Top Row: Nick Hill, Hopu Ahonima-Blanco, Mike Oshita, John Brumbaugh, Sam Hori, Cameron Kawai
Front Row: Holden Pattengill, Bailey Pattengill, Atlee Riddle, Benny Alcoran

[ Pre-season news ] ...
[ Maui goodwill tournament ] ...
[ Free-agent draft ] ...
[ Off-the-field news ]
[ Game Day 1: May 2nd ] ...
[ Game Day 2: May 9th ] ...
[ Game Day 3: May 16th ] ...
[ Game Day 4: May 23rd ]
[ Game Day 5: May 30th ] ...
[ Game Day 6: June 6th ] ...
[ Game Day 7: June 13th ] ...
[ Game Day 8: June 20th ]
[ Game Day 9: June 27th ] ...
[ Game Day 10: July 10th ] ...
[ Game Day 11: July 11th ] ...
[ Game Day 12: rescheduled ]
[ Game Day 13: rescheduled ] ...
[ Game Day 14: August 1st ] ...
[ Game Day 15: August 8th ] ...
[ Game Day 16: August 15th ]
[Regular Season Final Standings ] ...
[Pitching Records ]
[ Game Day 17: August 22nd - Playoffs ] ...
[ Game Day 18: August 29th - Playoffs ] ...
[ Game Day 19: September 5th - Playoffs ]
[ Game Day 20: September 12th - Playoffs ] ...
[ Game Day 21: September 19th - Playoffs ] ...
[ Game Day 22: September 26th - Championship ]
[ Game Day 23: October 3rd - Awards & All-Star Game ] ...
[ more photos ]
League Commissioner
Katherine Donovan
reported that the regular summer league fees for the upcoming season would remain unchanged from 2009. This is consistent
with the league's previously-announced budgetary projections calling for no increase in costs to the local players over a 3-year period. However, it
was also announced that moneys would come due earlier this year. In addition, each team manager's initial commitment would be $600 (applied to
team fees), due by February 5, 2010.
Individual consultations with 2009 season team managers (and others who have expressed interest informing a team) have been focused
on securing sponsorships earlier this year. Unfortunately for the players in the league, economic conditions in the last two years have put
a strain on local businesses. This has resulted in a higher financial commirment from each player.
While teams' sponsorship revenues were down, the value of the advertising and promotional dollar was up. Particularly in
down economic times, locals look to local merchants for products and services.
Under league rules, at each season's end, all KonaBaseball.com players become free agents. Managers can begin talking to players about the
next year's season, but may not begin "signing" anyone up any earlier than January 1st. This annual,
clearing-of-the-slate keeps the league fresh and competitive. It also fosters friendships across team lines throughout the league.
Returning players are always cautioned that some manager might just hand them a KonaBaseball.com registration form shortly after
toasting in the New Year. Upon making such a written commitment, the player is "off limits" to other managers for the season. Subsequent
inter-team transfers of players require both managers' approval.
League Umpire-In-Chief
Jim Donovan
announced that the KonaBaseball.com affiliate league from Maui
will be coming over to the Big Island for a goodwill tournament
for three days, beginning January 8, 2010.
The inaugural game is scheduled for 1:00 p.m. on Friday, with a pair of double-headers on
both Saturday and Sunday.
Included in the festivities is a barbecue party Saturday evening.
Tournament involvement is available to all KonaBaseball.com players. The two teams of
local all stars will play in official league t-shirts (the same as those that qualify as
alternate uniforms during the regular season).
For players who already have a regulation t-shirt, the goodwill tournament fee is $25, which includes play in
two or three games as well as a ticket to the Saturday evening barbecue.
For players who do not have a league t-shirt, the fee is $45 which also includes a shirt in the
team color and numerals of the player's choice. Add $2 for 2XL or 3XL.
The first four bargain hunters can save $5 by ordering the shirt in yellow (a color not
assigned to any specific team in the league). These numerals are available: #1, #13. #17. #24.
All moneys are due by Sunday, January 3, 2010 (5 days before the tournament), and there are a limited number of
player-slots available. To assure involvement (and to choose jersey numerals), payment must be made by Wednesday, December 29, 2009.
As of January 7, 2010, there are only four player slots open for the tournament against the Maui team.
The size large shirts available are:
Green #10, Gray #47, Gray #54 and Orange #29.
In other tournament news,
the league has confirmed that on December 30, 2009,
Roseanne Barr
was invited to sing the national anthem at the upcoming goodwill tournament.
Apparently taken back a bit by the proposal, her face quickly turned into that famous
"Roseanne"
smile when she realized that KonaBaseball.com League
Umpire-In-Chief
Jim Donovan
was jesting. Nevertheless, she is a real baseball fan who is particularly supportive of players from Honokaa. So, she just might show up!
The goodwill tournament is now sold out. Kona will field two teams of 14 players each, with crossover play permitted.
While all league managers and coaches will be involved,
Michael Harris
and
Nick Hill
will serve as team captains.
The 3-day, 5-game event with a visiting team from Maui was everything that was hoped for,
generating goodwill between both leagues.
The comradery established on the field carried over to the Saturday evening barbecue, and
everyone seemed to have a great time at event that was held at a 4-acre retreat up Kaloko mauka.
Kona all-stars
Drew Comacho
and
Ryan Landis
led the offensive barrage in the opening game, taking the local team to victory.
Teammate (at least on this day)
Keegan Lerma
started atop the mound and was not a very generous host, yielding only one
run to the visiting Maui team.
Kona relievers
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco
and
Keefe Lerma
kept the game in check, but not without a threat or two by the Valley Islanders.
For Maui,
Dave Prysinski,
Raiman Johnson
and
Kevin Spaise
each went 2-for-3.
However,
Johnson
was the only one of them who was able to score ... proving once again that
everbody loves
Raiman.
Maui's left fielder
Raiman Johnson
accounted for both of the runs scored by his team, as a
foursome of Kona pitchers stymied the visitors.
Maui's
Kevin Spaise
took the loss, relievers
Mike Foley
and
Dave Perzinski
faring better, but the damage had already been done.
For Kona, the offensive charge was spearheaded by
Shadow Diessner,
making a rare appearance in the lead-off batter's position of the lineup.
Jose Luis
also crossed home plate twice
to seal the deal for
winning pitcher
Steve Furchner
and his trio of relievers:
Jeff Barbas,
Hondo De La Cruz
and
Jorge Perez.
A slugfest erupted in the late game, both teams
teeing off on opposing pitchers.
In this contest,
Raiman Johnson
took the mound for his one-and-only appearance in the goodwill tournament ... and goodwill is exactly what
Raiman
provided.
By the end of the third inning, the Kona bench was
feeling that "everyone loves Raiman" effect
itself, enjoying an 8-1 lead.
Turnabout is fair play, however. By the end of the fourth inning,
the highly-effective, but quickly-tiring Kona starter
Tobe Kamalai
was replaced by
C.J. Hanna.
Five runs and no outs later, the Maui bench
was getting that
"everyone loves C.J." feeling (and there isn't even any TV show about that!).
Unlikely relievers
John Brumbaugh
and
Ryan Landis
mopped things up, preserving the win for the local team.
Offensively,
Maui's
Patrick Merrill,
Matt Banet
and
Dave Perzinski
crossed home plate on multiple occassions.
For Kona, just about everyone
saw paydirt,
Kenny Benson's
run eclipsing the tally on the scoreboard.
After the Saturday evening barbecue,
everyone was a little bit late arriving at Simmons Field, but nobody seemed to care.
In recognition of "Hawaii time", the early game began about half-an-hour late.
Perhaps that was the ploy of the Maui team.
Afterall, Maui Brewery brewmaster
Raiman Johnson
and his teammates had generously provided beer
at the party.
For the Kona team,
Keefe
and his older brother
Keegan Lerma
shared the mound duty for most of the contest,
the elder sibling squandering his baby bro's lead.
Paul Skarbo
and
Mikey Marcotte
emerged as the stars in this one for Maui.
In the other dugout, the name
Larry Strozyk
must be highlighted for a pair of blistering base hits including a double. Unfortunately
for him however, his teammates left him stranded on the base both times.
After a weekend of play and partying, the Maui team was finally "all baseballed out"
by the fifth game of the goodwill tournament ... hardly
a time to have to face
Jorge Perez.
The lanky fastballer
was definitely on his game, yielding only three hits in five innings.
Relievers
Jeff Barbas
and
Oscar Delgado
wrapped matter up on the mound, each tossing a scoreless inning.
For Maui,
starting pitcher
Mike Foley
took it on the chin. Offensively,
Patrick Merrill
Matt Banet
and
Nick Batres
each batted 2-for-3, but to no avail, as those hits were scattered.
For Kona, credit
Michael Harris
and
Donovan Aiona,
a couple of seasoned veterans (old guys who guide the Canefire team during its regular KonaBaseball.com season) with
a pair of plate crossings each! ... what a testamony to the concept of multi-generational baseball.
Before the play ended, just about everyone was talking about getting together on another day. Maybe a team
from the KonaBaseball.com league will travel to Maui next time.
As two vans, loaded to the gills with Maui baseball players, left Simmons Field for the airport Sunday afternoon,
the shouts of "We love you, Kona" echoed off the walls of the gymnasium ... and that says it all.
On April 25, 2010, the KonaBaseball.com free-agent draft will be held at 10:00 a.m. at Simmons Field.
Players should have their $20 league registration fee when coming to the field and should be prepared to budget a total $175 for the season, including $20 for a shirt and $135 for the player's contribution to the
team fee (monies paid by the teams to the league for other costs, including baseballs, field supplies, umpiring, etc.).
Under
Ray Uribes,
the Sharks (formerly the Dodgers) appear to be set with their roster, as do the
Jeff Barbas'
Earthquakes. This also appears
to be the case with the Thunder, the reigning champion team now under the management of
Shadow Diessner.
In addition,
Don Aiona's
Canefire team will not be participating in this year's draft.
Their are still some pukas within the Black Sox' squad, however. Not to worry, a sizeable pool of players seems to exist, as well as any new players to the league.
Some 2009 season players may have been waiting for
Mike O'shita's
rumored team to form (a more sizeable task than
Mike
foresaw), thus are
still uncommitted.
The situation of an abundance of free agents is compounded by the fact that nobody stepped forward during the pre-season to take charge of the Angels, one of the original teams in the league.
Accordingly, it puts a whole
bunch of other guys in the posture of uncommitted free agents.
In view of the situation,
Benny Alcoran
is making an effort to scrape together a group of players with a core roster coming from the 2008 Crush team. Many of
those players have also been involved in softball, a team known as "Shut-D". Let's see if
Benny
can shut the door on getting his players to commit both physically and financially.
If so, the Shut-D team will play hardball in the 2010 season.
The April 25th draft turned from one type of madhouse to another, nobody stepping forward to direct a start-up team of free agents.
An eleventh our merger of the proposed Shut-D team with the Black Sox
took a sizeable group of free agents off the table. Then, the Canefire
announced the signing of several veterans from the now-defunct Angels.This further reduced the pool of available players
When league officials realized that a sixth team would not be feasible this year, the reamining free agents were scattered around the league, several joining the Sharks,
Earthquakes and Thunder.
With rosters bulging at the seams, team managers must rely on the league's flexible substitution rules in order to
give everyone enough playing time. With only five teams in the league, quality of play is likely to
be turned up a notch this year.
On October 10, 2009, KonaBaseball.com Commissioner
Katherine Donovan
completed the Ironman World Championship Triathon - her sixth such finish in a row. And even though her duties as commissioner
are mainly in the summer, her 2010 triathlon season has already begun - Ironman China! ...
[ details ]
Team alliances are being formed for the 2010 season, and new players, coaches and teams are welcome to join.
Adults 18 years and older (as young as 15, by special invitation and parental consent) may participate.
There is no maximum age limit, and players of all levels of skill are invited to join. Liberal substitution rules give managers flexibility so
as to include everyone in each game.
In addition, the league has several
paid positions available
for backup scorekeepers and umpires. For more information, call
Jim Donovan
at 883-3331.
It was the Black Sox who were singing as
though Uncle Remus were in the crowd Sunday morning, as
the team's most formidable pitcher
Cameron Kawai
combined with
Aaron Grant
and
Mike Oshita
to shut out the Canefire by the score of
"ten-zip" in the season opener.
Offensively, it was
Kawai
helping his own cause, blasting a triple and
scoring twice to single-handedly secure the victory for the Black Sox. Multiple plate crossings
were also registered by Black Sox veteran
John Brumbaugh.
Yes, even the older guys can run, hit and score in the KonaBaseball.com multi-generational style hardball league.
Another highlight for the Black Sox came from one of their most recent recruits.
The debut of reliever
Aaron Grant
proved to be a bonus, the rookie successfully striking out the side to start matters, then going on to earn a save in the outing.
For the Kohala Canefire, the troops were a bit thin, several
players not yet back home from off-island colleges, etc.
The recently acquired battery of former Angels
Jorge Perez
(the winningest pitcher in the league in 2008)
and
Jose Luis Ibarra
(veteran catcher and field general)
proved to be of little help for the Canefire, the team going hitless against
Cameron Kawai
in the inagural 2010 season game.
A new look Earthquakes team took the field Sunday afternoon, no longer
the doormat that they have sometimes been in past seasons. By contrast, their defensive play was crisp, executing multiple double plays
to quash any would-be threats by the Sharks.
Steve Furchner
was definitely the player of the game, hurling five innings to pick up the win.
The only flaw in his performance was in the third inning when, with runners on second and third, he
intentionally walked Sharks' clean-up batter
Dustin Lapinid
to load the bases.
Furchner
then released an errant pitch that hit batsman
Keegan Lerma
allowing
Mike West
to score from third base for the Sharks.
The Sharks only other run came late in the
game when
Mark Lo
scored while Earthquakes' reliever
Jason Hurst
was on the mound. After an absence from the league in recent seasons,
Hurst
was welcomed back by his EQ teammates ... and they even treated him to a little bit of defensive support for a change.
The game was much closer than the final score of 6-2 would seem to indicate.
Both teams played in mid-season form, an accomplishment in and of itself for opening day. The Earthquakes
however were able to mount a rally in the fifth inning which proved to be the game decider.
That four-run frame was highlighted by the base hit of the game, a 2-RBI double
by none other than
Steve Furchner, a base hit
that sealed the fate of the Sharks in this one.
In his first KonaBaseball.com
at bat, rookie
Ben Swett
sliced a base-clearing triple in the bottom of the last inning
to stun the Sharks in walkoff fashion Sunday, 7-6.
A repeat of last season's championship match, the Thunder
prevailed once again, but they cut this one a little bit close.
In the end, the team placed its fate on an unknown, only
to find fate smiling its fickled finger in their direction.
The Sharks were argueably the better team Sunday, taking a slim
lead earned against
Thunder ace
Ian Glass
into the sixth inning. Then, facing reliever
Aaron Murphy,
the Sharks padded their lead to 6-3, "a handy spot to be in, especially when you are going into your opponent's
final at-bat", remarked the Sharks' coach
Ray Uribes.
However, that three-run cushion proved not to be enough to ward off
Mountain Thunder's last-gasp rally.
For the Sharks,
Alex Akau
batted 2-for-3 and scored twice to lead his team.
Starter
Dustin Lapinid
was effective on the mound through three innings, but
Keegan Lerma
lost the grip on the team's
lead when the Thunderous rally zenithed.
One of the original teams in the league - once known as the "Canardlys", the Thunder has a rich history. However,
this may have been the team's first walk-off victory. And a sweet victory it was, exemplified by the ear-to-ear
grin
accompanying arms in the air by
James Juarez
as he crossed home plate with the final tally.
In contrast to
Lerma's
wrong-place-at-the-wrong-time scenario, it was Mountain Thunder skipper
Shadow Diessner
who was in the right place at the right time.
Calling his own number to pitch the final inning in relief,
Diessner
faced only five Shark batters, yet recorded the victory when his team rallied in the bottom of the frame.
Calling the victory "no sweat" might have a double meaning on this day.
The new-look Earthquakes took command of the Sunday morning game, manager
Jeff Barbas
seeming to have the right formula in his third year at the helm of the club.
For the victors,
Steve Furcher
and
Phil Prisby
each scored thrice to lead a pack of other multiple plate crossing alumni:
Tyler Roy,
Bobby Cherry
and
Josh Carlucci.
For the Canefire,
a shortage of players was the main issue.
Starter
Kamalani Manantan
was hammered early, the Earthquakes' lead-off batter
Tyler Roy
doubling then scoring on
Phil Prisby's
single.
A pair of wild pitches and costly walks
quickly ran the score up to four, the contest effectively over before the first three outs had been
booked.
Without
Jorge Perez,
surprisingly absent from the Canefire dugout,
Kohala
called upon
Donovan Aiona
in early relief.
Normally a third baseman,
Aiona
has the arm strength to pitch.
However,
pitching is very different from throwing a ball across the diamond.
All-in all, the transplanted third baseman he did pretty well, but
his fielders let him down in a number of critical moments, as did the umpire (a least on one occasion, anyhow).
The Kohala team's defensive opportunities to end innings were squandered,
and multiple runs were allowed to score instead.
Down by more than ten runs, the
Canefire could not take the game past the fifth inning. The final score was Earthquakes - 13, Canefire - 1.
The afternoon game was one to be remembered for a good, long time. It
will likely be remembered as one of the most exciting games with one of the most bizarre finishes in league
history. Chocked full of outstanding defensive fielding, close plays at the plate, lightning-speed base running, a
crisp pick off of an unlikely candidate, and action galore, the ending of the game (a walk with the bases loaded) seemed somewhat anti-climatic.
The Black Sox took a well-earned 1-run lead into the last inning, but
the Thunder had another roar to go.
Drew Camacho,
Larry Strozyk
and
Jon Vitale
produced consecutive singles,
but
Camacho
was thrown out at the plate in an exciting bang-bang play.
Strozyk
did score however, and the game was tied by the time the Sox retired their foe.
As such, the Thunder began preparing for overtime.
Afterall, these two teams had gone 13 innings the previous time they met (in last year's Mauka division championship game).
Why would anyone think that these two class-of-the-league teams might still not be so evenly matched?
Leading off the bottom half of the seventh for the Black Sox,
Jason Cheyne
delivered what proved to be the knockout punch - a wicked triple to right filed that
took starting pitcher
Jon Vitale
out and changed the entire game plan for the Thunder.
With nobody out and a baserunner at third, both the infield and outfiled needed to be drawn in.
Manager
Shadow Diessner
called on reliever
Aaron Murphy
to take on the unenviable task of intentionally walking sluggers
Eduardo Andrews
and
Cameron Kawai.
The strategy was to
to load the bases, creating a force at
every base.
But in order for the strategy to work, the next batter would have to either put the ball into play or to strike out trying to do so.
Holden Pattengill
refused to do either.
Instead, he selectively fouled off unwanted deliveries, working the count to 3-and-2, then fouling off five additional pitches.
Eventually,
Murphy's
arm fatiqued, and the dreaded ball four was tossed, this time NOT so intentionally.
A "walk-off" victory in the most literal sense is the final word on this thriller: Black Sox - 6, Thunder - 5.
The reigning league champion Thunder still finds itself looking up from the middle of the standings, same as last year. No worries, the players claim,
citing the fact that they rose to the occasion last year in the playoffs and plan to do so again this year. Besides, it's early in the regular season, and they have still have a
pair of shots at the league-leading Black Sox.
In the meanwhile, the Thunder almost looked past the Canefire Sunday morning, only to find that Kohala forgot that they were playing against the cream of the crop, the
underdogs putting up a good fight. The
final tally of 7-2 simply does not give justice to the much-closer feel of the contest. In fact, had it not been for a handful of plays where the wheels fell off of the defensive
wagon for the Canefire, this headline just might be reading "upset".
New-to-the-league player
Ben Swett
took the mound for the Thunder and showed another facet of his athleticism, striking out five of eleven batters that
he faced over three innings.
During that time, his teammates provided him with a three-run cushion (credit
Drew Camacho
for offensive leadership),
enough for
Ben
to pick up the win.
In this game, the Thunder made a bold move that almost backfired on the team.
Fresh from being featured in a movie at the Big Island Film Festival,
Ian Glass
stood along the sidelines, not even dressed in uniform. Instead,
manager
Shadow Diessner
elected to put
Larry Strozyk
on the mound, the very first pitching appearance in the utility-player's entire baseball career!
Everything consideed,
Strozyk
was pretty good. His delivery may have seemed awkward at first, but the pitches were close enough to the strike zone so as to prompt batters to put the ball in play.
Granted, he did not have an array of pitches, so there was little need
for a bunch of signs and hand signals. "Just pitch anything you want and I'll catch it" was the not-so-secretive
communication from batterymate
Jon Vitale.
Fortunately,
Strozyk
had
a strong team of fielders backing him up, getting him through a few bouts of wildness, including multiple
walks and hit batsmen. And despite the fact that he yielded a couple of runs,
Larry
earned a save for preserving a 3-0 lead.
The afternoon game turned out to be a 10-0 blowout for the
Black Sox, administering a pounding in each and every inning
that may prompt a change the opponent's logo from that of a great white shark to that of a hammer-head shark, or more appropriately a "hammered"-head shark.
With just about everbody on the roster present for the game (including a bunch of ex-Crush players),
the Black Sox looked like 2+ teams, hardly a place for anyone to take a seat on the bench.
Multiple plate crossings were lodged by
Jason Cheyne,
Kallen Hirashi
and
Avery Kagawa.
John Holley
claimed his first victory for the Black Sox, while
Lanson Paolo
took the loss in his debut for the Sharks.
The Canefire took a seven-run lead into the fifth inning, and everyone on the Kohala team was getting that warm feeling that a shutout might be on tap. "But not so fast" was
the response from a stunned group of Earthquake players, still deterimined to ignite the scoreboard before game's end. However, the
old adage of "too-little, too-late" turned out to be their fate on this Sunday morning.
Timo Holschuh
went the distance to pick up the victory for the Kohala Canefire, the final score being 7-5.
Offensively, it was veterans
Jose Luis Ibarra
and
Oscar Delgado
leading by example to secure the Canefire's first win this season.
For the somewhat hapless Earthquakes,
their entire reel of highlights is limited to just one inning - the fifth.
Sensing
that
Holschuh
was tiring (he threw a total of 119 piches in the game), the
Earthquakes patiently awaited strikes to be delivered.
Five walks and four base hits later, that strategy appeared
to be paying off. By inning's end, four runs had scored, tightening the game immensely.
But the Candfire still had another pitcher left, youth player
Devereaux Aiona.
And that is all that the Canefire needed. The lanky
highschooler calmly dealt with his opponents in the sixth inning, but not
without incident.
Still sparked by their strong fifth inning rally, the Earthquakes lauched the
sixth with three back-to-back base hits.
Appearing dishoveled,
Aiona
then released an errant pitch that hit batsman
Josh Carlucci
to load the bases with nobody out.
Interestingly, at the height of what appeared to be trouble,
is where and when
Aiona
settled down.
Relying on his fielders,
he proceeded to retire the Earthquakes, 1-2-3 to quash the foes. And that was that.
In the afternoon of what proved to be a day of upsets, the bottom-of-the-pile
Sharks shocked the sugar out of the coffee from up the mountain. Taking the lead in the third inning,
the Sharks never looked back in this one, keeping ahead of the Thunder for the duration of the contest. Credit
newly-recruited shortstop
Klifford Hawkins
for outstanding play, both defensively and offensivly.
Whether it was intuition, skill or just plain luck, manager
Ray Uribes
made a critical move in the fifth inning
that turned out to be decision that may have saved the game for the
Sharks.
Starting pitcher
Keefe Lerma
had been all but unstoppable through four innings, but
ran out of gas in the afternoon Kona sun.
Turning to reliever
Dustin Lapinid,
the Sharks were able to get out of the fifth, but ran into trouble
again in the sixth. This is where the critical decision was made.
Noting that his moundsman failed to deliver a 3-0 pitch anywhere near the strike zone, the
skipper immediatly handed the ball over to
Keegan Lerma,
brother of the game's starter.
That strategy definitely worked for the Sharks, the elder
Lerma
brother successful in snuffing out the Thunder in its last at-bat.
For Mountain Thunder, the 2010 season is not without its challenges. The league champion for three years in a row may
not be the team that it used to be. Frustrations abound, especially
when fielding mishaps extend innings, base-running mistakes kill rallies, and mental errors
take their toll. Where is
Andrew Emsley?
After a week of nursing physical injuries that were suffered on the field and a week of nursing emotionl injuries that were a result of dissention on the bench, Mountain
Thunder arrived early Sunday morning, poised to take on the league-leading Black Sox. By contrast,
their lofty opponents barely made it to the field on time, co-captains
Atlee Riddle
and
Nick Hill
scratching their heads in their attempt to
field a full team by game time.
With
Mike Sofranko
back at the helm of Mountain Thunder, perhaps some perspective might be attained. It was beginning
to be standard procedure for
the Thunder to leave the field each Sunday with a victory, an
"anticipation" that became an "expectation".
However,
Sofranko
remembers what it was like to fall short in games (and wrestle with oh-so-long losing streaks),
the skipper having lead the once-upon-a-time
Canardlys from the depths of perennial basement dwellers to the heights of three-time league champs.
More reality set in as the Black Sox did manage to round up nine players. They then jumped out to a two-run lead in the second inning. Undaunted,
the Thunder bounced back in its next at bat.
Back-to-back base hits by
Drew Camacho,
Jon Vitale
(a triple), and
Dylan Bunnell
produced a pair of runs to knot the score by the middle of the third inning.
But that was the extent of the highlights for the Thunder in this game.
Black Sox starter
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco
was replaced by
Cameron Kawai
(the eventual game winner)
who gave up only one base hit for the rest of the game.
The frosting on the cake was the relief appearance by
Clarence Alcoran
who snuffed out any Thunderous ideas of a last-inning rally.
Ian Glass
was charged with the loss for Mountain Thunder, a rarity for the league's top pitcher of the 2008 season.
The victory solidifies the Black Sox position atop the league standings. At
the start of the year, Mountain Thunder was expected to be the team that the Black Sox would be chasing.
In actuality, the reverse has been the case this season. With two of the team's three head-to-head meetings now
in the record books, the 2010 tie-breaker advantage has already been secured by the Sox, and a sweep of the Thunder is in reach.
In the noon game, Earthquakes' veteran (another word for "middled-aged") pitcher
Steve Furchner
started matters by mowing down youth player
Klifford Hawkins
on three straight pitches, a rare strike-out of the Sharks' star shortstop.
But that auspicious opening seemed to spark the Sharks' bench, rather than quiet matters,
prompting a barrage of base hits by
Tanner Benbow
(a double),
Lanson Paolo
(a triple),
Ryan Landis
and
Kenny Benson.
Trailing by three runs, the Earthquakes answered back with
three tallies of their own in the bottom of the first. Could this much
action continue for each and every inning of a double header? If so, the players and fans would undoubtedly be exhausted by day's end.
Unfortunately for the Sharks,
a different Earthquakes team came out defensively in the second inning, then again in the third inning, in the fourth, etc. In fact,
Furchner
yielded only two hits for the rest of the contest. Maintaining a modest pitch count, he proceeded to go the entire seven-inning distance to secure his second (and league-leading) win.
As the game progressed, the Earthquakes continued to widen the lead, eventually to run out victors by the final score of 8-4.
Lanson Paolo
was tagged with the loss.
At three o'clock, these same two sides faced off once again, this time with the home/visitor sides reversed. And it turned out to be good luck for both home teams on this particular day.
Maybe it was that home-town crowd!
In this multi-generational hardball league, the second game belonged to the fountain of youth,
Klifford Hawkins
going the distance for the Sharks
to hand
Jeff Barbas
and his Earthquakes the loss.
In this, the "nightcap" of the double header,
Hawkins
did a good job offensively as well. He and teammate
Ryan Landis
lead the attack, each scoring twice.
In fact, the Sharks almost broke the game wide open in the third inning when
Tanner Benbow's
line drive was snagged by shortstop
Phil Prisby
to end the inning and keep the ballgame within reach.
In the end, however, the Sharks had clearly demonstrated that they had control of the Earthquakes in this one. As a result, the Sharks climb out of the basement at the expense of the idle
Canefire.
In a game originally scheduled for July 27th, the Black Sox
took full advantage of this year's early-season opportunity to stamp its authority on
reigning champion Mountain Thunder, capping matters with a shutout.
The highlight of the game was the mammoth home run
by
Cody Maeda,
a blast that was drilled over the fence in right-center field. It was the first out-of-the-park
roundtripper of the year for anyone in the league. Driving a baseball that far is an enormous feat, given the
sea-level elevation of Simmons Field.
Returning player
Kai Miller,
recently back home from collegiate endeavors on the mainland,
picked up the win for the Black Sox.
Then, reliever
Aaron Grant
finished matters on the mound,
completing the shutout by the final score of 8-0.
For the wavering Thunder,
pitching ace
Ian Glass
took his second loss of the year. However a new ray of hope flickers for the discombobulated Thunder, as
Larry Strozyk's
relief appearance was once again, quite good. He may not have a vast array of pitches, but
he gets the ball close enough to the strike zone to induce opposing batters to swing, then he lets his fielders take care of putting
the baserunners out.
Even the best of pitchers needs offensive support, and it is impossible to win if your team fails to score.
The Black Sox remain undefeated after facing two separate opponents on Sunday (a fluke in the schedule necessitated by
the unavailability of Simmons Field during much of the month of July).
"Don't make no matter none" seems to be the attitude of the Black Sox, forgiven for their grammatical faux pas.
Showing little sign of being tired, the Black Sox continued their winning ways in the noon game.
And although
Holden Pattengill
was highly effective, his teammates failed to provide him with enough
offensive support to secure the win.
Instead, it was
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco
logging the "W".
Sandwiched between those two pitchers was a
brief appearance by high school athlete
Sterling Hettel.
He displayed a surprisingly strong fastball, but
the big boys of KonaBaseball.com showed
Hettel
little mercy on this day, promptly tagging him for a pair of scores.
A walk and a hit batsman plagued the youth's
debut on the mound, but it is all a part of
the experience of multi-generational hardball. He will undoubtedly
be better and more poised in his next outing.
For the Canefire,
it was
Timo Holschuh
starring offensively and
carrying the load defensively as well ... his dubious award being that of having an "L" added to his pitching stats.
True to his character,
Tim
merely smiled at the 9-4 final score.
On this day, the team also welcomed back veteran
Guy Newbury
who batted safely in the contest.
It was a seven-run rally in the third inning by the Earthquakes
that spelled doom for Mountain Thunder in the three o'clock game Sunday afternoon.
Former youth players (now young adults)
Tyler Roy
and
Pono Kadooka
each scored twice to lead the Earthquakes
in a key victory that solidified their second-place position in the KonaBaseball.com standings by day's end.
Mountain Thunder dug deep, but could not produce enough pitching for the multiple-game challenge
that Sunday required.
Similar to the Black Sox' decision to debut a youth pitcher in the noon game,
the Thunder called upon
newly-recruited
Ian Stormont
as their starter.
The neophite (who is visiting for the summer from Alaska) was reasonably effective, but
yielded three runs in as many innings,
enough for team manager
Michael Sofranko
to put a wrapper on the experiment.
Using a quartet of moundsmen that included
Larry Strozyk
and
Jon Vitale,
it was
Aaron Murphy
who was eventually charged with the loss.
Despite their loss,
the defensive highlight of the game for the Thunder was an outstanding
catch by
Victor Ibarra
in the sixth inning, keeping the game within reach, having dived to grab a blistering line drive off the bat of
Josh Carlucci.
Phil Prisby
went the distance for the Earthquakes to pick up his second win of the season against no defeats, his pitching statistics now
sitting alongside those belonging to the other league leaders.
The Earthquakes took the task right up to the loftier and undefeated Black Sox Sunday morning
and looked to be the goods midway through the contest. However, a nightmare of a sixth inning spelled their doom
as the Black Sox began rumbling the Richter scale themselves ... seven times to be precise.
Earthquakes starter
Steve Furchner
was strong on the mound, nursing a modest lead that began to
diminish as the game progressed, eventually turning into a modest deficit by end of the fifth inning.
Accordingly, the workhorse for the team was tagged with the loss.
For the victorious Black Sox, it was
Cameron Kawai
picking up the win with 10 strikeouts of opposing batters.
Offensively,
Eduardo Andrews
led all scorers with three tallies for the Black Sox.
Also responsible for multiple plate crossings were the Sox'
Kallen Hirashi
and
Cody Maeda
(Sterling Hettle
coming home in a pinch-runner role).
The final score of 13-5 does not fairly represent the overall
game, but most definitely points to a recurring issue that
the Earthquakes have wrestled with over the last couple of seasons - one inning that totally gets out of hand for them, spoiling an otherwise
great game.
The luncheon menu was roasted shark in the afternoon game, cooked
to sweet perfection over a canefire.
In reality, both teams should have been hungry for the win, yet neither squad was able to take command over the other until the very end ... in extra innings.
Knotted at two runs apiece throughout most of the game,
each team scored two runs in the late innings to send it into a 4-4 overtime (a KonaBaseball.com game is normally even innings).
Finally,
Jorge Perez
banged a base hit in the top of the ninth inning to bring
Oscar Degado, Sr.
home with the winning score.
Timo Holschuh
gets credit for the win for Kohala, while
Klifford Hawkins
is charged with the Sharks' loss, despite his strong, 111-pitch appearance. Fortunately, he had some cloud cover in Kailua-Kona on this afternoon.
It was anyone's game, but in the late innings, the Sharks made a number of bad baserunning decisions and squandered a golden opportunity when an ill-advised
bunt was attempted with runners on both second and third bases, with two outs. In the very next inning, the Canefire took advantage of that mistake, and the game was over.
The win hoists the Canefire from the bottom of the standings to a respectable third place on the laddar. By contrast, the reigning champion Mountain Thunder team, idle
on Sunday, has now slipped into the basement.
In a rare appearance as a starting pitcher,
Oscar Degado, Sr.
was tagged with the loss for Kohala.
The Canefire was never in this one, scrambling at game time to see which player would play which
position. With no starters available, the afore-mentioned veteran utility player drew the
short straw.
By the fourth inning, the game was all but over. The good news is that the no-pressure
situation provided ideal circumstances for
a high school youth to log a little experience on the mound.
And looking back on the scoresheet, for
Deveraux Aiona,
the experience was definitely worthwhile. In three and two-thirds innings,
the Kohala High School youth
pitched scoreless baseball, all while facing the league champs!
Of course, the Black Sox would never admit that the Sharks gave the Sox a run for their money in the noon game Sunday.
League home-run leader
Cody Maeda
recognized that the Sharks "might" have been able to pull the game out, given some additional luck.
The slugger reported that he is getting tired of the same old story week after week ... the one that reports
how the Black Sox crush each and every opponent.
Despite the slimmest of margins (the final score being 4-3), even this game may have been more in hand than the score indicates.
Kai Miller
earned the victory with
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco
logging a save.
Evan Moniz
took the loss for the Sharks.
Across the diamond, the Black Sox were busy sharpening their swords during the lunch break between games. The depth of the Black Sox
squad was advanced even further when it was announced that
Ikaika Baptista
was joining the team and would pitch in the late game.
While this addition to the roster meant very little to most of the Sharks (neophites to KonaBaseball.com since the days when
Baptista
dominated the league),
Tanner Benbow
knew what he and his teammates had in store for them.
In 2007, a 15-year-old
Benbow
had his own boy-becomes-a-man
day as a catcher for the Kona Crush, calling signals (generally, pitch #1) in a game that featured a trio of fastballers
(Ikaika Baptista,
Cameron Kawai
and
Eduardo Andrews)
that put a enormous welt on
Benbow's
left palm, while forever redefining the word "ouch" for the young man.
In this game however,
Tanner Benbow
was wearing the opposite team's jersey, and only had to face
Baptista
from the batter's box. The result was a strike out, and
Benbow
made no comment as to which situation felt worse.
The Black Sox' starter
Mike Oshita
earned the win with
Ikaika Baptista
taking credit for the save as the "pitcher of effort" with three perfect innings.
A hold was also credited to
Cameron Kawai
who struck out the side in both of the last two innings, 1-2-3.
On the day,
Jason Cheyne
eclipsed all scorers to lead the Black Sox offensively in their
double-dip triumph.
Oh, and by the way,
Cody Maeda's
request goes unfulfilled. The story is the same as the Black Sox continue to crush each and every opponent. And along those same lines, the word is out that
rock and roll is here to stay. So roll over, Beethoven, and tell Tchaikovsky the news.
For the victorious Canefire, the offensive punch came primarily from the lower half of
its batting order.
Multiple plate crossings were regular occurrances for the Canefire, thanks to the bats of
Teao Buchler,
Guy Newbury,
Devin Chong,
and
Milo Blain.
And in true multi-generational hardball style, veteran (yet rookie)
Warren Chong
appeared in a platooning role to also score.
Smiling
Tim Holschuh
finally had a good reason to smile, pocketing the win with a dominating performance atop the mound.
In fact, the only Black Sox batter who faired well against the righthander was
Sam Hori.
For the Black Sox, the pitching duties were passed around the dugout like a hot potato.
Without a pitcher on the bench, a handful of utility infielders and a catcher
took turns on the mound, with starter
Holden Pattengill
taking the loss.
All jokers seeming to have gone wild this weekend, the kings of clubs showed little heart, and there were no jacks for the Black Sox in this game.
In the pitching debut of youth player
Teao Buchler,
the defensive support was disappointing, to say the least. The
young pitcher deserved a 1-2-3 inning, or close to it. Instead,
a series of fielding errors put him on the wrong end of a five-run
margin by the end of the first frame.
Kliff Hawkins
went the distance for the victorious Sharks, making the most of a scant 66 pitches, to pick up the win.
Alex Akau
eclipsed all scorers with three plate crossings.
Also highly effective offensively for the Sharks was
Evan Lakin.
Regardless of the fact that the players and fans were forced to settle for only one game on this afternoon; everybody
got his money's worth. It was one of the most entertaining contests of the year.
Tied at 4-4 and again at 5-5, in the end the Earthquakes prevailed over the Thunder by the score of 8-6.
Starters
Jon Vitale
for the Thunder and
Steve Furchner
for the Earthquakes
both perservered seven innings, but it was
Phil Prisby
eventually receiving credit for the win at the expense of
Larry Strozyk.
In reality, the Earthquakes appeared to be the better team all game, but squandered opportunities
to take control of the scoreboard on a number of occassions, regularly stranding runners in scoring position at inning's end.
With the win, the Earthquakes have secured the head-to-head tie-breaker with the Thunder. The two squads will make up the
postponed game on August 8th. Undoubtedly, the Earthquakes will be looking for a sweep
against the Thunder in 2010. Who would have ever imagined that? ...
Jeff Barbas,
the Earthquakes' manager, that's who.
Games designated for days #12 and #13 were rescheduled.
Perhaps the most disappointed player on the field
was Sharks' starter
Keegan Lerma
who hurled six innings, leaving the mound
with a 4-2 lead, yet ending up with no decision.
On a relatively cool day and one in which the moundsman has a modest pitch count of
only 79, it was a surprise when
a reliever appeared on the mound for the final inning of the game.
That decision seemed to be the mistake of the day,
a mistake that might seal the Sharks' fate for a bottom-of-the laddar finish this season.
The Canefire immediately showed that they had
Lakin's
number, so
the Sharks' starting pitcher's brother
Keefe Lerma
was called upon to eventually retire the team from Kohala. But, the damage already had been done.
For the Canefire, the late-season acquisition of
Jason Kwiat
might be the tonic that the team needs to "quiet" their opponents
during the playoffs.
Under league rules, a player is eligible for the playoffs only
if the player has made appearances (an at-bat, pinch runner or an inning of play defensively) in at least
three regular-season games.
Assuming
Jason
appears in the two remaining regular-season games, he will
qualify.
Other teams have players in similar positions and were notified by the league.
Let's also give credit to
Holden Pattengill
for his on-the-diamond leadership
and pitch-calling,
Ahonima-Blanco
rarely shaking off a sign flashed by the youthful catcher. And let it be known that
Cameron Kawai
went 4-for-4, including a pair of doubles, while
setting a league record of four runs scored by one player in a five-inning game.
Beauty, however is a matter of opinion. From the point of view of the Earthquakes, this game was far from beautiful. In fact, it was downright ugly.
Trying to look on the bright side, one must realize that beauty is only skin deep.
But this game was so ugly, it was ugly to the bone, the mercy rule
finally ending manager
Jeff Barbas'
misery.
Among the lowlights,
Bobby Cherry
set a league record for four consecutive fielding errors by a shortstop.
Nevertheless, the Earthquakes maintain their respectable position of second place, with a game and a half lead over the Canefire
(whom they meet in the last game of the season) and only three games left on the docket ... one of them is against the Black Sox.
With the bloodless coup, the Earthquakes secure their first winning season in team history. Congratulations go to
Jeff Barbas
for a job well done at the helm of the Earthquakes team.
Jon Vitale
scored three runs, with teammates
Drew Camacho,
Aaron Murphy
and
Dylan Bunnell
each crossing home plate twice.
On the hill in the late innings when his team's bats got hot, it was that same
Aaron Murphy
claiming the pitching victory.
Across the diamond, the loss was the second such statistic for
Timo Holshuh
the pitcher in league with the most wins (4).
For the Earthqaukes, matters could have been even worse. They too had a game
scheduled for early in the day with a 3-hour layoff between contests. However, their reprieve
was the fact that the Black Sox rolled over to them at nine o'clock. Accordingly, the Earthquakes
had a 3-inning intersquad game that was essentially batting practice in preparation for the three o'clock game.
The Earthquakes took early control, scoring in each of their first two at bats.
Starting pitcher
Phil Prisby
yielded three runs to Mountain Thunder in the third inning, but
still maintained a modest lead.
However, he could not get through the fourth inning, reliever
Steve Furchner
called upon to snuff out what turned out to be another 3-run rally. The Earthquakes' lead was suddenly gone.
Prisby
was taken off the hook when his team scored a pair of runs in the bottom half of that same
fourth inning to tie the score.
Then, in the sixth inning, the game-winning base hit was produced by
Drew Camacho,
plating
Pedro Escobar
for Mountain Thunder's 7-6 victory.
Larry Strozyk
grabbed the win for Mountain Thunder with
Jon Vitale
getting a save.
And despite a strong outing,
Furcher
was charged with the disappointing loss for the Earthquakes.
After three seasons in the KonaBaseball.com League, the youth player (now a young adult)
will be moving forward with his enlistment in the United States Marines. Everyone in the league wishes him well,
and those who know him recognize the sportsmanship and character that he has displayed both on and off the field. America will undoubtedly be proud to have
Tanner Benbow
as a Marine. But first, they will need to give him a haircut.
Offensively, it was
Kenny Benson
eclipsing all players on the field with a pair of runs scored, including
what turned out to be the game winner.
In addition,
Ryan Landis
and
Dustin Lapinid
each produced a pair of base hits.
For Mountain Thunder, another junk-baller pitcher
Ian Glass
also went the full seven innings of this ball game,
a strong performance that unfittingly caused him to notch his third loss of the season.
The Glassman's winless record of 2010
illustrates the disappointing regular season for Mountain Thunder,
a team that once again failed to provide enough offensive support.
This time, the reigning champs could not sustain a sixth-inning rally
that began with lead-off singles by
Drew Camacho
and
Larry Strozyk,
each of whom came in to score on
Jon Vitale's
double.
But that is where Mountain Thunder's threat ended when, only a moment later,
Vitale
got picked off. With the bases empty,
Lerma
was able to relax and buckle down to retire the side. He then proceeded to put down the opponents, 1-2-3, in the seventh inning.
Manager
Ray Uribes
was pleased with the win, especially in view of the fact that barely nine players made it to the field for the start of the game.
However, they played quite well, even though some of the Sharks were feeling the morning-after effects of their participation in teammate
Mike West's
(understandably AWOL on this morning)
bachelor party Saturday night.
The victory temporarily moved the Sharks into a position for a potential fourth place tie with the Canefire, a hope
that was dashed by day's end when the Canefire beat the Earthquakes. It made little matter however, since the Canefire holds the head-to-head tie-breaker against the Sharks.
For MountainThunder,
the loss spells the first losing season in four years. Not since the days when the team was known as the "Canardlys" has
Mike Sofranko's
squad faced such a challenging regular season. However, with the playoffs about to begin, the slate is wiped clean, and
Mountain Thunder still plans on retaining its supremacy in the league ... come the end of September.
For the Canefire,
Tim Holchuh's
bat was hot all game, he and his teammates dominting throughout the suddenly-shortened contest.
Just about everyone touched his toe on home plate in the third inning, except
Jason Kwiat
... go figure!
And it was veteran pitcher
Jorge Perez
earning the victory for North Kohala.
An injury suffered by
Josh Carlucci
reduced the nine-member Earthquakes team to eight players, and
Steve Furchner's
need to leave the field for personal reasons further reduced the
on-field roster to seven, below the minimum under league rules.
The final score is booked at 14-0. Ten runs are booked as scored plus one per inning
for the remainder of the game as penalty for the mid-game forfeit.
The result of the loss for the Earthquakes turned out to be nil. Similarly, the victory for the Canefire had no effect on the final end-of-the-season standings.
While the win hoisted North Kohala into a tie with Mountain Thunder for third place, the head-to-head tie breaker belongs to Mountain Thunder, who swept the Canefire this year.
The forfeit is recorded as a 7-0 victory for the Earthquakes who now enjoy a bye this next weekend. Undoubtedly,
they will be watching the action in the winners' bracket to size up their next opponent. For the Sharks, an elimination
game is their fate next Sunday afternoon in the losers' bracket.
Jon Vitale
picked up the well-deserved win, hurling 91 pitches over six innings.
Turning the ball over to reliever
Aaron Murphy,
the three-run lead was quite comfortable, allowing the
Murphy
to record the save without having to deal with much pressure.
The loss was charged to
Jason Kwiat,
the late-season sensation for the Canefire
who got tagged in the second inning of this, his pitching debut.
In relief,
Timo Holschuh
was able to keep his team in the game, pitching scoreless ball for the duration of the contest.
However, the damage had already been done.
Offensively lead by
Drew Camacho,
the Thunder appeared to be the goods throughout the game, but the Canefire had its chances in the late innings.
Unfortunately, a pair of base-running mistakes cost Kohala dearly, erasing the team's chances to close the gap.
The victory keeps Mountain Thunder in the winners' bracket of the playoffs where they face the regular-season champion
Black Sox team next Sunday morning. The loss sends the Canefire into an elimination contest with the Sharks later that same day.
Other players receiving votes included (in random order)
Donovan Aiona,
Steve Furchner,
Cameron Kawai,
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco,
Teaotai Buehler,
Jon Vitale
and
Josh Carlucci.
In team MVP voting, the results are as follows:
Black Sox:
Cameron Kawai
Earthquakes:
Josh Carlucci
Thunder:
Drew Camacho
Canefire:
Jose Luis Ibarra
Sharks:
Mike West
Awards will be presented at the annual end-of-the-season
activities and all-star game, scheduled for October 3rd. Those events may possibly be accelerated to
September 26th, pending the outcome of the September 19th playoff game.
It was a frustrating day for the quad of Mountain Thunder pitchers
Ian Glass,
Larry Strozyk,
Aaron Murphy
and
Jon Vitale
who sought, but seemed unable to find, consistency in this game. In the end,
it probably did not matter. The strength of Black
Sox's starter, and the depth of the pitching staff
allowed co-captain
Atlee Riddle
to call upon
Eduardo Andrews
to close matters, 1-2-3 in the seventh inning after
Kawai's
pitch count crossed the 100 mark.
For the Black Sox, the victory sets up their hosting of the Earthquakes next week. For
Mountain Thunder, a second chance remains.
They have to chalk this one up to the old saying that, in life it really
doesn't matter whether you win or lose. What matters is how you look while you're doing your best to accommodate
everyone else's playing of the game. And on some days, we look better than on others.
The difference in this game was definitely the outstanding performance by
Sharks' pitcher
Keegan Lerma,
going the distance for the win
against a foursome of moundsmen for the Canefire, starter
Kamalani Manantan
charged with the loss.
For the Sharks,
Ryan Landis
lead all scorers with three plate crossings. Also, credit goes to
Carl Kimura
for crisp defensive play all game, including a pair of putouts and an assist in the same inning, effectively retiring the side almost single-handedly.
The Sharks now look ahead to their next do-or-die contest, a matchup against Mountain Thunder.
In a rare appearance as catcher, the Earthquakes'
Greg Okumura
did an outstanding job
filling in for the injured
Josh Carlucci,
the team's MVP.
Okumura
also contributed offensively, producing the go-ahead run in the fourth.
And although the contest was eventually settled in later innings,
the tone of dominence by the Earthquakes was
maintained throughout the game, thanks in some degree to his on-the-diamond leadership.
The game was far from being one-sided, however.
Briefly, the Black Sox looked to be back to their usual winning ways. In their own half of the fourth inning,
John Brumbaugh's
lead-off single
resulted in the tying score. The seasoned veteran came home on
Eduardo Andrew's
base hit. But before the rally developed too much steam, the Earthquakes were able find a way to control the damage.
From the start of the game, the Earthquakes'
Steve Furchner
had command of his pitches and enjoyed solid defensive support from his fielders.
The winning pitcher went the distance with 104 pitches and helped his own cause offensively
with the game-deciding plate crossing in the sixth inning.
Then in the seventh inning, the Earthquakes'
Ronnie Waltzer,
known for his highly-spirited cheerleading-style antics from both the bench and coaches' boxes,
tacked on an insurance run to seal the deal.
For the Black Sox,
Cody Maeda
was in the wrong place at the wrong time (when the Earthquakes got hot - maybe he was the reason the got hot) and was tagged with the loss.
However, one bright spot for the Black Sox was the quality of the game that was played by
Sam Hori,
batting 2-for-4 with a double and a run scored.
This game will undoubtedly be remembered as the major highlight for the 2010 Sharks, a team
that had a challenging regular season, finishing in the basement.
After some untimely decisions that were made in previous games, it appears as though manager
Ray Uribes
may have "l e r m e d" his lesson this year ... observing pitch counts and calculating the right time
to replace his starter, whether it be
Keefe Lerma
(today's winning pitcher) or his older brother
Keegan Lerma
(capturing the save on this day).
For Mountain Thunder,
Jon Vitale
was charged with the loss. By the time his pitch count got close to 100,
he began tossing meatballs and was unable to get out of the top of
the seventh. In frustration, he was forced to turn to the ball over to
Larry Strozyk
to record the final Earthquakes' out.
This milestone officially ends Mountain Thunder's three-year dominance of the Kona Baseball.com league.
What started as a shocker, when the Canardlys changed their name and started playing serious baseball,
ends in a shocker as well. But let's not forget what happened in between, and let's give credit to
Mike Sofrankos'
team's accomplishments, for the meat in this sandwich is the first team in
league history to three-peat as league champions.
It could be argued that this simply wasn't the same team as in the past,
as the long-standing regulars fondly remember the bat of
Cameron Smay
and the glove of
Andrew Emsley.
In addition, there was some rumored dissention on the bench.
So now starts the time to think about 2011, and the Thunder will surely be a force once again.
Fortunately for the Black Sox, one call was answered by
Eduardo Andrews
who arrived at the field mid-game, just in time to spark his teammates.
He then proceeded to pick up the save in relief of winning pitcher
Cameron Kawai.
Brothers
Bailey
and
Holden Pattengill
were surprisingly quiet in this game, the pair batting a pathetic
zero-for-six on the day.
Nevertheless, other regulars including
Sam Hori,
John Brumbaugh,
Mike Oshita
and
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco
provided enough offensive punch to get the job done.
For the Sharks, the
Lerma
brothers split duties on the mound. The deliberate style of righty
Keefe Lerma
provides an interesting contrast to his older brother
Keegan's
slow curves, thrown with a south paw.
But on this day, the Black Sox were not fooled.
It was
Keefe
who ended up taking the loss, his first loss of the year.
The game moved along very rapidly, the seven innings played in just over
two hours. Batters were regularly putting the ball into play, and the game's overall quality was action-packed and reasonably crisp.
All pitchers displayed control, so there were only two walks issued - one on each side. Each team also had a couple of hit batsmen, but nothing serious ... and only a little time lost.
As a result of this game, the playoffs will come down to a final battle between the first-place
Black Sox and the second-place Earthquakes - true to the schedule maker's seeding chart. The only twist is that the regular season's second-place finishers have
the edge. The Earthquakes have come through the playoffs unscathed, dominating the winners' bracket.
On the other hand, the Black Sox come to the championship via a rocky road in the playoffs, barely keeping
alive in the losers' bracket.
Accordingly, in order to capture the flag, the Black Sox need to beat the Earthquakes twice - this Sunday, September 19th, and next
Sunday, September 26th. For the Earthquakes, the taste
of a championship is only one game away, manager
Jeff Barbas
ready to claim the league crown this week, without any further delay.
By the end of the third inning, there was little doubt that
the Earthquakes were
not going to simply cruise through the winners' bracket of the playoffs unscathed.
The power of the Black Sox suddenly seemed to be back. And now, the jacks of clubs are
determined to show that, just like in the regular season,
they deserve to be the kings of diamonds in the playoffs as well.
The final score was 11 to II ... which might look like a tie score. Unfortunately, the
Earthquakes' tally is displayed Roman numerals. Instead, it is a paltry 2, when displayed in Arabic characters.
And of course, that is the standard used by Kona Baseball.com league officials. Accordingly, the record
books will show 11-2 in favor of the Black Sox.
With all this fancy math cleared up, there is no doubt that
Cameron Kawai
was the star of this game, both offensively and defensively.
In relief of starter
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco,
Kawai
entered the game in the second inning with the scored tied at one run apiece, and successfully put a lid on the Earthquakes' only rally.
In the right place at the right time,
Kawai's
teammates gave him an eight run lead only an inning later when just about everyone in the Black Sox lineup crossed home plate.
Among those scoring in the third-inning barrage was
Kawai
himself. In fact,
Cameron Kawai
scored three times in the game, eclipsing all players on the field. Upon glancing at the scorebook, it appears as though he beat the
Earthquakes single-handedly. Of course, he had help.
For the Earthquakes, their chance to grab the brass ring is delayed.
Steve Furchner
took the loss, but it really was not his fault.
Sloppy infield play was the culprit, especially in the third inning.
The lowlight was when the ball rolled through an unnamed infielder's legs. As such, a would-be, inning-ending, double play
suddenly turned into a run scored. Compounding matters, the error left the pitcher in a bases-loaded situation.
Let's face it. A championship team simply cannot afford to make such mistakes.
Will things be different next week when team captain
Jeff Barbas
returns?
Posting a final score of 16-0, the Black Sox put an exclamation point on a season in which they dominated the Kona Baseball.com league. In fact, so powerful were
the 2010 Black Sox that their early clinching of the regular season worked to the team's disadvantage. They came close to being knocked out of the playoffs on more than one occasion
(almost eliminated by the lowly Sharks - the last-place team that finished surprisingly high in the playoffs - 3rd), but
the Black Sox buckled down when their backs were against the wall.
Give credit to co-captains
Nick Hill
and
Atlee Riddle
for keeping the squad together despite a number of key players being hit-and-miss all season (as far as their attendance is concerned), perhaps
allowing the surf and other activities to take precedence.
What initially looked like a manager's dream (lots of talent from a merger with the Crush at the start of the season), resulted in
a team of too many players, some of whom could not get enough early-season playing time so as to maintain their enthusiasm.
In the end, the Black Sox put it all together however, and that is what counts. And they did it with their core of regular guys, players like
Sam Hori,
John Brumbaugh,
the Pattengill
brothers and
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco,
all present to reap the harvest and to enjoy achievement's reward.
That said, the star of this game (and all season long) was undoubtedly
Cameron Kawai,
2010 team MVP, 2010 pitcher of the year and 2009 league MVP.
It was, once again, the workhorse of the pitching staff
Cameron Kawai
who was in the spotlight. The undefeated pitcher (7-0) was on cruise control,
hurling a no-hitter through five and two-thirds innings when
Phil Prisby
finally broke the ice for the Earthquakes with a single.
Up to that point,
Kawai
had thrown close to a perfect game.
In the first inning, he made a hit batsman out of
Tyler Roy.
But, let's face it ... this guy has had it coming for years, ever since he was a kid! Fortunately,
the errant fastball merely grazed
Roy's
jersey, and first base was awarded. Besides that, the only other flaws in
Kawai's
performance were a pair of walks yielded to
Nate Figueroa,
a player who is rarely so patient and selective at bat,
and to the previously-mentioned
Tyler Roy
with one out in the sixth.
Through four innings, the Earthquakes kept the game within reach, although the Black Sox
were slowly but steadily establishing a modest three-run lead.
Then in the top of the fifth, the soon-to-be champs
expanded the margin with an eight-run rally, neither starting pitcher
Phil Prisby
nor reliever
Steve Furchner
able to contain the red-hot Black Sox.
There was a smattering of action in the fifth, sixth and seventh innings, but
the Earthquakes' Cindarella hopes of "going from worst to first" were over.
The Black Sox team had sufficiently displayed its supremacy. Everyone in that team's lineup
scored at least one run, with
Atlee Riddle
and
Eduardo Andrews
each touching home plate thrice.
Championship game-day tensions suddenly eased, and players began
entering the batter's box with a renewed outlook and fresh attitude toward the game of baseball, one by one, each
one like a wide-eyed little boy stepping up to the plate on the baseball diamond for the first time.
Of course, each one knew that it was his last at bat in the 2010 baseball season,
and each one seemed to stop briefly to savor the moment.
Captain
Jeff Barbas
called on his own number to pitch the final inning. Much to everyone's surprise, including his own,
Barbas
pitched one of the finest innings of relief in his career. Relaxed and composed,
his curve balls curved just right, his sliders had batters swinging at the wind, and he succeeded in getting others to put the ball into the air.
And although
John Brumbaugh
coaxed a walk from the lefty,
Brumbaugh
was eventually left stranded on first base at inning's end.
For the Earthquakes, the 2010 season has been a hugh success, rising from last place in 2009
to second spot in the regular sesason, coupled with an identical finish in the playoffs.
Credit for the advancement of the team clearly sits with its captain
Jeff Barbas.
The end-of-the-season activities were held on October 3, 2010. In addition to the presentation of awards,
the pitch-thru-tire and long-ball derby were conducted.
The highly-popular pitch-thru-tire event pays tribute to Cleveland Indians' pitching legend
Bob Feller
who is said to have developed his pitching skills as a child by hanging an old tire from a tree behind his grandfather's barn in rural Iowa, then
pummeling the blackwall all day with baseballs.
In the KonaBaseball.com version of pitch-thru-tire, a tire is placed at home plate on top of a pair of cinder blocks.
Hitting the tire scores one point, and bull's eye is worth two points. A triple-score is earned by pitcher who lodges the ball in the tire itself, mimicking a perfect curve-ball or slider.
After 2 optional warm-up throws, each contestant is allowed 5 pitches.
In this year's pitch-thru-tire contest,
Jeff Barbas
took the early lead with a first-round score of 5 points.
He was joined in the second round by
Mike Sofranko,
Carl Kimura
and
Dustin Lapinid,
each of whom scored 4 points in the opening frame.
Jeff Barbas
repeated his five-point performance in the second round, as did
Dustin Lapinid. The others faulted.
Then in the third and final round,
Jeff Barbas'
dominance came to an end when he scored only 2 points.
Dustin Lapinid
proceeded to double that score with a score of 4 points ... good enough for the medal.
In the long-ball derby (KonaBaseball.com's version of a home-run derby), orange cones are
set up mid outfield. After all, baseball is played at an elevation that is only a few feet above sea level, and such
a game is played at an NCAA-sanction field, few players ever hit out-of-the park home runs. In fact,
Cody Maeda
of the Black Sox was the only player to do so this season.
On this day, it took only two rounds for the winner to be determined.
Atlee Riddle
clearly took charge of the first round, smashing seven long balls before committing ten outs (defined as any swing that does not result in a long ball).
Keefe Lerma (4 long ball scores),
Carl Kimura (6 long ball scores)
and
Dustin Lapinid (6 long ball scores)
joined him in the second round.
In that second round,
Keefe Lerma
matched his first-round score of 4 long ball scores, but
nobody could match
Dustin Lapinid's
performance, winning the contest going away. When he reached a score of 5, everyone's interest turned to the cake and presentation of the awards.
As such,
Dustin Lapinid
won both contests this year, a feat that was performed only once before in KonaBaseball.com league history, when
Ryan Landis,
although not even a pitcher, swept the events several years ago.
The Most Valuable Player in the league for 2010 was
Tim Holschuh
of the Canefire, ironically the first team to be eliminated from the playoffs.
Next, the league's Pitcher of the Year award was presented to the coach of the Black Sox
Nick Hill
accepting on behalf of
Cameron Kawai,
the only pitcher with a perfect record this season.
In team MVP voting, the awards were made as follows:
Black Sox:
Cameron Kawai
Earthquakes:
Josh Carlucci
Thunder:
Drew Camacho
Canefire:
Jose Luis Ibarra
Sharks:
Mike West
Medals were awarded to those players as
well as to
Dustin Lapinid
for his victorious performances in both the pitch-thru-tire and long-ball derby.
Trophies were presented to
Jeff Barbas
of the Earthquakes (runners-up) and
to co-captains
Nick Hill
and
Atlee Riddle
of the 2010 KonaBaseball.com Champions - the Black Sox.
Black Sox co-captains Nick Hill and Atlee Riddle celebrate their team's 2010 championship. John Brumbaugh displays perpetual plaque.
KonaBaseball.com League umpire-in-chief Jim Donovan presents Earthquakes' manager Jeff Barbas with the runners-up trophy.
Dustin Lapinid of the Sharks wins both the Long Ball Derby and the Pitch Thru Tire contests.
The 2010 ceremonial cake is now just a digested memory.

Pre-season news
Managers' Winter Meetings
Free Agency Activity
Maui team to play in goodwill tournament
Update - goodwill tournament almost full
Going ... going ... gone

Maui goodwill tournament exceeds expectations
Three-day, five-game event deemed a complete success
Friday afternoon: Kona - 9, Maui - 4
Saturday morning: Kona - 7, Maui - 2
Saturday afternoon: Kona - 16, Maui - 11
Sunday morning: Maui - 9, Kona - 3
Saturday morning: Kona - 7, Maui - 0
Shall we do this again, Maui?

Free-agent draft this Sunday
Lots of uncommitted players "floating around"
Free-agency fizzle
Everyone scrambling to join an established team

Other Items of Interest
Off-the-field news
New players invited for the new season

Game Day #1 - May 2, 2010
Opening day in mid-season form
Zippidy-do-dah
Whole lotta quake'n going on
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox .... 1 0 -
Earthquakes ......... 1 0 -
Mountain Thunder .... 0 0 0.5
Island Tat Sharks ... 0 1 1
Kohala Canefire ..... 0 1 1

Game Day #2 - May 9, 2010
Oh Mama Mia on Mother's Day
No sweat - rookie delivers game winner for Thunder
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox .... 1 0 -
Earthquakes ......... 1 0 -
Mountain Thunder .... 1 0 -
Kohala Canefire ..... 0 1 1
Island Tat Sharks ... 0 2 1.5

Game Day #3 - May 16, 2010
Come, let's stroll ... stroll across home plate
Earthquakes claim top of standings
Black Sox talk the talk ... and walk the walk ... with walk-off winner
Standings
W L G/B
Earthquakes ......... 2 0 -
Shut-D Black Sox .... 2 0 -
Mountain Thunder .... 1 1 1
Kohala Canefire ..... 0 2 2
Island Tat Sharks ... 0 2 2

Game Day #4 - May 23, 2010
The minor fall, and the major lift
Thunder back to 500+ ball ... first time this year
Army of Black Sox goes Shark hunting, bags ten of 'em
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 3 0 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 2 0 0.5
Mountain Thunder ................... 2 1 1
Kohala Canefire .................... 0 3 3
Island Tat Sharks .................. 0 3 3

Game Day #5 - May 30, 2010
Upsets abound on Memorial Day weekend
Canefire outlasts Earthquakes' late rally
Sharks notch a win against the champs, 8-6
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 3 0 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 2 1 1
Mountain Thunder ................... 2 2 1.5
Kohala Canefire .................... 1 3 2.5
Island Tat Sharks .................. 1 3 2.5

Game Day #6 - June 6, 2010
Sox secure top spot; Earthquakes and Sharks split a double-header
Black Sox remain undefeated, overpower Thunder. 5-2
Earthquakes double up on Sharks
Sharks get the last laugh, 9-4
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 4 0 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 3 2 1.5
Mountain Thunder ................... 2 3 2.5
Island Tat Sharks .................. 2 4 3
Kohala Canefire .................... 1 3 3

Game Day #7 - June 13, 2010
Friday the 13th falls on a Sunday this month for bewildered Thunder
Black Sox shut Thunder out for sweep in season 2010
Black Sox hang on to outlast Canefire
Earthquakes muffle Thunder, 10-6
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 6 0 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 4 2 2
Island Tat Sharks .................. 2 4 4
Mountain Thunder ................... 2 5 4.5
Kohala Canefire .................... 1 4 4.5

Game Day #8 - June 20, 2010
Lots of pops on Father's Day
Earthquakes shake up Sox ... maybe too much
Canefire cooks Sharks, 5-4
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 7 0 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 4 3 3
Kohala Canefire .................... 2 4 4.5
Island Tat Sharks .................. 2 5 5
Mountain Thunder ................... 2 5 5

Game Day #9 - June 27, 2010
Black Sox clinch regular season top spot - earliest in league history
Thunder swipes back at Canefire, 10-2
Mountain Thunder starting pitcher
Larry Strozyk
was somewhat ineffective on the mound in this game, but the lanky righthander
was in the right place at the right time (still in the game when his team amassed four scores
in their second at-bat) to pick up the
win. The real credit however belongs to reliever
Pedro Escobar
who earned only a save for a supurb outing that consisted of a full, five innings of scoreless pitching.
Sharks close in - within one run of Black Sox
Let's face it - it still wasn't enough, but at least somebody came close to upsetting the Black Sox in season 2010.
Black Sox remain undefeated - clobber Sharks in Nitecap, 8-1
Having devoted so much energy to the noon game, the Sharks' hopes were
somewhat diminished going into the second game of the double header. The Sharks recognize the depth of their opponents' pitching staff, and
had hoped to stun the league leaders early in the day.
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 9 0 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 4 3 4
Mountain Thunder ................... 3 5 5.5
Kohala Canefire .................... 2 5 6
Island Tat Sharks .................. 2 7 7

Game Day #10 - July 10, 2010
Saturday surprise
Black Sox play a game of crazy-eights, get trumpted by Canefire
Unable to field a full team of nine players, Black Sox coaches
Nick Hill
and
Atlee Riddle
simply did not have enough cards in their deck Saturday morning, folding to
the kings of diamonds from Kohala, 12-3.
With so many players on its roster, nobody guessed that the Black Sox
would ever have trouble rounding up a full team, but
surfing and softball seemed to take their toll on this day, thereby ending an undefeated season,
a feat accomplished only once in league history ... by the 2006 Mariners.
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 9 1 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 4 3 3.5
Mountain Thunder ................... 3 5 5
Kohala Canefire .................... 3 5 5
Island Tat Sharks .................. 2 7 6.5

Game Day #11 - July 11, 2010
Well, it's been a long day
Sharks end Canefire's brief euphoria
After knocking off the league leaders, the Canefire returned to Simmons Field Sunday morning, this time to face the team at the bottom of the standings.
And in this topsy-turvey world, the unexpected occurred once again, a five-inning, mercy-rule shallacking of the Canefire, by the final score of 13-3.
It takes 13 innings to decide 1st game - of scheduled double-header!
At noon, the Thunder and Earthquakes began the first game of a double-header planned for Sunday. The 3:00 p.m. nightcap
had been rescheduled from July 4, 2010, and ended up being postponed again.
It is the first KonaBaseball.com game rescheduled due to darkness, a reality that became apparent when the clock passed 4:30 p.m., and the first
game remained unfinished.
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 9 1 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 5 3 3
Mountain Thunder ................... 3 6 5.5
Kohala Canefire .................... 3 6 5.5
Island Tat Sharks .................. 3 7 6

Game Day #14 - August 1, 2010
Baseball action resumes
Canefire Kwiats Sharks, 5-4
It was a come-from-behind victory for the Kohala Canefire as new-to-the-league
Jason Kwiat
delivered the game-winning base hit, shocking the Sharks in the last inning.
Timo Holshuh
went the distance for the win while
Evan Lakin
was charged with the loss.
Sox sock it to Earthquakes, 13-0
It was
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco
pitching a no-hitter
in Sunday afternoon's game, using only 65 pitches to extinguish the foes.
In what could be described as a beautiful performance
of precise deliveries,
only a pair of errors kept this from being a perfect game for the dominant Black Sox.
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 10 1 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 5 4 4
Kohala Canefire .................... 4 6 5.5
Mountain Thunder ................... 3 6 6
Island Tat Sharks .................. 3 8 7

Game Day #15 - August 8, 2010
Thunder - up from down under
Earthquakes capture white flag from Black Sox
The Black Sox are like types of blood. On any given Sunday, they may show up with their "A" team or their "B" team, but
after sewing up the top spot, they showed up with type "O" in the morning game, only five players ready at game time. Accordingly, a forfeit was declared, and
an all-league pick -up scrimmage game was held.
Mountain Thunder comes from behind, then pounds Canefire, 12-6
In the noon game, the Canefire let a 6-4 lead slip out of its
fingers late to give way to last season's champs.
Mountain Thunder nibbled back with one run in the sixth inning, then
exploded in the seventh inning with seven runs to seal the deal.
Mountain Thunder tops Earthquakes, 7-6
Mountain Thunder climbed another rung on the laddar to third place by
completing a victorious double header ... against two different teams.
In a scheduling snafu, compounded by a 13-inning stand-off between these same two teams in mid-season,
the Mountain Thunder had a double-whammy of a double header on Sunday.
Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 10 2 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 6 5 3.5
Mountain Thunder ................... 5 6 4.5
Kohala Canefire .................... 4 7 5.5
Island Tat Sharks .................. 3 8 6.5

Game Day #16 - August 15, 2010
Dog days of Summer - underdogs prevail
Sharks end regular season on upbeat, 3-2
It was bottoms up at the end of the season for the underdogs on Sunday, starting with the results of the morning game.
The Sharks'
Keefe Lerma
went the distance for the victory, keeping Mountain Thunder scoreless through five innings.
Credit also goes to catcher
Tanner Benbow
for calling a fine game to make the
most of
Lerma's
array of junk pitches in what may be
Benbow's
final game this year.
Canefire scores knockout over Earthquakes
It was Earthquakes's starting pitcher
Phil Prisby
effective through two innings, but
ending up tossing what looked like "pills" and "frisbies"
at the Canefire
for an end-of-the-season lowlight from the point of view of the Earthquakes.
Eight Canefire runs in the third inning resulted, at least in part, to four walks by
Prisby,
the righthander having trouble finding the strike zone, not even blaming home plate umpire
Roman Kowalski
for his misfortune.
2010 Final Regular Season Standings
W L G/B
Shut-D Black Sox ................... 10 2 -
Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 6 6 4
Mountain Thunder ................... 5 7 5 (prevailing over Canefire in head-to-head play)
Kohala Canefire .................... 5 7 5 (yielding to Thunder in head-to-head play)
Island Tat Sharks .................. 4 8 6

2010 Regular Season Pitching Records
Cameron Kawai, Black Sox ___________ 3-0 (1 hold)
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco, Black Sox _____ 2-0 (1 save)
Kai Miller, Black Sox ______________ 2-0
Keefe Lerma, Sharks ________________ 2-0
Eduardo Andrews, Black Sox _________ 1-0 (1 save)
Shadow Diessner, Thunder ___________ 1-0
Ben Swett, Thunder _________________ 1-0
John Holley, Black Sox _____________ 1-0
Mike Oshita, Black Sox _____________ 1-0
Jorge Perez, Canefire ______________ 1-0
Aaron Grant, Black Sox _____________ 0-0 (1 save) (1 hold)
Devereaux Aiona, Canefire __________ 0-0 (1 save)
Clarence Alcoran, Black Sox ________ 0-0 (1 save)
Pedro Escobar, Thunder _____________ 0-0 (1 save)
Ikaika Baptista, Black Sox _________ 0-0 (1 save)
Phil Prisby, Earthquakes ___________ 3-1
Larry Strozyk, Thunder _____________ 2-1 (1 save)
Timo Holschuh, Canefire ____________ 4-2
Klifford Hawkins, Sharks ___________ 2-1
Steve Furchner, Earthquakes ________ 2-3
Aaron Murphy, Thunder ______________ 1-2
Jon Vitale, Thunder ________________ 0-1 (1 save)
Jason Hurst, Earthquakes ___________ 0-1 (1 hold)
Jeff Barbas, Earthquakes ___________ 0-1
Oscar Delgado, Sr., Canefire _______ 0-1
Holden Pattengill. Black Sox _______ 0-1
Teao Buchler, Canefire _____________ 0-1
Keegan Lerma, Sharks _______________ 0-2 (1 save)
Evan Moniz, Sharks _________________ 0-2
Ian Glass, Thunder _________________ 0-3
Lanson Paolo, Sharks _______________ 0-3
Kamalani Manantan, Canefire ________ 0-3

Game Day #17 - August 22, 2010
Higher-seeded teams prevail in first round of playoffs
Sharks apparently "poisoned" by wedding cake
Only a week ago, the morning after
Mike West's
bachelor party, his teammates (sans the goom-to-be) finished the regular season with
an upset win over Mountain Thunder.
What a difference a week makes. Who would have ever guessed that
the Sharks would be unable to field a team for the game scheduled for the day after
Mike's
wedding?
Thunder takes 4th in a row from Canefire, 5-2
The two teams that ended up tied for third place in the regular season took to the
field Sunday afternoon in what promised to be an evenly-matched pair of opponents.
However, despite the teams' identical records, their head-to-head play has been decidedly
one sided ... in favor of Mountain Thunder. In fact,
the reigning champs dominated North Kohala in all three
meetings in 2010 ... now make that four.

Game Day #18 - August 29, 2010
Ballots cast as league MVP's team sees end of its season
Most valuable player voting completed
With all teams' ballots now in, the Most Valuable Player award for 2010 will go to
Tim Holschuh
of the Canefire, ironically the first team to be eliminated from the playoffs.
Black Sox continue to control the weather, beat Thunder, 9-3
Sunday morning, it was
Cameron Kawai
proving worthy of his teammates' selection as most valuable player
with a six-inning, two-hit performance against Mountain Thunder in the winners'
bracket of the playoffs.
Across the diamond,
Drew Camacho
also proved worthy of his teammates' MVP selection,
turning a pair of walks into scores, accounting for two-thirds of his team's production
of runs.
Sharks snuff Canefire out of playoffs
After a late-season surge that put the team into a tie for third place, the
Kohala Canefire is the first team to be eliminated from the playoffs in season 2010,
sweet sugar cane lunched on and munched upon by the Sharks on Sunday afternoon, 12-2.

Game Day #19 - September 5, 2010
A day of upsets, as the playoffs progress
Earthquakes rattle Black Sox, 5-3, to punch their green ticket to championship game
Despite an inauspicious start, wherein Black Sox pitcher
Holden Pattengill
hit the lead off batsman
Bobby Cherry
with a pitch, then walked the second batter
Tyler Roy
(both of whom came around to score),
Pattengill
handed the ball over to reliever
Cody Maeda
at the top of the fifth inning with the score tied ... just in the nick of time.
As such, it was the reliever who was charged with the loss
against a more ready-to-play Earthquakes team Sunday morning.
Thunder blunder, taken from down under, 5-2
It was a "three-peat" for Mountain Thunder in 2009, but they are "four-lorn" in 2010. Despite all odds,
the lowly Sharks gnashed their teeth Sunday morning,
sending the 3-year dynasty team home for year. Who would have guessed that the
reigning champs would be de-throned by a last-place team?

Game Day #20 - September 12, 2010
Regular season's top two teams headed for championship showdown
Black Sox end Sharks' Cinderella dreams, 5-3
The last-place Sharks took it right up to their loftier opponents Sunday morning, but
could not hold onto an early-game, two-run lead, eventually falling to the top-of-the-pile Black Sox.
It was an elimination game that the Sharks appeared to take more seriously than the Black Sox,
manager
Nick Hill
frantically on the phone an hour before gametime, attempting to roust his
players, some of whom may have been glued to television sets on this, the opening
weekend of the NFL.

Game Day #21 - September 19, 2010
Not so fast, Earthquakes
Black Sox force winner-take-all championship

Game Day #22 - September 26, 2010
Black Sox Reign Supreme
Cameron Kawai says "Good-bye" to Earthquake batters

Game Day #23 - October 3, 2010
End-of-season festivities
Pitch Thru Tire and Long-Ball Derby Results
Awards presented

2010 Final Regular Season Standings
* W L G/B
1 - Shut-D Black Sox ................... 10 2 -
2 - Kokonuts Bar & Grill Earthquakes ... 6 6 4
4 - Mountain Thunder ................... 5 7 5 (prevailing over Canefire in head-to-head play)
5 - Kohala Canefire .................... 5 7 5 (yielding to Thunder in head-to-head play)
3 - Island Tat Sharks .................. 4 8 6
* - order of the teams' finishes in the playoffs

Pitchers - 2010
Cameron Kawai, Black Sox ___________ 7-0 (1 hold)
Hopu Ahonima-Blanco, Black Sox _____ 2-0 (1 save)
Kai Miller, Black Sox ______________ 2-0
Eduardo Andrews, Black Sox _________ 1-0 (2 saves)
Shadow Diessner, Thunder ___________ 1-0
Ben Swett, Thunder _________________ 1-0
John Holley, Black Sox _____________ 1-0
Mike Oshita, Black Sox _____________ 1-0
Jorge Perez, Canefire ______________ 1-0
Aaron Grant, Black Sox _____________ 0-0 (1 save) (1 hold)
Devereaux Aiona, Canefire __________ 0-0 (1 save)
Clarence Alcoran, Black Sox ________ 0-0 (1 save)
Pedro Escobar, Thunder _____________ 0-0 (1 save)
Ikaika Baptista, Black Sox _________ 0-0 (1 save)
Keefe Lerma, Sharks ________________ 3-1
Larry Strozyk, Thunder _____________ 2-1 (1 save)
Timo Holschuh, Canefire ____________ 4-2
Klifford Hawkins, Sharks ___________ 2-1
Phil Prisby, Earthquakes ___________ 3-2
Steve Furchner, Earthquakes ________ 3-4
Keegan Lerma, Sharks _______________ 1-2 (2 saves)
Jon Vitale, Thunder ________________ 1-2 (1 save)
Aaron Murphy, Thunder ______________ 1-2 (1 save)
Jason Hurst, Earthquakes ___________ 0-1 (1 hold)
Jeff Barbas, Earthquakes ___________ 0-1
Oscar Delgado, Sr., Canefire _______ 0-1
Holden Pattengill. Black Sox _______ 0-1
Teao Buchler, Canefire _____________ 0-1
Jason Kwiat, Canefire ______________ 0-1
Cody Maeda, Black Sox ______________ 0-1
Evan Moniz, Sharks _________________ 0-2
Lanson Paolo, Sharks _______________ 0-3
Ian Glass, Thunder _________________ 0-4
Kamalani Manantan, Canefire ________ 0-4
Go2 2010 Season's News
