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June 29 District 12 LL 12-Year-Old Round-Up
Nottingham shortstop Matthew Tola avoids West Windsor's Drew Panson and fires to first to complete a double play during tonight's District 12 game at Sayen Park (Photo by Dennis Symons Jr./purchase photos at dennissymons.com).
West Windsor becoming a real pain for Nottingham
By Rich Fisher
Fish4Scores.com
For the second straight year, West Windsor spoiled Nottingham’s good time with a late bomb.
In a battle between 2-0 Pool A teams, Nottingham carried a 2-1 lead into the top of the sixth and got the first two outs quickly.
But two straight walks were followed by a three-run homer from CJ Markisz as West Windsor took a 4-2 victory at Sayen Field.
Has WW become Nottingham’s nemesis?
“I guess you’d have to say yes to that,” manager Anthony Francioso said.
As 10’s, Nottingham beat West Windsor to win the district title, but last year WW got a late home run in a loser’s bracket game to oust the Square Boys from districts.
This loss isn’t quite as costly, as Nottingham will likely advance with one game remaining against West End. But it could alter the seedings for bracket play.
“Were we stunned? No way, not at all,” Francioso said. “Were we upset we lost? Sure. But we weren’t stunned. They’re a good team, they play the game right.
“Hey look, they got us on a home run, we got Bordentown on a home run. It happens.”
Nottingham took a 2-0 lead in the second when Steven Moticha hit his third home run of the districts, and singles by Anthony Francioso and Frank Lucchesi helped set up a Michael Lee fielder’s choice that scored Jacob Liedtka.
“We sent seven batters to the plate that inning,” Francioso said. “But after that we couldn’t string anything together.”
Shane Keledy pitched 5-1/3 strong innings for Nottingham before Kyle Muller entered in the sixth. Muller got the first out, then walked two straight before the homer. He had two strikes on both batters that walked, and threw several extremely close pitches that could have gone either way.
“It was an exciting game, they’re a good team,” Francioso said. “We just have to forget about it and come out Friday and try to win.”
Sunnybrae's Terrance Mazzella connects for a fifth-inning double that would eventually figure in what would prove to be the game-winning frame in tonight's District 12 game with HTRBA at 6-11 (Photo by Ken Weingartner).
Heroes galore as Sunnybrae secures bracket play
By Rich Fisher
Fish4Scores.com
June 29: If you want to be a hero for the Sunnybrae Little League 12-year-old All-Star team, better take a number and get in line.
The Yardville Gang had a pretty long list tonight in a key, 11-10 win over township rival HTRBA at 6-11.
“This was a good win for us,” said Bryan Renda, who was first in the hero line as he held off a furious rally from HTRBA, which trailed by five entering the fifth inning.
The win secures a berth in District 12 bracket play for Sunnybrae, which is now 3-1 in Pool B with one game remaining against North Trenton/Chambersburg.
SLL is proving manager Brian “Mags” Maglione a prophet, as it really does seem to be getting better every game.
Contributions are coming from throughout the lineup and tonight was no different as eight of the 10 players either had a hit or scored a run.
Their efforts helped Sunnybrae rally from a 2-1 deficit by scoring eight in the fourth and two in the fifth for all it needed – barely.
Start with Bryan Renda, who went 2-for-3 with two runs and an RBI, and then saved the game with two strikeouts in the last inning. Renda hit a home run to tie the game and ignite the eight-run fourth, then hit an RBI single and came home on Tyler Kmiec’s triple to cap the uprising.
“That was a good inning, our whole team hit that inning,” Renda said. “I think because I was the leadoff hitter that inning, I think the home run got us all up on the bench.”
When Renda entered to pitch in the sixth, there were runners on second and third. He fanned the dangerous Adam Kaczorowski – who had two doubles and a walk – on a curve. After yielding a two-run single to Sean Jones, Renda got Kyle O’Sullivan on some more curves.
“That breaking ball he throws is nasty,” Maglione said.
Renda is finally playing pain free after hurting his wrist while playing soccer goalie against a 14-year-old shooting nemesis in his front yard.
“He hasn’t been himself, but tonight you saw the real Bryan Renda,” Maglione said. “He’s definitely one of the better players in this tournament, one of the better pitchers.
“He’s just a gamer. I’ve coached him since he was four and he’s a kid I have a lot of confidence in. He’s one of the smartest kids on this team.”
Renda says he was affected by his wrist for a while, but that “It’s all back to normal now, so everything is good.”
Also coming up big was Kmiec, who went 3-for-3 with a triple, two RBI and two runs scored. Kmiec also was the starting and winning pitcher, throwing 4-1/3 innings and allowing four earned runs before tiring.
“He had three hits, a great game on the mound,” Maglione said. “He battled. He didn’t have his best stuff, he got tired after the third, but he gutted through it.”
“The mound was a little slippery and my arm hurt a little bit,” Kmiec said. “I got a little tired, but my team came through, got me a lot of runs.”
Helping in that department was Jordan Mucha, who clocked a three-run homer in the eight-run fourth. That gave Mucha his third homer in two games. He also threw an inning of relief and got out of a bases-loaded, one-out jam by allowing just one run in the fifth.
“Jordan is hot,” Maglione said. “I’d like to see him hit more curveballs, but nobody hits a fastball better than he does.
“And he’s really developed as a pitcher. He did the job getting us out of the fifth. He’s another gamer.”
As is the coach’s son. Nicholas Maglione came up with two hits, two runs and two RBI and produced what proved to be the game winning knock when he drilled a two-run double off the left field fence in the fifth.
At the time that made it 11-6, but that entire advantage turned out to be quite necessary.
“He’s another one, like Kmiec and Renda, who I really trust,” Maglione said. “He’s another kid that always gets things done when you need him. I think that was a big double for us.”
Not to be forgotten is the team’s lone 11-year-old, Anthony Bencivengo. One wouldn’t expect much from an under-age No. 9 hitter, but the second baseman ripped a two-run homer in the fourth inning.
“All I did to hit that was practice and practice and practice,” Bencivengo said. “Before this game I hit like, 280 balls and I just got up there and hit it.”
“I needed him this year,” Maglione said. “I told the president of Sunnybrae I really need the Bulldog to solidify my infield and he’s done nothing but that. Now he’s adding some power to it at the nine spot.”
Bencivengo doesn’t want to be known as just a fielder.
“I really have to keep up with my bat,” Bencivengo said. “Even if I’m batting ninth, I have to pull up my end.”
Everyone is pretty much doing that for Sunnybrae, which wraps up pool play Friday with a 6 p.m. game against North Trenton/Chambersburg at HTRBA.
“This team will hit one through nine and stay in games,” Maglione said. “Good pitching stops good hitting. But if we see anything below a great pitcher, we’re gonna score runs.”
“Our team is coming together good,” Renda said. “We should be able to get better every day.”
So far, they have done just that.
HTRBA's Sean Jones watches the flight of his fifth-inning fly ball, which proved deep enough to score Chris Stout from third base (Photo by Ken Weingartner).
HTRBA needs a lot to happen to advance past pool play
By Rich Fisher
Fish4Scores.com
Manager Chris Stout couldn’t have been prouder of the way HTRBA battled back against Sunnybrae, but the one-run loss leaves the Van Horn gang in a sticky situation as far as advancing.
HTRBA must upset unbeaten Allentown Friday and hope that winless 6-11 can upset Lawrence.
“It’s a pretty tall order,” said HTRBA manager Chris Stout, whose team showed tons of heart in rallying from a late 9-2 deficit to bring the potential winning run to the plate in the bottom of the sixth. “We’ll just have to do the best we can.”
HTRBA had taken a 2-1 lead in the bottom of the first on Adam Kaczorowski’s two-run double. After Sunnybrae’s eight-run fourth, the Mercerville Men went to work in the bottom of the inning as Kyle O’Sullivan had an RBI ground-out and Sam Malespina’s double set up two more runs.
Sean Jones’ sacrifice fly made it 9-6 before Maglione’s double put Sunnybrae’s margin at five. In the bottom of the sixth, singles by RJ Komet and Sean McGeehan, his second of the game, a walk to Chris Stout and Joe Garey’s two-run double made it 11-8 and put runners at second and third with one out.
After a strikeout, Jones hit a two-run single to make it a one-run game, but Renda finally ended it with a strikeout.
As the manager pointed out, a few errors that led to three unearned runs ended up hurting.
“It’s nice to see them come back,” Stout said. “But it’s always the little plays that, at the time they happen don’t seem so significant, but they cost you one or two runs and in the end that’s the difference.
“But it’s good to see them come back, not give up and keep working at it.”
HTRBA hosts Allentown at 8 p.m. Friday.
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FISH TALES
(Also known as
Rich Fisher's blog)
May 7, 2012
Thanks go out to
Mollie, Ms. Quinn,
Alu, Nancy Mac
and other great
F4S contributors
May 7: Just want to start out by thanking Steinert senior Mollie Coyne and GALARE teacher Tracy Quinn for having me in as a guest speaker on Friday. It was a tremendous experience with a great group of kids.
Mollie extended the invitation, Ms. Quinn made it happen and it turned out to be a great morning.
Being a guest speaker is always a crap shoot. You go in and talk for a little bit and hope you spark an interest that will lead to some questions. If there are little or no questions, it can get pretty embarrassing because I don’t have a heck of a lot to say after five minutes. . . on anything!
But the GALARE gang took care of that by asking some thought-provoking, intelligent and inspiring questions. They made me think of things I haven’t thought of in years and also made me think of things I take for granted all the time and never give much thought to. It also gave me a chance to experience a nice give-and-take relationship with the students other than a quick interview after the game.
It’s kind of cool to see what kind of things young adults think about in this day and age, and I have to commend this group for being attentive and, not to sound like a britsh woman at Sunday morning tea, quite delightful!
And I have to give props to Cat Castaldo, whose dad John put her up to a prank question that she didn’t even understand, but asked it anyway and had me laughing like crazy. Good job Cat! But don’t let your dad drag you down to our level too many more times!
And Sydney, thanks for overlooking my Yankee dislike. Glad we could come to terms!
* * *
Congratulations also go out to Quinn and Robyn Korchick Lucchesi, both standout hoop players from the township, for their upcoming induction into the Mercer County CYO Hall of Fame. Both are quite deserving and are products of Joe O’Gorman’s knowledge of the game.
Also, happy birthday to Tracy one day late, and happy anniversary to Robyn, who’s celebrating her 18th year with husband Frank today. All good stuff!
* * *
More thanks go out to Phil Alu and Nancy McManimon.
When this site started over two years ago, I billed it as a “community sports” website, with the accent on the community. I have a few guys helping out but for the most part I’m still on my own and need help from the members of the community and the coaches of each team.
I have certainly been getting that, as the influx of youth sports results has been better than ever this spring, as has the reporting of results from the high school coaches.
But on Friday Phil took it to a new level. I couldn’t make it to the Hamilton-PDS game due to some other issues I needed to deal with. I really wanted to get there because so many township kids played on PDS.
So Phil agreed to text me updates each inning, which he did a fabulous job of. And Nancy provided several pictures of the game, although that’s not news because she has done that often in the past.
Now, skeptics will say this was only done because both their kids had big games. But they offered to do so before the game even started, no matter what the end result.
It worked out great and I just want to thank them both. . .and thank everyone else for all the contributions you have been making this spring and, of course, in the winter, fall and summer.
* * *
It’s hard to believe Marshall Harden isn’t in the Steinert lineup. Few programs can lose a guy like that and do what the Spartans are doing.
Speaking of Steinert baseball. . . .how tasty is that 7 p.m. match-up against Robbinsville. Rarely do you get last year’s finalists meeting so early in the tournament. Steinert owes the Ravens some payback from last year, but Robbinsville is on fire.
Should be awesome. * * *
Here’s a little unfortunate news to report.
Just call it “Bad Ending II”
Steinert grad Angela “Pit Crew” Marinos’ had her outstanding collegiate softball career come to a gruesome end on Sunday.
With Mercer County Community College playing Morris in the Region XIX Tournament Sunday, Marinos swung at a high and inside pitch on a hit-and-run play. She fouled the ball directly into her mouth, and blood exploded everywhere.
Marinos was rushed to the hospital. There was no fracture but twor front teeth were pushed back, and it took over 25 stitches to seal all the wounds.
This marks the second dark ending to a career for the popular Marinos. (To quote HGSA legend Tara Lavin “Who doesn’t like Ange?”). Her career at Steinert ended due to a broken ankle.
Get well soon Ange. There are engines to overhaul!
* * *
Fish4Scores “Phase 2” is on the horizon.
After making sure this was a site that was going to last and gain interest, I now want to take it to the next level and begin selling banner advertising to local businesses. The process will probably take a month or so to get started, but if you are a business owner out there looking to promote your venture and support local athletes all at once, please give it consideration.
If you are a sponsor and want to upgrade to a banner ad, you will obviously have a lower rate since you’ve already paid into it.
More details will be forthcoming, but just putting it out there.
* * *
There is another exciting promotion for Fish4Scores in the works, but things haven’t been finalized yet so let’s wait until they are before we talk about it. But in getting it started, it will involve fun help from the community.
* * *
My dislike of the Yankees is no secret to anyone who reads this blog, but here’s hoping Mariano Rivera can make a successful return next year.
There is no way anyone in the world can not like this guy. He is humble, modest, keeps a lower than low profile and just happens to be the greatest player at his position that ever lived playing for a franchise that is nearly impossible to stay low profile with.
A guy like Mariano deserves to go out on his terms. He deserves to have a farewell tour around the league and let everyone cheer him. He probably doesn’t want that, but he deserves it.
In my mind, he is the absolute key to this Yankee dynasty in the era of the closer.
Get well and get back Mariano. You deserve it! * * *
My Flyers are down 3-1. My Sixers are up 3-1.
I predicted Flyers-Devils would go seven games with four of them going overtime. I didn’t predict the winner, just the length. Well, change that from my prediction to my prayer.
As for the Sixers, I thought they would hang with the Bulls after Derrick Rose went out, but didn’t think they would win. But Chicago is getting killed with other injuries too, so what the hell, might as well take advantage of it!
* * *
Mike “The Meatball Master” Papero continues to show his versatility, as he ran the clock flawlessly during Hamilton West’s girls county lacrosse game with Robbinsville Saturday. The Master also announces at hoop games, coaches football and coaches golf.
Where there is time for meatballs, I will never know.
April 28, 2012
Township athletes
should be making
us proud during
period of adversity
Apr. 28: As much as everyone in the area likes Jimmy Hines, I’m afraid I overstayed his welcome at the top of this blog. No less than three people this week said “Hey, isn’t about time for a new blog, I’m a little sick of Jimmy Hines.”
Well, OK, a month might be a little too much, so here we go on to the land of the Hines-less.
* * *
We all know what’s going on in Hamilton Township these days and it is not casting us in a very good light around the area.
But we can’t help what our leaders do, we can only do what we do.
That’s why this township should be proud of some of the young athletes at Hamilton West High School this week.
In case you missed the stories posted on Fish4Scores earlier this week (and still on the home page), a group of Hornet football players helped out at the Miracle League by playing baseball with individuals with disabilities, and Hamilton West softball catcher Brianna Castellano has gotten her teammates and Nottingham’s softball team to “Play for Pink” Monday night during their game at HGSA.
Granted, these aren’t the only high school kids from the township that do nice things. It happens at all three schools.
But during a week of total upheaval in our township, the timing of these athletes could not be better to make us feel good about ourselves. Isn’t it nice to know that there are some young kids among us who aren’t just thinking about themselves, but are looking out for others?
Show them how much you appreciate it.
Prove to them you’re proud of what they have done during this bleak week.
Come to the HGSA complex Monday night and donate to breast cancer. And watch a good softball game while you are there.
* * *
Megan Cibree is about as much of a lacrosse expert as you can get when it comes to the sport in Hamilton Township.
The Steinert senior has played in the Spartans program since she was a freshman and Steinert was a club team. Her boyfriend plays on the Steinert boys’ team.
If she’s not playing lacrosse with the girls, she’s watching it with the boys.
So who better to ask if the sport is catching on in Hamilton.
“Oh yeah, definitely,” she said during a recent boys game that was very well attended. “You really see it at the boys’ games. I’m not sure if it’s catching on with the girls as much, because there really is more action in the boys’ games.
“But we’re still getting better crowds. People are really starting to get into it more.”
It helps that the Steinert boys and Hamilton girls have been winning a few games this year, which always helps pump up interest.
Granted, they are playing weaker schedules than the best teams in Mercer. But New Egypt coach Jay Corby, a township resident who has done an outstanding job out there in Plumstead, says that’s the way to go.
“If you’re trying to build a program, you have to have some success first,” Corby said. “You have to go out and win a few games, and get the kids some confidence. Then other kids in school see that the team is winning and maybe they want to come out.
“Once all that starts happening, then you can try and get a tougher schedule. But for now, let them enjoy some wins.”
* * *
Whoever knew this township was such a rugby factory?
Believe it or not, no less than four former high school athletes are playing club rugby at their respective colleges. Steinert’s Garrett Braddock is at Syracuse, Nottingham’s Mike Elberson is playing at Ursinus, Steinert’s Jonathan Pulley plays at Albright, and Hamilton West’s Amanda Rossi just went to the collegiate club championship game with Pittsburgh before the Panthers fell in the finals in chilly Ohio.
When somebody finds out where this feeder system is, please let me know.
* * *
You may have noticed that I am trying to run game by game results of various sports.
You may also have noticed that they are like, really crooked. They kind of swerve their way downward.
You may not care. Or, you may wonder why.
My answer is, I do not know why. They are straight when I type them in and proof them and all that. Then when the site publishes, they are crooked.
One of life’s little mysteries I suppose.
* * *
I’m not a huge hockey fan. I used to be, back in the day of the Broad Street Bullies winning Stanley Cups, but there’s just too many teams to try and keep track of the regular season.
BUT. . . I don’t know if any sport’s playoffs are more exciting than the Stanley Cup playoffs.
The NFL playoffs and NCAA tournament are gut-grinding because they are one-and-done. But as far as best-of-seven series, the emotions of these hockey playoff games are incredible. It seems like so many of them are one goal games, down to the wire with a goalie out.
I think one of the big differences in hockey and the NBA is that with hockey, barring a penalty, the game plays out in a rhythm with few stoppages down the stretch. In basketball, foul shots and timeouts in the final few minutes pretty much stall things. In hockey, you never get the chance to catch your breath, which is what makes it so cool.
I don’t even care about some of the teams in these playoffs and I’m all edge-of-my-seaty at crunch time. It’s good stuff. And it’s gonna be pretty wild around here in the next few weeks with Flyers-Devils.
Let’s go Flyers!
* * *
Speaking of playoffs, I am a Sixers fan, but it kills me to see Derrick Rose out for the rest of the playoffs.
Part of what makes any post-season game great is watching the stars go head to head and see who rises to the top. For the Bulls to lose their best player, that just cheats everybody. Will the Heat feel good about beating a Rose-less Bulls?
Actually, with that crew, who knows?
* * *
I guess there’s something wrong with me, but I just can’t get into the NFL draft. I don’t know why. Maybe I’ve just seen too many hyped guys fall flat, so watching all this stuff and all these interviews and everything just doesn’t do much for me because you really never know what’s going to happen.
I can understand people doing it. It’s a great haven for hard core football fans. I’m a big fan, but I’m more a fan of just watching the games. I’m not a fantasy guy, I don’t play pools, I just love to watch it.
What does make me laugh, are the people who sit there and watch the 86,000th pick with the same intensity as the top 10. “Ohhh, how can they take that guy when that receiver at Saskatchewan College is still available. That kid’s a sleeper!”
* * * *
Congratulations to College of New Jersey coach Sharon Pfluger for becoming the first Division III women's lacrosse coach to win 400 games. Sharon is not from Hamilton, but she's a friend, a great person and a great coach and I'm happy for her.
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