Peterson's Farm Tavern is king

Al's Fastball News fastball at pmihrm.com
Wed Aug 22 13:45:11 EDT 2007


Doug Moe: Peterson's Farm Tavern is king
Doug Moe — 8/21/2007 9:07 am

ROD PETERSON says this was going to be the year. He isn't getting
any
younger, you know.

Peterson is about to put 70 in his rear view mirror and assembling
this
year's edition of his Farm Tavern softball team took a lot out
of him. He
sent all the way to Australia for one kid, Jeff Goolagong, who
turns out to
be related to Evonne Goolagong Cawley, the tennis star from the
1970s.

The point is, Peterson, a Rio native who came to Madison in 1955,
was at
last going to put a wrap on a fast-pitch softball managing career
that is
legendary around the world among those in the know. Then a funny
thing
happened. Saturday night, in Canada, Peterson's Farm Tavern won
another
International Softball Congress (ISC) world title.

"Now" Peterson was saying Monday," "we'll be back to defend."

Among fast-pitch softball players, guys who generally play for
love and beer
money, the Farm Tavern franchise resonates like the New York
Yankees. Last
weekend's world title was the Farm's third, and there have been
multiple
national crowns as well. The numbers can run together for a self-described
farm boy like Peterson, but they appear to indicate the Farm
Tavern has
finished in the top four in the world championships 11 of the
past 12 years.
Talk about a Murders' Row.

This all started for Peterson, 69, one day in the early 1960s
when he was
leaving his job at the Mendota State Hospital on the north side
and spotted
a buddy carrying baseball spikes. The friend said he was going
to a
fast-pitch softball game. "Want to come?"

Peterson, a lifelong baseball fan who had been thinking about
playing Home
Talent League hardball, went along, and he has never looked back.
He played
first base and started managing in 1966, skippering a team sponsored
by the
Music Box Tavern on Madison 's east side in the city recreation
league.

Peterson, whose family has a 650-acre farm south of Rio, bought
the Farm
Tavern on Moorland Road, south of South Towne, in 1975, and naturally
he
fielded a fast-pitch softball team. Today they play some 55 games
a summer,
traveling around the state and beyond. Fast-pitch has become
an
international game. This year's Farm team has four players from
Wisconsin
(out of 15 on the roster). Peterson pays room, board and a stipend
to the
mostly young players who relocate here for the summer. And while
the game is
bigger elsewhere than in Madison, every July Peterson hosts a
tournament at
the Bowling Green complex in Middleton.

There have been many highlights over the years. In the ISC world
tournament
in 1981, held in Saginaw, Mich., the Farm Tavern played a 34-inning
game
that took nearly six and one half hours to complete. The Valley
Merchants of
Midland, Mich. wound up winning it 2-1 in the bottom of the 34th.
The
Michigan pitcher recorded 64 strikeouts.

The result was better in 1997 when the Farm won its first ISC
title in
Victoria, British Columbia. Peterson calls it "the greatest thrill
I ever
had in my life."

How did they celebrate?

"We drank champagne out of the cup and danced at a club until
four in the
morning." The manager chuckled. "It was quite an ordeal."

They won again in 1999, and last week they were up in Canada
again, in
Kitchener this time, seeded sixth out of the tournament field
of 32. It
hadn't been the greatest season for the Farm, but Peterson says
that about a
month ago things started to come together, and in the tournament
they
thumped a couple of "really great" teams that had beaten them
earlier. The
final was an 8-1 rout of a team from Palm Springs, Calif.

"I'm coming to the end," Peterson said Monday. "I'm getting older
and every
year the kids seem younger. It's a tremendous amount of work"
But next
year's world tournament is nearby -- in Kimberly. You can bet
both the farm
boy and the Farm Tavern will be there.


 Al's Fastball News
*Email: fastball(at)pmihrm.com
   fastball at pmihrm.com
NEWS-1: http://www.AlsFastball.com/
NEWS-2: http://fastpitchwest.com/alsfastball

VIA http://www.webbox.com








More information about the Alsfastball mailing list