Check out my 2012 Mid-Atlantic Preview and see how right and wrong I tend to be. There's usually 4-5 teams that I hit the nail on the head and one that I miss completely on. Last year, it was Delaware. I didn't expect their pitching depth to go past their ace.
Read about this year's New England Region Preview to see how the other teams in Bristol, CT look.
Tournament History: In the 12 years of the Mid-Atlantic region, Pennsylvania, New York, and Maryland have each won three championships. New Jersey has gone to Williamsport twice since the split with New England, and Delaware has its lone trip to the LLWS in 2003 with Naamans Little League. Nobody from the District of Columbia has ever advanced to a regional final.
Read about this year's New England Region Preview to see how the other teams in Bristol, CT look.
Tournament History: In the 12 years of the Mid-Atlantic region, Pennsylvania, New York, and Maryland have each won three championships. New Jersey has gone to Williamsport twice since the split with New England, and Delaware has its lone trip to the LLWS in 2003 with Naamans Little League. Nobody from the District of Columbia has ever advanced to a regional final.
2013 Team Pedigree: Newark National (DE) is making its third
straight trip to the Mid-Atlantic region tournament. For the second consecutive
season, at least one player is back from the previous year. This time it’s big
man Nate Hardcastle. Capitol City (DC) is a regular in Bristol, CT but has only
reached the regional tournament once since 2008.
The remaining four teams in the Mid-Atlantic tournament have won their state championship for the first time in league history. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake (NY) is from the Albany region which hasn’t sent a representative to Bristol since Colonie in 2004. Lionville’s (PA) section hasn’t represented the state of Pennsylvania since the last time District 27 won a state championship back in 2003. That team was Lower Perkiomen. East Greenwich (NJ) is ALSO from an area of its state that doesn’t win often. Section 4 in New Jersey hasn’t sent a team to the regional since 1991 before this year. Berlin (MD) isn't traditionally strong and hasn't won a state title previously, but this group has been built for this run at the regional title.
Interestingly, only East Greenwich (NJ) has tasted defeat so far this tournament. Each of the other five champions are all unbeaten. In the pitch-count era, that's very surprising and unusual.
The remaining four teams in the Mid-Atlantic tournament have won their state championship for the first time in league history. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake (NY) is from the Albany region which hasn’t sent a representative to Bristol since Colonie in 2004. Lionville’s (PA) section hasn’t represented the state of Pennsylvania since the last time District 27 won a state championship back in 2003. That team was Lower Perkiomen. East Greenwich (NJ) is ALSO from an area of its state that doesn’t win often. Section 4 in New Jersey hasn’t sent a team to the regional since 1991 before this year. Berlin (MD) isn't traditionally strong and hasn't won a state title previously, but this group has been built for this run at the regional title.
Interestingly, only East Greenwich (NJ) has tasted defeat so far this tournament. Each of the other five champions are all unbeaten. In the pitch-count era, that's very surprising and unusual.
Team Previews (Tournament Records in Parentheses)
Capitol City, DC (7-0): After a short hiatus, Capitol City
is back. District of Columbia’s traditional power ran through the DC Tournament
fairly easily especially in pool play and its semifinal game. In the
championship against rival Northwest Washington, Capitol City used a
momentum-boosting home run from Sofia Ohanian to break open a tight game in the
middle innings before winning comfortably. Capitol City relies on great team
defense, strong pitching, and its timely hitting. Always an underdog in
Bristol, Cap City will try and change some opinions about D.C. Little League as
a whole.
Newark National, DE (6-0): Newark needed just six games to
get through Delaware this year. That’s the beauty of double elimination when
you stay in the winners’ bracket. This is the third trip in a row for Newark
National and they’ve had a lot of success in Bristol. Newark is 7-1 in pool
play during the last two years. In 2011, Newark made the semifinals. Last year,
they lost a 1-0 decision to Par-Troy East (NJ) in the regional final. Could a
third time be the charm? Nate Hardcastle is the name on everyone’s tongue
because he played last year and has dominated the state of Delaware with his
mid-70s fastball and monster home run power. Joey Davis might be the hottest
player in the tournament though with four home runs in his last two games.
Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake, NY (13-0): Burnt Hills enters the
regional tournament out of nowhere, at least according to this downstate New
York blogger. While BHBL has never won a state title before, this team has had
plenty of success with sectional championships as 10s and 11s. They rolled
through districts and sectionals and took home the state championship with very
good pitching and timely hitting from players like Jack Wyatt, Evan Bowers, and
Derek Haughey. Hunter Valley is a top pitcher.
East Greenwich, NJ (12-1): East Greenwich is one of the
unlikeliest state champions from New Jersey in a while. It doesn’t mean the
boys from South Jersey can’t play ball. East Greenwich’s defense was superb in
its state championship victory over Toms River East especially at shortstop
with Josh Crowding and in right field with Hunter Kelly. Shawn Dougherty and
Sean Szestowicki supply the offense at the top of the order. On the mound, East Greenwich tends to give a different look often. They maximize their abilities by throwing a couple pitchers per game and sometimes as many as four or five... all on purpose. They like to give you a different look every now and then and keep their staff available and fresh.
Berlin, MD (10-0): Berlin’s trip to Bristol has been years
in the making. Berlin is the only team in the Mid-Atlantic region to win state
titles as 10s, 11s, and now 12s. The team is led by Tristan McDonough who has
an overpowering fastball and big bat. Hayden Snelsire doesn’t get the same
publicity but tossed five shutout innings in the winners’ bracket final against
Conococheague to send Berlin to the state final. Along with McDonough, Wes
Powell and Matt Kinsey have big power. Others including Snelsire and Jack
Rosenberg can hit it out of the park as well.
Lionville, PA (11-0): Lionville’s offense has been a
juggernaut all tournament long and averaged 14 runs per game. When you have a
dominant pitcher like Michael Rodriguez on the staff, you don’t even need that
much. Joe Janick carries the team’s best stick, to the point that he was the
winning run and still intentionally walked in the state semifinals. It’s
probably an inadvisable move in the regional since Connor Kalten his behind him
and hit a game-winning double. The next night, he blasted a home run of his
own.
Projected Records
Pennsylvania 3-1
Delaware 3-1
Maryland 2-2
New York 2-2
Washington D.C. 1-3
Washington D.C. 1-3
New Jersey 1-3
Semifinals: Pennsylvania over New York 7-4, Delaware over
Maryland 3-1.
Final: Pennsylvania over Delaware 9-3
You can hear more of my thoughts on the entire East Region tournament by listening to Little League Insider Radio: Episode 2.
To listen to the debut episode of Little League Insider Radio: CLICK HERE
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You can hear more of my thoughts on the entire East Region tournament by listening to Little League Insider Radio: Episode 2.
To listen to the debut episode of Little League Insider Radio: CLICK HERE
Join the Little League World Series discussion on Facebook with some of the best baseball minds around right here: Little League World Series Discussion
Like our Facebook page: Little League Insider
Please spread the word about the blog to anyone who loves the Little League World Series. To support all the hard work on this blog, Please...
3 comments:
No way DC wins a game. I've seen them play. They're NOT good. No talent.
Delaware concern is pitching. Not as deep as the last two year's
I like the way you think! Go, Lionville!
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