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It was cool and breezy Sunday
morning as four area nines assembled at the pristine Chase Collegiate
grounds in Waterbury to take part in the first annual vintage
base ball round robin hosted by the Waterbury Connors.
The much-depleted Newtown Sandy Hooks joined the Connors and
two clubs from western Massachusetts, the Westfield Wheelmen
and the Meddowe Base Ball Club from Longmeadow in the 1861 affair.
With a total of six matches on the fixture, Jim Wigren's Brass
City nine with a decided home field advantage and years of success
at this era game, seemed the likely choice for team accolades
on the day. Yet, though they prevailed in the win column, by
day's end the rejiggered Sandy Hooks and upstart Meddowe clubs
were to be the teams that receive the most attention and applause.
In the initial match the equally
understaffed Hooks and Westfield clubs squared-off for the first
time since last August when Hooks bested the Wheelman in an 1886
event on the Westfield turf. On this occasion, only two ballists
who played in that memorable match were in attendance to swing
for the Newtowners.
Phil '90' Keane, coming off the shelf after a year-plus rehabilitation
from a serious leg injury, took the ball for the Sandy Hooks
and began what would be a twenty-one inning hurling effort that
may prove to be one of the gutsiest in Newtown Sandy Hook annals.
With an amazing array of pitching techniques that kept the visitors
off-balance throughout the match, the determined but hobbled
hurler maintained his composure and good humor while his gritty
new mates retrieved numerous potentially wayward orbs.
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'90' Keane on overdrive - Inning
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Of the starting nine, credit goes to newcomers 'Honus' Pernerewski,
'Zack' Wheat and 'Bingo' Long for putting the spark in the ball
and tearing-up the turf with their non-stop barnstorming behavior,
and to 'BB' Dieckman and 'Sparks' Marcucelli for patrolling 'the
garden' with jaw-dropping skill. Paes, Norwich and Weiner secured
the infield positions while 'Mudcat' Albano protected the ground
around home plate.
Pernerewski, who counts his second job as a history teacher
in New Milford, displayed his prowess with his 40+-ounce tree
limb, carved from a downed maple, to gain four hits in as many
at-bats and drive-in two aces for the Hooks. 'Zack' created his
own dust clouds on the verdant paths with hell bent for leather
base running, while 'Bingo' lived up to his namesake by plating
an inside-the-park round tripper based on a blast that caromed
around the far reaches of the yard for what seemed like an eternity.
Never to be overlooked or underestimated, veteran 'Pudgey' Dieckman
drove in a four stunning aces on a two-for-three day at the dish
in game one.
As the clouds parted and the warm breezes kissed the sidelines,
the Sandy Hooks came away with a well-earned 12 to 7 victory
over the Wheelmen.
In game two, the Sandy Hooks
were introduced to newcomers to the vintage scene, Mark 'Cappy'
Hurwitz's upstart Meddowe nine from up the road in Longmeadow,
MA made the trek for the day to test the old guard. Yet, little
did the local nine know from looking at the freshly clad rookies,
this would be no 'muffin' affair and they were in for what would
eventually become a dog-fight.
As the well-broken Sandy Hooks positioned themselves for game
two, '90' again manned the box and proceeded to hurl heroically
as the newcomers teed-off his assortment of offerings.
On a numerous occasions, he fielded screaming come-backers
that would force lesser men into early retirement. In spite of
that fact, '90' held his positioned masterfully while his mates
responded with numerous missiles of their own that kept the match
interesting. 'Bingo', 'Zack' and '90' were the hitting stars
for the Sandy Hooks with two hits each in game two but it wasn't
enough to overcome the hitting prowess of the upcountry strangers.
In the final analysis, Meddowe went on to score the first
victory in their short-lived history besting the Sandy Hooks
by an 8 to 6 margin at the end of regulation. Admittedly, the
dumb-down '61 game tends to neutralize many offensive threats
(except in the case of the ever resourceful Connors). The numerous
bound-outs, that characterize the game, rendering well-struck
long balls and heavily armored adversaries benign, snuffed-out
potential rallies and kept the event from being a 23 to 20 affair.
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