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As the clouds broke Sunday morning,
locals seeking respite from a week of havoc and mayhem brought
on by Mother Nature were no doubt looking for peace and sunshine
in their day. Little did they know just around the corner at
Dickinson Park the local vintage nine were conjuring-up a little
havoc and mayhem of their own.
After two seasons as resident gypsies, the Sandy Hooks, thanks
to the support of Newtown Park and Recreation, were finally able
to christen the old Dickinson Pond area which for decades had
been the swimming hole for the generations of Newtowners. Though
the week's rain had formed numerous puddles and quagmires on
the outer features of the pitch, the diligent P&R Department
was on the scene attempting to fill dangerous gaps.
As the storied Hartford Dark Blues appeared on the horizon,
the persistent mist that menaced the weekend appeared to dissipate.
Captain Greg 'Daisy Cutter' Frank met the local nine and the
honorable 'Saint Louis' Margolus at home plate at 10:00AM to
begin what was to be one of the most exhilarating slugfests ever
seen in these parts.
With the initial match of two being played by 1867 rules,
Dennis 'Muhl' Snyder manned the box for the Newtowners and 'Mudcat'
Albano handled the backstopping duties. With the help of their
mates, they went on to mow down their guests in short-order in
the first frame. In the bottom of the inning, the Sandy Hooks
greeted the battery of Mike 'Crusher' Smith and Bo 'Champagne'
Muschinsky with six base hits supported by three stolen bases
to put the home side up by what seemed at the time to be a comfortable
6 to 0 advantage. Margolus, Pernerewski, Pendergist, Albano,
Long and Dieckman all plated aces for the home club.
In the second frame the Dark Blues put their bats to work
to close within one of the Hooks, while the Hooks responded with
four more runs in the last of the second to maintain a five run
cushion. This seesaw battle continued from inning to inning with
monumental blasts and acrobatic plays by both squads with 'Pops'
Pendergist taking center stage for the Newtowners with back-breaking
catches and one-handed stabs.
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'Bulldog' Paes makes play at
first sack. |
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Through eight frames complete, both clubs were knotted at
seventeen and everyone held their collective breath knowing inning
nine would be 'the game' for both clubs. To their credit, the
Hartford club, who have made their name playing by '1861' rules,
played fundamental base ball throughout the match and battled
the locals play-for-play and score-for-score.
The Sandy Hooks had a great chance to take the lead in the
bottom of the eighth but, with the bases full and two hands down,
a catastrophic base running blunder (on the magnitude of a later
day 'Merkle's Boner' or 'Billy Buckner toe dance') suppressed
the potential rally and left the locals dumbstruck.
In the top of the ninth, the Dark Blues went quickly to work
smacking 'The Muhl's offerings around the ballyard to manufacture
five hard-earned runs to close their day with a seemingly insurmountable
22 to 17 lead. Smith returned to the box for the last of the
ninth knowing the hope of his club rested on three remaining
outs.
Looking for five runs to tie
and six to win, the Sandy Hooks went about their work like professionals.
In the bottom of the ninth, 'Kid Rambo' Rambone, just returned
from Storrs Agricultural School, stepped to the dish and laced
a single to right and continued the aggression stealing two sacks
with abandon as 'Bulldog' Paes waved his willow at three hittable
pitches and 'Herman' Weiner flied deep to left to put the hometowners
in a serious hole.
Nonetheless, with two hands down, 'Doughboy' Norwich confidently
stepped to the line and smashed a single to left-center plating
Rambone with an ace. (Dark Blues 22, Sandy Hooks 18.)
It was up to the top of the order to continue what they had
accomplished with aplomb throughout the day. With only one hand
remaining, 'Moose' Margolus jumped on the first pitch from Smith
for a single moving 'Doughboy' into scoring position at third.
(Two men out and men on the corners.)
After Margolus found his way to second, 'Honus' Pernerewski,
wielding his 43 ounce hand-carved tree bough, unleashed a double
to the gap driving in Norwich. (Dark Blues 22, Sandy Hooks 19.)
As 'Pops' Pendergist approached to the dish a hush came over
the cranks and opponents alike. Responsible up to this point
for three hits for four trips to the dish including four runs
batted in, 'Pops' picked out a Smith offering and crushed his
second gargantuan double of the day which immediately cleared
the bases for the Hooks. (Dark Blues 22, Sandy Hooks 21.)
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'Mudcat' Albano awaits his pitch
while fellow Hook breaks for third. |
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Tony 'Mudcat' Albano, who spent
much of his day on hands and knees wallowing in the muck (What
else do mudcats do?) behind the dish, bouncing through the air
trying to retrieve foul tips and stealing four bases, plated
the game-tying ace with the third double of the inning. The blast
visited the trees that dot left and left center garden and rattled
around for a time before the Hartford leftfielder could retrace
his steps and get the ball back into the infield. The 'Mudcat',
not known for his baserunning prowess, showed no fear on this
day as he swiped four and turned a normal single into a game
tying double. (Dark Blues 22, Sandy Hooks 22.)
With the score knotted again, two men down and Albano hovering
around third base, 'Muhl' Snyder, who had had what was for him
a dreadful day at the plate, challenged hurler Smith's offering
and took a flat inside pitch between first and second base for
a single and the game deciding walk-off RBI, which resulted in
the twenty-third and final ace of the match.
Quickly, what looked like a sure victory for the Dark Blues
had become storybook jubilation for the Newtown Sandy Hooks.
In the final analysis, the line score read Newtown Sandy Hook
23 runs, 33 hits and numerous errors verses 22 runs, 28 hits
and numerous errors for the Dark Blues.
The two teams played the tightest, most exciting match this
scribe has experienced in vintage ball and congratulations go
to both sides for a most memorable Opening Day match.
Pop's Pendergist was the star
of the day for the Sandy Hooks with 4 for 5, 3 runs scored, 6
rbi's, 5 stolen bases, a triple, two doubles, and two gravity
defying catches to snuff-out rallies in the field. Rookie 'Honus'
Pernerewski continued his torrid offensive pace with a 4 for
5 day, 4 runs, 3 rbi's and 3 stolen bases; 'Mudcat' was 4 for
5 with 4 aces plated, 3 rbi's and a historic 4 stolen bases;
Margolus, Dieckman, Carasone, Rambone collected three hits each;
Snyder, Long, Paes, Norwich and Weiner contributed two hits a
piece.
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'Pops' Pendergist |
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In match number two, the elated
Sandy Hooks met the deflated Dark Blues in a less energetic '1861'
style match (where perfectly placed base hits result in less
fulfilling 'bound-outs'). The Dark Blues show their prowess in
this match to an evidently ambivalent Newtown nine, and assumed
the nightcap by an advantage 9 to 8.
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Hartford Dark Blues meet Newtown Sandy
Hooks for the first time to christen the new Dickinson Grounds |
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On Memorial Day weekend the Sandy Hooks travel to the Pittsfield
1886 Tournament to take on the powerful Pittsfield Elms (4:00PM
on Saturday at Wahconah Park) in an overhand match. The local
club has yet to play an overhand game this season and hopes to
find the same teamwork they experienced in match one against
the Dark Blues to help spark their game against the Elms. A second
match will take place on Sunday; place and time to be determined.
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