Travel advisory for those flying to the U.S.

December 27th, 2009

Editor’s Note: With many Canadians, along with Central and South Americans, planning to fly to Florida for the AAU International Tournament in January, keep in mind the additional security measures and limitations on carry-on luggage.

TORONTO – It’s the busiest time of the season to fly and now there will be more delays and added security – including pat-down searches.

The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority has tightened security at airports after a man tried to blow up a plane in the U.S., said Trish Kale, with the Greater Toronto Airport Authority.

“They put in new regulations limiting two carry-on bags to one and passengers will have added security checks,” Kale said.

Farouk Abdul Mutallab was on a Northwest Airlines plane flying from Amsterdam to Detroit when he attempted to set off an explosive device as the plane was landing.

WestJet has announced it is working in cooperation with the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority.

“All guests on flights bound to the United States will be subject to a secondary search,” said WestJet spokesman Robert Palmer.

“Every guest on flights to the United States will be required to submit to a physical pat-down search and carry-on luggage, which will be limited to one bag per guest, will be searched by hand.”

Passengers travelling to the U.S. are advised to arrive at the airport early because of the extra checks being performed.

U.S.-bound flights on all airlines are experiencing significant delays, said Duncan Dee with Air Canada.

“At this time, we are asking for the cooperation of our U.S.-bound customers to minimize the inconvenience on themselves by limiting their carry-on items to the absolute minimum or even to travel with no carry-on items if possible,” Dee said.

“This temporary carry-on policy will assist security officers at the gate in screening customers more quickly and thereby minimize delays for passengers to the extent possible.”

kevin.connor@sunmedia.ca

2010 AAU Roster # 8 & 9 – USA Maccabi Red and Blue

December 22nd, 2009


Team Red
Head Coach–Paul Rubin
Assistant Coach–Tony Kahan

Mike April–C/OF
Dave Blackburn–P
Dan Cosgrove–2B/3B/1B
Nate Fish–SS
Mike Goldman–2B/OF
Mike Groves–P
Howie Israeloff–1B/OF
Tony Kahan–C/1B
Tim Kauffman–OF
Josh Lamberg–C
Scott Rosen–3B
Paul Rubin–OF
Ron Saslow–P
Dewey Dyke-P/DH

Larry Silfen–SS/OF
Josh Persell — SS/OF,

Team Blue
Head Coach–Dan Winters
Assistant Coach–Jeremy Spear

Team Blue Coach Winters

Mark Brill 3B
Colin Fein C
Dan Winnick OF
Jason Gluckman P/C/1B
Joe Schwartz 2B
Matt Singer OF
Russ Snow P
Dan Winters C/3B/1B
Mike Trenk 3B/OF
David Shpiro SS
Steve Schucker OF
Jeremy Spear SS
Fred Cohen P/1B
Mike Lamberg 1B

The 2010 AAU International tournament will be played at the Wide World of Sports complex at Disney World at Orlando, Florida on January 21-24, 2010. The tournament was started by AAU tournament director Alex Linares in 2000 with eight teams, growing to 40 teams in this, its eleventh year. Fastpitchwest/Ballparkradio/Maddy’s Photos has been providing coverage of the event since 2004.

Click here for a list of all 40 teams competing in the 2010 tournament.

Click here for other 2010 AAU rosters
posted to date.

2010 AAU Pools and Schedule

December 20th, 2009

Update: We have bumped this post back to the top to note a correction in the earlier posted schedule: Friday, 3 PM #24. The original schedule showed Italian AC
vs Sopotocientos and it should be Italian AC vs Dominicana US.

The format below is a little rough at the moment, converted from an Excel file, but will do for now.

click here to view in webpage format, courtesy of Al’s fastball


2010 AAU Men’s International Fastpitch Tournament
January 21-24, 2010 – Disney’s Wide World of Sports complex 12/20/2009

Pool A Pool B Pool C Pool D
1. Chicago/New York 1. Virgin Islands 1. Brewers de Venezuela 1. Italian Athletic Club – CA
2. Venezuela/Miami 2. Barranquitas – Puerto Rico 2. Maccabi Red – USA 2. Indios de Venezuela
3. Cobourg Force – ON 3. Gigantes de Venezuela 3. Radio 560 – Mexico 3. Kitchener Outlaws – ON
4. Adasi – Spain 4. Houston Carnage 4. Millwood Logistics – ON 4. Dominicana US

Pool E Pool F Pool G Pool H
1. Ashland Stockpack – OH 1. Atascados – Tijuana 1. Dominican Republic Nat’l 1. Minnesota Angels
2. Combatientes de Venezuela 2. PK Broward – IL 2. Sopotocientos de Venezuela 2. Sureno Soy – Venezuela
3. NY Gremlins 3. Niagara Storms Fury – ON 3. Maccabi Blue – USA 3. Nova Scotia
4. Oklahoma Fastpitch 4. Puerto Rico Juniors 4. Earl’s Club – WI 4. Florida Fastpitch

Pool I Pool J
1. Los Socios – Venezuela 1. Capitalinos de Venezuela
2. Hill United – Ontario 2. Puerto Rico National Team
3. DC Arrows – British Columbia 3. Jamaica
4. Big Cove – NC 4. Team Minnesota

Thursday 1 PM Diamond Thursday 3 PM Diamond
Los Socios vs Hill United 25 Big Cove vs DC Arrows 25
Barranquitas vs Virgin Islands 24 Minn. Angels vs Sureno Soy 24
Brewers vs Maccabi Red 23 Dom Rep vs Sopotocientos 23
Italian AC vs Indios 22 Chicago/NY vs Venez/Miami 22
Stockpack vs Combatientes 21 Florida FP vs Nova Scotia 21
PK Broward vs Atascados 20 Cobourg vs ADASI 20

Thursday 5 PM Thursday 7 PM
Gigantes vs Carnage 25 Carnage vs Barranquitas 25
Niagara Fury vs Puerto Rico Jr’s. 24 ADASI vs Venez/Miami 24
Team Minnesota vs Jamaica 23 Maccabi Blue vs Earl’s Club 23
Radio 560 vs Millwood 22 Millwood vs Maccabi Red 22
Kitchener vs Dominicana US 21 Dominicana US vs Indios 21
NY Gremlins vs Oklahoma FP 20 Oklahoma FP vs Combatientes 20

Friday 9 AM Diamond Friday 11 AM Diamond
Puerto Rico vs Capitalinos 25 Puerto Rico vs Team Minnesota 25
Florida FP vs Sureno Soy 24 Brewers vs Radio 560 24
Puerto Rico Jr’s. vs PK Broward 23 Virgin Islands vs Gigantes 23
Earl’s Club vs Sopotocientos 22 Kitchener vs Italian AC 22
Big Cove vs Hill United 21 NY Gremlins vs Stockpack 21
Cobourg vs Chicago/NY 20 Atascados vs Niagara Fury 20

Friday 1 PM Diamond Friday 3 PM Diamond
Capitalinos vs Jamaica 25 Brewers vs Millwood 25
Chicago/NY vs ADASI 24 Italian AC vs Dominicana US 24
Maccabi Blue vs Dom Rep 23 Dom Rep vs Earl’s Club 23
Minn Angels vs Nova Scotia 22 Florida FP vs Minn Angels 22
Los Socios vs DC Arrows 21 Stockpack vs Oklahoma FP 21
Carnage vs Virgin Islands 20 Atascados vs Puerto Rico Jr’s. 20

Friday 5 PM Diamond Friday 7 PM Diamond
Venez/Miami vs Cobourg 25 NY Gremlins vs Combatientes 25
Indios vs Kitchener 24 Maccabi Blue vs Sopotocientos 24
Los Socios vs Big Cove 23 PK Broward vs Niagara Fury 23
Capitalinos vs Team Minnesota 22 Sureno Soy vs Nova Scotia 22
Barranquitas vs Gigantes 21 Hill United vs DC Arrows 21
Maccabi Red vs Radio 560 20 Puerto Rico vs Jamaica 20

32 team single elimination championship (CH) bracket and 8 team consolation (CO) bracket – – schedule below

Saturday 9 AM Saturday 11 AM Saturday 1 PM Saturday 3 PM
Game 1 CH Game 5 CH Game 9 CH Game 15 CH
Game 2 CH Game 6 CH Game 10 CH Game 16 CH
Game 3 CH Game 7 CH Game 11 CH Game 17 CH
Game 4 CH Game 8 CH Game 12 CH Game 18 CH
Game 1 CO Game 3 CO Game 13 CH Game 5 CO
Game 2 CO Game 4 CO Game 14 CH Game 6 CO

Next page….

Saturday 5 PM Saturday 7 PM Sunday 10 AM Sunday 12 Noon
Game 19 CH Game 7 CO – Chps’p Game 25 CH Game 29 CH
Game 20 CH Game 26 CH Game 30 CH
Game 21 CH Game 27 CH
Game 22 CH Game 28 CH
Game 23 CH
Game 24 CH

Sunday 2 PM
Game 31 championship


Tournament Rules after the jump.
Read the rest of this entry »

2010 AAU Roster # 7 – Los Socios

December 19th, 2009


Los Socios – Venezuela


Número Nombre Y Apellido Posición

65 Florencio Barreto P
25 Nestor Osorio P
42 Ramiro Escorcha P
41 Robert Poorman Epp P
07 Jorge Lima Inf
24 Jose Ramon Rodriguez Dh
04 Obdulio Pedrique Inf
21 Jhon Diaz Inf
08 Jose Solorzano Inf
14 Gustavo Lacau Utility
10 Carlos Denikin Ramirez Inf
13 Bryan Ramirez Inf
43 Tulio Linares Of
02 Pedro Gonzalez C
17 Alexander Tovar Of
18 Carlos Eduardo Wood Of
19 Alejandro Barrios Inf
43 Darren Dutsky P
23 Obdulio Pedrique Manager

Editor’s note: Los Socios has won the AAU international tournament twice, (in 2002 in 2004), and was the runner-up in 2005. They are one of only two teams in the term its ten-year history to win the tournament twice, the other being Macs, which won the tournament in 2007 and 2008.

The 2010 AAU International tournament will be played at the Wide World of Sports complex at Disney World at Orlando, Florida on January 21-24, 2010. The tournament was started by AAU tournament director Alex Linares in 2000 with eight teams, growing to 40 teams in this, its eleventh year. Fastpitchwest/Ballparkradio/Maddy’s Photos has been providing coverage of the event since 2004.

Click here for a list of all 40 teams competing in the 2010 tournament.

Click here for other 2010 AAU rosters
posted to date.

2010 AAU Roster # 6 – Barranquitas Puerto Rico

December 18th, 2009


ROSTER OFICIAL PROCERES DE BARRANQUITAS PUERTO RICO

2010

Adrian Torres 1ra Base
Markus Albino 1ra Base
Nestor Salas 2da Base
Jose Lopez Santiago Infield
Jaime Mercado Infield
Pedro Centro Infield
Victor Rivera Outfield
Andres López Lanzador
Jose Rivera Lanzador
Juan Martinez Lanzador
Luis Rosario Outfield
Alex Pérez Outfield
Omar Hernández Outfield
William Rodríguez Infield
Alexis Ortiz Infield
Heriberto Lopez Dirigente-Receptor
17. Freddy Luna Outfield

18. Hector Steider Lanzador

19. Edrick López Lanzador

20. Andy Carrasquillo Lanzador

21. Joseph Garder Infield

22. José Navas Lanzador


Editor’s note
: “Lanzador” = “Pitcher”

The 2010 AAU International tournament will be played at the Wide World of Sports complex at Disney World at Orlando, Florida on January 21-24, 2010. The tournament was started by AAU tournament director Alex Linares in 2000 with eight teams, growing to 40 teams in this, its eleventh year. Fastpitchwest/Ballparkradio/Maddy’s Photos has been providing coverage of the event since 2004.

Click here for a list of all 40 teams competing in the 2010 tournament.

Click here for other 2010 AAU rosters
posted to date.

2010 AAU Roster # 5 – Milwood Logistics – Canada

December 18th, 2009


Millwood Logistics Countrymen

Scott Wagar -P
Andrew Phibbs -P
Brad Robinson -P/IF
Chris Payne – IF
Rowan Lam – IF
Steph Walma – IF/OF
Jamie Robinson – OF
Ben Wideman – OF
Troy Rick – OF
Adam Dearborn – C

The 2010 AAU International tournament will be played at the Wide World of Sports complex at Disney World at Orlando, Florida on January 21-24, 2010. The tournament was started by AAU tournament director Alex Linares in 2000 with eight teams, growing to 40 teams in this, its eleventh year. Fastpitchwest/Ballparkradio/Maddy’s Photos has been providing coverage of the event since 2004.

Click here for a list of all 40 teams competing in the 2010 tournament.

Click here for other 2010 AAU rosters
posted to date.

Philanthropists to Build Stadium in Israel

December 17th, 2009

With an Eye on the 2013 Maccabiah Games, Philanthropists Go to Bat for a Softball and Baseball Complex in Israel

Responding to the growing love for baseball and softball in Israel, a group of businessmen and ball players from Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom have joined forces to build a full-service stadium they hope will be finished in time for the 2013 Maccabiah Games.

Tel Aviv, Israel (PRWEB) December 17, 2009 — A group of businessmen and ball players from Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom has launched a project to build a “field of dreams” for the growing leagues of baseball and softball teams in Israel.

In coordination with the Israel Softball Association, the group has kicked off a fundraising program aimed at building a full-size baseball and softball stadium in Israel, just in time for the 2013 Maccabiah Games, an international Jewish athletic event that is the world’s third largest sporting summit.

“We need a full-service facility for Jewish youth from around the world to come to Israel to play softball,” said Lorne Swartz, a Canadian business executive and softball leader of the Canadian Maccabiah team, who is part of the group behind the project. “We come to play here every four years. Why not build a field to the highest standards for our youth and for the next Maccabiah?”

In recent years, baseball and softball have become increasingly popular among athletes and sports fans in Israel. But the lack of facilities has presented barriers for those who want to pick up a bat and glove and head out to the field.

At present, Maccabiah softball games in Israel are held in a rented facility in Petah Tikva, located in the country’s Center District. However, the field was designed for baseball and needs to be converted during the Games to accommodate softball matches.

“This results in less than ideal conditions for softball players,” explained Morrie Frydberg, head of operations for the Canadian Maccabiah softball program. “So a group of us started talking about the need for a proper complex that would include a baseball field, a softball field, change rooms and basically everything you need to support these games.”

In addition to Swartz and Frydberg, the philanthropic group also includes Fred Cohen and Ken Schwartz of the U.S., Jack Fireman of Canada, and Mark Berman of the U.K., who is a veteran of three Maccabiahs and a member of the British Softball Hall of Fame. The group, which plans to have an integrated “Friends of the Field” fundraising program in place by 2010, wants to either expand and improve an existing facility or acquire the rights to build a new complex through one of the major municipalities.

Ami Baran, Executive Director of the Israel Softball Association and a Vice President of the European Softball Federation, will play a key role in developing the new facility.

“I have dreamed of this for years,” says Baran. “Now we have the chance to move our program forward. The expansion of the Maccabiah Games to include Women’s Open, Men’s Open, Youth and Men’s senior’s competitions, and the growth of the Israel Softball Association, highlight the need for Israel to have a first-class facility for softball and baseball, for kids from around the Jewish world.”

Jack Fireman, who heads Canadian softball for Maccabiah Canada, says building this complex will help softball and baseball grow in Israel and spark interest in other countries to participate in the Maccabiah Games’ bat and glove events.

The facility would also allow Israel to play host to other international softball and baseball competitions.

Softball was introduced to the Maccabiah Games in 1981. Kibbutz Gezer built a softball facility with support from North America and hosted the games through 1997. Later, Maccabiah softball games moved to the Baptist Village facility in Petah Tikva, where competitions took place in 2001, 2005 and 2009.

For more information or to schedule an interview regarding this press release, contact:

Ami Baran (Israel) Tel. +972-52-275-1387 amib(at)actcom(dot)co(dot)il

Morrie Frydberg (Canada) morriefrydberg(at)hotmail(dot)com

# # #

2010 AAU Roster # 4 – Earl’s Club, WI USA

December 16th, 2009


2010 AAU Roster – Earl’s Club

Tim Barsuli
Bub Dreher
Freddie Faccin
Scott Gillmore
Jay Gilray
Dale Horton
Jared Johnson
Josh Johnson, P
Jeremy Maginn
Bruce Pirkel
Paul Skora
Jon Zipperer

The 2010 AAU International tournament will be played at the Wide World of Sports complex at Disney World at Orlando, Florida on January 21-24, 2010. The tournament was started by AAU tournament director Alex Linares in 2000 with eight teams, growing to 40 teams in this, its eleventh year. Fastpitchwest/Ballparkradio/Maddy’s Photos has been providing coverage of the event since 2004.

Click here for a list of all 40 teams competing in the 2010 tournament.

Click here for other 2010 AAU rosters
posted to date.

Glenn Ormsby New ISC Player Rep

December 16th, 2009

The ISC is pleased to announce Canada West Vice President, Todd McCabe’s appointment of Glenn (Spike) Ormsby as a new ISC Player Rep, replacing Brad Bibby who is no longer an active player at the ISC level. We thank Brad for his 5-years of service as an ISC Player Rep.

Glenn Ormsby is a well known player at the highest level, making ISC All-World in 2008 with the Circle Tap team and named ASA All-America 3-times in 2007, 2008 and 2009. In 2010 Glenn plans to play with the Dominican Republic team of New York.

Ormsby, a fastball player for 23-years, is a 10-year ISC veteran, age 39, married to Sandra and has a son Lukas and a daughter Kiera. He is employed as a Territory Manager for Emco Waterworks/Irrigation and resides in Prince George, BC.

Spike is looking forward to serving the game and the ISC as a Player Rep and we salute his enthusiasm in taking on this important role.

Glenn Ormsby
17340 Robyn Way
Prince George, BC, Canada
V2N 6S2
email: spike44 (at) telus.net

Please join me in welcoming Glenn (Spike) Ormsby.

Zane Smith shares memories of the bygone era of military fastpitch softball

December 15th, 2009

From Otto in Focus:


Written by Bob on December 14th, 2009
By BOB OTTO
botto3 (at) verizon.net

YUCAIPA, CA – It took but one game. And Zane Smith was forever hooked on fastpitch softball.

In 1962 Smith was a young Navy Corpsman. And the Naval base he was stationed at had a fastpich team with a key position to fill. So Smith raised his hand.

“The manager asked, ‘can anybody catch?’” said Smith. “I said I could. I didn’t know anything about the game and I used a baseball catcher’s mitt.”

Little did Smith know at the time that warming up on the other side of the diamond was one of the all-time great military and civilian pitchers, Buck Brown.

“I was warming our pitcher up and I heard this Pow! Pow!” Smith said. “I turned and looked and it was Buck Brown warming up. He was really bringing it.”

Smith struggled his first year at the plate hitting .079, but he was determined to raise that anemic batting average and better his game. And over the next 28 years of his Navy career, Smith did just that.

In 1968, the right-handed power hitter was selected to the All-Marine Corps team. And he played in five All-Navy championships.

The 70-year-old Smith has long since retired from the Navy. But his memories of Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force fastpitch softball live on. Those were days when all the military branches had outstanding teams, pitchers, and players. Those were the days when the three branches battled ferociously to claim the title as the Inter-Service champion.

The heyday of military fastpitch has long since disappeared. But he cherishes those times still, and agreed to share some of his fondest memories.

Who were some of the great Navy pitchers?
Joe Lynch. He was the best Navy pitcher I ever saw. He was a big guy, about 6-foot-4 and 250 pounds and just 20-years-old in 1963 when I first faced him. The ball was a white blur. He threw harder than anybody I ever faced. When you were in the batter’s box he scared you. You stayed real loose.

“We played him at Camp Pendleton and he struck out all 21 of us. He got out of the service when he was 21 in 1964, and went on to play for Aurora and Clearwater (Bombers). He was the MVP pitcher and MVP player for Aurora when they won the ASA national championship.

“Roy Burlison was the second best in the Navy. He could bring it too. Everybody in the world wanted him when he got out. And Jim Sperry, a crow hopper, had the great rise ball and the great drop.

“In about 1969, me and Darwin Tolzin were picked up for the All-Navy Tournament. Darwin started out as an outfielder. He had the good rise, good drop, and an unreadable change drop that you couldn’t hit at all. (In 1976, along with Al DeWall, Tolzin pitched All American Bar of St. Paul, Minn. to the ISC World Championship held in Long Beach and Lakewood, Calif.)

What were some of the great fastpitch military bases?

“The two best were Sub-Marine Atlantic near London, Connecticut, and Sub Flotilla One in San Diego. Our base team (San Diego) played in the Western Softball Congress for years.”

What military branch played the best fastpitch?

“The Air Force. They had some great pitchers. Big Bill White was 6-foot-6 and when he warmed up he started from the outfield fence and kept moving in. When he got to 46 feet, he was really bringing it. Then there was Jim Swilley, he was only about 5-foot-6, but he was really quick.

“The Air Force held world wide (selection) camps to chose their team. They had all the best players and softball was their job.

Describe one of your most memorable moments?
“In 1972 I hit a three-run homer to tie the game and we went on to win the championship (and qualify) for the All Navy Tournament.”

Who was one of the best all around players?

“Cary Weiler. He gave you everything he had as a pitcher, and he was one hell of a hitter, and a good first baseman. He’s one of the best competitors ever. I remember one tournament where he was all cramped up and he just took the ball and kept going. He was also a good basketball player and made All-Navy.”

What about position players?
“George Giles was the best position player ever. He could slap hit and played every infield position, and when he ran he just glided along and fielded everything. Pete Russo was a 5-foot-7 centerfielder who could go get the ball with anybody. After he left the Navy he played with the Vista Bombers.”

You also managed. Tell us about that.

“I started playing and managing in 1972. I managed teams like Stanley Andrews (San Diego), Mel’s Car Wash in Oceanside, the Oceanside Bombers, San Bernardino Stars, and Albuquerque Roadrunners. In 1981 we won the Western Softball Congress with the Oceanside Bombers and went to the (ISC) World Tournament. We split four games with Camarillo Kings in the WSC and they won the World Tournament. They had Mark Smith, and he was a barnburner. He threw awfully hard.”

When you retired from the Navy, you managed teams in the ASA and ISC (Western Softball Congress) and saw many great players. Name a player who really impressed you?

“Nick Hopkins, Sr. I was in awe of him. He played shortstop for the Long Beach Nitehawks and he could hit and field with anybody. He could reach any ball and had a great arm and instincts for the game. I was a dead pull hitter and they had a shift on me, so I tried to hit to the right side and bunt.

“He came up to the stands after our game and said, ‘son, you’re really messing up. Quit trying to bunt and hit the other way. Go back to hitting the way you do.’ It was the best advice anybody ever gave me.”

Best rise ball pitcher?
“Bob Todd (Long Beach Nitehawks). He started at the letters and kept walking the pitches up. He had pin point control.”

Best drop ball?
“Ralph Salazar of Fresno. He pitched for Winchells and RKT. He was so strong and he just rolled the ball straight down like off a table, and Ed Klecker. “Ed had one pitch, that drop ball, but it was the best. I faced him for five years, and I only got one rise ball from him in all those years in the 1974 (WSC) All-Star game. It was the fourth inning and Red Meairs (Nitehawks manager) sent me in to pinch hit. Ed threw me a rise ball and I hit it out. Ed won the ISC World Tournament for the Jets in 1973 with that one great pitch. (Klecker was named the Most Valuable Player of the ’73 World Tournament and was selected to the ISC All-World team in 1972, ’73, ’74, and he was inducted into the ISC Hall of Fame in 2006.)

Best change up?
“Vaughn McClure (Navy). I remember a game against the Nitehawks when he gave up back-to-back doubles in the first inning and they didn’t touch him the rest of the way. We ended up losing, 2-1, in 12 innings. Every team in the Congress wanted him.”

With all those years spent playing military and civilian fastpitch, what has the game come to mean to you?
“It was a love. A true love.”

Editor’s notes:

It was good to see Zane’s name in an article about fastpitch again. Kudos, Bobby Otto for the story, reminding us of a bit of history we’ve almost forgotten – the military teams. I have had the pleasure to get to know Zane around the diamond, facing his teams, and later, trying to persuade him to manage the Vista Bombers, something we almost did. Zane was one of those people you warm up to the moment you meet him, someone who just seemed to be made to manage. He had the respect of his teammates and the players he coached. I recall a tournament in San Bernardino, while playing for a local team, when he saw one of my “once-every-decade” home runs, and offered to get everyone to sign the ball, so I could take it back to my regular team, the Bombers as proof that it actually happened. It was a measure of the good natured banter you could count on Zane for.

While I never saw the change-up of Vaughn McClure that Zane mentions, I can vouch for Bob Todd‘s rise ball, and Ralph Salazar‘s drop. I adopted familiar Todd’s number 19 after watching him while growing up in Long Beach, and saw Salazar pitch in one of the last west coast ISC World Tournaments, in 1976 at Blair Field. Salazar had a huge left arm, one that looked like it belonged to someone twice as large. While probably known more for the drop that Zane described, he used the change-up to great advantage at that ’76 World Tournament. Salazar tossed two no-hitters that year in those hideous bright yellow uniforms.

Salazar was mentioned in Ike’s CCMSA website, mentioned among the Central California greats, along with the late, great Hall of Famer, Kevin Herlighy.

“Another is Ralph Salazar from Fresno who has 3 no hitters, (2 of them in 1976). Then there is Herman Dunkerkin with a no hitter in 1974. Steve Schultz (Bakersfield) with 2 no hitters. Tom Lampe (Dinuba) with 1. Kevin Herlihy from Lancaster is second in all time win in a single tournament with 7 in the 1983 tournament, and has 2 perfect games to his credit.”

Salazar big left arm carried the Fresno Winchell’s squad to a sixth place finish at the 1976 ISC World Tournament, with Salazar earning first team all world honors, with a 4-1 mark, a 0.72 ERA, striking out 58 while walking only 6.

Ed Klecker, I recall as the ace for the Lakewood Jets, arch-rivals of my hometown Nitehawks. He was at the zenith of his career when I was in high school. We did a feature on Ed at Fastpitchwest in 2006, when a dinner was held in Long Beach to honor he and Greg Sepulveda on the eve of their 2006 ISC HOF induction. Klecker’s achievments were chronicled that night by former Jet batboy (and later star of the team) Ron Rupp. Rupp — a former member of the “California Cuties” barnstorming team (that entertained fans while wearing women’s clothing) – had the best line of that night, stepping to the podium to announce that it was the largest gathering he ever spoke to without a dress on.

And of course, Cary Weiler, who Zane mentions as one of the greatest all around players of his time, I got to watch Cary play – first for the Vista Bombers, and later for the Long Beach Nitehawks, finally sharing a dugout with him for a few years on the Vista Bombers version 3.0, in the early 1990’s. Cary at Joe Rodgers field in Long Beach was like Chipper Jones at Shea. Tournament directors would buy an extra box of balls if Cary was coming to the tournament. One of my first memories of watching Cary play was walking in the outfield behind the tarped fences at Joe Rodgers and nearly getting hit in the head by one of his home runs. True story. I didn’t see him hit it, but the public address announcer’s “Home run, Cary Weiler” became one I got used to hearing. I used to remind Cary that I had watched him “when I was growing up”, though he would be quick to remind me that “you’re not that young”.

For those not familiar with the author of the article above, Bob Otto, he was a pitcher in the Riverside California, as well as sportswriter and photographer. He has penned some of the best original content stories about fastpitch that you’ll find. He was the official photographer of the ISC for a number of years, creating some of the most iconic shots of his era, including a number of Darren Zack. When Fastpitchwest was founded in 1998, it was Bobby’s photos that graced the pages, photos he graciously granted permission to post, in the interest of promoting the game. When Maddy started to shoot fastpitch, it was Bob Otto’s photos that served as the model, and goal – his photos that capture not only the action, but the emotion of the game. A favorite of mine, below, taken by Bob Otto of Glenn Davis, aka “The Rocket”, who pitched for a number of So Cal teams, including the Long Beach Painters during the mid-1990’s (about the time the team appeared in Jeremy Spear’s movie, “Fastpitch”)


(Glenn Davis, pitching for the So Cal Bombers at the 2002 Best of the West tournament)

Photo by: Bob Otto

As for Zane Smith, I remember him leading great teams, but perhaps most for the laughter you heard coming out of the dugout when he was around, sharing a story or three, or needling someone nearby, be it opponent or teammate.