Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Let It Shine Bright Green, 24-19 over Scarlett

In a game that featured a tremendous roaring comeback by the snake bit Scarlett team, the Green Machine pushed through for a 24-19 win.

The Lantern was lit for 5 1/2 innings as Mark Narciso held off the powerful Scarlett lineup to three runs in the first. We weren't hitting on all cylinders ourselves, yet had built a comfortable 14-3 lead. Highlights included two run doubles by Greg Wilson in the first, and by Tony Gorgone and Chris Nielsen in the fifth. Wilson also had two booming home runs - a solo shot in the fourth and a three run job in the sixth.

We couldn't hold off the Red Menace forever, and they plated six in their half of the sixth. We answered with our only five spot of the day in the next frame, but had a complete meltdown defensively in the bottom of the seventh, and their balls were finding holes besides the ones we were giving away. They knotted the game at 19.

Then a remarkable thing happened - we reverted to our solid defensive form and held Scarlett scoreless for the last two innings. In the mean time, Matt Meredith put us up with a massive home run to left center, and a few batters later, Darren Bobrosky sent a laser even further in the same direction for a two run shot.

In the top of the ninth we played small ball and added two for the final score of 24-19. In the bottom half, Meredith provided one of the defensive highlights when he ranged far to cover second for a force out on a smash up the middle to Val Hornstein. \

Other defensive highlights included a one hop scorcher to Phil Tucker up the middle in the third that was part great glove work and part self-preservation. Later with the game close, Chris Nielsen made one of his patented spears of a grounder seemingly headed to right center field and turned it into a routine 1-3 putout.

Our offense was kind of feast or famine, but Wilson had one of his best days, as he largely carried us. He had the two HRs, including one that seemingly was destined for Concord to the east, the double and a single for six RBIs. Hornstein had another 4-4 day, and has yet to make an out this season (although this was only his second game). Narciso and Gorgone also had 4-4 days but each had a grounder that turned into a generous scorekeeper's hit. But each had multiple clutch hits. Nielsen had three hits good for three RBIs, Kevin Fisher joined him with three knocks, and the bottom three in the order (David Partridge, Meredith and the Coach) had only three ABs but had two hits each.

I have to tip my hat to Scarlett - they are having a tough time of it, but they do not give up. I hope they can get a win - just not against us!

Tuesday, April 5, 2022

The Lantern Shines Bright, Green 22 - Royal 16

The Green Lantern took Royal out of the land of the undefeated with a convincing 22-16 win on Heather Farm One today.

As usual Green trailed early, going out with a double play and then a groundout in the top of the first, and giving up the curse of the first five in the home half.

So be it, seemingly that's our MO this season. We trailed 6-1 after two, and then our bats woke up. We scored 4, 5, 5, and 5 in the third through the sixth. At one point, seventeen out of eighteen batters reached safely; in the fourth we scored five without making an out. There weren't a lot of long balls either, yet we had multiple extra base hits, with a total of seven doubles and a triple.

But once again it was our defense and pitching that carried us to victory. Stellar plays were made all over the place. Mike Nagy snagged a line drive shot to his left at third base. Likewise Chris Nielsen (who also got one batter on a strikeout) at the mound in the fifth. And he stormed in on a dribbler with the bases loaded in the sixth and scooped and threw home in one motion, the only place he could get an out.

We threw out two runners (actually I believe it was the same runner twice) at home for the third out - in the second it was David Partridge (LC) to Phil Tucker (R) to Matt Meredith (C), and then it was Kevin Fisher (RC) to Lamont Thompson (R) to Partridge (who scooped the one hop throw) in the fourth to prevent the fifth run scoring that inning.

Tim Orr and Fisher made an assortment of running catches in the middle outfield. And speaking of scooping, Heffe scooped not one not two but three low throws at 1B. One of them came on a game ending double play from Rover Tucker to first.

But the play of the game was in the eighth. After we had taken a commanding 20-10 lead, Green's offense slowed down and Royal's strong lineup mounted a comeback. It was 22-16 when one of their hitters stroked one of those frustrating pop flies into no man's land in shallow left center. Rover Tony Gorgone twisted and turned and kept after it until he turned at the last second and snatched the ball out of the sky. I don't think any of us is going to see a better play this season. It shut down the Royalty in the eighth and they couldn't score in the ninth after that either.

Oh, and by the way Green hit .704 as a team. Fisher was 4-4, Nagy 3-3 + a walk, Heffe 3-3, Mark Narciso and Greg Wilson 3-3 + a SF. Others with three hits included Orr, Darren Bobrosky, Angie Rizzato, and Paul Lisi. Meredith pounded one over Yaz' head down the left field line for our only triple.

For the record, we hate byes! because we are on a hot roll , and next week it is our turn to sit out.

The Lantern Glows!

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

The Lantern is Lit, Green 19 - Scarlet 8

Sometimes you play a nearly perfect game. Today Green did as close as a bunch of old men can come to doing that. We made but one error and it was in the first or second inning, on our way to routing Scarlet O'Hara ("Frankly Frank, I don't give a damn") by a score of 19-8.

Scarlet's lineup is intimidating. We managed to get out of the first and score four of our own before they came up with five in the top of the second. But after that, Mark Narciso and Chris Nielsen and our defense allowed but one run in innings 3-8. We scored our only five spot in the fourth to go up 11-6 and never looked back. Scarlet finally broke through in the ninth for two runs, but Nielsen had shut them out against him until then in four straight innings.

The defense was tremendous and unrelenting. We made all the routine plays and then a few turned in spectacular ones as well. Lamont Thompson caught a line drive on the first play of the game at first base. When he moved to rover in the fifth, he came in on a ball in no man's land between the mound and second and snared a soft liner. In the next inning playing catcher, he hustled out toward third base to catch a popup that is usually a back breaker when it drops. Very few Creakers make that play.

Matt Meredith is a revelation at 2B. He leapt high in the seventh (OK in Creakerland 'leap' is a relative term) to snag a shot ticketed to right center field. On another tough grounder with a runner on second in the fourth, after catching a one hopper, he moved toward him to freeze him on the bag, and then fired to first for the out on the batter. Textbook. He made two of the outs that inning. Mike Nagy at third made his usual couple of plays on hard hit grounders trying to get to left field, including getting the speedy Lee Namanny for the third out with runners on in the third to keep Scarlet scoreless in that frame. Darren Bobosky made a great running catch in the sixth in deep left center. And Nielsen shut out the heart of Scarlet on four pitches in the eighth.

Let's face it, Scarlet turned even redder many times in the game as they gave us gift after gift when we were hitting. But we made the most of them. Bobrosky, Greg Wilson and Nielsen were each 4-4. Darren scored four times, and Wilson drove in a single run in every at bat to lead the team with four. How's that shift working for our opponents?

We hit .630 as a team, and everyone with one unnotable exception (not mentioning any names) had at least one knock. Tim Orr, Tony Gorgone, Angelo Rizzuto, Nagy, Nielsen and Meredith had long balls and although none were home runs, all but Orr's leadoff double in the first produced runs.

The Green Lantern is Lit!

Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Comeback of the Year (So Far), Green 15 - White 13

Once in a very long while, you play in a game that is just the perfect feel good game. Sometimes it is just because you simply dominated the other team, and pummeled them to death. You all feel pretty good about yourselves.

But the games you really take pride in are the ones where you come back against all odds and walk away with the opposition stunned, and smiles all around on your team. I mean really all Creakers are just happy to be enjoying the sunshine and playing a boys' game but the sun is brighter (and the refreshments taste better) after a win.

Today, Green spotted the tough White lineup a ten nothing lead after two innings. Every ball they hit was between us or we botched it, and every ball we hit was a line drive right at someone or one of their very good outfielders was making a great running catch.

We could have been as down in spirit as the score indicated. Indeed, our manager tends to dwell on the negative too much. But we have the ultimate cheerleader in Mike Nagy. He never lets us get down and no matter how dire the situation is, he always thinks we can come back. He led the cheers as we chipped away at the lead, even though we did not catch up until the ninth inning.

And come back we did. We held that fearsome White lineup to three more runs the rest of the game - that's seven innings. Our pitching kicked in (Chris Nielsen is the best closer around). Our fielding came around. And we chipped away with two in the third, four in the fourth, one in the sixth, three in the seventh, and suddenly we went into the open inning just down three runs at 13-10.

Coach Heffe led off the winning rally with a hit. Tim Orr and Darren Bobrosky followed suit, and it was bases loaded, no one out and the heart of the order up. But then two groundouts left us at 13-11, and we hung by a thread with two outs. Lamont Thompson strode up and hit a line shot into the outfield, and on a bobble Greg Wilson scored all the way from first and we were tied. And LT, a speedster in his youth I hear, against all odds rumbled to second base to get in scoring position as the lead run. He would have been fined if he was out, but that guy has the best instincts, and not only was the throw dropped but I think he actually beat it. Paul Lisi and Kevin Fisher came up with two more clutch two out hits, and we took a precarious 15-13 lead into the bottom of the ninth.

The first batter hit a screaming AND knuckling line drive toward right center but second baseman Tony Gorgone said no way and snagged it. The first out is huge when protecting a lead in the last inning, and that just made the White hitters tighter. After a hit, the next batter hit a blooper into shallow center - early in the game that would have fallen in - but center fielder Orr was just as determined and dove and caught it. Two outs. The runner on first took off on contact and I am sure if Tim hadn't had to dive he would have ended the game right there on a double play but couldn't make a throw from the ground. No problem, as the next batter made a routine out, and it was a win in the Green corner 15-13.

Other defensive gems were a running catch near the foul line and in the sun by left fielder Bobrosky in the fourth, and a slick runner gunned out at home play from Orr to shortstop Angie Rizzato to David Partridge in the fifth. Third baseman Nagy turned a bases loaded popup in a tricky wind in foul territory into an out in the sixth. That set up a Matt Meredith (2B) to Wilson (Rover) to Heffe double play to end the inning with no runs, and it was a momentum changer.

In the seventh, Nielsen went to his knees to snag a shot up the middle, and got the out with a throw from the ground. In the eighth Green turned an unlikely SS (Rizzato) to 3B (Nagy) to second double play to end the inning.

As you can see defense wins games.

Our hitters took a while to come around, but we hit when it counted. Wilson had a hustle double among his three hits. LT duplicated that hustle as noted already and had two hits and a Sac fly. Meredith had a clutch two run two out double in the third.

But it was pitching and defense that was the difference in this game - and the Nagy Never Say Die Attitude.

As James Brown famously sang (sing along Mike)-

Whoa! I feel good, I knew that I would, now

I feel good, I knew that I would, now

So good, so good, I got you

Momma Told Me Don't Be Green With Envy, Orange 30-Green 17

My momma told me if I don't have anything nice to say, don't say anything at all.

So I will be brief (for me).

Orange outplayed Green in all facets of the game Tuesday, and came out on top 30-17, We gave up five in the top of the first (what happened to the Curse?) and five more in the third but actually kept it close for a few innings - we trailed only 12-10 after four innings.

However, the relentless Orange Crush kept after us and scored five in the sixth, seventh and eighth to turn Green into Vomit. We had a few defensive lapses, but really I tip my hat to their hitting.

Lamont Thompson drove in six runs on three hits including two doubles. Val Hornstein was a doubles machine - three of his four hits were doubles as he ran aggressively. Greg Wilson had an opposite field triple and double to beat the extreme shift Orange put on him. And then made the loudest out of the game when he sent one nearly to the trees in right center - right where the outfielder was playing. It was that kind of day for the Mean Green.

David Partridge also had three hits and Matt Meredith drove in four and each had a triple. Matt also made a couple of fine plays at second base.

Well, the cliche after a game like this is "It's early in the season". Right Mom?

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Practice Schmactice...

My dad modified the well known cliche, saying, "It's not whether you win or lose, it's how you win!"

And I created a corollary, "It's not whether you win or lose, it's just a hell of a lot more fun to win!"

And so, Team Green put a win in our pocket for this practice season today, 17-13 over Royal.

We did it some very significant individual and team contributions in ways that really count.

Great defense:

  • In the first, Angie started a SS to Phil at Rover to LT at first, who scooped a low throw. The top of the Royal lineup is excellent, and this play set the tone for the game.
  • In the second, David made a great running catch in LF. Angie stabbed a one hop hot shot in the 5-6 hole and snapped a perfect throw to first. And to finish the trifecta in the inning, Mike grabbed a grounder on the third base line before it could go foul and heffe corralled his low throw.
  • In the fourth, with the potential fifth run on third, Darren caught the second out and threw a perfect one hopper to LT at home to nail the runner. By the way, I have never seen a Creaker who plays the left sun fields at Heather Farm better than Darren. 
  • David made another nice catch running in playing right field later in the game.
  • Matt had a stellar game at 2B, he made a number of plays including a hot shot to his abdomen in the last inning that he turned into an out.
And as I think will become the norm this season, excellent pitching by Mark and Chris, which is part of great defense. Royal's top of the order got four in the ninth, but before that we held a potent lineup to nine runs in eight innings.

Phil was the hitting star with two triples in his three ABs.

Two significant notes on the offense. The ability to "add on" is extremely important in softball with the high scoring games we see. When Royal scored seven runs in the fourth and fifth innings, we responded with four in each of the fourth, fifth and sixth. That gave us a dominating 14-7 lead, and we cruised onward.

Second was that the fifth inning rally came with two outs and no one on. Mike had opened with a single and then LT sent a laser shot to right center that the fielder caught after a bobble. Mike went for second and was nailed out. But then, Paul, Mark, Greg, Tony, Chris and David put together consecutive two out singles to plate four runs. That's huge.

Four times we strung together four, five, or six straight hits to generate run scoring rallies. That's huge.

Phil had the two triples, Darren had a perfect 4-4 day, and LT, Greg and Phil led the way with three RBIs each. Everyone had at least one hit.

It's how you win!

Wednesday, February 23, 2022

The Frozen Tundra of Danville

In a game played barely over freezing at game time, The WolfPack's pitching and defense dominated the Crows in a must win game to make the playoffs, winning by 10-2.

JP was spot on for the most part for his innings, allowing just one run. But then Chris came in, and he dominated the Crows for six innings of shutout ball, really seven as they scored a measly single run in the open ninth. He had four, count them one, two, three, four Ks looking. He was living at 11 feet plus, but not over 12 and hitting front, back, and every corner of the plate.

He had some help on defense. There were outstanding plays by Wilbur at second base on a liner, and Marc on a great stretch at second to get a force on a shot up the middle to Les to nail the speedy Crow Anthony. Johnny G caught a slashed liner at third and Paul made a great running catch in right field in the eighth.

The big hits were in the third and the sixth. In the third, there was a close play at second where our umpire, who was screened from the play, called our runner out going to second base. But LT the Crow rover played the honesty card and gave up the out because he was off the bag. After much confusion our runner was ruled safe and when we subsequently loaded the bases, Kevin hit a bases clearing double and it went from 3-1 to 6-1. A big lead on a day when everyone was basically freezing and the wind was blowing in hard from left.

In the sixth, we needed to add on as the score had stagnated for three innings. After a hard luck double play by Selwyn (he hit a hard grounder right to the second base bag), we punched out five straight hits by Ladd, Kevin, Les, Marc and Johnny G. The last one was a twisting triple that eluded the right fielder, and even though we couldn't get him home, it gave us a 10-1 lead which on this day was dominant.

Even though we tried to end the game in the rules mandated time limit, Don Clay insisted on playing all nine, but the Crows were barely able to get one more run, and we walked off with the 10-2 win.

This victory was essentially an elimination game for us. But with this one in our pocket, it opens a bunch of scenarios for the end of the season, many of which land us in the playoffs. We are 3-2 in our last five games and each of the losses are by one run to the two teams tied for first.

You just never know what will happen when the temperature drops to nearly freezing. The Scared Crows freeze and the Wolves Howl!