Archive for September, 2010

Video – Brad and Pita Rona on NZ News

Sunday, September 12th, 2010

Cap tip, Al’s Fastball and Jason Gerbes.

Great video of Brad and Pita Rona on New Zealand news.

Missouri’s fastpitch leaders planning for bigger better boy’s tournaments in 2011

Friday, September 10th, 2010

From OttoInFocus:


(click banner for original news story at OttoinFocus)

WINSTON, MO – Some men would just throw up there hands and say, “enough’s, enough, it just isn’t meant to be.”

But you won’t hear that from Eric Lewis of Winston, Missouri. The father of two fastpitch-playing sons is determined to keep the boy’s fastpitch game alive – at least in his part of the country – northwest Missouri.

Though denied participation in the 2010 ASA Boy’s National Tournament in the 10-under and 12-under age divisions because of a lack of teams to offer competition in the two brackets, Lewis is undeterred for the 2011 tournaments to be held in Mankato, Minnesota.

And even though his teams couldn’t play at Rolla in the 2010 event, his boys played non-the-less.

“I stayed home and played a fantastic game between my two boys teams,” said Lewis, who is the principal, athletic director, and boy’s softball coach at Winston High School. “I had nineteen little boys age 12 and under play a scrimmage game….we had uniforms, umpires, PA announcing, etc. Great time was had by all.”

And as for the ASA national in Mankato next year?

“I am planning on going to Mankato and taking a 10-Under and a 12-Under team. I am also talking to a couple dads about putting a 14-Under team together. And I’m sure my brother-in-law, Greg “Skipper” McQuinn will have at least an 18-Under
and 23-Under (this year he had those two and a 16-Under).”

Lewis added that it’s possible that northwest Missouri will have a team in every division of the ASA boy’s and young men’s tournament.

And he sees a glimmer of hope that he and McQuinn aren’t alone in the push to revive the boy’s and young men’s sides of the sport.

“I saw some of the younger boys division dads and coaches playing fastpitch in Des Moines in the NAFA World Series tournaments,” he said. “They spoke very confidently of taking teams to Mankato (and) some spoke of taking multiple teams.

“Let’s try and reverse the tide and have a tournament with more teams in every age division.”

Dolan & Murphy wraps up season

Friday, September 10th, 2010

The Dolan & Murphy Shamrocks men’s softball team wrapped up its season last month by competing in the International Softball Congress World Tournament in Midland, Mich.
It was one of three national or international tourneys in which the team competed.

The Aurora Fastpitch Softball Association’s men’s entry defeated Carey’s of Midland 9-2 behind winning pitcher Ales Jetmar, getting a home run and five RBIs from Dave Perkins and two hits each from Robert Reder and Cooper Carson, but lost three other decisions to be eliminated from the tourney.

It dropped the Shamrocks to the ISC II tournament where they went on to tie for third place. D&M defeated Palermo, Ontario, Canada 2-1, topped Ashland, Ohio 5-2 and Toronto 5-1 before falling to Wyevale Tribe of Canada 3-1 in the semifinal. Mark Kleffner earned all-tournament honors.

Click the logo above for the complete story online.

Men AND Women’s Fastpitch at ISF Site

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

See it HERE..

Al Savala on deck for LB Hall induction

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

KEISSER: Savala on deck for LB Hall induction

From the Long Beach Press Telegram

By Bob Keisser, Sports Columnist

The heyday of fastpitch men’s softball in Southern California passed long enough ago that most people can’t remember its demise, much less its history.

The game thrived longer in Long Beach than other communities, too, thanks to the Long Beach Nitehawks, Lakewood Jets and Long Beach Painters.

But the sport will have its day on Sept. 18 when the softball branch of the city’s Hall of Fame inducts five new members, including three men who are proof that the sport still has a profile in town.

Hice Stiles, a 2001 inductee into the International Softball Congress Hall of Fame, will be inducted – and Stiles can still be found playing the game today in masters leagues.

Darrell Kam
, who played for the Nitehawks and only retired from active play a few years ago, will join Stiles, as will Al Savala – the player/coach of the vibrant Long Beach Painters who were the last local team to play high-end softball at Joe Rodgers Field, and the last local team to reach the ISC World Series (1998).

How vibrant are the Painters? Savala still fields three teams, two of them in the masters divisions (45-and-older and 50-and-older).

Their moment in the spotlight will come at the same time that the softball park gets a name change. It now will be named Red Meairs Field at Joe Rodgers Stadium, in honor of the late Meairs, the longtime Nitehawk who succeeded Rodgers as manager and kept the team on the field until financial issues and the changing times led to its closure in 1988.

Savala, on the other hand, never stopped even as the sport’s ranks were thinning. He’s the beacon of the sport, which he’s been involved with for 50 years.

His Long Beach Painters reached the ISC world tournament in four of five years between 1993 and 1998, finishing fifth in 1994 while earning the ISC Sportsmanship Award. The 2009 Long Beach Painters won the American Softball Association’s 45-and-over title.

“We’ve probably qualified for more than 100 national tournaments over the years and won 18 or so different titles,” Savala said. “We traveled a lot, too. I always thought that was the best part of the game, challenging teams from other parts of California and other states.

“When the Nitehawks and other teams stopped, we just kept going.”

Savala talked with Meairs about co-sponsoring the Nitehawks when the team was facing financial hardships, but Meairs wanted to homestand and bring teams to Rodgers Field before competing for a spot in the worlds.

Savala wanted to travel.

“I wanted exposure for the team,” he said. “I think some of the teams I had (in the ’90s) were as good as some of the championship Nitehawk teams.

“It’s worked pretty well for me. I’m pretty well known around the country for playing teams in tournaments, and it’s been fun now to go to nationals and see guys I played against. Now many of their kids are playing.”

Savala, who grew up in Northern California and started playing softball when he was 15, got his start at a high level when he was 16.

“The Knights of Columbus team lost its pitcher and my uncle asked me to teach him how to pitch,” he said, “I showed him, and he said, `heck, why don’t you pitch for us? You’re better than anyone we have.”‘

He played for several teams in the Western Softball Congress before launching the Painters. The name of his team has a story of its own.

Al Savala has been a painting contractor almost as long as he’s been playing softball. He started in high school and launched his own company in his 20s.

He’s left a literal mark on several local fields. Years ago, he noticed Lakewood’s softball fields were “starting to look a little raggedy,” so he told the city he’d paint them for free if they supplied the materials.

He would eventually paint Lakewood’s baseball fields, too … and Poly’s field when Bill Powell was coach … and the field at Cal State Los Angeles when he was asked by old friend and then Golden Eagles coach John Herbold.

“I just enjoy doing it and helping when I can. There’s no rhyme or reason for it. I just enjoy it,” he said.

His commitment to softball – he’s sponsored boys and girls softball youth teams and donated to the softball programs at Long Beach City College and Long Beach State – and well-kept fields isn’t his only contribution to Long Beach.

He was a Little League and Pony League coach in Lakewood and saw more than 30 of his former players reach the pro ranks. He’s often been invited to sit on the bench by Lancers coach Spud O’Neill since Savala knew so many of the kids.

When an illness left Lakewood High shorthanded on the soccer field, he filled in as coach, a stint that lasted six years. When then-Long Beach City College coach Larry Reisbig needed a tutor for a kicker, he asked Savala for help, and he would spend 19 years as a specialist coach for the Vikings.

The Century Club’s award for the high school athletes of the year is sponsored and named after Savala.

Savala said Stiles had – and still has – one of the smoothest swings of any player he’s ever met. Kam played for the Nitehawks and Painters, and the late Meairs said Kam was one of the grittiest, unsung players he ever had with the Nitehawks.

Induction day will revive the sport, however momentary.

“I still haven’t gotten to the point where I know what to say about this,” Savala said. “It’s nice that someone thought of me. But it’s not like I’m going away.”

Savala said he’ll coach and lead the Painters until someone pries the bat, or paint brush, out of his hand.

bob.keisser (at) presstelegram.com



Editor’s note:
I had the chance to attend a couple of the Long Beach Softball and Baseball Hall of Fame luncheons at Blair Field in Long Beach.

Here is the “Wall of Fame” at Joe Rodgers Field in Long Beach from that inaugural class of 2004:


(click photo to enlarge)

CCASA 2010 Annual Meeting – Oct 23-24

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

The CCASA 2010 Annual Meeting is coming!

Mark Your Calendars!

October 23rd & 24th, 2010

Piccadilly Inn University, Fresno, CA

Agenda will follow soon!

The CCASA Hall of Fame dinner will be held at the same location October 23, 2010

More information soon!

Please pass this information on to anyone you think will want to attend the Annual Meeting or the Hall of Fame Dinner!

2010 Central California ASA | 6155 Conejo Rd. | Atascadero, CA | 93422
http://www.ccmsasa.org/

Find the CCASA on Facebook.

2010 SCIFL Post-Season Managers Meeting – Saturday, Sept. 25

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

From the SCIFL website:

(click SCIFL logo for official website

From SCIFl commish, Robert Hernandez:

2010 and another successful season is being us. This is to announce that the SCIFL Post-Season Manager’s meeting for the 2010 season is schedule for Saturday, September 25th, at 9:00 AM. The location will be at the Inn Suites in Buena Park. The address is 7555 Beach Blvd, Buena Park, CA. The hotel is located just south of the 91 freeway Beach Blvd exit.

The agenda will be, but not limited to:

2010 Season Recap
2010 Expenses
20011Proposed Tournament Schedule
Tournament Formats
Locations
SCIFL & NAFA Boards
2011 NAFA World Series
2011 NAFA Master’s World Series
Umpires
Hotels
Sponsorships
Open Discussion

This will be an open meeting and participation is welcomed as each item is discussed. We are more than happy to discuss an item that is not on the agenda but may move it to the Open Discussion portion of the meeting. If you have an item that you wish to place on the agenda, please forward it to me prior to the meeting.

I look forward to seeing everyone on September 25th and discussing the sport we all love to play. Please respond back to me via this email address or on my cell at 714-392-1387 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              714-392-1387      end_of_the_skype_highlighting begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              714-392-1387      end_of_the_skype_highlighting so that we can make sure we have enough chairs and refreshments.

Robert Hernandez

Maddy’s Photos – ISC Hall of Fame Breakfast

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

From Maddy’s Photos blog:

This year I was asked by the ISC to cover the ISC Hall of Fame Breakfast. I had attended before as a guest, but coming in as a photographer gave me a different insight into the event. For all the inductees, this is a very important moment in their lives. Their years of playing the great game of fastpitch is finally recognized not only by the ISC organization but by their peers and fans. So I wanted to do justice to the moment and cover as much as I could of the event. Of course, I am never satisfied but I hope that the resulting images satisfies everyone that attended and participated.

Click HERE to see the gallery of photos of the breakfast.

Watch for more of Maddy’s Photos soon.

You can also find Maddy on Facebook, visit by clicking the logo below(and click that “LIKE” button to become a fan)

Click here for the largest gallery of fastball photos known to man.

A.C. Williams, Prescott’s amateur softball pioneer, dies

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010


(click logo for original news story)


By Doug Cook

A.C. Williams, former longtime Prescott Parks and Recreation director and beloved state commissioner for the Arizona Amateur Softball Association, died Tuesday in his Prescott home, apparently from complications with diabetes and a heart ailment, according to family members. He was 85.


A.C. Williams, a softball legend in Arizona

Williams moved from Tucson to Prescott in the late 1950s and soon became instrumental in building the city’s reputation as the so-called “Softball Capital of the World” as ASA commissioner from the early 1970s through 2007.

A member of the Arizona Softball Hall of Fame and the ASA National Hall of Fame, Williams brought highly competitive national fast-pitch amateur softball tournaments to Ken Lindley Field, formerly City Park, while forging a cooperative relationship between the city schools’ athletic programs and the Parks and Rec Department for use of fields and courts.

“He was one of the greatest men in recreation,” said Cal Cordes, a close friend of Williams’ who refereed with him years ago. “He changed our recreation program around to the fact that it just ran smoothly all the time. He ran a good ship and trained a lot of good kids about ‘how to do this’ and ‘how to do that.'”

When he first arrived at Prescott Parks and Rec, Williams operated a one-man department inside the old Armory next to City Park at the corner of Gurley Street and Arizona Avenue, which at the time played host to both baseball and softball.

During his tenure from the late-1950s to 1983, Williams also oversaw the creation of several Prescott parks, including Bill Vallely Field next to Yavapai College and Willow Creek Park off Willow Creek Road. He also began the development for Granite Creek Park near the intersection of Sheldon Street and Montezuma Street, which later was named in his honor, and had a hand in the creation of Goldwater Lake Park.

“He was a legend in Parks and Rec and Arizona ASA,” Don Fishel, Arizona ASA’s current commissioner, said of Williams. “He was always amiable and always wanting to help.”

Jim McCasland, who eventually succeeded Williams as Prescott Parks and Recreation director in the mid-1980s and retired in 2007, said he met Williams in 1968 while he was still in high school. At the time, McCasland played summer softball and worked as a Little League umpire.

Not until 1973, as a parks and rec employee, did McCasland get to know Williams, a past chair of the Arizona State Parks Board who had already become an ambassador for softball and Prescott.

From the middle- to late-’60s to the early ’80s, Prescott became the place to play fast-pitch softball. International teams from Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Taiwan and the West Indies, among other countries, visited here to compete.

“He really made fast-pitch go in this town,” said Larry Bender, who scored softball games for Williams for years. “We had a great men’s league here.”

Williams, who brought the first national softball tournament to Prescott in 1978, developed annual invitational fast-pitch tournaments on Memorial Day, the Fourth of July and Labor Day that brought in some of the West’s best teams and a tremendous amount of tourism dollars to Prescott. He also was responsible for bringing the slow-pitch game here in the early 1960s.

“He just loved the game and was absolutely dedicated to it,” McCasland said. “He was a force for softball.”

For years, Williams labored at his East Gurley Street office and at the park seven days a week throughout the summer to ensure that the city’s softball operations went smoothly. He demanded a lot from his staff, too, whether it was maintaining the fields or umpiring.

“We just worked hour upon hour upon hour,” McCasland said. “I didn’t know anything else. It was what you did.”

McCasland, a former fast-pitch softball player, said Williams cared the most about the fans he drew to Ken Lindley Field for summer league games and tournaments. On numerous occasions during night contests in the early ’70s, it was common to see anywhere from 2,000-3,000 spectators, McCasland said, and nobody went home.

“That’s because of A.C. and what A.C. orchestrated,” McCasland said. “When you went to Ken Lindley Field, you’d see members of the city council and the school district, and young people were there.”

Today, the Arizona Softball Hall of Fame has its headquarters inside Grace Sparkes Activity Center, 824 E. Gurley St. – undoubtedly because of Williams’ influence.

Although softball was his first love, Williams also sponsored activities on the courthouse plaza seven days a week.

“With A.C.’s passing, I see an era passing,” McCasland said. “In Prescott, there were people who were unique characters to Prescott – Prescottonians who were Prescott through and through. A.C. was one of those icons.”

Williams’ survivors include his wife of 64-1/2 years, Dell, and his three children, Linda Cates, Vicki Mastriani and Byron Williams.

Funeral services are pending.

ORIGINAL REPORT, 4:33 p.m.:

PRESCOTT – A.C. Williams, former longtime Prescott Parks and Recreation director and beloved state commissioner for the Arizona Amateur Softball Association, died Tuesday in Prescott from complications with diabetes, according to close friends of the family. He was 85.

Williams came to Prescott in the late 1950s and soon built a reputation for the city as the so-called “Softball Capital of the World.” He brought highly competitive national fast-pitch amateur softball tournaments to this area while forging a cooperative relationship between the city schools’ athletic programs and the Parks and Rec Department for use of fields and courts.

Survivors include his wife of 64-1/2 years, Dell, and his three children, Linda Cates, Vicki Mastriani and Byron Williams.

Funeral services are pending.

Editor’s note:

I had the pleasure to meet A.C. Williams, and speak with him a number of times, during visits with my teams to Prescott, Arizona. He indeed put the town on the fastpitch map. For a number of years, including the late 1980’s, Prescott hosted a big 4th of July tournament, in conjunction with the town’s “Rodeo Days” celebration, which seemed to bring three-fourth’s of the population out to Gurley street, with non-stop traffic cruising back and forth, amidst the celebration, with American flags flying from the back of pick-up trucks, full of young people, and always large crowds standing at street level on Ken Lindley Field (which sits in a bowl below). Those tournaments were as Americana as apple pie – quite literally on the 4th of July. In 1987, we (San Diego Eagles, with future ISC Hall of Famer Alan Rohrbach) made it to the championship game against the Morgan Hill Nine – a team comprised largely of the Santa Rosa Guanella Brothers, and played before a packed house of 1000 or so, with fans lining the fence on Gurley as far as we could see. People stayed because it was too much fun to leave. That was Prescott. That was the environment that A.C. helped create. A.C. passed the baton to folks like Jim McCasland, Don Fishel and Sharon Mitchell. Teams could always count on one thing in Prescott, and that was A.C. Williams-like hospitality. Teams came first, with the folks going out of their way to be sure the teams enjoyed themselves during their stay in Prescott. That was A.C. Williams.

-JF

Bob Otto’s Photo Galleries from NAFA World Series

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010


(click banner for original news story at OttoinFocus)


Written by Bob Otto on August 6th, 2010

I’ve posted the final photo gallery of the 2010 NAFA World Series. That brings the total to 12 galleries of about 50 to 60 photos each.

I’ll keep the galleries posted until Nov. 1st. After that date all the galleries will be deleted. So if you want to look at them, or buy a photo or two, do it before Nov. 1st. After that date, they’re gone for good.

NAFA World Series photos, gallery 12

Bob Otto
www.ottoinfocus.com