‘Big Chap’ Still the Man

October 13th, 2008


(click logo for original story)

[HAWKES BAY, NEW ZEALAND] –

Story by Shane Hurnell

Sport Today would understand if Rayner Te Wake would take things a little easier on the Hawke’s Bay premier men’s softball scene.

But it’s not the Fast Pitch premier men’s player-coach’s style. After 24 years of play at this level the “Big Chap’ (Te Wake’s nickname) is still the man.

Te Wake, 41, batted .1000 with an automatic home run as his troops beat the other previously unbeaten side, Saints, 7-2 at Akina Park, Hastings on Saturday. During his time on the mound he struck out seven of the 18 batters he faced while conceding five hits and one walk.

But don’t be fooled into believing Fast Pitch is a one-man band. It’s obvious Te Wake’s enthusiasm is fueled by the progress being made by the youngsters under his command. Youngsters such as national under-19 champion Cameron Willis. The short stop picked three walks with the bat and on defence took one out.

Former Junior Black Sox utility Te Rangi Chadwick took an out in the centre outfield and collected two hits and a walk with the bat. Te Wake would have been impressed with the rundowns his young infielders produced.

They had to as Saints out hit Fast Pitch 5-3. Saints used two pitchers in the game.

Kevin Papuni struck out two of the 16 batters he faced while conceding five earned runs.

Junior Black Sox utility Jovaan Hanley struck out two of the nine batters he faced while conceding three walks.

Dodgers beat Maraenui Pumas 4-0 in the other premier men’s battle played at Taradale. Short stop Josh Gettins collected two hits from three turns for Dodgers including a three bagger.

Junior Black Sox catcher Campbell Makea and first baseman Joachim Paul also collected two hits from three turns. Napier Boys’ High School’s Dillon Kiwara, in his first premier match since switching from cricket, collected Dodgers other hit.

Former Junior Black Sox pitcher Tamihana Hokianga struck out 11 of the 24 Pumas batters he faced while conceding two walks and two hits.

Pumas pitcher Hau Hunga Hunga did well to restrict Dodgers to eight hits in his second full game of the day on the mound. He has earlier played for the Pumas B side in a 5-2 loss to Taradale.

Considering he is a “master’ this is a mighty feat so early in the season.

The promoted Dodgers Red side beat Taradale 13-3 in the only premier women’s match played.

Jarrad Martin Back with Old Club

October 10th, 2008

The Dominion Post | Saturday, 11 October 2008
Martin back with PCU

Porirua City United have landed a big fish for the season with Black Sox skipper Jarrad Martin returning to the club after a three-year hiatus.

Martin, 35, is in the twilight of his illustrious career and wanted to spend what will probably be his last club season playing alongside his brother, Haizley.

The infielder spent the past three years commuting from New Plymouth to Auckland to play for North Shore club Northcote, and will do the same this season for Porirua.

Martin, who made his New Zealand debut in 1991, has won three world championships and is targeting a fourth, in next year’s world series in Canada, as the perfect way to sign off from the sport.

“Obviously, it’s an important year for myself and I just felt that it’s possibly my last year playing domestically,” Martin said.

“I thought that if it was going to be my last year I wanted to play with my brother Haizley but also just to get a bit more drive back into my game by coming down and playing with a good competitive team as well.”

Martin trains by himself in New Plymouth, where he works as an electrician and as such didn’t feel it appropriate to captain Porirua, who he thinks have national champions potential this season.

“But obviously I’ll offer my experience, talk a lot and help out where I can.”

The Wellington intercity men’s softball season starts today, but Porirua will have to make do without Martin till Labour weekend.

Last year’s runners-up, PCU have also gained gun pitcher Tane Richardson, who is eyeing a Black Sox recall, to complement the power-hitting Makea brothers, Fabian and Thomas.

Defending champions Hutt City United open their season against Johnsonville at the Polo Ground at 1pm today with a settled lineup from last season, Shane Doherty the only addition of note. Johnsonville, who have gained Junior Black Sox pitcher Sam Bishop from PCU, then play Porirua at 3pm.

Giants open their campaign at home in Masterton as part of a double-header against Hutt Valley Marist.

Miramar have gained former Black Sox pitcher Karl Gollan, while Poneke-Kilbirnie will have under-19 stars Nick Hayes and Corey Timu. Newlands have Frank Pointon, back from pitching his way to a European club championship.

Kapiti welcome back catcher Conrad Bain from the United States, while Hutt Valley Marist, Dodgers and Cardinals have similar squads to last season.

Al’s Fastball Down for a Short While

October 8th, 2008

Al’s Fastball is closed for a few days

Al’s Fastball is down for a few days while we are on the road until October 18.

If time permits, we will do updates when we have access however please do not be dissapointed if we are unable to post your news item until Ocotber 18.

thanks
Al

New ISC and ISC II Roster Forms for 2009

October 8th, 2008

From the ISC, courtesy of:

(click icon to see original post at Al’s Fastball)

The ISC has released its Roster Forms for the 2009 season.

Roster Forms for both ISC and ISC II teams has been posted to the ISC website At http://www.iscfastpitch.com select “Rules and Forms” from the side bar. Under “Forms” you will find a 2009 ISC World Tournament Roster form and a sample form as well as a 2009 ISC II Roster form, along with a sample form. All of these forms including the samples are downloadable Excel spread sheets.

Changes include minor design changes and the full list of email addresses where rosters are to be sent.

Fastpitch fans still longing for the game

October 7th, 2008

From the Country Messenger, Scandia, MN
(Hat tip: David Blackburn)[Reprinted with permission, Kyle Weaver, Country Messenger, All Rights Reserved]


By Kyle Weaver

If George Lindgren’s old softball hat could only talk, it would probably tell a lot of stories.

But then Lindgren and others of his generation who watched and played fast pitch softball in Scandia have plenty of stories of their own.

“There was a whole lot of talk about softball back then,” said Lindgren, who some have identified as the biggest Scandia softball fan ever.

Scandia has a rich history with the sport, dating back to the post-World War II era and a team formed in 1946 by Les Benson and Stan Sandquist.

In the late 1960s and ‘70s, Scandia fast pitch was not to be missed. During that time period, the town produced numerous state and national tournament-winning teams.

In fast pitch softball, having a good pitcher meant having a good team, and the key to much of Scandia’s success in those days was the fact that Scandia had a few good pitchers — Jim Lindberg and Wayne Erickson, a 1984 inductee to the Minnesota Softball Hall of Fame, to name a few.

“A team depended on pitching talent,” said Greg Benson, who played for about 12 years during the ‘60s and ‘70s.

A good fast pitch softball game, then, meant 2-1 or 1-0 scores. No-hitters were fairly common — they certainly weren’t the anomaly they have become in the modern era of million dollar baseball salaries and deep pitching crews.

In 1976, for instance, Lindberg pitched a 25-inning game that ended with a 2-1 score. According to a 1966 tournament program, Erickson averaged 12 strikeouts per game during the 1963 season, more than half the batters he faced during the seven-inning contests.

Near the ends of some of those close games, Scandia’s pitching was really something to watch, Lindgren said.

“When the going got tough, they really put the smoke on ‘er then,” Lindgren said with his trademark chuckle.

Scandia had its share of clutch hitters, too, Lindgren said.

“They could get ahold of one that would make you wonder if the ball would ever come down,” he said.

Scandia’s softball team gave the town a reputation, one that followed its players.

It wasn’t uncommon for players to introduce themselves as being from Scandia, only to have someone mention the softball team, Benson said.

“Everywhere you went, that would happen,” he said.

Lindberg agreed.

“Scandia got on the map then, because of it,” Lindberg said.

But Scandia softball was probably best known as a source of local culture and community pride, Lindberg said.

“We used to have some scrappy games, I tell ya,” Lindgren said.

Players used to drive around the former township with a speaker mounted to the roof of their vehicle, announcing the game and encouraging people to attend, and having a crowd of 300-400 people attend a weeknight game was not uncommon. Admission cost 25 cents.

“Back then, it’s what you did for recreation,” Lindberg said. “Once you got a taste of it, it was really hard to stop.”

Community pride in the team was evident all around. Business owners in the area competed for top billing as sponsors of the team, and some companies would even find work for good softball players.

“If you knew how to play, they’d find a spot for you,” Benson said.

Once, when the team lost to a team from Marine on St. Croix, the owners of Meisters Bar & Grill flew a black flag from the building.

Though there were a lot of sponsors, the team was often supported financially by residents. The team and fans held more than a few fundraisers, some of which were perhaps as fun as the games themselves.

One such event, an old-fashioned “smoker,” cooked up by Lindgren and a few others, involved lots of cigars, poker, blackjack, dice and slots — “the same as Las Vegas,” Lindgren said.

“That second year, we really made the money,” Lindgren said. “We had fun with all those activities.”

Scandia’s lighted softball field, which still today is a cultural centerpiece for the town, was a busy place in that era.

Fast pitch softball once had its following worldwide. It was the era of Eddie Feigner, and his Harlem Globetrotter-esque four-man softball team called “The King and His Court.” Feigner often pitched from second base, sometimes even from center field, to give his opponents a chance. He was unrivaled in the sport and traveled the world with his act.

“I watched (Feigner) when he came to St. Paul one year,” Benson said. “He was pretty tough.”

The Scandia team traveled all over as well, often making trips to Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada to play in tournaments.

Yet those days are gone. Worldwide, the game still plugs on, but it is almost gone from the American landscape. Lindberg and Benson believe that young pitchers simply weren’t willing to learn fast-pitch pitching and baseball pitching both. The game faced competition from other methods of recreation as well. Some purists even argue that, while still popular today, slow pitch softball contributed to the game’s demise.

Notable fast pitch softball teams in the United States today are largely comprised of well-paid players from New Zealand, Lindberg said.

“It hasn’t quite died in Canada like it has here,” Benson said.

Lindberg, Benson and Lindgren all agree that the culture that fast pitch softball once brought to Scandia is missing today.

“That was a different time,” Lindberg said. “Softball was it then. … That icon is gone. And it really was an icon.”

For Lindgren, a noted coffee drinker in Scandia, conversations about the game are what he misses most.

“We talked ball, played ball, kidded each other,” Lindgren said.

Citing a recent exhibition held during the last Taco Daze, Lindberg believes there is still an interest in softball in Scandia, though. He believes the game could be revived with the right efforts.

At the very least, the team’s fan base is still ready. Lindgren still has his hat.

“If there was a team today in Scandia, people would go,” Lindberg said.

Argentine Fastpitch Website

October 6th, 2008

Here is a new website/blog, from Argentina, C.P.E.F. Nº 5 – SOFTBOL “DEL POLY AL MUNDO.

Click here to view.

The site will test your Spanish but also contains a variety of photos, some of which you may have seen before, and others, like this one, which you have not. (Like the Ballparkradio girls times 100).

While Google Translator is not perfect, it will help you get the gist of the stories posted (and sometimes hilarious results)

More evidence of the game’s global reach.

Hat tip to our friend in Omaha, Nebraska, Matt Christensen for this link.

News from the Bahamas Softball Federation

October 3rd, 2008

By KELSIE JOHNSON, NG Sports Reporter

Although the Bahamas Softball Federation (BSF) is not able to confirm how many teams will compete in the 9th Annual Austin ‘King Snake’ Knowles National High School Softball tournament, 1st Vice President Burkette Dorsette is confident that the tournament’s hit will be a ‘home-run.’

The national championships are set to be held from October 23-25 at the Baillou Hills Sporting Complex. It is designed to unite all the teams from the various Family Islands, and it will also give national coaches and executive members a good look at the young talent in the country.

According to Dorsette, the BSF is really thrilled to host this year’s tournament, even though there isn’t a definite number. He feels as though tournaments of this nature are great for The Bahamas as they not only highlight the talents of our younger players but also points to the bright future in the sport.

“We are not able to confirm the number of teams as yet, but we have had calls from Abaco, Andros, Exuma, Long Island and Eleuthera. These are among the Family Islands that have expressed interest, so far. Of course we have teams from New Providence, most of the government and private schools,” said Dorsette.

“The response has been pretty good in the past. We’ve been having this tournament now for nine years and it is paying dividends for fast pitch softball. There are quite a bit of players who came into the (night) league from the Austin Knowles tournament. The men’s division in particularly has picked up some promising pitchers, who have played on those teams from Long Island. Quite a bit of the players from Long Island are now playing, I think, with the Proper Care team in the ladies’ division. In the men’s division we have new faces on the New Breed and the Sigma Brackettes for women, so it has paid dividends for fast pitch softball. It is like a feeder system for the sport.”

Although softball is the ‘lead-off’ sport for only private schools, Dorsette revealed that the government schools are ready each year. The government-based schools in New Providence may be placed at a disadvantage this time around as their after school activities have yet to start. However, he stated that the competition rises each year and this tournament should be no different.

Returning in search for their third consecutive title will be the team from Long Island, NGM Major Wildcats. They are hoping to retain the title despite having lost their coach, who was transferred to Eleuthera. As a result, four teams are expected to represent the island of Eleuthera, two coming with Tony Crean.

“There is going to be some keen competition. I have been around the islands, and particularly down in Bimini they have some very young players there, in Long Island as well. I haven’t seen any of the players in Exuma but in New Providence the teams are ready. It is going to be a very exciting competition. Stiff competition is expected, so it is going to be good.”

The tournament is expected to have a round-robin format, but this would be based on the number of participants. If there aren’t sufficient teams for the round-robin, a sudden death system will be used.

Editor’s note: Emphasis (bold) in story is mine. Nice to see a “feeder” system working to invigorate the game.

Glencoe, Winship Soar to Victory

October 3rd, 2008

Click logo below to read the story at our brother blog on ISC II coverage, “The Deuce”:

NPSA Championships Begin in Bahamas

October 3rd, 2008

NPSA Fast Pitch Championships Begin Tonight



(click banner for original news story)

[BAHAMAS] – The semi final round of the playoffs in the New Providence Softball Association resulted in some very good play all around and now the best two men and women’s teams will play for the ultimate league title.

Tuesday night the last semi-final series came to an end when the New Breed beat the Kings Real Estate Pros 9-3 in game four of their best-of-five series.

The victory advanced the New Breed to the championship series against their most hated rivals, D’ Truckers who are the defending champions.

After struggling during the final two weeks of the regular season, the New Breed found themselves in a battle for the meaningless second spot in the men’s division with the Pros, but on Tuesday they seemed to have regained their focus and easily did away with the Pro. Now the New Breed looks poised to dethrone the Truckers, which is much easier said than done. .

In game four on Tuesday the New Breed saw the Pros jump out to the early 3-1 lead after the first inning, but New Breed pitcher Leonard LaFrance got stingy and allowed just four hits the remainder of the game.

His offense gave him all the support he needed. They pulled to within one run after two innings then exploded for three runs in each of the fourth and fifth inning before adding another run in the top of the sixth.

New Breed batter Garfield Bethel was 3-for-4 off losing pitcher Cardinal Gilbert. He hit the only home run of the game. Marcellus Hall was 2-for-3 in the win.

The Truckers swept the Defense Force Commodores in the second half of the men’s semi-finals.

In the past few seasons, particularly when the New Breed was developing their team to beat the Truckers, the two sides have had a number of physical altercations that have intensified their rivalry. They will play in the feature game tonight at 8:30pm.

The action will begin with game one of the women’s championship series between the Proper care Pool Lady Sharks and the fourth seeded Sigma Brackettes starting at 7pm at the Baillou Hills Sports Complex.

Tom Dowd named ASA Central California Commissioner

October 2nd, 2008


(Click ASA logo for official press release)

OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. — The Amateur Softball Association recently announced Tom Dowd of Clovis, Calif. as the new Central California ASA Commissioner effective November 1, 2008. With over 20 years of experience with the ASA, Dowd is thrilled to be taking on this new position and thanks Dick Grove, former Central California Commissioner, for his guidance to get him to this point.

“This is an honor and privilege to serve ASA and our association membership in the Pacific Coast region,” said Dowd. “I want to build on the foundation that we have right now and continue to grow the sport of softball. Dick (Grove) has been a mentor to all of us and I am so fortunate he took me under his wing years ago.”

It was Dowd’s second daughter Anne who jump started his association with ASA dating back to 1987. She was eager to play the sport of softball and Dowd and other parents searched around the area and eventually started the Clovis California ASA league that is still in existence today. It started with teams ranging from 10-14-years-old and today ranges from 10-18- years-old with over 90 plus teams.

“Working with the association membership has been my most favorite part of ASA,” added Dowd. “I look forward to continuing those relationships and meeting new people from throughout the Central California association.”

Once the Clovis ASA League took off, Grove asked Dowd to come on board in a couple different capacities and he was named the Junior Olympic Commissioner in 1992. Serving in that position for almost 15 years, in 2007 Dowd then moved on from the JO position to Grove’s executive assistant in order to ease the transition after Grove’s retirement.

“Tom is a good guy and a great worker,” said Grove. “He knows how to get things done and is a good communicator. I don’t have any worries as he has been around and I have rotated him through a lot of things. This way everything will keep rolling and together we have things set up well.”

Dowd’s primary goals in the commissioner role is to expand the Adult Program Championship play in his area and also to bring back the visibility the men’s and women’s adult fast pitch game had years ago.

“It has been a little slow coming,” said Dowd. “I want to work to get the recreation departments to promote more ASA Championship Play in slow pitch. Our registrations in the adult area are great, but we have to get them into the championship play. Also, the adult fast pitch game…. We need to bring it back to the level it was at years ago.”

Editor’s note: We wish Dick Grove the best as he moves on from the position. Dick (along with our old friend “Hodgie”) were responsible for a lot of the fastpitch events in Central California. And we are encouraged by Tom Dowd’s comments about placing more emphasis on the game of men’s fastpitch. (Emphasis in story ours)

Related story from the ASA website
on Dick Grove’s retirement after 23 years, after the jump.

Read the rest of this entry »