Little League baseball: Mercy mission
Barry Faulkner
HUNTINGTON BEACH - The Costa Mesa National Little League Majors
Division Marlins have turned the District 62 Tournament of Champions into
their own mission of mercy.
The Marlins, who trounced their first-round opponent, 18-0, invoking
the 10-run mercy rule, ended Saturday’s second-round clash prematurely as
well, eliminating the Ocean View Athletics, 11-1, with yet another
impressive display at Wardlow Park.
Saturday’s win, the first ever second-round triumph for a Costa Mesa
National Majors squad, propelled the Marlins into tonight’s 5 p.m. Area 2
championship game against the Fountain Valley Devil Rays. The winner of
tonight’s contest, at Wardlow Park, will advance to meet the Area 1
winner Wednesday for the District 62 Tournament of Champions crown. The
Devil Rays, who finished second in their league, defeated the Huntington
Valley Athletics, 11-3, Saturday to advance.
The Marlins appear bent on more than just advancing. After losing
their first postseason game, the opener of a three-game playoff with the
Costa Mesa National second-half champion Diamondbacks, Manager Paul
Errington’s Marlins have now won four straight, by a combined margin of
43-6.
“Only two of our kids made All-Stars,” said Marlins assistant coach
Rob Stillman, who noted one other team had five players selected. “I
think our guys have something to prove.”
Prove it they did Saturday, scoring two runs in the first, five in the
second and four more in the fourth to close out the game.
Starting pitcher Vinnie Valdez worked three scoreless innings,
allowing just two hits and striking out five to earn the victory. He also
belted a three-run home run, tripled and scored three runs to lead the
Marlins’ 10-hit attack.
Using what Stillman called a cut fastball, which was breaking sharply,
Valdez, one of the team’s two future All-Stars, kept the A’s off the
scoreboard. Valdez, whose homer was his sixth of the season, will start
on the mound tonight, Errington said.
There were plenty of heroes for the Marlins, however, including right
fielder Matt Pisarski, who also wrapped out a pair of hits.
Pisarski, a replacement player picked up from another team to fill a
depleted roster (rules dictate such additions can’t be All-Stars),
launched a solo home run over the left-field fence, two hitters after
Valdez cleared the center-field barrier. Pisarski, who now has four
homers this season, also singled, stole a base and scored the final run
of the fourth.
After Pisarski’s run gave the Marlins an 11-0 lead, P.J. Errington,
the team’s other All-Star who began the game behind the plate, relieved
Valdez and allowed only one run to keep the mercy rule in order.
Every spot but one in the Marlins’ order produced a hit and all nine
spots reached base.
First baseman Alex Robles singled, walked and scored a run, while
second baseman Anthony Secrest and third baseman Garrick Williams each
had RBI singles for the winners.
P.J. Errington singled and scored twice, while Adam Seagondollar and
Chad Belmont each singled and scored to trigger the five-run
second-inning uprising.
Leadoff man Brice Stillman, who had three putouts and one assist at
shortstop, scored a run, while outfielders Mitch Shamrell and Kevin
Matson each walked. Matt Wedgeworth also contributed off the bench for
the Marlins, the Costa Mesa National first-half champions who improved to
22-6.
The A’s averted the shutout with the benefit of the Marlins’ only
error, a bobbled ground ball with the bases loaded. But the Marlins even
turned that play into an out when the infielder recovered quickly and
threw to Errington on the mound. Errington, seeing an A’s runner had
rounded third a little too aggressively, threw to the third baseman,
forcing the runner into a rundown that ended quickly when Vadez, charging
up the line from behind the plate, took the throw from third and made the
tag to end the game.
“I think after we beat the Diamondbacks, 8-1, in the second game of
the (league championship) series, our kids got their confidence back,”
Paul Errington said.
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