin until the first day after completion of the ISF tournament.

Exceptions:

Pitchers who are currently classified as ISC II eligible are exempted from having to appeal if they pitch in the ISF World Championship.

Rosters:

All ISC II team rosters must be approved by the ISC prior to participation in any Qualifying Tournament or Championship Tournament.

No team, player or pitcher will be allowed to compete in both the ISC World Tournament and ISC II Tournament of Champions in the same season.

No player or pitcher may attempt to qualify for the ISC II Tournament of Champions from more than one region or for more than one team in any one season.

Pitchers or players who play on an ISC team which qualifies for the ISC World Tournament but does not attend are not eligible to play in the ISC II Tournament of Champions.

ISC II teams may have up to three (3) out-of-region players, including from the international region. There is a limit of two (2) out-of-region pitchers per team, including from the international region. All out-of-region players must be registered with the ISC, and the appropriate fee must be paid by May 1 of the current year.

NOTE: It is mandatory that any international region pitcher or player be submitted for approval even if he doesn’t appear on the ineligible list.

Additional details on out-of-region player registration and fees can be found on the ISC website under the Rules section.

Once teams have qualified for the ISC II Tournament of Champions, they are allowed three (3) pickups from ISC II-eligible players from within their region. Pickups must meet all ISC II eligibility guidelines and must be noted on the final roster submitted at the Tournament of Champions registration.

Returning teams must have 70% of their roster to qualify for an automatic berth for the following year.

Appeals:

All appeals must be submitted no later than June 1 of the current year to your ISC Regional Vice President (see the Contacting Us page for details) using the ISC Appeal form (available on the Rules and Forms page).

Any eligibility questions not covered above should be directed to your team’s Regional VP and copied to ISC II VP Jim Williamson (jrwilliamson@foodfacility.com) and ISC II Commissioner Blair Setford (blairjs@rogers.com).

The ISC strongly suggests resolving eligibility questions early so there are no surprises or disappointments prior to league, tournament or championship play.

Jim Williamson
ISC II Vice President
jrwilliamson@foodfacility.com

Blair Setford
ISC II Commissioner
blairjs@rogers.com

SCIFL Las Vegas Results

April 6th, 2009

From:

(Click logo for official SCIFL website)

LAS VEGAS ROAD TRIP II – UPDATED 4/6

The Champions have been crowned for the 2009 edition of the Las Vegas Road Trip. In the AA-Major/AA division, Sta. Cecilla went undefeated and beat New Image 6-2 in the Championship game. In the A-Major division, after dropping their first two games of the tournament, the Long Beach Black Sox went on a 6-0 run to “double-dip” Macabbi USA and take home the Championship. For the “A” division, Flor de Cana also went the undefeated route going 5-0 with the Championship win over the Caribbeans.

Click here, then menu buttons on left for brackets.

OASA Intermediate Elims winner to receive ToC berth

April 6th, 2009

OASA & ISC Canada East announce ToC berth for Intermediate Eliminations winner

April 6, 2009 – The Ontario Amateur Softball Association and the International Softball Congress (Canada East) are pleased to announce that, effective this season, a berth in the following year’s ISC II Tournament of Champions will be awarded to the winner of the annual OASA Intermediate Eliminations Tournament.

“The OASA is pleased to have the opportunity to work with the ISC to help promote the game of fastball in the Province of Ontario. We look forward to having a very competitive tournament at Hillside Park in Waterloo this August,” said OASA Men’s Committee Chair Brad Thomson.

“This is a terrific opportunity for the two leading men’s fastball organizations in the province of Ontario to cooperate and provide teams with a 12-month window to plan for a trip to the top intermediate championship tournament in the game,” said ISC Canada East Regional Vice-President Blair Setford.

Information on registration and roster requirements for the OASA Intermediate Eliminations will be available through OASA and ISC Canada East sources. The tournament will be governed by Softball Canada rules and will use the ISC pitching rule and eligibility guidelines.

The 2009 OASA Intermediate Eliminations tournament will be held in Waterloo at Hillside Park July 31-August 2. The winner will receive a berth in the 2010 ISC II Tournament of Champions to be held in Midland, Michigan.

For more information, please contact:

OASA contact info
Brad Thomson
OASA Men’s Committee Chair
519.954.1269
thomson.brad@gmail.com

or

Blair Setford
ISC Canada East Regional VP
905.826.2697
blairjs@rogers.com

2nd Annual Yakima Invite

April 5th, 2009

2nd Annual Yakima Invite

Gateway Complex, Yakima WA
Where: Corner of Maple St & Fair Ave
Right off the highway
When: SATURDAY May 16th & Sunday May 17th

Class: B/C Classification

Format: It will be a 4 GG, round robin play single elimination on Sunday. Rules will be given upon signup.

Cost: $325.00

Contact: Mark Seward

(509)388-1250
(509)972-0247
Amtramksew@q.com

Contact: Sam Karr

Cell:(509)945-0027
Fax(509)452-5120
sksells (at) msn.com

Highest Batting Avergage in ISC World Tournament – 2002-2008? Travis Wilson

April 4th, 2009

Former Pro Baseballer Leads All ISC Hitters with .432 Batting Average (2002-2008)


(Travis Wilson, in Jordan-esque shot, with Patsy’s at the 2008 ISC World Tournament, can do more than just flash the leather)

The player with the highest batting average at the ISC World Tournament over the past seven years (2002-2008) ? Travis Wilson, with eye-popping .432 batting average, 35 hits in 81 at bats. (minimum 70 AB’s for consideration). Fifteen of those 35 hits came in his very first ISC World Tournament – amazing when you consider how long Jerry Hoffman of the Lancaster Chameleons held the former record for a double elimination tournament with 14 (set back in 1983).


(Reigning ISC World Tournament batting champion (.432), Travis Wilson, while playing pro baseball in the Atlanta Braves organization)

Wilson’s biography is an interesting one, earning a gold medal while playing for the world Champion New Zealand Black Sox back in 1996, then catching the eye of a major league baseball scout for the Atlanta Braves, and playing professional baseball for seven years, mostly in AAA, before returning to New Zealand — and men’s fastpitch in 2004. He rejoined the Black Sox the following year, in 2005 and will be with them in Saskatoon this summer, when they attempt to hold onto the gold in the ISF World Championships. (the 81 at bats shown in this batting average ranking are for only the last four years, as he did not play during the first four years covered in these stats). He was with Patsy’s of New York in last year’s tournament.

The top four hitters are the lone members of the “.400 club”:

Travis Wilson, .432
Jason Hill, .413
Evan Potskin, .402
Chad Boom, .401

A closer examination show that these four have almost identical numbers, Wilson rising above the other three by virtue of two more hits:

Travis Wilson, 35-for-81
Jason Hill, 33-for-80
Evan Potskin, 33-for-82
Chad Boom, 33-for-82

As for hitters near the head of the class who have made the most of their at bats, the list must includeyoung Jason Hill (2nd, at .413, 33-for-80), and Tex Lessard (.387, 29-for-75). One fan writes:

[About Hill]:

“He’s got a chance to become one of the absolute top guys. Very calm at the plate, able to adapt to different styles of pitching…has a ton of power. He’s going to be fun to watch.”

[About Lessard]:

“very underrated – good to see him get some recognition.”

Another interesting name on the list is Frank DeGroat, who is sizzling along at a .387 clip (29-for-75) since coming over from modified. The .387 is remarkable, considering that DeGroat is a middle-of-the-lineup guy, counted on for his power, not a hitter in the mold of Ichiro. And he’s still hitting high average, along with the extra-base hits.

In the voter’s prediction poll, Jody Eidt garnered the most votes, with 87, followed by Colin Abbott with 68, and Jarrad Martin with 58. (not surprising, as Martin and Eidt placed 1-2 in the earlier “most hits” poll. Colin Abbott actually ranked further down the actual list, tied for 19th with Kyle Beane, at .340, but 49 hits in 144 at bats, certainly no slouch. We are talking about the top 20 highest batting averages in the world over the past seven years. Every player on the list owns a batting average higher than MLB’s top hitter of the modern era, Tony Gwynn (.338).

Martin’s actual ranking among the world’s top hitters for average was 6th, with a .385 average (60-for-156), while Eidt was right behind him at 7th, with a .378 average (59-for-156), a single hits separating the two.

Also not surprising is that the players at the top of the poll tended to have fewer at bats (between 70 and 100). Jeff Goolagong has the highest average for any player with over 100 at bats, .391, 43-for-110).

Fewer at bats or not, Wilson’s numbers are astounding, and leave him 20 points ahead of his nearest rival,

Actual Ranking

1. Travis Wilson
, .432
2. Jason Hill, .413
3. Evan Potskin, .402
3. Chad Boom, .402
4. Jeff Goolagong, .391
5. Frank Degroat, .387
5. Tex Lessard, .387
6. Jarrad Martin, .385
7. Jody Eidt, .378
8. Keith Mackintosh, .376
9. Donnie Hale, .370
10. Ian Fehrman, .366
11. Chris Miljavac, .358
12. Ted Kosceisza, .357
13. Reno Dambrosio, .355
14. Chris Delarwelle, .354
15. Don Garvey, .352
16. Todd Budke, .350
17. Jeff Ellsworth, .346
18. Rob Gray, .345
19. Kyle Beane, .340
19. Colin Abbott, .340

For those who can’t resist breaking it down by country, here is that list:

CANADA

2. Jason Hill, .413
3. Evan Potskin, .402
5. Tex Lessard, .387
7. Jody Eidt, .378
8. Keith Mackintosh, .376
10. Ian Fehrman, .366
12. Ted Kosceisza, .357
13. Reno Dambrosio, .355
17. Jeff Ellsworth, .346
18. Rob Gray, .345
19. Colin Abbott, .340

USA

3. Chad Boom, .402
5. Frank Degroat, .387
11. Chris Miljavac, .358
14. Chris Delarwelle, .354
15. Don Garvey, .352
16. Todd Budke, .350
19. Kyle Beane, .340

New Zealand

1. Travis Wilson, .432
6. Jarrad Martin, .385
9. Donnie Hale, .370

Australia

4. Jeff Goolagong, .391

For the first time in three “ISC Stat Trivia” polls, the readers missed the mark to some degree, pegging the actual batting champion, Travis Wilson at 7th, runner-up Jason Hill at 16th, and third place Evan Potskin and Chad Boom at 11th and 12th, respectively.

With 233 votes cast, here is how our reader’s predictions went:

1. Jody Eidt 87 votes
2. Colin Abbott 68 votes
3. Jarrad Martin 58 votes
4. Jeff Goolagong 30 votes
5. Donnie Hale 29 votes
6. Todd Budke 26 votes
7. Travis Wilson 20 votes
8. Tex Lessard 17 votes
9. Chris Miljavic 16 votes
9. Frank DeGroat 16 votes
10. Keith Mackintosh 15 votes
11. Chris Delarwelle 13 votes
11. Chad Boom 13 votes
12. Evan Potskin 12 votes
12. Jeff Ellsworth 12 votes
13. Rob Gray 11 votes
14. Ian Fehrman 9 votes
15. Reno Dambrosio 8 votes
16. Jason Hill 7 votes
17. Ted Kosceisza 3 votes
18. Kyle Beane 1 vote
19. Don Garvey 1 vote

A poll commenter who has played against these guys thought highly of Abbott (.340), Delarwelle (.354), and Lessard (.387), 5th, 14th and 19th, respectively:

My top 3 would be Colin Abbott, Chris Delarwelle and Tex Lessard. Despite that bad wheel, Abbott still has the best hand-eye coordination among fastpitch hitters. Delarwelle tends to get pitched around a lot, though I’m sure his slugging percentage is high. I know Lessard has had some good World Tournaments in Ontario and Eau Claire.

Commenter “Scout” asked about the omission of Ryan Wolfe from the list, a question echoed by another commenter, and good question, considering Wolfe ranked third for most hits overall with 54.

No Ryan Wolfe??

The answer was that Wolfe is at .327, 54-for-165. Everyone that has been around for the final day of the WT knows that not only does Wolfe have a ton of hits, but often big ones, as was the case with his championship game home run in 2008, to help Kitchener capture the crown. But at some point, those at-bats pile up. Nonetheless, he remains near the top in many categories, and appears on the short list when they are asked to identify the top players in the game today.

There were others with 40 or more hits down the list just a bit with lots of at bats that brought the average down, as it tends to do over time:

Patrick Shannon, .338, 33-for-136
Ryan Wolfe, .327, 54-for-165
Paul Rosebush, .317, 57-for-180 (that’s an average of 25 at bats every year for 7 years !)
Darren Box, .309, 45-for-152
Bill Simmons, .299, 41-for-137
Thomas Makea, .296, 45-for-152
Rhys Casley, .292, 42-for-144

Mike Encinas of Southern California garnered “Nostradamus” honors, with this top 3 picks:

1. Jody Eidt
2. Jarred Martin
3. Donnie Hale

Eidt, Martin and Hale were all in the top 10 – 7th, 6th and 9th respectively.

Watch the Morning Brief for our next ISC Stat Trivia Polls coming up soon !

Otto in Focus

April 4th, 2009

Fastpitch Photographer and Writer Establishes New Blog


(click photo to visit Bob Otto’s new blog)

We are pleased to share a note from our friend Bob Otto, who served as the official photographer for the ISC for a number of years, and whose work provided the inspiration for Maddy’s photos. Bob generously permitted us to display many of his photos, and post his feature stories in the early days of Fastpitchwest. For those that don’t know him, he was a longtime fastpitch pitcher in Southern California, playing in the days I competed against him, for Chuck Vranich’s Matthew Bronze team. He is also a longtime fastpitch photographer, and penned some great feature stories on the game and its players, which have appeared at Al’s Fastball, the ISC website, and here at Fastpitchwest.

Bob has a new blog up, and a link to a site displaying some photos from the 1994 ASA Major tournament held in Palm Springs. With a large library of negatives, he tells us that we can look forward to seeing more in the future. Here is his note:

My son Brian finished setting up a blog for dear old dad today, and I posted some of the photos I shot of the 1994 ASA Men’s Major National Tournament at Palm Springs. I thought maybe some of the readers would like to see the photos.

There’s teams like Decatur, All Car, The Farm, Seafirst, Hearts of Bloomington, Il., Jack & Do’s, The Long Beach Painters….

Many of the players have retired, and most were shot in B&W, so that gives it a nostalgic feel, I think.

I’ve got thousands of negatives to go through in which 90% of the photos haven’t been seen by the public. But it takes a lot of scanning, which means I will be at this for a long, long time to come. So look for more men’s fastpitch galleries (many ISC WT) in the future.

Click here to visit his blog, www.ottoinfocus.com. Then click the link there to see the 1994 ASA Major Nationals photos. You’ll find some household names there, including Peter Meredith, pitching for Larry Miller Toyota, and Chub Tangaroa, pitching for the Decatur Pride. Hard to believe it’s been 15 years since then.

2009 ISC World Championship Guide available

April 4th, 2009

From the ISC:

The 2009 ISC World Championship Guide is now available for ordering.

The new edition is 152 pages full of ISC World Tournament and ISC II Tournament of Champions photos, ’08 stats, historical all-time stats, Developmental results and photos, Hall of Fame and Carrol Forbes Foundation inductions and presentations, color team photos of teams entered in the 2008 ISC World Tournament and much, much more.

Cost of the Guide is $7.50 US and can be ordered in one of two ways.

On Line Ordering

Go to www.iscfastpitch.com and click on ISC Products in left margin. Follow the links. Payment is via credit card.

Or click banner below to go directly to order page:

Mail or Email Ordering

Send a $7.50 US check or money order, payable to ISC, to Ken Hackmeister –
153 E. 200 S. – #10 – Farmington, UT 84025. A copy will be mailed to you.

Or, email (or phone 801-447-8807) me with the following Visa or MasterCard
information:

Name on credit card
Card number and expiration date
3-digit number on back of card near signature line
ZIP or Postal Code of credit card billing address
House number of card billing address (If it’s 3950 Maple Street, we
need 3950)

We feel this 2009 edition is one of the best ever published and certainly contains information every fastball player and fan should want. We’re also proud of the fact that this is the earliest the ISC World Championship Guide has ever been made available.

Ken
iscken@comcast.net

Welcome

2009 ISC Media Guide is Out !

April 3rd, 2009


(Photos on the cover by Maddy)

A couple of weeks ago, we posted a sneak preview of the 2009 ISC Media Guide. Today, I am pleased to announce that the guides are now available. I received mine today, and can tell you firsthand that it’s nicely done. Not good on a work day, though, because you can’t put it down once you start thumbing through the pages.

Astute readers might notice that the cover photos are from the galleries at Maddy’s Photos. The large cover shot is The Farm’s Kevin Schellenberg going up high to avoid the sliding Mike Lawton of Aspen Interiors on a force play.

Lots of Maddy’s photos throughout the guide, plus the full color photos of all of the teams (well, all but the two teams that will remain nameless that didn’t show for their photo).

Oh, and you’ll spot our ad, in color, on page 80, looking like this:


(click to enlarge)

We’ll post details on how to order your copy shortly.

Fastpitchwest Forum Registration is Open

April 3rd, 2009

Psssst. Registration to the Fastpitchwest Forum is now open.

Thursday, April 9: Act fast, as we can only hold the window open for a short time, until the spammers attack.

If you tried to register recently, you probably got a message saying “user name not available”. We have had new registrations locked down due to spammers, and we will be locking it back down later this evening.

In the meantime, if you are among the many who have been unable to register, but wish to (so you can post to the forum), now is the time to act.

One you create a user name and password, you will still need to be “activated” (by me), so when you receive the “Welcome to Fastpitchwest Forum Forums” email, forward it to me via email: jim (at) fastpitchwest (dot) com.

Softball’s Olympic Fate to be Decided in August

April 1st, 2009

From:

(click logo to view official press release at USA Softball website)

ATTENTION: Below is an update on the IOC vote for softball’s inclusion in the 2016 Olympic Games.

Sports Face August Deadline – Report from Around the Rings

IOC President Rogge confirms the seven sports under consideration for addition to the program for the 2016 Olympics will be reduced to two at the IOC Executive Board meeting in August in Berlin.

Baseball, golf, karate, roller sports, rugby, squash and softball will make presentations in June to the Executive Board ahead of the August decision on which to cut.

“”We are going to study carefully the seven applicant sports and out of the seven we are going to propose two sports to the IOC Session,” he says. The vote will take place around October 6 at the Session in Copenhagen.

Softball Reacts Positively to IOC Shortlist News

ISF president: “With odds of 2 out of 7 to make shortlist, softball will re-double efforts to communicate incredible value to Olympic Movement”

Plant City, Florida (USA); 30th March 2009: International Softball Federation President Don Porter has pledged to re-double efforts to get softball reinstated to the Olympic Games Programme in 2016 following the news that the International Olympic Committee will shortlist only two sports for the IOC Session vote in Copenhagen in October.

The shortlist news was delivered by IOC President Jacques Rogge last week at SportAccord in Denver where a top BackSoftball campaign team were busy meeting Olympic Family decision-makers and opinion formers.

Mr. Porter said, “While the decision to cut the list to only two sports for a vote by 115 IOC Members was a surprise, it has not deflected the commitment behind, and focus of, our campaign. If anything it has given us further incentive to work even harder at communicating the incredible value that softball offers the Olympic Movement. We are greatly encouraged by the way IOC Members are reacting to how softball would help the Olympic Movement open up women’s sport – especially in Muslim countries; they also like our global focus on youth and our 100% doping-free track record.

“But most of all, IOC Members appreciate that the Olympic Games would be the absolute pinnacle of our international competition structure; the whole softball calendar would peak every quadrennial with the Olympic Games. While I cannot comment on other sports, I can tell you that the Olympic Games would not be just another competition in an over-crowded calendar for softball. For millions of softball players around the world the Olympic Games would be the greatest honor and we guarantee that the world’s best softball athletes would all commit to performing at the Olympic Games.”

Meanwhile the BackSoftball Campaign has moved to their fifth continent in a month with a critical presentation to the Oceania National Olympic Committee Annual Assembly tomorrow in Queenstown, New Zealand. The presentation will be led by Ms. Low Beng Choo, ISF Deputy Secretary General, and Danielle Stewart, a 2008 Olympic softball bronze medalist from Australia. Ms. Low is also the Malaysian Softball Federation President, Softball Confederation of Asia Secretary General, and a member of the IOC Women and Sport Commission.

Softball was first featured in the Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta in 1996 and last year’s competition in Beijing, which was won by Japan, was hugely successful with a total attendance close to 180,000 and a continuation of the sport’s excellent record of no positive drug tests in major competitions.

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, +44 7802 412424

Editor’s note:click here.