District 62 Tournament of Champions: Long on drama
Bryce Alderton
FOUNTAIN VALLEY - When it gets to the semifinals of any tournament,
games seem to get closer as pitching and defense tighten up and hits
become hard to come by.
For eight innings, the Costa Mesa National Little League Majors
Division Dodgers battled the A’s from Huntington Valley. But in the end,
the A’s got the hit they needed, a single by Chas Boule to plate Drew
Duffy with the go-ahead and eventual winning run as the A’s beat the
Dodgers, 2-1, in the semifinals of the District 62 Tournament of
Champions Monday at Mile Square Park.
Boule’s hit was the third single of the inning and seventh hit for the
A’s. The Dodgers finished with four.
The loss eliminates the Dodgers (20-7), who had won their two previous
tournament games, 16-1 and 7-1.
But the Ddogers went down fighting, with fearless pitching by Justin
Long for the last five innings and sound defensive plays that made
Manager Kim Pederson proud.
“The key to this team has been (its ability to) battle all year to get
a win,” Pederson said. “This time, the breaks went the other way. With
all that pressure on, one bad play could make the difference, but it
didn’t. We didn’t give it to them. (The A’s) were a great team that put
the ball in play.”
Long pitched with runners on in every inning but the seventh, when he
retired the A’s in order. He struck out the side in the sixth, the last
two batters looking with runners on first and second.
In the fifth, the A’s again had runners at first and second with one
out, when A’s second baseman Pablo McBeth hit a line drive at Dodger
shortstop Juan Guzman, who tried to make a basket catch on the ball.
The ball bounced off Guzman’s chest to the ground right in front of
him, so he was able to scoop up the ball and quickly run to touch second
base for the force out. Long struck out the next batter to end the
inning.
Long struck out 10, walked two, and allowed one run.
The Dodgers had a chance to tie in the bottom of the eighth.
With two outs, Bryan Bennett singled up the middle, but A’s relief
pitcher Cody Moran struck out the next hitter to end the game.
Bennett and Guzman had two singles apiece.
Guzman scored the lone Dodger run in the second. He hit a looper that
dropped in front of second baseman McBeth. McBeth fielded the ball and
threw quickly to first as he was stumbling to his knees, but Guzman beat
the throw.
After advancing to second and third on a passed ball and wild pitch,
respectively, and a walk to second baseman Cory Ames, Guzman scored on
Nick Oliver’s fielder’s choice grounder to short.
The Dodgers didn’t advance a runner past first after the second
inning.
“(The A’s) kept us off balance,” Pederson said. “We didn’t do a good
job with two-strike hitting and they did. They had (a bunch) of called
third strikes and you just can’t do that against their pitchers. You
gotta credit their pitchers.”
The Dodgers struck out seven times looking, 16 overall.
Ian Abernathy and Long weren’t too shabby on the mound either.
Abernathy started the game and pitched three innings, allowing one run
(unearned) on one hit while striking out four and walking two.
Dodger defense was strong throughout, with right fielder Danny O’Neil
battling the sun to catch a line drive in the second and Brandon Grimmett
diving head first near the A’s first-base dugout to catch a pop foul in
the third inning.
“What more can you have?” Pederson said. “No one wins them all, but I
couldn’t be more proud of a group of kids.”
Monday’s loss isn’t the end of the baseball season just yet for
Pederson and four Dodgers.
Pederson and Mike Falbo are coaches for Manager Bill Redding’s CMNLL
All-Star team. Guzman, Grimmett, Bennett and Long are the Dodger
representatives on the team, which opens July 6 against Westminster.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.