Friday, May 25, 2007

Montville Triumphs in 10 Over Morris Hills


In a contest billed as the game of the week by the Star Ledger, Montville and Morris Hills take three did not disappoint, with Montville winning 6-5 in ten innings on a Lexi Haugh single past the drawn in infield scoring Lauren Novotny. This exciting game had three ties and four different changes.
This playoff quarterfinal set up just the MCT quarterfinal with Morris Hills being the five seed and traveling to face Montville the four seed. In addition, the Lady Knights sent out Senior Cara Moriarty and the Lady Mustangs countered with senior Candace Harrison. This game was not a pitcher’s duel with both teams scoring five runs off the other team’s starter. Montville struck in the bottom half of the first when Michelle Geannakakes was hit by a pitch and scored on a single by Stephanie Malgeri. Then in the next half inning, Morris Hills scored two runs on a single by Melissa O’Connor. In the bottom of that inning, Montville scored again when Geannakakes tripled in Haugh. In the bottom of the third, Montville scored three runs when they loaded the bases on two singles and a walk. They plated three runs on three fielders choices, where seven eight, and nine in the batting order put the ball in play and great things happened. Morris Hills stopped the bleeding by bringing in O’Connor from left field, who promptly got two outs to end the inning. The fourth was quiet with both teams going down in order. In the fifth inning, Morris Hills got one run back on a single by Jess Sitzer. In the sixth, Morris Hills got the equalizer when O’Connor again singled in two runs. That sent the game to extras.
The first two frames of extra innings had no base runners because of the pitching of Harrison and O’Connor. Fernicola doubled with one out and Noelle Sisco was brought in to end the threat and to finish the game. The first batter she faced was Sitzer, who hit a liner to center field where Kristin D’Arienzo made an amazing, spectacular, marvelous, incredible diving catch, the best one this reporter has ever seen in person. The only rival to this catch was the one by Gary Matthews Jr. who last year scaled the fence and brought back a homerun ball a good five feet over the top of the wall. That catch was described by Coach John Immediato as a game saver because a single would have scored Fernicola from second. In addition, no one at the game, even D’Arienzo, was shocked about that Web Gem everyone had all seen. Sisco then struck out the next batter to end the inning. D’Arienzo then led off and drew a walk and moved to second with two outs when Novotny hit a bullet right at the third basemen’s glove. Then the gameentered the international tiebreaker as the game went into its tenth and final inning.
In the tenth inning, Michelle Bauer started at second. Morris Hills could not advance the runner. Then Sam Boccolini singled to center but a laser from D’Arienzo held the runner at third. Sisco then walked the next batter to load the bases and bring up O’Connor all ready with two two-run singles, but Sisco came through and ended the threat unscathed.
Novotny started at second for the Mustangs and was moved to third by a beautiful bunt to the third basemen by Candace Harrison. Then Morris Hills moved the infield in to prevent the winning run from scoring, but then Lexi Haugh on a 1-0 pitch hit the ball back over the pitcher’s head to the score the winning run as her fellow teammates poured out of the dugout to celebrate. This celebration was practiced Wednesday twice, once because Immediato jokingly stated, “If we celebrate like that, then I don’t want to win!” In addition, Lexi Haugh scored the winning run in the practice celebration. The Mustangs move on by to great pitching and timely hitting to face the number one seeded Paramus Spartans on Tuesday. This is the first time in Montville Softball history that the Mustangs have ever made it to the Semifinals of the State Playoffs. The girls have a bet with Coach Immediato and the manager, Andrew Sidebottom, that if they do win the State Tournament both men will have to shave their heads. The girls emphasized that they keep this stone a rolling. You can bet Coach Carchietta and MCHSS.net will be there for that celebration.
Montville only mustered four hits on the day but managed to score by putting the ball in play. Of the four hits, three drove in runs and the person who got the last hit scored. The Mustangs still left 9 on base and the Lady Knights left on 12 base. The stars for the Mustangs were Harrison, Haugh, and D’Arienzo who had to share two game balls. Melissa O’Connor starred for Morris Hills allowing one hit over 7.2 innings and drove 4 runs on the day.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

It only gets better ....

Mom sues Little League Coach For Not Teaching Son to Slide Properly

  • One player on your team makes contact with the ball and it looks like an easy single, maybe a double, so what do you do? Well, of course, the first base coach tells the kid to go for two and as he approaches second everyone yells "slide!" Which the 12-year-old does . . . badly and injuries his leg. So what does the boy's mom do THREE YEARS LATER? Sue the coach and the local Little League, that's what, claiming that no one taught her boy the "skills needed to avoid and/or minimize the risks of injury," specifically: how to run bases and slide. This, despite the fact that the bases are made of foam. And you wonder why no one wants to coach youth/hs sports anymore? (NY Post)

If at First You Don't Succeed . .

  • A Wisconsin woman is in jail after being accused of slapping the coach of her son's basketball team. Actually, the slapping part initially got her a warning not to return to the recreation center where the initial confrontation took place. But guess what she did anyway? Cops returned to the scene of the crime and arrested Alyssa Streiff, 30, and cited on suspicion of disorderly conduct. (Channel 3000)

Youth Football Coach Grabs Player's Helmet

  • Parents Claim That Type of Public Embarrassment's Worth a Cool $1 Million - The parents of Ricky DeMann, 9, admit their son was not injured in the incident last September in Mason, Ohio, but HE COULD have sustained serious neck injuries. Ricky's helpful parents allegedly caught the incident on camera and decided to help his fragile self-esteem by posting the clip of the visibly upset kid on YouTube. The clip appears to show the coach lift the boy off the ground slightly as he tries to run off the field, but it's hard to tell if he has a hold of the face mask or the kid's jersey. Now mom and dad say that because Coach Darrell Boreing and the Mason Youth Football Organization did not apologize for the incident, they think they owe them a cool one million dollars: Because their boy COULD have been injured. He wasn't, but he COULD have been. Bobby Knight would probably be rolling over in his grave right now if he was dead. (NewsNet5)