District 62 Tournament of Champions: Gut check
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Bryce Alderton
COSTA MESA - When the going gets tough, Austin Bagby seems to
shine.
And shine he did with the sun Saturday as the Costa Mesa American
Little League’s 9-10 year-old Yankees’ pitcher didn’t fizzle under
pressure, striking out the side in both the fifth and sixth innings, to
hold off the surging Costa Mesa National Little League Dodgers, 3-2, to
help the Yankees (15-5) advance to the semifinals of the District 62
Tournament of Champions Monday at 5 p.m. at Costa Mesa High.
Bagby struck out the final batter of the game with the tying and
winning runs on third and second, after the Dodgers (17-7) had scored a
run on Joshua Erno’s single to plate Billy DiGirolamo, who had also
reached on a single.
Yankee players swarmed together to form a circle and hopped
up-and-down briefly to celebrate their hard-fought victory. Bagby took
off his hat and looked skyward, exhaling as if in relief.
“I’m confident in my pitching,” said Yankee Manager Phil Bagby after
the game. “(Austin Bagby) pulled through. It’s almost that he performs
better under pressure.”
Bagby struck out two Dodgers after DiGirolamo and right fielder Daniel
Degree opened the sixth with singles.
In the fifth, Bagby was in a similar predicament, walking Preston
Schow and Daniel Derieg with one out before striking out the next two
batters to finish the inning. Bagby finished with eight strikeouts,
allowing two walks, six hits and one run (unearned).
He was also involved in one of two controversial plays.
With no outs in the top of the fourth, with Matt Mello and Tyler Muzzy
reaching base safely on singles, Bagby hit a 1-1 pitch on the ground to
Dodgers’ shortstop Erno.
Erno threw home to catcher Coleman Brown, who tried to tag-out the
sliding Muzzy, but the ball caromed off Brown’s glove and rolled toward
the Yankees first-base dugout.
Muzzy was safe and home plate umpire Ken Kobylka also ruled Mello
safe, because Kobylka said the ball rolled into the concrete area of the
dugout causing a “dead ball,” in which all runners advance two bases from
the point of the throw. Mello was at second when Bagby hit the
groundball.
Dodger Manager Clint Brown watched the play unfold from the third-base
dugout and has a different angle.
“It was rolling in the dirt when (a Yankees player) came up and
touched it,” Brown said. “They cannot gain an advantage on a mistake they
made. But he’s a great ump and I have a great deal of respect for him. He
made 99.9% of the other calls correctly, he just missed one we needed.
That’s just baseball, those things happen. Next time the call will go our
way.”
The other controversial call went the Dodgers way.
In the fifth, the Yankees’ Roland Wood, who had doubled and stolen a
base in the inning, tagged from third on Dylan Gravelle’s fly ball to the
Dodgers’ left fielder. Brown handled the throw at catcher as Wood
stumbled head-first into home plate. Wood was ruled out because, “there
are no head-first slides into a base in Little League,” Kobylka said.
“No matter how he does it, he did it, period,” Kobylka told a
questioning Phil Bagby.
The Yankees staked an early 1-0 lead in the third as Joseph Blackwell
hit a looper over the head of a backpedaling Erno at third base.
Shortstop DiGirolamo ran to back up Erno in short left field. He reached
out to try and cradle the falling ball, but the ball careened off his
forearm, allowing Joshua Bowman to score.
But DiGirolamo more than made up for the play he almost made in the
third, as he was on the receiving end of two sparkling defensive plays in
the second.
On two consecutive hits, one by Kyle Myres and Wood, DiGirolamo tagged
out both runners trying to stretch singles into doubles. Right fielder
Degree threw the first runner out from right as lightning struck the very
next batter. Center fielder Preston Schow hustled to grab the ball hit
over his head after it rolled to the fence. Schow picked up the ball and
threw it to DiGirolamo covering second and he made the tag on the sliding
runner.
Wood finished 2 for 2 with a single and a double. Muzzy singled and
scored a run as did Mello. Myres went 1 for 2 while Blackwell singled for
an RBI, scoring Bowman, for the Yankees.
Chris Gute pitched the first three innings for the Yankees, walking
three, allowing no hits and no runs while striking out six.
Degree singled twice and scored a run for the Dodgers, while Erno went
2 for 3 with two RBIs and DiGirolamo singled and scored a run in the
sixth.
Eusebio Castillo pitched the first three innings for the Dodgers,
allowing one run (unearned) on three hits, striking out one and walking
none. Mickelson relieved Castillo for the final three innings, allowing
two runs on three hits, walking none and striking out three.
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