Newport Beach Little League: Giant steps
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Bryce Alderton
NEWPORT BEACH - They say defense wins championships.
Nowhere does the phrase hold more true than at Wednesday’sNewport
Beach Little League AAA championship game, as the 15-7-1 Giants defeated
the 19-2 Red Sox, 6-2, at Lincoln #2 Field.
The Giants flashed the leather, making the plays when they had to,
while the Red Sox lapses in the field in the first inning proved to be
their downfall.
The Giants jumped out with four runs in the first inning, cashing in
on Red Sox throwing errors.
Jack Gerdau and Beau Attyah (single) reached base to set the table for
Eric Chebil, who singled them both in.
Josh Harrison then reached on an error. Next came starting pitcher
Jamie Heinecke, who grounded out to third, but two Red Sox throwing
errors led to Chebil and Harrison both coming around to score.
That was all the runs the Giants would need as Jamie Heinecke and Jack
Gerdau, who both went three innings, giving up one run apiece, stymied
the Red Sox, allowing just six hits.
Peter Weidner, who singled in the fifth, gobbled up ground balls that
came his way and raced to the bag to record the out on two occasions.
After the game Giants Manager Ken Gerdau gave two words for the key to
the game, “good defense.”
“That’s what it comes down to,” Gerdau said. “Jamie (Heinecke) kept it
low to get the ground balls and they made the plays.”
Heinecke and Gerdau combined to force 10 groundball outs, limiting the
Red Sox to six hits.
Facing first and second with no outs in the bottom of the fifth,
Gerdau pitched out of the jam, striking out the next three batters, two
swinging and one looking.
“You don’t see that happen too often,” said Ken Gerdau of Jack
striking out the side.
The Red Sox other scoring chance came with two outs in the fourth, as
Chris Freeman, who finished the game 2 for 3 with two singles, singled to
center and Will Morrow walked. Both stole bases to set up second and
third with two outs, but Gerdau struck out Risser to end the inning.
The Giants defeated the Red Sox for the second time this season. The
teams split their two regular-season matchups.
After the game, Red Sox Manager Bart Thomsen gave credit where credit
was due.
“(The Giants) played fantastic baseball from the first pitch to the
last pitch,” Thomsen said. “They played fantastic defense. We crushed the
ball but they came up with the big plays. Our pitchers pitched well, but
our defense had some lapses so we weren’t at our best. But that’s the
great thing about sports, you never know before the game is played who
will win. That’s why we play six innings instead of deciding it on
paper.”
Wednesday’s game was the first time the Red Sox had scored less than
four runs all season, Thomsen said.
Parker Werline and Blake Thomsen (single) combined on the mound for
the Red Sox, with Werline allowing four hits and Thomsen striking out
three.
In the second, Risser threw from his catcher position to Thomsen at
short to nab a Giants’ runner trying to steal second.
The Giants’ John Cazort had the only extra-base hit in the game,
tripling in the third.
Eric Hansen, who reached on a single, scored the Red Sox’ second run
on a wild pitch in the bottom of the sixth before the Giants settled down
to record the last two outs in the inning.
In practice, Ken Gerdau said he simulates game situations and works on
defense 75% of the time, which paid off for his players and him in
Wednesday’s game.
“They were so excited (about playing in the championship game),”
Gerdau said. “We’ve been talking about this since February. I’m totally
jazzed, I’m just proud of the kids.”
The Red Sox settled down after a rocky first, collecting a run in the
second when Risser, who had reached base on an error, scored on David
Rabosky’s groundout to short.
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