NBLL Triple A: Dodgers postseason run ends
- Share via
Barry Faulkner
MISSION VIEJO - Boldly going where few Newport Beach Little League
Baseball teams ever dare, the Triple-A Dodgers, following two victories
in the District 55 Tournament of Champions, were finally eliminated by
the Trabuco Canyon Astros, 9-3, Saturday at Gilleran Park.
Manager Van Holland’s squad, which would have advanced to the Area B
title game with a win, appeared to heed Holland’s assurances afterward
that they had nothing for which to hang their heads.
“These kids had a terrific (regular) season and a terrific postseason,”
Holland said. “They’ve come from behind on numerous occasions, they’ve
held off charges and they’ve played with a lot of heart.”
Heart wasn’t the problem Saturday, as the Dodgers were felled by a
quality Astro contingent, as well as a rare defensive miscue, which put
the locals in an early hole.
After a pair of walks and a fielder’s choice loaded the bases, third
baseman Kevin Holland left his feet to backhand a grounder down the line.
He then fire to the plate for a force to keep things scoreless in the
first.
But Astro starting pitcher Zach Henderson then lined a single into right
field, which rolled through the outfielder and all the way to the fence.
Henderson sped home to score on the play, turning the three-base error
into three unearned runs and a 4-0 cushion.
The Dodgers settled down with the leather from that point on, even making
a few stellar defensive plays.
But Henderson, making his first mound appearance in six weeks, did some
settling down of his own.
Astros Manager Fausto Reyes asked Henderson, the team’s regular catcher,
to give him a few pitching innings, so the top two hurlers could save
enough innings to throw in the championship game (Little League rules
limit the amount each player can throw per week). And he did just that,
striking out six and refusing to allow a hit, before returning to his
familiar spot behind the plate.
“He’s not a pitcher,” the elder Reyes said of Henderson. “But he looked
like one today.”
Dodger pitcher Carlo Valdes, however, kept his team close, working
scoreless innings in the second and third, backed by the aforementioned
defensive prowess.
Dodger right fielder Charles Vickery pounced on a bloop single down the
line and threw to second in time to erase a would-be double for the first
out of the second.
Center fielder Eric Berkley caught a fly ball for the second out, then,
after an infield error, fielded a base hit up the middle and gunned to
third to nail a runner trying to advance from first to end the threat.
Left fielder Sean Ryan made a running catch on a fly ball for a key out
in the third.
Danny Moskovits drilled Astro reliever Kevin Reyes’ first pitch into
center for a single in the fourth, advancing to second when the ball was
misplayed.
Valdes followed with a single to left to put runners on the corners, then
stole second. After a strikeout, catcher Sean Berkley jumped on the first
pitch for a two-run single to second, halving the deficit.
Reyes singled in two in a three-run fourth to reestablish a comfortable
Astros lead, but Valdes singled in Holland, who had walked, in the fifth
for the Dodgers’ final run.
Henderson, Reyes and David Zeuske, who worked the final inning, combined
for 12 strikeouts as the Astros advanced to meet a team from host Viejo
Little League tonight.
Moskovits, who along with teammates Valdes and Holland were selected to
play for the league’s two all-star teams, which begin tournament play in
July, went 2 for 3 with a lineout to right field. He also struck out six
in three relief innings.
Valdes finished 2 for 2 with a walk, while Nicholas Russo-Larson walked
twice and stole a base.
First baseman Michael Tanzier also made a fine defensive play on a sharp
grounder for the Dodgers, who defeated Laguna Hills, 10-6, and Rancho Santa Margarita, 10-9, earlier in the tournament.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.