Thursday, November 11, 2010

From the archives - Amari Spievey

Thought this was interesting on my return to Palmer Field. From 6 years ago when Amari Spievey (now of the Lions) stars for the Falcons against Shelton:

In freezing temperatures, and with other games much closer by, I made the decision to head to Middletown Saturday night to watch Xavier take on seventh-ranked Shelton.
There were some underlying reasons why I made the trip: I thought the Falcons had a good chance to pull off an upset, I knew the field conditions wood probably be poor (they were, ice was all over the field), and the Gaels needed the game to stay in the Class LL playoff hunt (more on that later).
But there was only one real reason why I wasted an hour driving and put an extra 70 miles on my vehicle, and his name is Amari Spievey.
I’d heard about him, read about him, but had never seen Spievey -- Xavier’s standout running back -- live, I had not covered a Xavier game in three years. Many people consider Spievey the best player in the SCC, and that’s someone writing a column like this just has to see live at least once, whatever the price a Honda Civic has to pay.
But as so often happens in life, when you go looking for one thing, you often find another. And what I found last Saturday night had little to do with Spievey. Sure, he ran for 99 yards and a touchdown, and got the game-clinching interception as Xavier upset Shelton, 27-20, but it was a tremendous team effort that got the job done for the Falcons.
On his first carry of the night, Spievey fumbled and was injured, forced to sit out a series. Shelton immediately scored, but junior Shea Dwyer came off the bench to post a 51-yard touchdown run against a Gaels’ defense that hadn’t given up a point in the previous nine quarters. On the next series, Spievey returned and Dwyer never got another carry. Such is the life of a backup, but Dwyer’s TD gave Xavier momentum it would carry throughout the contest.
Tight end Matt Maguire, a senior captain, had three receptions for 64 yards and a 2-point conversion, and had perhaps the catch of the year, a diving grab that he caught inches from the ground on a 3rd-and-7 play from the Shelton 15-yard line. The Falcons scored on the next play, and although they trailed at the half, 20-19, they believed they could get the job done.
“We challenged them at halftime,” Xavier coach Sean Marinan said. “We know they are a very good team, the defending Class L champions, and we needed to pick it up a notch on defense.”
Xavier was dealt a tough blow midway through the third quarter when senior quarterback Mike Crescimano was carried off the field on a stretcher because of a left shoulder injury.
As backup Corey Moses was trying to get his legs under him, the phone calls to the Palmer Field press box began.
They were from Crescimano’s father, Don, who is also an assistant coach with Xavier. He was calling from the local emergency room because, even in a hospital room, Mike wanted to know how his team was doing.
“Shelton 20, Xavier 19,” he was told. Ten minutes later, he was told the same thing. Another ten minutes, same story.
But midway through the fourth quarter, Moses had his legs. He ran for 12 yards, hit Spievey for a 14-yard gain, and completed a pass to himself (it was tipped) for four yards. Then, he took a three-step drop and lofted a pass down the right sideline. It was underthrown, but when the Shelton defender slipped, Ryan Cody came back, grabbed it, and waltzed into the end zone in front of the student section.
“Xavier 27, Shelton 20. Five minutes left.”, Crescimano was told. The phone calls started coming more frequently.
The Gaels got inside the Falcons’ 30-yard line twice after the go-ahead score, but when Semil Desai’s pass was intercepted at the Xavier 20 with 45 seconds remaining, the phone rang almost immediately.
“Xavier 27, Shelton 20. Final.”
As Xavier and the student section celebrated on the field, there was probably a mini-celebration in the emergency room. It was, in all aspects, truly a team win.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

SCC football - Week 1: Xavier raises the black flag atop the SCC

"Every normal man must be tempted, at times, to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats." - H.L. Mencken

The quote above is mentioned in Friday Night Lights - no, not the movie, nor the network drama, but the fantastic original book by Buzz Bissinger that came out some two decades ago.
(By the way, if you haven't read that book and you're reading this column, do so. Now. This can wait a few hours.)
The quote hung in Odessa Permian's locker room before their game against rival Odessa, but it must have been somewhere in Xavier's lead up to its showdown with top-ranked and defending Class L champion Notre Dame last week.
You see, as much as we want to talk about things like athleticism and strategy, there's a reason why football became America's pastime and Linda McMahon has enough money to run for the Senate, and it's violence.
Coaches and players will talk about being physical, but will rarely use the word violence because it's got a negative connotation, but it's all semantics at that point. And I'm not here to condemn violence, some of my favorite athletic memories growing up were of Mike Tyson pummeling someone. In fact, as a Giants fan, perhaps my personal best memory is Leonard Marshall knocking Joe Montana out of the 1990 NFC title game with a vicious blindside hit.
Every football player lives for a hit like that, a clean (as opposed to some of the cheapshots like the one on Wes Welker on Sunday, which should not be applauded or condoned in any way, shape, or form) blow that makes the crowd gasp. What better way to intimidate your opponent and fire up your own team?
Of course, no one wants to see people get hurt, certainly serious injuries, but you really can't get your violence without a few people feeling some pain along the way.
"We pride ourselves on being physical," Xavier coach Sean Marinan said. "We make no bones about that, that's the way a defense has to operate, especially against a team like Notre Dame."
So on the second play from scrimmage last Friday - after a long Tirrell Young kickoff return gave Notre Dame and its huge crowd early momentum - Sean Goldrich hit Phil Bentley with a flare pass down the right sideline. Bentley is listed at 168 pounds, with the operative term there being "listed". To his credit, Bentley could gave gone out of bounds, but cut up the sideline, where the play - and Notre Dame's momentum - met a violent end as safety Gerry Basadonna crushed Bentley at full speed, a collision the human body is not made to deal with too often.
With Bentley temporarily out of the game (he did later come back and score a touchdown), four plays later Austin Ahern whacked Goldrich for a 14-yard loss and a message was sent that playing against Xavier's defense is not going to be a heck of a lot of fun. And it's going to be painful.
Notre Dame coach Tom Marcucci would swear after the game that his team stood up to Xavier and was every bit as physical. And the scoreboard indicated that, if not for a bizarre fumble late in the game, the Green Knights might have won and still been the state's top team.
It's also true that violence is not the answer to all football's problems. Xavier's lack of a reliable passing game and the fact that they had trouble snapping the ball nearly derailed a much-deserved victory and probable No. 1 state ranking.
But the fact remains that Xavier came out to physically intimidate Notre Dame and you'd have to say they succeeded. Goldrich never looked comfortable, finishing 5-of-17 for 69 yards and three interceptions (and the only 2 completions in the second half were dump-offs). Young, minus the opening kickoff, wasn't really a factor. ND was held to just 180 yards of total offense.
"We want to make it our mission to come out and come after people," Xavier's Graham Stewart said. "We like to be physical, and we knew we had to be physical tonight (last Friday). That's what we do at Xavier."
Stewart, headed to Boston College, and Ahern - also one of the state's top college prospects - made a nuisance of themselves, but they were joined by Marinan's son (also Sean, and who had the biggest play in the game, stripping David Rose in the fourth quarter) and Eric Mischke in the backfield for much of the evening. After Xavier finally grabbed the lead, you never got the feeling Notre Dame was coming back.
And you also get the feeling that the Xavier defense will make plenty of people in the SCC (and, probably, beyond) extremely uncomfortable.
It won't be an accident.
LIGHTNING, LIGHTNING GO AWAY: Evidently, the football gods didn't like opening games being played on Thursdays, as all the SCC games slated for last Thursday were either never started and not completed because of heavy rain and lightning.
It set up an odd situation for the Cheshire-Hamden and North Haven-Hillhouse contests, where coaches had nearly 24 hours to design halftime gameplans. Of those four squads, apparently the Rams' staff did the best job, when play was stopped on Thursday, Cheshire and Hamden were scoreless early in the third quarter, but Cheshire ran away with a 27-0 victory in the end.
The Rams continued the two-quarterback rotation (Michael Ecke and Max Slade this year) that worked so well for them on their way to a state championship. But it was their defense that was the story, holding Jordan Teague and company scoreless.
Cheshire will have to deal with Hillhouse this week, and the Academics were able to hold off North Haven, 12-0 (a rematch of the SCC basketball title game, by the way), after having the lead by that same score Thursday when the game was stopped at halftime. Freshman Harold Cooper and senior Chris Turner had the touchdowns, and the Academics look like they might be headed back toward the top of Division II (and are the highest D-II team in the power rankings).
PENALTY KICKS: Foran and Branford played a thriller Saturday night, with the Lions eventually prevailing 28-27 in overtime after it looked like they had lost the game in regulation. The Hornets stormed to the Foran 1-yard line with time running out, but picked up a penalty and eventually had a field goal blocked.
In overtime, both teams immediately scored, and Branford originally seemed to be going for 2 points and the win, but eventually decided against it, went for the tie (and a second overtime) and missed the extra point.
Unofficially, 95 percent of overtime in the current high school format come down to a missed extra point one way or the other, so it seems like the wise thing to do is move the start back to the 25-yard line like college. At least it won't be so easy to score.
Foran's opener last season also came down to kicking. After tying Lyman Hall 20-20, Joe Capalbo missed an extra point that probably would have won the game, but redeemed himself by drilling a field goal on the game's last play to win 23-20.
Ironically, later in the year, Capalbo wasn't so lucky against Branford last season. After the Lions had cut the Hornets' lead to 21-20 in the second overtime last season, his kick was blocked to end the game (meaning it was in the 95 percent decided by the kicking game).
And put in the same situation again, it's probably safe to say that you'll see the Hornets go for the jugular when they have the chance.
EXTRA POINTS: If you thought some unique matchups in this week's crossover games, you weren't hullicanating. Three of the games feature teams that have never met (Foran-Xavier, Jonathan Law-Wilbur Cross, and Hillhouse-Cheshire). Guilford-West Haven haven't met since 1997, when the SCC was nothing but a babbling toddler. Sheehan and Shelton - division rivals in most sports - will meet for the first time since 2003. According to SCC commissioner Al Carbone (who also supplied those facts), The league’s Scheduling Committee and Athletic Directors last winter voted to eliminate the scheduling rule that avoided Division I West/Division II East and Divison I East/Division II West matchups during crossover weeks. Doesn't mean the games will be any better, but they'll be different at least, I guess ... East Haven was indeed able to field a team (and had decent numbers) and put up a fight against Guilford before falling 27-6. It will still be a struggle for the Easties, but I think they should be able to beat Platt Tech and might, just might be able to shock someone else before the season is done ... The other winless team from a year ago - Fairfield Prep - also put in a solid performance, albeit in a losing effort, falling 28-14 to Hand. Prep misses out on the crossover fun, but gets to take on Griswold this week. That's a long Friday trip on I-95 for Griswold ... For the second straight year, Wilbur Cross went on the road against a traditional power and hung a big number in an easy win, this time beating Shelton 32-21. Their schedule is much easier in the next two games than it was after last year's upset win over Xavier, with Jonathan Law and Fairfield Prep coming up before they get into the heart of their Division I schedule. Last season, they finished 5-5 ... Did I say 5-5? Just like my record last week in the picks. Yikes.
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PLAYER OF THE WEEK
James Ward, Wilbur Cross - Ward ran the opening kickoff for a touchdown and rushed for 142 yards and three more TDs on just nine carries as Wilbur Cross rolled to a 32-21 win over Shelton., the second straight year the Governors have won on the road in Division I in the opening week. Ward also added an interception to round out his day of being everywhere on the field.

GAME OF THE WEEK
Hillhouse at Cheshire, Friday, 7 p.m. - Both teams made statements in games that were played over two days in the opening week, and both teams posted a shutout, which means points might be at a premium at the Maclary Complex. The Maclary Complex is brand new to Hillhouse, these teams have never played each other in their history, which adds to the intrigue of this contest. Both teams also still have some question marks which will probably be answered in this one.

INSIDE THE NUMBERS
3
Number of interceptions thrown by Notre Dame quarterback Sean Goldrich in the opener, after throwing only a single one in all of the 2009 season. Xavier remains the only team to pick Goldrich off in the last two seasons, the Falcons recorded the interception last year against him as well.

POWER RANKINGS
1) Xavier (1-0; Last Week 2) – Don' t think it will be too much fun for Foran this Friday at Palmer Field.
2) Notre Dame (0-1; LW 1) – Knights have a lot of work to do on the lines, but should be fine in the end.
3) Cheshire (1-0; LW 3) – Again, the two-headed QB system pays dividends, but defense the story.
4) Wilbur Cross (1-0; LW 5) – Let's hope the Governors learned lesson after first game last season.
5) Hillhouse (1-0; LW 4) - Might be a little high, but we'll know exactly where to place Acs after Friday.
6) Shelton (0-1; LW 4) – Georgalas will return, but it might be a struggle against best SCC has to offer.
7) Hand (1-0; LW 6) – Not exactly an inspiring performance, but it goes in the win column for later use.
8) West Haven (1-0; LW 8) – Blue Devils had to wait until Sunday, but got season off on right foot.
9) Hamden (0-1; LW 7) – Offense was nonexistent against Cheshire, and they'll have to figure that out.
10) Lyman Hall (1-0; LW 3) - Highest Trojans have been in a while here, and they might be able to climb.
11) Foran (1-0; LW 5) - The Lions and Schumitz will most certainly battle you, especially at their place.
12) Branford (0-1; LW 1) - Tough loss to open campaign. Hornets surely hope doesn't cost them playoffs.
13) North Haven (0-1; LW 2) - Schwab was forced to leave opener. Indians could use him on field this week.
14) Sheehan (1-0; LW 6) - Gannon threw for 4 TDs, good start for a young quarterback in this league.
15) Amity (0-1; LW 9) – Tremendous defensive effort, but Spartans end up with nothing to show for it.
16) Fairfield Prep (0-1; LW 10) - Some things to build on, especially with Griswold coming to town Friday.
17) Jonathan Law (0-1; LW 7) - Didn't really see Lawmen giving up 37 points, but I didn't see a lot of things.
18) Guilford (1-0; LW 8) - Got a win, but Indians know things will only get a whole lot tougher from there.
19) East Haven (0-1; LW 9) - Played hard, played tough. What else can you ask for out of a team?

Sunday, September 12, 2010

SCC football - Division I preview: ND's world and everybody else is just visiting

"To whom much is given, much is required." - John F. Kennedy

People forget that prior to last fall, the Notre Dame football team was coming off three consecutive losing seasons, and many people (including someone whose picture lies somewhere on this page) didn't really believe that last season was going to be the one that the Green Knights returned to glory.
Of course, 20/20 hindsight shows outstanding lines on both sides of the ball, speed to burn, and an outstanding leader and winner in Conor Keniry.
Notre Dame hopes that there won't be any hindsight needed in December. They will begin the season this week No. 1 in the Courant poll, the Register poll, the WELI poll, and - presumably - the Gallup polls.
Rumors of their preseason beatdowns of other traditional powers have spread like wildfire through the football underground.
But, unlike last season, the hype comes with a giant target on their back, one that Notre Dame will have to embrace if they want to avoid the snipers.
"We don't talk too much about last season," Notre Dame coach Tom Marcucci said. "It's a new story, a new group. We graduated eight starters on offense, seven on defense. We have some skill players back and we have some talent, but it is a different team."
No one will be feeling the heat more than senior quarterback Sean Goldrich, because he's the most heralded player returning from last year's Class L title squad, throwing for 20 touchdowns with just 1 interception last season and completing nearly 69 percent of his passes.
However, his role will almost surely be increased this season. Goldrich never threw more than 15 passes in a game last season, and although the Knights should still run plenty, there will be times where the game may rest on Goldrich's strong right arm.
"I just want to win games, that's what's most important to me," Goldrich said. "I know interceptions will happen from time to time, so I'm not worried about it. Coach (Marcucci) has told me we're probably going to throw a little bit more, which is obviously exciting as a quarterback, but as long as we're winning, I'm fine."
You want an example of how things have changed for Goldrich? At a recent visit to Notre Dame, I was told I couldn't talk to him. After explaining that it was set up through Coach Marcucci, the message came back, "Well, he can't talk to college coaches during school."
For whatever reason, major colleges have been slow to warm to Goldrich. He had looked at Iowa, but they grabbed another QB. The same appears to have happened at Villanova.
What makes it doubly strange is trying to find someone with something negative to say about Goldrich, either on or off the field, is darn near impossible.
"In my opinion, he is a Division I quarterback," Marcucci said. "He has a big-time arm and he's faster than people give him credit for. He's a good runner. And he's a fantastic kid. He does everything the coaches ask, and it's always the team first."
You can tell the college thing stings Goldrich a little, but while he's not exactly a tragic figure, he has had his share of adversity growing up in West Haven.
When he was in seventh grade, his mother, Tara, died suddenly, and therefore never saw him play a down in high school.
"It dawned upon me a couple of times last season," Goldrich said. "It was a little emotional in the playoffs that she couldn't see the success that we had. In the end, although I wish she could be here, it's nice to know that there's someone up there looking out for me, and she'll always be a big part of who I am."
You want weapons? Goldrich (who somehow didn't even make first team Division I last season, as he was beaten out by Xavier's Alex Pace, Hamden's Jason Lassiter, and Cheshire's Greg Palmer) has weapons. Phil Bentley and Tirrell Young-Williams, who each had big plays in big games last season, were 1-2 in the 100-meter dash in Class MM track last spring. Running back David Rose was not spectacular, but consistent and should be stronger with a year of experience under his belt.
Sometimes it's not the most fun position to be in, anything but a repeat as state champion will likely be a disappointment.
However, it certainly beats having a losing record.
"We have a lot of things we can still do to get better," Marcucci said. "This won't be easy."
STEWART LEADS FALCONS: As of Sunday, there was only one name on the MaxPreps roster for Xavier: Graham Stewart.
The linebacker spurned UConn (yeah) and Syracuse (boo) to play at Boston College, ending a fairly contentious recruiting period and allowing him to concentrate on football.
Stewart and fellow linebacker Austin Ahern are among the top 10 recruits coming out of Connecticut this season, which alone means the Falcons should be a handful (Just YouTube Stewart and you'll see some pretty good hits against Division I opposition).
Xavier also won their final nine regular season games last season, including a win over Notre Dame, before giving Staples all it could handle in the Class LL semifinals.
But it was a strange season for the Falcons defense, which posted three shutouts and nearly had two others, but was run off the field by Wilbur Cross (37-19, their only regular season loss), and gave up 20 or more points five times, including to Staples.
Will they have enough to unseat Notre Dame atop the SCC? We won't have long to find out, will we?
EXTRA POINTS: Tony Martone returns to Hamden, and he might have his work cut out for him with a brutal schedule and losing 24 players to graduation. He does have running back Jordan Teague (who, strangely, didn't play any running back in the final scrimmage against Greenwich) and he should have enough athletes to be competitive. But how competitive? ... Yea, I was the one that put Cheshire 8th in Division I to start last season. All they did was win the Class LL state championship. Oops. I'm semi-inclined to look at the fact that they look likely to use two quarterbacks again (Michael John Ecke and Max Slade) to prove that the might have some problems, but it's worked for them in the past, and they should have enough talent to be in position for a possible playoff berth ... Shelton will be without Mike Georgalas for its opener against Wilbur Cross after he was ejected from last Thanksgiving's game against Derby (the CIAC never forgets). They will also miss Ryan Deangelis for the season with an ACL tear, so the Gaels may take some time to get going, and that may be enough to cost them a postseason run ... Wilbur Cross has Dontay Long (QB) and James Ward (RB), but it's hard to tell what else this early. Last season, they started with an 18-point win at Palmer Field, but later in the season lost by 24 points at home to West Haven. They finished 5-5, and you expect you might see more of the same this season ... Hand has some players returning, but it's hard to see them having the athleticism to keep up with the Notre Dames and Xaviers of the world ... West Haven is another mystery, they haven't looked particularly good in the preseason, but they never do, do they? ... Fairfield Prep and Amity, both with new coaches (Tom Shea and Bert Mozealous, respectively), appear to be swimming upstream in Division I, at least for this season ... Couldn't fit this into Inside the Numbers, but the least amount of points Notre Dame scored last season: 28.
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PLAYER OF THE WEEK

GAME OF THE WEEK
Xavier at Notre Dame, Friday, 7 p.m. - By all preseason accounts, this should be the game of the season as well in front of what figured to be a giant crowd in West Haven. Is Notre Dame's offense that good? Is Graham Stewart that good? Is the SCC that good? All questions we've been waiting months to answer will finally begin to be come this week, thankfully.

INSIDE THE NUMBERS
32
Number of playoff teams in the CIAC football playoffs this season, up from 24 last season. Seeing that I was one of the ones that was pushing for a change, obviously I like it, but it will be interesting to see how it plays out. I surmise there will still be some teams that feel they should get in and don't, but that's the way it goes.

D-I POWER RANKINGS

1) Notre Dame (11-1; Opener: vs. Xavier) – Knights don't have to leave West Haven until October 22. Nice scheduling.
2) Xavier (9-2; at Notre Dame) – Have to survive ND and Cheshire (both away) in the season's first three weeks.
3) Cheshire (11-1; at Hamden) – Usually, they lose to Hamden, then go on big win streak. Tough to do that this year.
4) Shelton (7-3; vs. Wilbur Cross) – Won last six games last season, will know much more after Friday's opener.
5) Wilbur Cross (5-5; at Shelton) – Ward will take them as far as he can, but he's going to need some help somewhere.
6) Hand (5-5; at Fairfield Prep) – Less cool storylines for opener, same amount of rush-hour traffic on I-95.
7) Hamden (7-3; vs. Cheshire) – Dragons don't play Wilbur Cross this season. Seems kind of wrong, doesn't it?
8) West Haven (5-5; at Amity) – Fairly kind opening to schedule may give the Westies much-needed confidence.
9) Amity (3-7; vs. West Haven) – Mght be a little bit of a rough start to the new regime, but they'll battle in D-I.
10) Fairfield Prep (0-10; vs. Hand) - Well, it really can't get much worse, can it?

Sunday, September 5, 2010

SCC football - Division II preview: Lions staying tough despite size

In retrospect, Jeff Bevino's initiation into the Southern Connecticut Conference may have been a clear violation of the CIAC hazing policies.
Bevino - coming from a winning program at Notre Dame of Fairfield - and his 2006 Foran team was beaten, battered, and ultimately left winless behind a young quarterback named Jake White.
Perhaps the ultimate humiliation came on Thanksgiving of that year, when Law - only two years removed from an 0-10 season of its own that saw them outscored 462-53 (yes, those were the pre-Cochran Rule days, people) that included a 43-0 loss to Foran - crushed the Lions 47-0.
"My first year, sometimes we had 18 healthy players, it was difficult," Bevino said. "It wasn't fun to get beat up like we did."
The next year, Bevino grabbed a couple of wins over Derby and East Haven to go 2-8, and in 2008, had what many people considered a dream season, finishing 7-4 behind a now veteran White and speedster Tyler Hames, who transferred in from Arizona the year prior.
But last season, White and Hames had both graduated and it looked like it might be back to Square One for the Lions in the brutal SCC. Nope.
Led by a previously unknown quarterback, Tucker Schumitz, and some gutsy play, Foran finished 6-4 and beat Law on Thanksgiving for the second straight year.
"We were really two points away from being 8-2 and looking at the playoffs," Bevino said. "The kids have settled in to our program, and hopefully we're building something here. I'm very happy where we are."
Schumitz may simultaneously have been the breakout star and the most underrated player in the SCC last season, both throwing (1,458) and running (1,161) for more than 1,000 yards from his quarterback position. The good news for Foran is that Schumitz returns for his senior season, but the bad news is that he won't sneak up on anyone this time around.
"He's a heck of an athlete," Bevino said. "He's been throwing the ball very well in practice, but we're hesitant to run him too much in scrimmages because obviously we don't want anything to happen to him."
Bevino trusts Schumitz enough in Foran's spread offense to basically put the game in his hands. At the snap, it's up to Schumitz to make the correct read to either keep the ball or hand it off to a teammate, something that might be tough for some old-school coaches.
"The thing I like about Tucker most is that he's a real student of the game," Bevino said. "He's a really smart kid, he always knows where everyone is on the other team, he has a good feel for what they are trying to do. I trust him enough to pull the ball any time he wants to, it's called a 'choice play'. He doesn't make a wrong choice very often."
Foran has a few holes to fill left by graduation on its lines, but Schumitz - who also uses his reading of the game as a defensive player for the Lions - will look to junior Andrew Sileo (406 yards rushing), and senior Stanley Olsson (26 receptions) to catch some of his passes.
The schedule is much more daunting this year for Bevino and the Lions, opening with a brutal three game stretch of Branford, Xavier, and Hillhouse, but it's probably safe to say that the days of worrying about winless seasons are behind them.
"We'll play the hand we're dealt with the schedule," Bevino said. "But our kids are game. We'll come out and play hard every game, and I'm confident we'll be in most of the games we play this season. I think it will be a fun season."
What a difference four years can make.
31 AND COUNTING: You wouldn't have thought things could get too much worse at East Haven, but with a losing streak of 31 games entering the 2010 season comes word that numbers are so low that the Yellowjackets may have trouble fielding a varsity team.
Athletic Director Mike Marone was quick to try to quell those rumors, but admitted things have been tough this preseason for second-year coach Greg Volpe (who at one point this off-season was told he was fired only to find out later that it wasn't true), and that as few as 17 healthy varsity players were available at a couple of practices last week.
One thing going for East Haven is that the students did not return until Tuesday, so they were hoping to pick up a few kids who might not otherwise be interested in playing, as well as some players that are currently injured. For those that read this column regularly, you'll remember that exactly one year ago in this point, East Haven and their new coach Volpe were featured, complete with this quote:
"I didn't know how deep it went here (at East Haven)," Volpe said. "It's just a culture more than anything. It's a big challenge, but we're going to try to meet it."
Unfortunately, that still sums it up.
And despite what you feel about East Haven, or if you like your team to have an easy win, it really is quite sad the situation the program is in, and we hope things turn around. (It was also a sad summer for the EHHS program as one fo their biggest recent stars, James Glee, was killed in a motorcycle accident in Hartford at the age of 29.)
I'm sure we'll be on this story for most of the 2010 season. One possible bright spot, the Easties were able to get rid of Trinity Catholic as their out-of-conference game and added Platt Tech. East Haven will play the first game in the SCC next Wednesday night against Guilford.
EXTRA POINTS: The Division II race may be too close to call, which may not necessarily benefit the teams that are pushing toward the playoffs. It's important to remember that although the playoff teams in each class have gone from 4 to 8, the number of classes have dropped from 6 to 4. So you math majors can tell us that the number of playoff teams, while increased, has only gone from 24 to 32. It's still hard to see a team with three losses qualifying for the postseason on a regular basis ... You'll see we have Branford tops in the Power Rankings, and that's largely due to the arm of Kyle Nolan, who took over for an injured Andrew Luzzi at quarterback and did very well, throwing for 706 yards and leading the Hornets to four straight wins to close the campaign ... North Haven, who was 7-3 behind sophomore quarterback Joe Schwab, also can't be counted out of the race, and if you want a sleeper, it might be Lyman Hall. The Trojans were much better than their 4-6 record of last season would indicate, and return Joe Desandre (1191 yards rushing as a sophomore in '09) and quarterback John Desandre. And we haven't even gotten to Hillhouse or Foran yet ... You've probably heard about Connecticut's new concussion rule, which - although most reasonable coaches went by anyway - is a good step, but among the other new rules in effect this season: no more than four captains out for the coin toss. How's that for random? Check us out on Twitter, www.twitter.com/currenscc. If you have any story ideas or scores you want to get across, let me know.


PLAYER OF THE WEEK

GAME OF THE WEEK
Hillhouse at North Haven, Sept. 16, 7 p.m. - Tough to get a read on Hillhouse this season, but we'll certainly know more about the Academics after this opener. Last season, Hillhouse appeared to beat North Haven, but a time out was called before an apparent missed field goal. The second time around, the Indians made the field goal for a 20-18 victory. The Acs finished 5-5, but had a loss to Ansonia and two Division I losses (Shelton, Wilbur Cross) mixed in. Both of these teams have aspirations for the postseason under the new system, but things will get much tougher for the loser.

INSIDE THE NUMBERS
9
Still the number of teams left in the SCC for Division II football, which while still a perfect square, is still not dividable by 2. Anyone from North Branford to Masuk to Morgan to Hyde has been rumored to be the 20th team in the SCC for football. An unlikely candidate to step up late: Platt Tech, which has already filled the schedule hole of three of the Division II teams, and would like to get its athletic program to a place where it can compete in the lower half of the SCC rather than drive all over the state for games.

D-II POWER RANKINGS

1) Branford (Opener: at Foran) – Big numbers for program, and Tracy now with a year under his belt in charge.
2) North Haven (vs. Hillhouse) – Slowly but surely making progress as one of the top teams in Division II ranks.
3) Lyman Hall (vs. Platt Tech) – Been a while since Trojans have moved this high, but should cruise in first week at least.
4) Hillhouse (at North Haven) – Been a while since Acs have been this low, but win over Indians would be good start.
5) Foran (vs. Branford) – Early schedule will be tough, but if nothing else, Lions should been very fun to watch.
6) Sheehan (vs. Jonathan Law) – Life without Biestak, who also led Sheehan in rushing, begins for Titans this week.
7) Jonathan Law (at Sheehan) – Reports out of Milford say Lawmen are huge, but going to have to find way to score.
8) Guilford (at East Haven) – Well, if the Indians don't win their opener, at least we'll have a good story, won't we?
9) East Haven (vs. Guilford) – Yellowjackets might have circled Platt Tech on their schedules already.

Monday, May 31, 2010

SCC baseball : Tournament review - Shelton not going anywhere

The torch might not have been passed last Saturday afternoon when Shelton beat Amity for the SCC title, but you may be able to say it was shared.
The last time an undefeated Amity team was stopped in the SCC final - three years ago - Guilford rode that momentum (and the right arm of Will Jolin) all the way to a Class L championship.
In 2008, the Indians had a remarkable regular season run before - as the top-seed - falling to Amity in the SCC semifinals, and then getting beaten by division rival Jonathan Law in the state semifinals. The last two seasons, Guilford has not been able to keep the momentum, failing to make the state tournament in both campaigns.
The signs point to the fact that Shelton may be a bigger long-term threat to Amity's supremacy atop the SCC baseball world. You were warned, by me and by others, that Shelton was coming. Under Scott Gura last season, the Gaels marched all the way to the Class LL semifinals before falling to West Haven.
But the step from believing to achieving can be a lot trickier than it seems. After all, Shelton is in the same division (Housatonic) as Amity, and the last time the Spartans didn't win the division title, most of the current Gaels hadn't even started their T-ball careers yet.
While Shelton did knock off Amity once last season, it never could completely figure its pitching out, en route to a 17-8 final record, very solid for most, but you felt like the Gaels were close to something big, which they obviously showed in the state tournament.
"Last year, we set the bar pretty high," Gura said before the 2010 season. "We wanted to make Shelton baseball a program that would be near the top of the SCC every year, but that's easier said than done. But last year was a great first step, but we want to be more consistent from year to year."
If they could only figure out a way to get past the reigning kings, Amity.
In their two regular season meetings this season, Shelton couldn't even manage a run off Amity, losing by scores of 2-0 and 5-0, respectively. And true to their championship form, the Spartans weren't going down without a fight on Saturday.
Leading 2-1 in the bottom of the seventh, three straight walks allowed Amity to tie the game, and it looked like more heartbreak for Shelton. But not this time. Dan St. George, as gutty as they come, induced a groundout to send the game to extra innings.
Somewhat surprisingly with the state tournament looming, Amity went to Lou Concato in relief for extra innings. But in his second inning of work, Tom Carroll and Jim Pjura touched the normally untouchable Concato for back-to-back doubles, and the Gaels - barely as the Spartans rallied for a run in the bottom of the ninth - made it stand up.
Finally, Shelton had beaten Amity in a big game, and they were kings of the SCC for the first time in a decade.
"We've had a tough time winning tournament games," St. George said. "This year, coming in and beating three very good teams is a real statement for our program and I hope it continues in the state tournament."
In a single-elimination baseball tournament, obviously anything can happen. And Shelton's next loss (if there is one, the Register's Chris Hunn has predicted an Amity-Shelton Class LL final next week, and wouldn't that be a sight?) will be the final high school game for St. George and some others, including Eric Christensen, who will likely by Shelton's all-time hit leader sometime this week.
But this should not be the end, or even the beginning of the end, for Shelton baseball. Amity has done what they have done over the last decade with pitching, allowing them to win games even when their bats have an off day. And for the Gaels to make the next step long-term, that's where they will have to do it.
By the way, the reason why we started this story with sharing the SCC torch? While Amity will lose its share of players, they surely won't go very far. In fact, remember when they were undefeated and lost to Guilford in 2007? You know what they did next? Win the state championship, their second consecutive Class LL crown, of course. And there aren't many people doubting them in this year's state tourney, either.
"To beat a team like that, that's an historic win for us," Gura said. "Especially in extra innings. That's a classic. People are going to be talking about this win in Shelton for the next 20 years."
Or until they meet again.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

SCC baseball - Week 6: Amity keeps on rolling


Believe it or not, the SCC Tournament will start - depending on where and when you're reading this - in less than a week (Tues., May 25) with the quarterfinals.
Who will be there? Well, there's still some work to be done, but the picture is becoming clearer, and the one thing we do know is we have a favorite, and a motivated favorite.
Amity, despite being pushed hard by Notre Dame over the weekend, remains unbeaten at 17-0, and - believe it or not - hasn't won the SCC title since 2006, an eternity for them (Guilford, Notre Dame, and Jonathan Law have won the last three titles. Interesting tidbit: Notre Dame won the 1997 title and has won the title four times. If you take out Amity as well, no one else has one the SCC crown more than once: Xavier, Branford, Shelton, North Haven, West Haven, Guilford, and Law have all won the title once each.)
Amity, Xavier, and Law appear to be on their way to division titles, and East Haven would be in if they beat North Haven Tuesday (more on that one in a second). Notre Dame should be in, as should Shelton. Cheshire is limping to the finish line, while Foran and Sheehan are in the mix. All are quality teams, and you'd have to say all are capable of winning it. But we'll have plenty of time to preview the SCC Tournament next week, for now, let me give some of my random thoughts as the regular season grinds to an abrupt halt.
* OK, back to the East Haven-North Haven clash that was slated for last Wednesday that will decide the Oronoque Division title (the Easties have a one-game lead, but North Haven won the first matchup, so would win the tiebreaker).
The game was rained out on its original date, and SCC rules state that it must be played on the next available day (no Sundays). But North Haven's game on Friday was moved up to Thursday because of their prom and East Haven had a game on Friday, so those two days are out.
(Interestingly, Bob Demayo was ejected in North Haven's 8-7 win over Branford last Monday, so he would have missed the East Haven game had it been played on its original date, but that's just the way the rain falls.)
Still with me? So you'd think the next day would be .... Saturday, right, on a nice 70-degree day. But the Indians were reluctant to play because of the prom situation, a valid concern, but - and we keep coming back to this, don't we? - is it a rule, or isn't it a rule?
If the rule is that the game has to be played on the "next available day" then the game should have been on Saturday. You can negotiate the time to be later in the day if you want, but a rule is a rule, isn't it? Ah, let's not get into that again, let's move on.
* Somehow, I missed to memo (literally) that the Amity-Shelton game was moved back to Amity High last Thursday and not in Orange. It appears that the Spartans will only play one game in Orange this season, Wednesday against West Haven.
Sal Coppola thought after beating up on Notre Dame last month, he would face a much stiffer test the second team, and he did, as Gary Flowers - aside from an Anthony Aprile home run - held Amity in check. But the Spartans prevailed, with Neil Dammando scoring the winning run on a wild pitch.
* It's not really their fault, but Notre Dame has played only three teams in the top half of the league this season (Amity, Shelton, Xavier - Branford and North Haven are close), and has a 1-4 record against them. They should get the chance to prove themselves in the SCC Tournament.
* Meanwhile, somewhat quietly, defending SCC champ Jonathan Law has won 12 of its last 13 games, their only loss being an extra-inning defeat to Shelton.
The key: what else? Pitching, of course. The Lawmen allowed five runs to Shelton, but otherwise have allowed more than three runs in their streak only once - in a lopsided 15-6 victory over Career. They've conceded only four runs in their last four games, but faces Cheshire, East Haven, and Amity to finish up the season.
* Not trying to pick on anyone (especially as a former Westie baseball player), but it's somewhat ironic to see West Haven sitting at 2-14 this season - currently 40th of 41 teams in Class LL - after capturing the state title last season.
It not only tells you how tough the SCC really is on a day-to-day basis (and how remarkable Amity is to be undefeated), but also how tough the high school baseball season can be. The Westies have an extra-inning loss and four other defeats of two runs or less this season.
* Cheshire could attest to the difficulty of the league, as tough losses to Sheehan and Fairfield Prep have put their SCC Tournament hopes in a little bit of jeopardy. The Rams sit at 11-6, but finished the season with three road games, at Jonathan Law, Xavier, and Hamden to finish the season. Eight losses may be too many with teams like Sheehan - whom they just lost to - lurking.
* Prep, which looking on the verge of collapse, has caught itself, and can make their case for an SCC Tournament berth with three wins against teams near the bottom of the league this week (West Haven, Lyman Hall, Wilbur Cross).
In the somewhat confusing SCC Tournament criteria, their loss to Bunnell doesn't count, which means they would finish at 11-7, and probably get them in some kind of tiebreaker scenario. Unfortunately, they don't hold too many cards on that front.
* Looking at the state tournament: Hillhouse, Wilbur Cross, West Haven, and Guilford are all out. Hand and Lyman Hall must win their final three games to get in, while everyone else will be in, creating the usual gaggle of SCC teams in Class LL and L.
* Finally, for those that have mentioned it, yes, I have noticed that Derby is 11-6 in its first year in the NVL. And that the last time the Red Raiders were in the tournament was 2001, and the last time they had 11 wins was 1998. But let's move on, people, shall we.
* Check Twitter (www.twitter.com/currenscc) and our blog (currenscc.blogspot.com) for SCC Tournament updates as the week unfolds. We'll also give you a preview of possible state tournament matchups.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Nick Vig, Fairfield Prep - Vig has helped to hold the Jesuits together this season. Last Friday, he came on in relief to pick up a big win for the Jesuits, holding the high-powered Rams to just one run over four innings. Vig has been on the mound for many of Prep's wins as they push for an SCC Tournament berth.

GAME OF THE WEEK
Jonathan Law at Amity, Friday, 3:45 p.m. - I think this marks the 106th straight week that the Spartans have been featured here. These teams could meet again in the SCC Tournament, but does Amity start feeling the undefeated pressure here?

INSIDE THE NUMBERS
1
Number of undefeated teams left in the state. To put that in a some kind of perspective, approximately 150 schools play varsity baseball in Connecticut. Last team to complete the regular season undefeated: Seymour (2008). Last team to win state title unbeaten: Don't know (but it was before 1998, Cheshire maybe?)

POWER RANKINGS

1) Amity (17-0; Last Week 1) – Have pretty much wrapped up this top spot this season, haven't they?
2) Jonathan Law (13-4; LW 6) – Must admit, their current run surprised even this "expert". Yes, in quotes.
3) Shelton (10-4; LW 2) – Another week, another tough loss, but no one wants to see them in LL, I'm sure.
4) Xavier (12-5; LW 3) – Still having some trouble with pitching after Coughlin, but a big threat nonetheless.
5) Notre Dame (13-4; LW 4) – Should be more motivated than most in the upcoming SCC Tournament.
6) East Haven (10-6; LW 8) – Can pitching (and weather) hold up to final four-game week? We'll see.
7) Foran (12-5; LW 7) – Didn't exactly beat the conference's best last week, but wins are wins.
8) Sheehan (10-7; LW 9) – Should, and probably must, win final three games to make SCC Tourney.
9) Cheshire (11-6; LW 5) – Rams hoping not to fall into that trapdoor that just opened up below them.
10) Fairfield Prep (9-8; LW 13) – Last time Prep was in SCCs: 2002. Also only time they've been there.
11) North Haven (9-7; LW 10) – Can steal an SCC Tournament berth if Indians can knock off Easties.
12) Branford (8-9; LW 11) – Hornets will be in the mix to repeat, stranger things have happened in states.
13) Hamden (8-9; LW 12) – Dragons can also breathe now, schedule is pretty daunting this week.
14) Hand (5-12; LW 14) – Doesn't look good, but Tigers' teams have pulled fantastic finishes before.
15) West Haven (2-14; LW 16) – Westies would like to finish up with a couple of wins for 2011 momentum.
16) Guilford (4-13; LW 17) – Tough season for Civitello after such a successful basketball campaign.
17) Career (3-13; LW 18) – Did get a win over Cross, but not enough for Panthers this season.
18) Lyman Hall (5-12; LW 15) – Need to win final three to get in, but not much life last week for Trojans.
19) Wilbur Cross (4-13; LW 19) – Pitching has been very good of late, but just can't find the offense.
20) Hillhouse (1-15; LW 20) – Faced Hyde on Wednesday in an interesting non-conference contest.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

SCC baseball - Week 5: East Haven chasing history

The East Haven baseball team would have liked to think about things most teams do at the beginning of a season such as qualifying for the state tournament, making the SCC Tournament, and maybe capturing a division title.
Instead, though, the Yellowjackets had to concern themselves with more pressing matters. Like getting an out.
In April cold weather, pitching is supposed to be king, but East Haven's pitching went AWOL just as the regular season opened. The Easties allowed 60 runs in their first five games, never allowing a single digit number (less than 10) in any of those contests.
Needless to say, they were 0-5 (although their offense nearly got them a couple of wins, even in those games), and - with division play looming - just hoping to find a way to stay afloat.
However, a funny thing happened to the sinking Yellowjackets on their way to the bottom.
They found their pitching (and the defense to go with it).
And what has followed has been one of the most amazing runs in East Haven baseball history - at least in the SCC era - as the Yellowjackets have rolled off eight of nine wins to already qualify for the state tournament with six games to go.
East Haven's timing also couldn't have been better as far as the division goes, their winning streak coincided with the beginning of the division schedule, meaning that wins over Wilbur Cross (Monday) and North Haven (Wednesday), the Easties would be outright divisional champs for the first time in the 16 year history of the SCC. And that also means they will make their first appearance in the SCC Tournament (the Easties did share the Hammonasset Division title in 2002 and went on to the Class L title game, but lost the tiebreaker to North Haven in the division).
"It's pretty easy to say, but it all comes down to pitching," East Haven coach Butch Johnson said. "Even when we were 0-5, we were hitting the ball pretty well. But we couldn't get anyone out."
The thing was, on the surface, there wasn't a real good reason for East Haven's troubles. Paul Spadacenta was one of the hottest pitchers in the conference to close 2009 (including a season-closing perfect game) while Mike Anastasio had some experience as well. But both were nicked up in the preseason, and obviously didn't start the season well.
However, the slow start appears to be well back in the rear-view mirror as - now healthy and confident - East Haven suddenly has a shot to make this a memorable season.
The lineup, despite the slow start of the team, has produced, led by junior Vin Guglietti, who made very few outs in the first half of the season, including four home runs. He has cooled slighty, but he's been picked up by the veterans, including Anastasio, Mike Perry (an all-division selection last season), Lou Pane, and Bob Consolatore.
The Easties have also gotten help from shortstop Pat O'Brien and Spadacenta at the plate.
"Paul has turned himself into a pretty tough out at the plate, too," Johnson said. "That definitely helps our lineup."
After pulling out its second win over defending state champion Branford, East Haven was nearly upset by scrappy Career Friday at East Shore Park, winning 4-3. Being in the role of the hunted can be much tougher than being the hunter.
"I was very worried about that game because of the letdown factor, and the fact that Career, even though their record doesn't show it, has played a lot of teams tough this year," Johnson said. "We still have to learn to play every game."
It's not out of the realm of possibility for East Haven to finish with a record of 13-7, which would be only the second time in a dozen years that the Yellowjackets would finish the regular season with a winning record.
Ironically, the other time was 2002, when East Haven finished with a 13-7 regular season mark before going all the way to the Class L finals.
For now, though, Johnson wants to keep his team focused on the job at hand, which is the next game on the schedule.
"We still need to stay focused and not get ahead of ourselves," Johnson said. "The kids aren't stupid. They see the standings. They know where we are. But we have to stay focused."
AROUND THE HORN: So you want to play night games in mid-May, do ya? A freeze warning for the state went up for Sunday night as I write this and night-time lows are slated to hover around 40 for a lot of the week. It won't be that cold at most of the night games in the SCC, but it won't be warm, either ... Amity continues to roll on, moving to 14-0. In fact, the Spartans are one of only two teams in Connecticut to remain unbeaten, with Ellington (Class M) being the other at the end of last week ... East Haven may be the hottest team (sans Amity) in the conference, but Xavier is a close second. After beating Notre Dame last week, the Falcons have made short week of the rest of the Quinnipiac Division, beating Hamden, West Haven, and Fairfield Prep in relatively easy fashion to take command of the division ... Hillhouse got its first win of the season, and an SCC win at that, stopping Wilbur Cross in mid-week. Always hate to see any team go winless in a season, although you hope in the end that doesn't cost the Governors a state tournament berth ... West Haven and Career don't have great records, but playing relatively difficult schedules, they have managed to give plenty of teams difficulty without getting a victory. Before the East Haven loss, the Panthers had nearly beaten North Haven earlier in the week, while West Haven had a lead after six innings against Sheehan before falling, and the day before were tied with Foran late, only to fall 2-1 ... Foran was beaten by Jonathan Law for the second time this season which obviously gives Law the inside track on the road to the Hammonasset Division title ... As for the SCC Tournament race, you can pencil in Amity, Xavier, and Jonathan Law. Notre Dame, Shelton, and Cheshire seem likely. East Haven will get one spot if it beats North Haven, so that leaves one more spot between probably Foran and Sheehan, with the Lions currently having the inside track.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Shaun Coughlin, Xavier - It's not a coincidence that the Falcons' resurgence has coincided with Coughlin's hot streak on the mound. He threw a 5-hitter as Xavier beat up on Fairfield Prep last Friday, pushing the Falcons to 10-4 on the campaign and on the verge of the Quinnipiac Division title.

GAME OF THE WEEK
Shelton at Amity (at Old Tavern Rd., Orange), Thursday, 7 p.m. - It will be a little chilly on Thursday night most likely (which may rule out the obligatory pre-game trip to Dip Top next door, but is this the day Amity finally falls? And how many times have I asked that question before?

INSIDE THE NUMBERS
13
Combined number of runs of the last seven losses by West Haven and Career, a number that is inflated plenty by a 6-2 loss to Xavier by West Haven last Wednesday. But other than that game, none of the losses are by more than two goals, tough to take when the combined records are 4-23.

POWER RANKINGS

1) Amity (14-0; Last Week 1) – Looking ahead, Shelton game Thursday could be only No. 2 of 4 meetings.
2) Shelton (10-4; LW 2) – Another week, another tough loss, but no one wants to see them in LL, I'm sure.
3) Xavier (10-4; LW 6) – The nightmare for rankings such as this, win a big one, lose a big one.
4) Notre Dame (12-2; LW 4) – Three wins, all at home. Schedule not really the toughest at second glance, is it?
5) Cheshire (10-4; LW 3) – Another Power Rankings nightmare, give up 23 runs than proceed to beat Shelton.
6) Jonathan Law (10-4; LW 8) – Pitching has carried them to the top of the division and to this lofty perch.
7) Foran (9-5; LW 5) – Couple steps forward, one step back. Would like to get into SCC Tournament.
8) East Haven (8-6; LW 10) – Won eight of nine, and should be in SCC Tournament for first time. Impressive.
9) Sheehan (8-6; LW 7) – Like Foran, not the greatest record, but not a team you want to see in the postseason.
10) North Haven (7-7; LW 9) – Indians would like to get one more win quickly to avoid tournament fears.
11) Branford (6-8; LW 11) – Speaking of the tournament, Hornets should make it, but should is not do sometimes.
12) Hamden (7-7; LW 12) – Gave ND quite the run, but lost to Lyman Hall in the game prior to that unfortunately.
13) Fairfield Prep (7-8; LW 13) – Got a big win over Hand, doesn't look like there's going to be a play-in this year.
14) Hand (4-10; LW 16) – Seemed to have the pitching sorted out, but can't score any runs all of a sudden.
15) Lyman Hall (5-9; LW 19) – Some life on their tournament hopes if they can pull off an upset or two late.
16) West Haven (2-12; LW 14) – Have to give Westies credit for battling, but just can't find a way to come out on top.
17) Guilford (4-10; LW 15) – Does look like the Indians are going to miss the tournament again this season.
18) Career (2-11; LW 17) – Unfortunate that we won't get to see them in Class S, could beat most of those teams.
19) Wilbur Cross (4-10; LW 18) – Tournament hopes fading away for the Governors as well in 2010.
20) Hillhouse (1-12; LW 20) – Despite the win, can't quite move them off bottom. But a tip of the cap for perseverance.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

SCC baseball - Week 4 : It's a Spartan world once again

All good things must come to an end, right? So you can forgive Amity's SCC rivals if they thought 2009 was the beginning of a downturn - finally - for the conference's marquee baseball program.
The Spartans lost nine times last season, including four of five at one point, lost before the SCC finals for the first time since 2002, and lost in the second round of the Class LL Tournament. After having only 11 total losses from 2004-2007, Amity had 15 combined in 2008 and 2009.
This season was going to be the one they finally capitulated to an improving Housatonic Division (which Amity has owned since 2000) and everyone else could finally get their shots in.
Um, good luck with that.
Amity is back, folks, and back with a chip on its shoulder. On a comically blustery day at a somewhat comically dilapidated Quigley Stadium last Thursday, the state's top-ranked Spartans mauled No. 2 Notre Dame 12-0 to finish the first half of the season 10-0 (they beat Guilford on Friday to make it 11).
"I still think we had a successful year last year despite everything," Amity coach Sal Coppola said. "I think what really hurt us is we lost (Joe) Ciancola, who was our No. 3 hitter and our No. 1 or 2 pitcher. We didn't quite have the pitching down the stretch we normally do. We lost a tough game to Law (in the SCC semifinals), we were still competitive, we were just a little short."
Ciancola missed the second half of 2009 with a meniscus injury, but is back to 100 percent now, holding the high-powered Green Knights scoreless through five innings last Thursday. He and Lou Concato form a formidable duo, and Coppola can call on E.J. Ashworth and Mark Esposito when he needs to.
But what has been really surprising about the 2010 Spartans is their offense. Nick Baviello and Brian Kernan bring speed to the top of the lineup, and you can let them get on base at your own peril, as both can run as well as anyone in the league.
"When you have guys like that at the top, it can ignite the team if they get on base, and make it tough on pitchers who have to worry about them on base, too," Coppola said.
Ciancola is helped in the middle of the lineup by Vin Siena and catcher Anthony Aprile, and Ted Ballou behind him has also been a very tough out for SCC pitching.
Amity came close to falling two weeks ago to Sheehan, but were able to come from behind, a hallmark of past Amity squads, with a hard-fought 8-7 victory. It was Ciancola, who was chased from the game on the mound, that came back to get the winning hit.
I've mentioned them before, but Amity's recent results in a sport like baseball, which does not lend itself to domination are worth repeating: a record of 96-11 from 2004-2007 with three SCC titles and back-to-back Class LL crowns in '06 and '07.
The Housatonic Division is as tough as it has ever been, with the Spartans fending off challenges from Cheshire, Sheehan, and Shelton in the first half of the season, challenges they will surely see again the second time around. In fact, when asked about the lopsided score of the Notre Dame contest, Coppola commented that it worried him a little because the Knights were a good team and might be a little angry the next time in Orange.
But that's what makes the Amity baseball program so good, for the most part, they take everyone's best, and they keep right on winning.
AROUND THE HORN: In the grand scheme of things, Foran was going to make the Class M Tournament, but Friday's 3-2 over Sheehan might turn out to be the day the Lions turned the corner. Foran had lost to hand the day before and trailed 2-0 with ace Brian Ward on the mound before the comeback. Just a guess, but coach Todd Williams agreed: "I feel this should be the turning point. We should build on it now." ... Doormats no more: Wilbur Cross picked up a 2-1 upset over North Haven last week, as Edison Rodriguez got two runs of support in the top of the first and made them stand up through seven innings. Not bad from a Governors' team that began the season down 20-0 to Hamden after just three innings. Three innings ... By the way, who is leading the Oronoque? That would be East Haven, who started the season 0-5, but has won five of six since, including beating Hand and Fairfield Prep in back-to-back games at the end of the week. Shelton is giving its fans their money's worth this season, as they played two more classic games to end the week, getting nipped by Amity 2-0, then coming back to stop Jonathan Law and Brett Michael Doran 5-4 in 8 innings. Dan St. George not only drove in the winning run, but got the win in relief, too ... Could four Housatonic Division teams make the SCC Tournament? Sheehan has been dealt a few tough losses lately, but still has the talent to make a run, and the other three teams (Amity, Shelton, Cheshire) look like locks ... The day before Amity beat them, Notre Dame lost to division rival Xavier, 5-3, as the Falcons are red-hot as well. The Green Knights did recover on Friday with a 10-2 pasting of Branford, the second time ND has put a big number on Branford this season.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Vin Guglietti, East Haven - Guglietti had three hits and two RBIs is East Haven's win over Fairfield Prep and added a pair of home runs in a game earlier in the week against Hand, leading the Yellowjackets to the top of the Oronoque Division at the season's halfway mark.

GAME OF THE WEEK
Cheshire at Shelton, Friday, 7 p.m. - Night baseball? It's that time, and this game is worthy of it. Both these teams have been as good as anyone not named Amity in the SCC this season, and the winner of this one still has a shot to try to knock the Spartans off in the Housatonic Division for the first time in a decade.

INSIDE THE NUMBERS
3
Combined number of hits in the Amity-Shelton game last season, which Amity won 2-0, despite picking up only two hits. Luckily for the Spartans, Lou Concato threw a 1-hitter to pick up the win. Dan St. George was the hard-luck loser for the Gaels.

POWER RANKINGS (see above)

1) Amity (11-0; Last Week 1) – The Spartans' train just keeps on keeping on. 20-0 will be tough, but not out of the realm.
2) Shelton (8-3; LW 3) – If I have to hear, "watch out for Shelton" again, I'm charging money. Gaels do deserve it, though.
3) Cheshire (9-2; LW 4) – Put up 16 more runs on Hand this week. Rams are just a dangerous offensive club.
4) Notre Dame (9-2; LW 2) – Hit a speed bump with a couple of losses, but still a contender going forward.
5) Foran (7-4; LW 6) – Big week coming up for Lions, a three-game sweep would mean that they're on their way.
6) Xavier (8-3; LW 8) – Falcons' record sneaked up on me, not the toughest schedule in the SCC, but they are hot.
7) Sheehan (6-5; LW 5) – Not a bad loss in the bunch, but the Titans did not win the schedule wars this year.
8) Jonathan Law (7-4; LW 7) – Tough defeat against Shelton, win there would have seen them higher here.
9) North Haven (6-5; LW 9) – Indians have gotten the pitching in order, but now their bats have gone to sleep.
10) East Haven (5-6; LW 13) – Speaking of getting their pitching in order, night and day with the Yellowjackets.
11) Branford (5-6; LW 12) – Hornets really don't have a great win this season, although they're playing a little better.
12) Hamden (6-5; LW 10) – Nearly got bitten by Wilbur Cross after a disappointing loss to West Haven last week.
13) Fairfield Prep (6-6; LW 11) – Prep has lost five of six after a solid 5-1 start. Seems to happen every year with them.
14) West Haven (2-9; LW 16) – Got a win over Hamden, but seems like making tournament is an uphill climb.
15) Guilford (3-8; LW 14) – Pitching was struggling anyway, bow with Schlitter gone for year, it will be that much tougher.
16) Hand (3-8; LW 15) – Got a win over Foran, but Tigers have given up way too many runs to be competitive.
17) Career (2-8; LW 17) – Panthers still hoping to make a run, but their pitching has struggled lately as well.
18) Wilbur Cross (4-7; LW 18) – After losing to Hamden 25-2, nearly turned it around, but was beaten in late innings.
19) Lyman Hall (3-8; LW 19) – Got a win over Hillhouse, got a chance for their revenge over Cross on Monday.
20) Hillhouse (0-10; LW 20) – Academics still pitching the ball better, if they can get some runs, you never know.

Monday, April 26, 2010

SCC baseball - Week 3: Taking stock as we approach midway

Well, we had it all planned to cover the showdown between Notre Dame and Amity Monday, but Mother Nature had other ideas, so the game was pushed to Tuesday.
(For what happened in that game, check www.twitter.com/currenscc or www.currenscc.blogspot.com)
But the little break in the action gives us a chance to see where we are in the 2010 SCC season. Believe it or not, Wednesday marks the halfway point of the regular season, and in four weeks we'll be watching the SCC Tournament. And we now have enough information to talk intelligently (well, semi-intelligently) about all the teams.
So that's what I'll try to do. Again, I'll repeat that these power rankings are just an opinion of how good the teams are, and have been proven wrong more times than I'd like to count.
But we're just trying to have some fun here. It's safe to say that this could be a banner year for the SCC, and a look at the teams will show you why:
1) Amity (8-0)
It's not surprising that Amity is undefeated (although as we've said about Amity many times in the past that winning as much as they do in baseball is much tougher than it looks), but what takes you back a little is the Spartans' offense. Take out a 3 (in a 3-2 win over Branford), and you get 10, 6, 7, 9, 7, 15, and 8. And they're not playing chumps, either.
2) Notre Dame (8-0)
Got a report that their pitching had been hit around in the scrimmages, but the Green Knights have allowed more than three runs just once this season, and this was in "garbage time" in a lopsided victory. They have enough experience to win the close games, and they are legit.
3) Shelton (6-2)
The Gaels had a tough loss to Guilford, and then nearly beat Notre Dame, which dropped them at the time to 3-2. But they've reeled off three straight wins, and just have the look of a team that will be heard from in June. I don't think their lineup has completely clicked yet.
4) Cheshire (6-2)
The Rams saw how difficult life could be in the SCC with losses to Amity and Shelton last week. There are questions about their pitching, but there are few questions about their offense, having scored 72 runs in eight games. They have some winnable games, but inconsistent pitching may give them a few more losses before all is said and done.
5) Sheehan (5-3)
The third straight Housatonic Division team in the countdown, and fourth overall (poor Lyman Hall). The Titans probably should have knocked off Amity last week, and certainly don't face the non-division schedule that the teams above them do. But nothing is that easy in the SCC.
6) Foran (5-3)
The Lions started the season No. 1 in the rankings, but their pitching has not materialized the way we thought it was, even giving up eight runs to Guilford last Friday (in a 13-8 win). Still, their record is not alarming, and they have some time to get it together to make a run at both the SCC and Class M crowns.
7) Jonathan Law (5-3)
If you had to give an MVP for the young season, it would probably be Brett Michael Doran (who was originally at ND by the way as a freshman). Doran is not only crushing the ball, but outdueling stud pitchers like Foran's Brian Ward, which helped the Lawmen navigate a tough early-season schedule, and put them in a position to maybe defend their SCC crown.
8) Xavier (5-3)
The Falcons will finish up their road schedule this week, meaning a long, long homestand and a chance to do some damage. They have scored a total of one run in their three losses, so they'll have to find a way to hit good pitching if they want to make the SCC Tournament, though.
9) North Haven (4-4)
I understand that I might catch some grief from the Hamden people here, but the Indians have that impressive win over Foran last week, and appear to have at least gotten their pitching somewhat in order (although a disappointing 7-6 loss to Branford to end the week). This week will be big to see if they deserve the spot here.
10) Hamden (5-3)
The Dragons haven't racked up the quality points for wins, but they should be in the state tournament, which is a marked improvement over last year, and they could make a run in a relatively soft Quinnipiac Division. Consistent pitching will be the key.
11) Fairfield Prep (5-4)
The Jesuits had a chance to get higher, but three straight losses last week bounced them down. Nick Vig has pitched well, but they gave up 10 runs in back-to-back losses to Xavier and Hamden and stand at 0-3 in the division.
12) Branford (3-5)
The Hornets seem to have turned the corner after a 1-5 start, the fifth loss coming 6-2 against then 0-5 East Haven. They do face Notre Dame and Amity in back-to-back games this week, and can probably forget about the SCC Tournament, but have a good chance to get to eight wins, and won't be someone people want to draw in Class L.
13) East Haven (3-5)
The hottest team in the SCC? Entirely possible as of Monday, the Yellowjackets had won three straight, and while none of them had winning records, it's a start. Their pitching has been good of late, after giving up double figures in all of their first five games.
14) Guilford (3-5)
The Indians also appear to have their act together of late, but their schedule is quite vicious. They - like many others - are having trouble with their pitching depth, which showed prominently in a 13-8 loss to Foran last Friday. But they have the talent to go on a run in the second half.
15) Hand (2-6)
It's been a tough ride for the Tigers in the early season, and (stop me if you've heard this before) it starts with the pitching. Other than a tough 2-0 loss to Branford, Hand has allowed 10 or more runs in all five of their other losses. Seems like it's going to be tough to get to eight wins.
16) West Haven (1-7)
You knew it was going to tough for the Westies this year, and they've been close in a couple of contests, but their only win is over Platt Tech. Still, you think they'll beat some teams at some point, maybe in the division this week.
17) Career (1-6)
The Panthers had a couple of tough battles early on, but have slumped of late, particularly on the mound, where they've given up 65 runs in their last four losses. Some home games await, and that may be a chance to do some damage.
18) Wilbur Cross (3-5)
Yea, they have two wins over O'Brien Tech and Hillhouse, but consider the Governors were down 20-0 after their first three innings of the season (to Hamden). That's quite a turnaround, and the team deserves plenty of credit for it.
19) Lyman Hall (2-6)
The Trojans began the season with a couple of wins, giving hope that this was the turnaround season, but things have fallen off pretty quickly. With the Housatonic Division soaring around them, they'll have to regroup and pick up a few wins where they're not supposed to to make a state tournament run.
20) Hillhouse (0-7)
The Academics have allowed less than 10 runs in their last three games, which is certainly progress. They've also been good for at least one upset in the last couple of seasons, so we'll see if they can pull it off again this time around.
AROUND THE HORN: Monday's rainouts were among the first of the season, and it looked like most of those games were going to get played on Tuesday, meaning a pretty calm season as far as makeups go. It also means that pitching staffs can be shortened, although it hasn't seem to have helped this season with plenty of runs being scored ... If you're reading it here for the first time, you need to get out of your cave, but former Amity star Brian Kownacki made the national media rounds at Fordham by jumping over the catcher, touching home plate with his hands, then completing the somersault past the bewildered catcher. I was trying to figure out if such a play was legal under high school rules, but there was not a conclusive answer. Kownacki's former teammate, Jason Esposito, is also starring at Vanderbilt, who should be NCAA Tournament bound in a few weeks ... Thankfully we did get a Notre Dame-Amity game this season, and an Amity-Foran tilt, but Notre Dame does not play Foran, although they did play Shelton, obviously. No Cheshire or Jonathan Law, though. I guess we can hope to see some of those games in the SCC Tournament.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Ryan Zahornasky, Shelton - After the sophomore nearly beat Notre Dame the week before, he threw a gem in the Gaels' 3-1 win over Xavier last Friday. Zahornasky also bats in the middle of the powerful Shelton lineup, and - needless to say - has a very bright future in this league.

GAME OF THE WEEK
Sheehan at Foran, Friday, 3:45 p.m. - This is a big game for two teams that seem to have hopes to upset the top two (Notre Dame and Amity) in the SCC. But they have to get to the SCC Tournament first, and a win in this game would make things much easier.

INSIDE THE NUMBERS
10
Number of teams with records between 5-3 and 3-5 in the SCC thus far this season. Yes, it's a league of parity, just as everyone wants.

POWER RANKINGS (see above)

1) Amity (8-0; Last Week 1) – .
2) Notre Dame (8-0; LW 3) – .
3) Shelton (6-2; LW 5) – .
4) Cheshire (6-2; LW 2) – .
5) Sheehan (5-3; LW 6) – .
6) Foran (5-3; LW 4) – .
7) Jonathan Law (5-3; LW 7) – .
8) Xavier (5-3; LW 10) – .
9) North Haven (4-4; LW 12) – .
10) Hamden (5-3; LW 11) – .
11) Fairfield Prep (5-4; LW 9) – .
12) Branford (3-5; LW 8) – .
13) East Haven (3-5; LW 18) – .
14) Guilford (3-5; LW 14) – .
15) Hand (2-6; LW 13) – .
16) West Haven (1-7; LW 16) – .
17) Career (1-6; LW 17) – .
18) Wilbur Cross (3-5; LW 19) – .
19) Lyman Hall (2-6; LW 15) – .
20) Hillhouse (0-7; LW 20) – .

Sunday, April 18, 2010

SCC baseball - Week 2: Keniry and ND chase another title

They've been on plenty of bus rides in their high school careers, but last Friday's seemed slighty de ja vu-ish for Conor Keniry, Sean Goldrich, and some other members of the Notre Dame baseball team.
On a cold, wet morning, the stars of Notre Dame's amazing football run to the state championship in the fall, took a trip down memory lane, back to the scene of the triumph - Shelton High School, where the Knights beat Pomperaug on a wet and raw December afternoon.
"It's funny, Conor and I were just talking about it on the way here," Goldrich said. "It brings back good memories, the surroundings, and everything that happened that day. It's good to be back."
Of course, memories are memories, and the present doesn't look too bad for the Green Knights baseball team. The business for Keniry and Goldrich (who bat 3-4 in ND's powerful lineup) Friday was a few hundred feet up the Shelton High hill to the baseball diamond, where the Knights look like they might have the squad to make some more memories this spring.
It was Keniry - who else? - that delivered the killer blow against a good Shelton team, a long home run in the top of the seventh that gave Notre Dame a 4-3 win, its fifth straight to start 2010.
It was a decade ago that the Knights won their last state title (over Cheshire, who is also off to a fine start this season), but led by Keniry and a brutal lineup, it looks like ND might at least be in the mix this season.
How brutal is the lineup? Ask Shelton sophomore Ryan Zahornasky, who did a really good job against it Friday. But after getting the first two outs in the second inning, he faced No. 9 hitter Matt Murray (also a member of the state champion football team).
Zahornasky grooved a fastball - why wouldn't he? - and Murray turned on it and not only hit it over the left field fence, not a cheap shot at Shelton High, but well over. Now that's a deep high school lineup.
What has helped carry Notre Dame to its perfect start, though, has been its pitching. It's not as star-studded as Amity's, but it has allowed more than three runs only once this season, and that was in a 24-7 rout of Career.
Last Friday it was Gary Flowers (yet another football player) who threw a complete game. It wasn't terribly flashy with only three strikeouts, but against Shelton, it was enough to get the job done.
Keniry, who will play baseball at Wake Forest, is finding out the hard way, that making a difference - as he seemed to do in almost every football team when his team needed him most - is not quite as easy on the diamond, especially when his reputation now precedes him.
"In baseball, you have to be a lot more patient and wait your turn," Keniry said. "In football, you can get mad and go out there and rip someone's head off or something, but even as a team that's not going to work in baseball. You have to be patient."
But when he gets his turn, there may be no one in the SCC better than Keniry. Like a Derek Jeter-type, there is just something about Keniry that seems to have him pop up in the big spot (both in football and in baseball). Once or twice, it might be luck. But when done on a consistent basis, and when whatever team he's on seems to end up on top more often than not, it's not luck, folks.
Friday, with one out and no one on in the top of the seventh, Keniry was having a pedestrian day, 1-for-3 with a bloop double. But with the game on the line and hard-throwing Dan St. George on in relief, Keniry took a fastball and drilled it over the center field fence for the game-winning home run.
"We got beat by the best player in the state," Shelton coach Scott Gura would say afterward.
And if you're worried about motivation from a senior leader who's already got a state championship and will head off this fall to play Division I baseball down south, you needn't.
"That was the longest winter ever," said Keniry. "I was definitely ready to go this spring. This is fun."
Winning a state or SCC title (which ND did win, led by MVP Keniry in 2008) in single-elimination baseball can sometimes be a crapshoot, but with Keniry and the veterans Notre Dame runs onto the field this spring, it might not be wise to bet against them.
AROUND THE HORN: Wouldn't you know that the netting at Bob DeMayo Field was not only up, but effective for the North Haven-Notre Dame contest last Wednesday? Just as I walked into the park in the first inning, the new netting grabbed back-to-back balls down the left-field line. Alas, it didn't help the Indians on the field as they fell 9-0, but did rebound to beat Guilford 13-5 later in the week ... Hey, stop the presses, Amity actually gave up four runs in a game this week. Of course, the Spartans still beat Jonathan Law 7-4, but at least the rest of the league can hope ... Division play started this week, meaning some brutal stuff in some divisions, including the Housatonic, where Cheshire put its undefeated streak on the line in back-to-back games against Amity and Shelton ... What happened to the nice weather? On the plus side, most of the games were played, but it was chilly out there. The weather looks like it will be better this week.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Dan Manke, Cheshire - Manke continued his torrid start to the season, picking up a double and three more RBIs in Cheshire's win over Xavier last Friday Special mention to the pitcher that day, Dom Severino, who tossed a two-hitter against the Falcons.

GAME OF THE WEEK
Amity at Notre Dame, Monday, 3:45 p.m. - Will both these teams make it to Monday undefeated? We can only hope so, but even if they don't, it's a great game, and one that's turning into a little bit of a rivalry. ND beat the Spartans for the SCC title two years ago, while Amity won a rematch in the SCC quarterfinals last year. And Conor Keniry plays Legion ball with plenty of the Spartans in the summer as well.

INSIDE THE NUMBERS
3
Number of different weeks SCC school systems have their April vacations this season, which has led to less early starts, if you've noticed. For instance, West Haven and New Haven (among others) are off this week, which is why Hillhouse and Wilbur Cross could play a 10:30 a.m. game at Rice Field on Monday.

POWER RANKINGS

1) Amity (5-0; Last Week 2) – Will certainly be tested in the next four games by some very good lineups.
2) Cheshire (5-0; LW 4) – Four out of first five were at home, tough road contests coming up soon.
3) Notre Dame (5-0; LW 5) – Appear to be the class of Quinnipiac, but no easy division games.
4) Foran (4-1; LW 1) – Scoring plenty of runs as well, that will be big plus if they can keep it up.
5) Shelton (3-2; LW 3) – Shouldn't be overly concerned by ND loss, bigger fish to fry in Housatonic.
6) Sheehan (4-1; LW 6) – Don't get too many points for schedule strength, but that will change.
7) Jonathan Law (2-3; LW 7) – Doran doing his best to keep Lawmen afloat, slate early was brutal.
8) Branford (1-4; LW 8) – Speaking of tough starts, they will be most concerned with the lack of offense thus far.
9) Fairfield Prep (5-1; LW 9) – Can score runs, but have beaten up on the bottom half of these rankings.
10) Xavier (3-2; LW 10) – Like Branford, having some offensive troubles, been blanked in both losses.
11) Hamden (3-2; LW 17) – Dragons seem much more feisty this season, eight wins should happen.
12) North Haven (2-3; LW 13) – Offensive output: 17, 0, 8, 0, 13. Guess it's all or nothing for Indians.
13) Hand (1-4; LW 11) – Rough start for Borelli, but once pitching gets sorted out, they should be fine.
14) Guilford (1-4; LW 12) – Disappointing start to season, big stretch coming up for Indians this week.
15) Lyman Hall (2-2; LW 18) – Like Hamden, seem more feisty this season, and that should bode well.
16) West Haven (1-4; LW 14) – Schedule doesn't get any easier for defending LL champs in Quinnipiac.
17) Career (1-3; LW 15) – Seven-game homestand coming up for Panthers, better not rain much at East Shore.
18) East Haven (0-5; LW 16) – Have yet to give up less than 10 runs in game this season. Ouch.
19) Wilbur Cross (1-3; LW 19) – Did get a win over O'Brien Tech, which is good for confidence of squad.
20) Hillhouse (0-4; LW 20) – Anyone else notice Hillhouse is Class M, while Wilbur Cross is LL? Strange.

Monday, April 12, 2010

SCC baseball - Week 1: DeMayo deserves better from town


Twenty-nine year old Bob DeMayo began his 52nd season in charge of the North Haven baseball program last week, and if you find a logical problem with the first part of this sentence, all I can tell you is you don't know Bob DeMayo that well, do you?
DeMayo's Indians began the season with a wacky 17-9 extra-inning victory over defending Class LL champion West Haven (before losing to Sheehan over the weekend), DeMayo's 778th career victory, a number that if broken will only come because of advances in medical science that allow people to live forever. And even then it would be tough.
But DeMayo recently called this year "the most stressful spring I've ever had here (at North Haven)". It had nothing to do with today's youth, or the fact that he was getting tired of coaching. It had to do with North Haven's brand new home for baseball, once whose opening was six years in the making.
A facility, ironically, named after him.
To complete the whole story, you have to go back a decade when North Haven's long-time home Sachem Field was renamed Robert E. DeMayo Field, an honor that even then was long overdue.
The next chapter was really no one's fault, the town of North Haven came up with the funds to build a brand new high school and the best place to do so was on top of their former athletic facilities. But the idea was to build brand new and improved athletic facilities for everything but football (Vanacore Field was not in the construction zone) where the old school was.
New and improved NHHS opened in 2005, but with other things going on, the Indians were content to move to antiquated, but serviceable Bailey Road for 2005 and 2006. But then glass was found (among other things) and the potential new field was deemed unplayable for another season in 2007. Then 2008 also went by. Finally, on May 18 of last year, the new Robert E. DeMayo Field was dedicated, including a statue of a baseball player that was a collaborative work, with DeMayo and his wife Betty coming up with the idea and many, many others contributing to the sculpting and engraving of it.
North Haven beat Guilford that night, and the saga of DeMayo Field seemed to finally be over, allowing DeMayo to finally enjoy a decent home field.
Unfortunately, and sadly, our story is just beginning.
You see one thing that was forgotten was some high fencing down the lines - particularly the left-field line - where some houses sit on nearby streets. The backyards of these houses, some with young children, are in the line of fire of stray foul balls.
No problem, you say, put up some netting. Ah, but this is a government operation (and although I'm a fan of a government health care plan, this story does show why so many people are so against it), and the funding for the field said nothing about any netting.
"It didn't seem that hard when it was first brought up," DeMayo said. "But everything kept getting put off, everything was manana."
Which got DeMayo (among others) even more angry, because in DeMayo's world, nothing is "manana". He finally e-mailed former players around Thanksgiving time, asking for a donation to help him pay for these fences and nettings he needed to be able to play on his field.
That's the part of the story that galls me the most, a legendary figure whose own field has been off-limits to him for six years having to basically beg for money to play there.
Of course, his players came through, and with new First Selectman Mike Freda (whose son was DeMayo's captain just a couple of years back) in office, again it appeared everything was taken care of.
But as the scrimmages began, the Indians were again back at Bailey Road. Sigh.
Finally, hours before the home opener against Sheehan on Saturday, they got permission from the neighbors and the town to play the game there as a special exemption. But there's no guarantee that the next home game (Wednesday against Notre Dame) would be played there.
"My understanding is that all the materials for the fencing are there," DeMayo said. "They need sleeves to put the fencing in, though, and I guess those haven't arrived yet. Until then, we can practice there because he hit in a cage, but who knows if we can play there? I'm completely confused. It's killing our program because we're trying to fit a varsity, JV, freshman, and middle school program basically on two fields.
"I don't blame the neighbor personally, he's got to look out for his children, and I completely understand that. People say, 'Why don't you get on the Building Committee?', and my response is, believe me, I've tried."
Eventually, these things will probably be worked out and the field will be up and running permanently. Deep down, Bob DeMayo will be thrilled that his team and program will finally be back to full speed and he can just worry about baseball again.
He never should have had to worry about these things in the first place.
AROUND THE HORN: This just in, Amity is good. Their pitching will be tough to stop, but Foran's 1-2 punch of Ward and O'Keefe is also going to be difficult to score on. They played each other Monday after our deadline, and they'll meet again later in the season ... I'm actually pretty proud of the fact that my Power Rankings weren't all that far off in the first week. Notre Dame's pitching held up, and if it does they'll be dangerous ... But not many other teams got great pitching performances in the season's first week, those that do will have a leg up on the rest of the league ... Looks like life will be tough for the New Haven schools this season, particularly usually competitive Wilbur Cross, who found itself down 20-0 after the first three innings of the season against Hamden last week. No one likes to see that. But Career, although 0-2, was very competitive, taking Shelton to the brink after nearly knocking off Xavier in the opener ... Speaking of the Falcons, they played their opener against Career at Xavier High, and will play their next 10 games on the road while Palmer Field is allowed to dry and undergo some work. They will finish the season with nine straight home games ... As it was last year, it looks like easy wins for the most part, will be few and far between this year in the SCC.


PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Brett Michael Doran, Jonathan Law - There was talk of an injury, but obviously he felt fine in throwing a three-hit shutout against Xavier on Saturday, allowing the defending SCC champs to even their record at 1-1 and beat Xavier ace Shaun Coughlin. With a tough schedule, the Lawmen will need performances like that to make a return to the SCC Tournament.

GAME OF THE WEEK
Notre Dame at Shelton, Friday, 11:30 a.m. - This should be a slugfest between two of the top offenses in the SCC (and maybe the state). But these teams will go as far as their pitching will take them at the end of the season, and for both (at least in the season's first week), it was so far, so good.

INSIDE THE NUMBERS
2
Number of runs allowed by both Amity and Foran in their first two games. One run per game. If you're going to knock these teams off, you're going to have to find a way to keep them off the scoreboard.

POWER RANKINGS

1) Foran (2-0; Last Week 1) – Sheehan had them on the ropes, but Ward sparked late comeback to start season.
2) Amity (2-0; LW 2) – This has the look of one of those vintage Spartan teams, how do they do it over there?
3) Shelton (2-0; LW 4) – Nearly went to sleep after opening victory, were fortunate to get past game Career squad.
4) Cheshire (1-0; LW 5) – Pitching is the question mark, four games this week may answer that question.
5) Notre Dame (2-0; LW 6) – For those scoring at home, the Green Knights are in Class L this season.
6) Sheehan (1-1; LW 12) – Should have remembered the Titans always have great pitching and this year no different.
7) Jonathan Law (1-1; LW 8) – Big win over Xavier, but Cheshire, Amity, and Foran all await in next four games.
8) Branford (0-2; LW 3) – Easier part of the schedule awaits, but would have liked to have a win in their opener.
9) Fairfield Prep (2-0; LW 14) – Might be the biggest surprise of the first week, put up 21 runs and got some pitching.
10) Xavier (1-1; LW 7) – Falcons will embark on a 10-game road trip while Palmer Field undergoes some work.
11) Hand (0-1; LW 10) – We'll know a lot more about the Tigers after this difficult four-game week.
12) Guilford (0-2; LW 9) – Not exactly the start the Indians wanted, must make some progress in three home games.
13) North Haven (1-1; LW 13) – Blanked by Sheehan after scoring 17 runs against West Haven. Strange game.
14) West Haven (0-2; LW 11) – In first two games after Lawrence graduated, Blue Devils give up 32 runs.
15) Career (0-2; LW 18) – Looked feisty even though lost first two, should serve them well in mediocre Oronoque.
16) East Haven (0-2; LW 15) – Brutal week coming up, could use some confidence, or could be uphill climb to states.
17) Hamden (2-0; LW 16) – Hard to get much of a read with first two games against Cross and Hillhouse, but they count.
18) Lyman Hall (1-0; LW 17) – Like Hamden, just one game and impossible to get a read, but a win nonetheless.
19) Wilbur Cross (0-1; LW 19) – Did sneak in a game against O'Brien Tech this week, tough opener.
20) Hillhouse (0-2; LW 20) – Scored a couple of runs, if they could keep people off board, could spring an upset.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

We're baaaack - SCC baseball preview

In his first full season in charge of the Shelton baseball program, Scott Gura admitted he was pleasantly surprised that his team advanced to the state semifinals, ahead of the schedule even he had set for the Gaels.
But with the state finals in Shelton's grasp last season against West Haven (and therefore Shelton's first appearance in the finals since 1990), it slipped away it a 3-2 loss. And getting that close means that the Gaels have had a taste.
"Last year, we set the bar pretty high," Gura said. "We wanted to make Shelton baseball a program that would be near the top of the SCC every year, but that's easier said than done. But last year was a great first step, but we want to be more consistent from year to year."
Gura, of course, took over in the middle of the 2008 season after the untimely death of long-time coach Ed Marocco, but has been around the program basically since he was a player two decades ago. Shelton has always had competitive teams, and has always been a threat, but hasn't quite been able to put it together consistenly. The Gaels won the 2000 SCC title, but have not won a game in that competition since, and have spent the last decade or so trying to be a thorn in Amity's side, which - at times - they've done quite well.
But Gura looks at his program, and sees the potential for maybe being the hunted instead of the hunter. He's got Bryant-bound Dan St. George, who will pitch and play some shortstop. The Gaels have leadoff hitter Eric Christiansen, an all-division selection last year. And they have plenty of other players, like catcher Ryan Daiss and Jimmy Pjura, that Gura thinks have big futures with Shelton.
He also knows that Shelton (with plenty of recent success, including a trip to the Little League World Series) has one of the best youth programs in the area, one that he hopes will mean long-term success.
"We're extremely deep in both pitching and hitting, although some of that is untested at this level," Gura said. "The guys are excited, we know we have a tough schedule in a very tough league so nothing will be easy. Our sophomore class is very good, our freshmen seem like they're good. It seems like things are looking good here for the future."
THROW 'EM IN A HAT: Unfortunately for Gura and the rest of the league, there are a lot of coaches that seem very positive about their team this season. In case you'd forgotten, the SCC final was an all-Milford affair last season with Jonathan Law beating Foran, and both teams return enough players to make them a factor this season. Foran, particularly, returns pitcher Brian Ward and many others from that cast including Brian O'Keefe. Also, Foran is the only Class M school in the SCC this season, which means high hopes for the Lions.
Law will have a tougher time replacing its championship parts (remember, Law has actually won titles two years in a row after their unexpected Class L title in 2008), but should have Brett Michael Doran - who hit six home runs last year - back to lead the offense.
Guilford, which didn't make the tournament last year, and Hand - with new coach Chris Borrelli at the helm and Nick Merullo behind the plate - both figure to be able to make some noise this season as well, making for a brutal Hammonasset Division.
Of course, the Housatonic Division is no joke, either. Amity lost an uncharacteristic nine games last season, but figures to reload behind pitcher Lou Concato (next to unhittable last summer in Legion ball) and junior Mark Esposito. We've already mentioned Shelton, but Cheshire - who like Shelton lost to West Haven by one run in the state tournament (quarterfinals) - is a sleeper - and Sheehan is always a factor in the end (the Titans went to the Class L semifinals last year, losing to Berlin).
In case you wondered if the remaining divisions (Quinnipiac and Oronoque) could keep up, consider that both boast defending state champions.
In the Oronoque, Branford was only 12-8 in the regular season, but fought through some adversity to win another state title. The Hornets feature a few players with some good bloodlines, like Tyler Olt, that should be able to carry them in a relatively weak division.
Finally, in the Quinnipiac, West Haven rode the right arm of Tom Lawrence to its first state title since 1988 last season, and will help the supporting cast drew enough experience out of that to drive them forward. The Blue Devils have enough coming back and enough tradition to stay competitive, but they will be pushed by cross-town rival Notre Dame - with Wake Forest-bound Conor Kinary, who already has a state title this year on the football field. The Green Knights (SCC champions in 2008) don't return much pitching experience, but their lineup is as good as anyone's in the league. Xavier is also looking to rebound from a mediocre 2009, and return pitcher Shaun Coughlin as well as plenty of other players with varsity experience.
The Power Rankings follow below, but - especially at this time of the season - they are a hypothesis at best, a wild guess at worst. And that should make for some serious entertainment in the months to come in the best baseball league in the state, the SCC.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK

GAME OF THE WEEK
Amity at Branford, Friday, 3:45 - There are a few other programs that can put themselves in the discussion, but these are probably the best two consistent successes in the SCC over the last decade. Both have mutiple state titles and always seem to be in the mix. Some of the Spartans' ridiculous streaks (like seven straight SCC finals) went by the boards last year, and they're looking to get back to the top, while the Hornets think they have the goods to have a memorable season.

INSIDE THE NUMBERS
4
Number of SCC teams in the semifinals of the Class LL and Class L tournaments last season, and yes, even if you didn't major in math, that's half of the field. The interesting thing, though, of the four teams: West Haven, Shelton, Branford, and Sheehan; none of them even made the SCC semifinals. West Haven, Shelton, and Branford were beaten in the quarterfinals and Sheehan didn't even qualify for the tournament.

POWER RANKINGS

1) Foran (19-6; Last Season 2) – Just tough to see how you're going to score runs off these guys this season.
2) Amity (15-9; LS 4) – That 2009 record means the Spartans will have a little bit of a chip on their shoulders.
3) Branford (17-9; LS 7) – Defending state champion with a lot of their team returning? Could be very dangerous.
4) Shelton (17-8; LS 6) – Gaels finding out that its tough to be a consistent winner in this league from year to year.
5) Cheshire (17-7; LS 8) – Wasn't too long ago, they were right at the bottom here, but tradition has returned.
6) Notre Dame (14-9; LS 5) – If Knights can figure out the pitching, they could move up this list pretty quickly.
7) Xavier (10-12; LS 12) – Falcons really underachieved last season, but it did give them a favorable 2010 schedule.
8) Jonathan Law (20-5; LS 1) – Lawmen were most consistent SCC team in 2009, only one not to lose in division.
9) Guilford (6-14; LS 16) – We'll give the Indians a pass on 2009, reports have them much improved outfit in 2010.
10) Hand (11-12; LS 14) – Borrelli brings new blood to Tigers, who - like ND - if they get pitching could be a big factor.
11) West Haven (21-5; LS 3) – Always tough to follow up run for the ages, but won't fall as far as some people think.
12) Sheehan (15-9; LS 9) – Won't be as easy to get results in the division as it has been in past seasons.
13) North Haven (12-10; LS 10) – Some reasons for optimism (like a field), but also a lot of question marks early.
14) Fairfield Prep (10-11; LS 11) – Much improved last year, may be able to surprise some people this season.
15) East Haven (8-13; LS 17) – Yellowjackets also have a lot of pitching returning, could jump up with some luck.
16) Hamden (5-15; LS 15) – Managed to win a couple at the end last season, but no easy ones in the Quinnipiac.
17) Lyman Hall (5-15; LS 18) – Beat West Haven last season, but didn't manage to win a game in the Housatonic.
18) Career (14-9; LS 13) – Went 7-3 in Oronoque last year and will have to do damage in division again to go places.
19) Wilbur Cross (2-16; LS 20) – Governors were young last season, we'll see that can carry over to 2010 and beyond.
20) Hillhouse (2-17; LS 21) – Well, they moved up to No. 20 when Derby left the league, so that's a good start.