Dream Team
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Rick Devereux
Whittling down the number of kids for this year’s Daily Pilot Youth
Baseball Dream Team was difficult. There were so many qualified
players that had solid seasons, but a group of 11 finally emerged as
the best of the best.
Austin Quon played catcher for Jeff Hirsch’s Costa Mesa American
Little League All-Stars and made defensive plays in the Mayors Cup to
get his team out of bases-loaded jams on two separate occasions.
“Austin’s a great catcher,” Hirsch said. “I told him in front of
the [American All-Star team] how impressed I was.”
Quon was also the No. 2 pitcher for his regular season team, the
Angels, and had nine of their 18 wins. Hitting in the No. 3 slot,
Quon had four homeruns while batting .455.
Quon’s team mate Dan Hurley was able to contribute at the plate as
well as in the field. The Angels captain and leadoff hitter had a
.571 on-base-percentage and led the team in stolen bases. From his
shortstop position, Hurley was a vacuum gobbling up ground balls.
“He was a leader that helped the younger kids coming up,” Hirsch
said.
On top of his athletic achievements, the 12-year old received
straight As at Davis Elementary and is a Life Scout, one rank below
an Eagle Scout.
A.J. Roth simply dominated for the Costa Mesa National Little
League All-Stars. He was able to play almost any position manager
Clint Brown asked and drilled the ball every time he made contact.
“A.J. is a very good first baseman and pitcher as well as being
able to fill in any position on the field except catcher,” Brown
said. “He has such God-given abilities, it’s incredible how good he
could be if he really wanted to be the best player in Costa Mesa.”
Roth hit .554 over the regular season with eight doubles and two
homers. Roth throws a blistering fastball and a knee-buckling curve.
That combination helped him strike out six of the 15 batters he faced
in four innings of the Mayor’s Cup. He only allowed one hit during
the two game event. He also went 3-for-5 with two doubles and an RBI.
Eusebio Castillo played for Tom Burns’ Padres in the Costa Mesa
National and made quite an impression on his manager.
“His pitching is outstanding and his abilities at shortstop are
great,” Burns said. “It would be easier to talk about his downside
because there aren’t any. I seriously think he has major-league
ability.”
Castillo played on Brown’s Costa Mesa National All-Star team.
Brown gave similarly high praise for the soon-to-be TeWinkle
eighth-grader who has been known to throw out runners at first base
from centerfield.
“Eusebio is the finest Little League pitcher I have ever seen,” he
said. “And, having umpired in this and many other leagues for almost
14 years, that is really saying something.”
John Doering opened up the season for the Mariners in the Newport
Beach American Little League by throwing a no-hitter against the
Angels and continued to do well throughout the season. As a shortstop
and pitcher, Doering used speed and determination to excel.
Naturally right-handed, Doering batted left to take advantage of
his speed.
“The opposing shortstop would play deep,” All-Star coach Michael
Borchard said, “and John would hit it to him on purpose. The other
guy thought he had a routine ground ball, but when he fired to first,
John was already two steps past the base.”
While Doering used speed, the Reds’ shortstop and pitcher Sean
Tokuyama used power. During Newport Beach American All-Star
practices, Borchard offered a $10 reward for anyone who could hit
back-to-back home runs. It was a safe bet for the coach until
Tokuyama came up.
“No one had gone back-to-back yet,” Borchard said. “Sean comes up
and hits, like, seven in a row. I don’t think there’s a better hitter
in Little League.”
Tokuyama hit .750 with an OBP of .810 for the Reds, and had two
home runs. He only lost once as the team’s No. 2 pitcher.
Borchard had the opportunity to coach his son, Mike, on the Reds
and the Newport Beach American All-Star team. Mike played short and
pitched and was counted on when his team needed him the most.
“Mike carried us pitching-wise all through the year,” Borchard
said. “He pitched and won the hard games. We would put him in with
the bases loaded and he would get three strikeouts in a row.”
Mike did not lose a game as pitcher. While figuring out wins in
Little League can be tricky considering the number of innings
pitchers are restricted to, Borchard guessed Mike and Tokuyama had at
least eight wins each, possibly more, during the Reds’ 18-3 regular
season.
Mike was the total package for the Reds, hitting .550 with an OBP
of .650 while only committing two errors in the field.
Michael Bloom was like a coach when he was on the field for the
Cardinals and the Newport Beach National Little League All-Stars.
“He is very intense on the field,” manager and father Jeff Bloom
said. “Every time he came up to hit, all of the other kids in the
dugout would hold their breath and watch him bat.”
There was good cause for the anticipation from the players because
Bloom had the ability to hit a home run at any moment. He hit three
home runs in one game for the Cardinals earlier in the year. He
finished the year batting .650 with nine dingers.
Ryan Albert, a pitcher, third baseman and outfielder for the
Newport Harbor Baseball Association Bronco A Cubs, was a terror on
the mound and in the batter’s box. Albert allowed 10 earned runs in
39 innings of work and struck out 67, a staggering 1.7 K’s an inning.
And he hit .400 with an OBP of .577.
Alex Maddox played second base and outfield for the NHBA Giants
and had one of the most impressive seasons for any youth baseball
player. He hit .475 with an OBP of .700.
Jacob McCann played mostly at shortstop for the NHBA Padres, but
he was able to pitch if need be. But he’s skills in the middle
infield were deemed “too valuable” by his all-star manager to
regularly on the mound. His skills at the plate were also helpful,
hitting .475 with an OBP of .650.
Manager Rich Hogan said Albert, Maddox and McCann were three-year
veterans of his NHBA All-Star team.
“For three years in a row they have played more games than anyone
in the area,” Hogan said. “They reached the regionals as 10-year olds
and as 11s. All three of them were leaders by example. They all did
everything that was asked of them.”
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