Archive for August, 2010

Masters Fastball

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Some Masters fastball info from Dave Birnie, Ontario, Canada, courtesy of Al’s Fastball.

European Men’s Cup 2010

Saturday, August 28th, 2010

European Men’s Cup 2010

Click here for official website, translated via Google Translate. (such as it is)

The website shows a page for “Streaming”, with instructions on how to connect. A little bit of work, but the the VLC media player is a good one, so worthy of the effort. (VLC is called the “Swiss Army Knife” of media players, will play virtually any file format you can find, so a good one to keep for later use).

The tournament is being held in Ronchi dei Legionari Gorizia, an area in the northeastern corner of Italy, near the northern harbor of the Adriatic Sea:


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ASA 40-and-0ver

Friday, August 27th, 2010

The ASA Men’s Masters 40 & Over Fast Pitch National Championships will be conducted in Prescott, Arizona Friday-Sunday, August 27-29. The tournament will begin on Friday, August 27 at 6:00pm with all games being played at historic Ken Lindley Field.

Click here for bracket.

ASA Men’s 40-Over Fast-Pitch National Championship. This bracket will be updated at the conclusion of each night’s games.

Sr. Canadians – 2 days and counting

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Games Begin on Sunday August 29, 2010

Official website of the 2010 Bud Light Senior Men’s Fast Pitch National Championship

Well we are a few days from the opening pitch and we can’t wait to host Canada’s best fast pitch players and most loyal fans from all over. The organizing committee of this 2010 Bud Light Senior Men’s Fast Pitch National Championship has worked hard over the past year and a half to put together a plan that will make this one of the best tournaments for anyone and we look forward to executing these plans.

The on-field product is second to none in this, Canada’s premiere fast pitch tournament. Our fields are in great shape and we have everything in place to make things most convenient for teams to focus on the task at hand. Off the field but at the ballpark, our food will be hot and our beverages will be cold and we have some great entertainment in our beverage tent on the final weekend, headlined by Mitch MacDonald, the Canadian Idol runner-up a couple years ago. Mitch returns home from a Western tour just in time to join us. Outside the park, our people and businesses are ready to host you in our friendly manner!

In closing, I want to congratulate and thank all teams for making it to the stage and I wish them all the best of luck. I want to thank all fans from near and far for planning to join us and I wish you all safe travels. Please get in touch with any questions.

See you all soon,
Trent Birt
Host Chair

Midland ISC a world-class event

Friday, August 27th, 2010


(click logo for original story)
By Geoff Mott | The Saginaw News


President of the International Softball Congress Dean Oscar, of Reedsburg, Wis., leads the opening ceremony for the 2010 ISC World Tournament held at Emerson Park in Midland on Saturday, Aug. 14. The ISC was pleased with the results from the tournament and may tab Midland for future tournaments. (Photo by Emily-Rose Bennett)

MIDLAND — It takes a world-class effort to put on a world-class event.

That was quite evident during nine days of International Softball Congress World Tournament action at Midland’s Emerson Park last week.

The only complaint I heard was in regard to ISC brackets, which included an ISC II bracket for the first 24 teams eliminated. With some teams needing three losses to be eliminated, one wondered if the ISC tabbed a physicist down the road from Dow Corning to come up with the bracket formula.

Emerson Park’s three fields were well-manicured, bright flowers greeted fans at the entrance to Currie Stadium and an estimated crowd of 15,000 found time between the Great Lakes Loons homestand and the Midland County Fair to create their own festive atmosphere for the 180 games.

“It was a total success from the host’s standpoint,” said Kyle Beane, co-chair of the ISC Host Committee. “The weather was perfect, nothing got backed up and everything I heard from teams, players, officials and fans were all positives.

“It was a long year-and-a-half, but it was well worth it.”

Beane and his crew modernized Currie Stadium quickly, running Internet into the pressbox and razing an infield that had built up over the years. While razing the dirt infield, workers uncovered a wooden slab believed to be used to anchor a pitching rubber back in the day. When isn’t clear, but officials think it could date back as far as the Dow AC’s of the 1940s.

This year’s tournament had 45 shifts, using 12 to 15 volunteers for each shift to keep track of stats, scores, traffic direction, water refills, beer tent and cleanup.

“The Midland community really got involved,” Host Committee member Peter Finn said. “It went better than I thought. A month before the tournament, you’re scrambling, thinking we need this for this and that for that.”

Midland became just the second city in Michigan to host the ISC Worlds, the other being Saginaw in 1981. Saginaw had the memorable 34-inning marathon game that is talked about to this day.

Midland provided its own memories.

There was hard-throwing Adam Folkard, an Aussie for the Jarvis (Ont.) Travelers who hurls the softball equivalent of a 104 mph fastball in Major League Baseball. New York Gremlins Rhys Casley, another Australian native, smashed a grand slam in the 10th inning on the first pitch he saw after a 40-minute delay was needed for his teammate, who was knocked unconscious with a pitch to his helmet.

The Travelers knocked out two-time defending champion Kitchener (Ont.) Riversharks Twins in an entertaining title game that was close until Jarvis hit back-to-back homers in the sixth inning. There were 2,000 people in the stands Friday and Saturday night, despite the fact that the hometown Midland Explorers were eliminated early Thursday.

“With the Loons, Midland County Fair and Mount Pleasant’s fair, I think we showed there’s still a lot of fastpitch softball fans around here,” Beane said. “Our goal was to run a great tournament and pay our bills and we’re right on track for that.”

Midland may be on track to host the top players in the world again in two years. Kitchener dropped its bid to host the tournament in 2012 and rumor is because of the added pressure of holding the extra games in the ISC II.

“There used to be three to five cities bidding to host this, but with the economy and everything, there’s not as much interest,” Finn said. “ISC officials were pleased and I heard people say it’s the best ISC they’ve been at in 10 years.

“Without a doubt, they want to come back here. I think people here need to recharge our batteries from this week, but a fair amount of work that was down to put this on won’t have to be done again.”

And the novice softball fans and the aficionados just might again be able to enjoy the best fastpitch players who hail from Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Argentina and the United States.

“Emerson Park is ideal for this tournament,” Beane said. “We have three fields that are good for it and a fan can watch action on all three fields in 10 minutes. We’re an added benefit because of our proximity to Ontario.

“We still have a hotbed of softball right here.”

You can find the rest of MLive’s outstanding coverage of the 2010 ISC World Tournament here.

Randy Peck featured on Canada’s TSN

Friday, August 27th, 2010


Former Team Canada catcher Randy Peck and his family are featured on a special TSN piece starting at about the 3:15 mark in the video.

11th Annual Raymond Angulo Memorial Tournament – Corona, CA

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

Ernie Marez and the So Cal Rebels will once again host the Raymond Angulo Memorial Tournament in Corona, California, this weekend, August 28-29, 2010.

Click here for the bracket and schedule of games.

Home to my cameo for 2010.

Click here for map link.

ISC, Midland a good match

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

From the Midland Daily News

Winger: ISC, Midland a good match
By Don Winger

Some things never change. That includes Midland’s ability to host a world class men’s fastpitch softball tournament.
In the 1970s and 1980s, it was the Amateur Softball Association’s national championship. This year it was the International Softball Congress’ World Fastpitch Tournament.

The host committee for the ASA tournaments was the Midland Redcoats, who were a group of dedicated volunteers who gave hundreds of hours toward making the tournaments a success.

For the ISC tournament that concluded last Saturday the same volunteer spirit existed for the Midland Explorers. Kyle Beane and David Lach, co-chairs of the 2010 ISC host committee, received the same kind of cooperation for their tourney as the Redcoats did for theirs.

Wherever you went at Emerson Park or the Redcoat Softball Complex, there were always volunteers in bright yellow shirts ready to lend a hand. They were available to answer questions to assist the many softball fans who flocked to Midland for the tourney.

Particularly visible were tourney co-directors Lee “Ike” Isenhart and Jim Volk as they rode their golf carts from diamond to diamond to make sure things were running smoothly.

As usual, Marcie Post and her Parks and Recreation Department staff did a superb job of keeping the ball diamonds in tip-top playing shape. Consequently, players had to worry about few if any bad hops turning routine ground balls into base hits. Even when called on to fix the landing area for pitchers, as they did on Emerson 3 one day, they were quick to respond.

Away from the playing fields, the highlight of the tourney was the ISC Hall of Fame induction breakfast at Valley Plaza Resort.
I had the pleasure of giving the invocation before sitting back and listening to the accolades afforded the various inductees.

As pitcher Darren Zack — who celebrated his 50th birthday that day — was introduced, I thought back to the previous afternoon. That was when he pitched his Cobourg (Ontario) Force to victory in their first tournament game. Although he did not strike out a lot of hitters as he might have in earlier times, his veteran presence on the mound was not that of a 50-year-old player.

My hope is that the ISC officials were sufficiently impressed to want to return to Midland in the future. If that opportunity arises, I urge the Explorers to go for it. If we did it once, we can do it again.

Don Winger is the retired executive sports editor of the Daily News.

Get back in the game, softball player/coach tells Kitchener

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010


(click for original news story)

BY CHRISTINE RIVET, RECORD STAFF

KITCHENER — This city should get back in the world softball game.

That sentiment comes from Dave Bailey, a player and coach with the two-time International Softball Congress’s world champion Kitchener Rivershark Twins.

Bailey’s team just returned from the ISC world tournament in Midland, Mich. where the R-Twins earned the silver medal.

“This tournament belongs in Ontario,” said Bailey who also runs his own senior men’s fastpitch tourney in his hometown, Tavistock.

“I had a lot of questions (about the new format), too,” he said. “But everything I saw said Midland was a great success.”

Back in March, a group of Kitchener-based organizers abruptly pulled out of hosting the 2011 worlds because the American-based ISC had changed the event’s format.

“We wouldn’t make the money that the groups expected to make,” Duncan Matheson, slated to be the 2011 tournament’s chair, told The Record in March.

“And I’m not about to lead a group of volunteers down a rocky road.”

The local organizing committee, comprised of ball associations and service clubs who would have split the proceeds, voted unanimously to walk away after the ISC combined the elite men’s bracket with the its second-tier tourney, thereby diluting the product, the Kitchener group said.

The Kitchener committee’s decision led to an acrimonious divorce with the ISC, leaving some to wonder if the sport’s governing body would ever return to Kitchener.

This city previously hosted some of the ISC’s most successful world tournaments, in 2002, 2006 and 2007.

Kitchener’s organizers estimated they raised close to $100,000 and drew about 50,000 fans for each of those events.

Local organizers also said the 2006 and 2007 events pumped about $7-million into the region’s economy through spinoff spending.

The Midland tournament’s co-chair David Lach said his committee’s objectives were more modest because it didn’t have the army of volunteers available in Kitchener.

“We were able to break even and meet our budget goals. All along our intent was not to make money on the event.

“The entire host committee was made up of members who were passionate about fastpitch softball and who wanted to leave a lasting memory. . .”

Bailey said differences between the Kitchener group and the ISC should be patched up for the good of the game.

He pointed out that 19 teams from Ontario competed in Midland, earning a clean sweep of all four division titles.

Bailey also said Kitchener’s Peter Hallman Ball Yard is a perfect venue for the ISC tourney’s new format.

“I’d love to see Kitchener get back in the game,” said Bailey whose R-Twins won world titles in 2008 and 2009.

The ISC’s 2011 world tournament has since been awarded to the Quad Cities area of Iowa and Illinois.

The R-Twins are in Charlottetown starting this weekend to defend their Canadian senior men’s fastpitch title.

crivet (at) therecord.com

While You Were Away…

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

While you were away, these two were still trading barbs. Good to have some constants in life.

Ronnie Rupp Jaime, three innings is a complete game for the G unit:)

Jerry Pyle ‎3 innings would be 2 more innings than you lasted in your last SCIFL game vs. J&B…