Final


FINAL STATS

























AVG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI TB BB SO OBP SLG
TEAM .332 920 226 305 60 10 4 172 397 154 166 .427 .432














Dunbar .476 42 7 20 4 2 0 17 28 10 10 .577 .667
Reeves .462 104 23 48 3 1 0 19 53 8 18 .500 .510
Hinthorne .460 63 19 29 7 1 0 13 38 5 2 .500 .603
Peleti .455 33 14 15 6 2 1 16 28 9 4 .571 .848
Safka .403 67 19 27 4 2 0 10 35 9 8 .474 .522
Vchulek .402 97 37 39 8 2 0 11 51 16 12 .487 .526
Fairchild .376 85 27 32 9 0 2 23 47 18 6 .485 .553
Salle .281 96 24 27 5 1 1 16 37 9 13 .343 .385
Burcham .260 73 15 19 8 0 1 21 30 23 13 .438 .411
Becker .246 65 12 16 3 0 0 12 19 22 17 .437 .292
Huff .242 66 7 16 6 1 0 12 24 8 20 .324 .364
Heller .239 46 13 11 1 0 0 6 12 14 10 .417 .261
Murphy .194 67 13 13 2 0 0 11 15 8 21 .280 .224
Helean .163 49 10 8 0 0 0 1 8 4 16 .226 .163











































ERA IP AB H R ER HBP BB SO

WHIP AVG
TEAM 3.33 219 893 212 139 81 0 93 142

1.39 .237














Fairchild 1.87 43.33 175 38 16 9 0 12 39

1.15 .217
Helean 2.85 47.33 187 48 23 15 0 20 24

1.44 .257
Peleti 4.26 6.34 25 6 3 3 0 3 5

1.42 .240
Salle 4.68 42.33 161 35 30 22 0 29 24

1.51 .217
Safka 5.40 28.33 124 34 27 17 0 6 19

1.41 .274
Burcham 5.68 19.00 92 30 27 12 0 9 5

2.05 .326














Dunbar - 8.00 26 1 2 0 0 9 7

1.25 .038
Reeves 0.77 11.67 46 8 2 1 0 2 8

0.86 .174
Hinthorne 2.25 4.00 15 3 1 1 0 1 4

1.00 .200
Becker 2.45 3.67 21 5 7 1 0 2 1

1.91 .238

Monday, April 26, 2010

After Game BBQ Bash Marred by Excess Left-overs

The MBC 14's made Magnolia Baseball history yesterday with the first Road BBQ. Wonderful idea. It was great to eat on the road. Many commented that given the weather at Magnolia Field #1 aka Candlestick Park, that BBQ's on the road just might be the thing to do.

The food was great, the service excellent and how can you beat birthday cake.

The BBQ was marred by excess leftovers. The absence of "Bonestacker" Billy Raye Heller was deemed to be the cause.

MBC Waves Goodnight to Beast in the Dark


MBC 14's beat the Beast and the Washington Wave 13-5 in a mercy rule game that ended in the dark. Offense was huge, pitching was good and we are still working on that third thing.

The team jumped out with a two run first. A lead off walk to Ben Thomson and a single by Tino Peleti set the stage for Stuart Fairchild's two run double for an early lead. But despite gallant pitching by Stuart Fairchild, the team let the Wave grab those runs and more with a two error inning. Things could have been much worse had we not gotten the bases loaded double play on a screaming line drive back to the mound.

The defense was much better after the first inning. Stuart settled in and pitched through the fourth inning yielding just one more unearned run and gave up just three hits on the day. Jake Hawken threw a blazing fifth inning mowing down the Wave in his "rehab" outing, and Nick Reeves completed the mercy run game with a snappy sixth inning.

Offensively the team scored in every inning but the second.

In the third Jimmy Sheldrup started the ball rolling with a lead off single. After a walk to Ben Thomson, Nick Reeves hit a deep fly to right allowing Jimmy to tag on reach third. Tino Peleti then drove a ball to the left center field fence to score Jimmy on a sacrifice fly.

The fourth and fifth were the big innings. Stuart Fairchild reached on an error by "The Beast" (see last years write-up) at third. Jake Hawken followed with a single and a walk to Campbell Queen loaded the bases. Mitchell Smith scored two with a single. Walks to David Becker and Jimmy Sheldrup loaded the bases for Ben Thomson who promptly double in two more. Jimmy Sheldrup scored on a passed ball to complete the five run fourth.

In the fifth, as it started to get dark John Peterson led off with a walk which was followed by Jimmy Sheldrup single. Another walk to Ben Thompson loaded the bases and the Wave was forced to bring in The Beast.

If you remember this team from last year, the Beast was a huge pitcher who threw gas and just mowed through our team. He was reported to have signed a professional contract after that game, but those rumours apparantly were untrue. Well this year it was a different story.

Nick Reeves greeted The Beast with a double, deep to right center, to score two. Tino Peteti ripped a double to score two more and Jake Hawken followed with a scorching single to score the fifth run of the inning.

What a difference a year makes. This team has grown and matured and is gaining confidence with every game.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Barn Burner Win Over Burnstead

MBC 14's had their best win while playing their worst defense to best Burnstead 9-8.  

The game featured seven lead changes and had the surprise of seeing this team bunt, and make two additional bunt attempts; that is if you count giving the bunt sign THREE times to a hitter who failed to notice. The offense was spectacular, and the defense most likely gave the home crowd a deja vue moment from watching these boys play T-ball many years ago.

Tinoi Peleti pitched the first four innings striking out seven, and having the defense give him about 90% support.  Who knew they were peaking at this point.

The offense (and bad play) started early with a lead off double by Ben Thomson (3-4, RBI).  Ben promptly ran to third on Nick Reeves's (2-4, RBI) ground out to short.  Tino Peteti singled and Nick then scored on Jake Hawken's (2-4, RBI) single. Walks to Campbell Queen  and Mitchell Smith  brought home a second run.

Burnstead answered with a run in the second, with some help from our defense, 'nuff said.

MBC answered this run in the third. Tino lead off with a walk, stole second and scored on Stuart Fairchild's single.

Burnstead tied the game in their fourth with two more runs.

MBC responded again to tie the game in the bottom of the fourth.  After two quick outs John Peterson and Jimmy Sheldrup walked.  These walks were followed by three clutch base bits by Ben Thomson, Nick Reeves and Tino Peleti.  The only problem was the first base umpire believed Tino was out at first thus ending the inning.

In the fifth inning John Peterson entered to pitch, or in other words was thrown to the wolves. John pitched well and was reward with five unearned runs, three in the sixth and two in the seventh.

MBC rallied in the sixth to restore their lead. A lead off Mitchell Smith walk, a bunt by David Becker (that went for a hit!), and a walk to John Peterson (fortunately as he was being flashed the bunt sign throughout his at bat) loaded the bases.  Jimmy Sheldrup hit a deep sacrifice fly and the the clutch brothers Ben and Nick followed with singles.  A bases loaded walk to Tino ended the scoring.

After valiantly taking the lead back , MBC promptly gave Burnstead two more runs to tie the score.

Jake Hawken started the inning with a screaming hit.  Campbell Queen bunted foul, fouled off a hit and run (that Jake apparently did not know about) and then singled as Jake stole second, setting the stage for Mitchell Smith with runners on first and third.  Mitchell delivered a walk off single to send the home crowd home with a smile.
 

Friday, April 23, 2010

Something to Think About as We Prepare to Battle Again This Weekend


Half a league, half a league,
Half a league onward,
All in the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.
"Forward, the Light Brigade!
"Charge for the guns!" he said.
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.


"Forward, the Light Brigade!
"Was there a man dismay'd?
Not tho' the soldier knew
Someone had blunder'd.
Theirs not to make reply,
Theirs not to reason why,
Theirs but to do and die.
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.


Cannon to right of them,
Cannon to left of them,
Cannon in front of them
Volley'd and thunder'd;
Storm'd at with shot and shell,
Boldly they rode and well,
Into the jaws of Death,
Into the mouth of Hell
Rode the six hundred.


Flash'd all their sabres bare,
Flash'd as they turn'd in air,
Sabring the gunners there,
Charging an army, while
All the world wonder'd.
Plunged in the battery-smoke
Right thro' the line they broke.
Cossack and Russian
Reel'd from the sabre stroke
Shatter'd and sunder'd.
Then they rode back,
but not Not the six hundred.

Cannon to right of them,
Cannon to left of them,
Cannon behind them
Volley'd and thunder'd;
Storm'd at with shot and shell,
While horse and hero fell,
They that had fought so well
Came thro' the jaws of Death
Back from the mouth of Hell,
All that was left of them,
Left of six hundred.

When can their glory fade?
O the wild charge they made!
All the world wondered.
Honor the charge they made,
Honor the Light Brigade,
Noble six hundred.


Copied from Poems of Alfred Tennyson,

Monday, April 19, 2010

Baseball Roots

My father was no baseball player. Did not know much about the game. Not his fault, his father passed away when he was 13 and he went to work to help the family. He dropped out of school after his freshman year (not sure if NY had high school baseball back then) and joined the service thus making me grow up as the son of a lowly enlisted man in the Coast Guard. He later did work his way through officers training school to earn an engineering degree.

My mother was the baseball fan. She was the one to inspire me. We probably played more games of catch thus making the movie "Field of Dreams" ineffective on me.

Sadly, neither one ever really saw me play much, not when it mattered. Not high school or college. My father left home when I turned 13 and my mother had her own issues through my young adult days.

But my father had ONE big thing to say to me about sports. Never a player, not much of a fan he did have ONE big comment about baseball and sports that has had the biggest impact on me. It probably had more to do with the hand he had been dealt in life than any insight into sports.

He had ONE word to describe sports and ONE word to measure who he liked on any given team. DESIRE. It never really mattered what kind of numbers a guy put up, or how good a guy was, My father was all about DESIRE. If a guy played hard, ran into walls, hustled and gave it his all, he was my father's guy. And they are my guys as well.

Show me what you got, give it your all and I am your biggest fan. It became the way I played, it has always been who I cheer for and it is what I hope to pass onto you.

MBC 14's Learn the Hard Way - Sleepwalking is Hazardous to Your Heath

After a wonderful morning win, MBC learned that they could not mail in a performance no matter who the opponent is.  Sluggish, sleepy and perhaps over confident, MBC dug an early hole against the Kirkland Merchants.

Down three nothing, the word finally spread, the team seemed to wake up and respond with one in  the third, one in  the fourth and finally five in the fifth. Alas it was not enough.

In the third, "Strike Zone" Mitchell Smith earned his fourth walk of the day.  He moved to third on Jimmy Sheldrup's single and was brought home by Ben Thomson's sacrafice fly to deep center.

In the fourth Stuart Fairchild singled and was driven home by Campbell Queen's double.

The fun for Magnolia started in the fifth. Lead off walks to John Peterson and Jimmy Sheldrup were followed by Ben Thomson's  RBI single.   Stuart Fairchild then hit a booming double to score two followed by hot hitting Campbell Queen's two RBI single. This gave MBC a 7-4 lead that seemed enough to the sleep walking crew.

John Peterson started and threw four innings.  Nick Reeves relieved and after throwing two easy innings ran into trouble in the seventh.  

The Merchants got a couple of cheap hits, a couple of questionable walks and despite a heads up call by savvy second baseman Keenan Heller to pick a man off second the Merchants final hitter still managed to somehow run into a ball to send the sleep walking MBC team home, wondering what happened.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

O-Boy a Win Over O'Brien's

The 2010 MBC 14's came out smoking hot and ran up a 9-0 lead against last years powerhouse O'Brien's Auto Group.  They almost made it a five run mercy rule game, but they let O'Briens sneak back in, and then barely held on to win.

Ben Thomson (2-3, 2RBI, 2B) led the game off with a hit, and stole second.  The O'Brien pitcher then walked  Tino Peleti (1-3) and hit Stuart Fairchild (1-3, RBI) and Jake Hawken (1-3, 1 RBI) back to back to force in a run.  Campbell Queen (1-3, 2RBI) then drove in two with a scorcher up the middle.  The fun was not over as Spencer Hogger (1-2, RBI) then blasted a ball over the center fielder's head.  When the crazy inning ended MBC held a 6-0 lead.

In the third after two quick outs, Mitchell Smith (3 walks) walked and was moved along by John Peterson's base hit.  David Becker (2-3, 2RBI 2B) then launched a ball deep into the gap for a two run double, which was followed by Ben Thomson's double over the now tired center fielder.  After a walk to Nick Reeves the center fielder had just enough energy left to chase down Tino's tremendous blast into center. 

Tino Peleti pitched four strong innings allowing four hits and one unearned run. He was followed by Stuart Fairchild who pitched well, but had the misfortune to experience the now desperate bats of the O'Brien team.  Thing got a little dicey at the end, and Tino came in for a save once the tieing run reached base.

A big win against a big opponent in the first game of the season, can it get any better????