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Infamous New York Little League - Danny Almonte - The Rolando Paulino Little League All-Stars -- which was led by pitcher Danny Almonte and stunned the sports world in the Little League World Series two years -- will be making a local appearance. Sort of. Much of the remnants of that Rolando Paulino team, which rode the arm of Almonte, who was actually two years older than the rest of the field, are still playing together for the Bronx, N.Y.-based FNHA team that will compete in the PONY League World Series starting Friday and continuing through Aug. 16 at Lew Hays Field in Washington. FNHA will play Davenport-West, Iowa, in the opening game of the PONY League World Series at 5:30 p.m. Saturday. While Almonte is not part of the FNHA team and Paulino is not the manager, nor has any association with the team, 10 of the 15 players on the FNHA roster were part of that infamous squad that marched their way to a third-place finish in Williamsport two years ago, only to have their victories stripped as a result of findings that showed Almonte, who was 14 at the time, used a falsified birth certificate claiming to be 12 years old. Two years removed from the incident, the doubters still follow. Rosy Perdomo, the sports coordinator for the FNHA Pony League team, has become quite conditioned to opposing players, coaches and tournament directors questioning the age of the kids on her team. "It get a little annoying," Perdomo said. "Danny (Almonte) was the only kid that was overage. Every tournament we go to it seems like, again and again, people question how old these kids are and I think it gets to the kids a little sometimes. I have all the paperwork and have proven that these kids are the right age." While there might be some doubt that still lingers around the FNHA team, Abraham Key, president and CEO of PONY Baseball, Inc., is satisfied that the playing field is, indeed, level. "We have checked the birth documentation, the scorebooks and all of their literature," Key said. "We have been able to verify that these players are exactly who they say they are and fall within the age limitations. There is no skepticism on our part. This team has been checked thoroughly." North Allegheny manager Jamie Howell, whose team could face FNHA on Monday in the second round, is worried more about getting his team ready to compete than the potential for another team to use a player that is too old. "I am absolutely not worried about this team having kids that overage," Howell said. "They earned their spot here in the field and the people at PONY baseball, I know, have looked into everyone's age and everything is alright with them. I don't worry about their age." While Howell is not worried about FNHA, or any other team for that matter, using a player who is older than allowed by rules, he admits that the FNHA team carries a certain stigma. "When we found out that they (FNHA) made the field, we said 'Oh, that's the Almonte team'," Howell said. "So, I guess it kind of takes away a little from what they do on the field because everyone still remembers what happened when they were in Little League." By Colin Dunlap FOR THE TRIBUNE-REVIEW Wednesday, August 6, 2003
The Kyle Chapman 14 year old all-star team finds itself one win away from the PONY World Series early Tuesday morning following a thrilling come-from-behind 5-4 victory over an incredibly tough East Cobb Georgia team on Monday night in St. Amant, Louisiana. Before we go to the game highlights, the author would be remiss for not acknowleging the contribution of Charlie West to Monday night's victory. During a Monday afternoon batting practice at a municipal park in Gonzales, Louisiana, Charlie West reached down deep and gave the K.C. 14's an inspirational speech, the likes of which have not been heard this side of Iwo Jima and various Civil War battlefields. FCC regulations prohibit the author from a direct quote of the speech, but let it suffice to say that if Charlie West had been present at the Alamo, Texas' southern border would now probably be the Panama Canal. Whatever the motivation, K.C.'s 14's knew that Monday night's game was critical. Win, and they were one win away from the PONY World Series. Lose, and they would have to win three consecutive games in two nights against two very tough teams. Now on to the highlights. East Cobb won the coin toss and elected to be the home team. K.C. came up in the top of the first and went down 1-2-3. East Cobb began the game with a walk, advanced the runner to third on two fielder's choices, but failed to score when its cleanup hitter grounded out to K.C. starting pitcher, Jamie Reingold. Scoreless after one inning. The author would never accuse East Cobb of dirty play. However, Jamie Reingold-- who pitched a very effective 1st inning against East Cobb-- came up to bat in the top of the 2nd inning. On a one strike count, the East Cobb manager sent in a set of signs. On the very next pitch, East Cobb's pitcher, Nathan Vinyard, hit Jamie in the ankle, sending him to first. A pickoff, and two strikeouts later, East Cobb held K.C. scoreless in the top of the 2nd. In the bottom of the 2nd, K.C. fielding made all the difference. East Cobb's pitcher led off the inning with a hard single down the third base line. On a 1-1 count, with none out, Clay Remouli hit a vicious hit-and-run line drive into shallow left field. Unfortunately for East Cobb, the rifle shot landed in the glove of a leaping Matt West, who doubled Vinyard off of first base for a beautiful double play. The excellent fielding was all the more important because the next batter singled, but was stranded when Jamie Reingold struck out the East Cobb batter to end the inning. Scoreless after two innings. K.C. registered two quick outs in the top of the third inning. Corey Triche got K.C.'s first hit of the game (up the middle), but quickly became the third out when he was caught stealing with an 0-2 count on Brian Borski. Jamie put East Cobb down 1-2-3 in the bottom of the inning. Scoreless after three innings. K.C. again went down 1-2-3 in the top of the 4th inning. In the bottom of the 4th, East Cobb drew first blood on a solo home run by first baseman Omar Byrd. At the end of 4, it was East Cobb 1, K.C. 0. K.C. revved up its offense in the top of the 5th, tallying 2 runs to take the lead 2-1 on a Jamie Reingold single through the right side, an error by the second baseman on a Daniel Rothenberg grounder, with a throwing error by the second baseman putting runners on second and third. Sean Lamont brought in a run on an error grounder to shortstop. Alex Cernoch pinch-ran for Daniel Rothenberg. With a 1-1 count on Joe Silver, Joe attempted a suicide squeeze. He did not successfully bunt, but he did set a world class pick behind which Alex Cernoch was able to avoid a tag by the catcher and score K.C.'s second run. East Cobb tied the game in the bottom of the 5th on a two out walk, stolen base and double to center field. Thus, it was tied 2-2 after 5 innings of play. K.C. went down 1-2-3 in the top of the 6th inning. In the bottom of the 6th, East Cobb turned a bad bounce into 2 big runs. East Cobb started the inning with two quick outs. After 2 singles, Matt West relieved Jamie Reingold on the mound. He finished a walk to the next East Cobb batter that Jamie started with a 2-0 count. Thus, with the bases loaded and 2 outs, East Cobb catcher, Jason Butts hit a hard ground ball to first base. The ball took a really hinky bounce over George Murphy and into right field. Two runs scored and East Cobb ended the 6th inning with a 4-2 lead. In the top of the 7th, East Cobb's players and coaches could be seen beginning their victory celebration. They obviously haven't faced K.C.'s die-hard 14's. Daniel Rothenberg led off the top of the 7th inning with a single up the middle. Sean Lamont followed with a walk on a 3-2 count. George Murphy loaded the bases with a single to the left side. Mark Robichau hit a fielder's choice grounder to the second baseman, getting George out at second, but scoring Daniel Rothenberg from third. Thus, it was 4-3 East Cobb with runners at 1st and 3rd, one out. Corey Triche tied the game with a beautiful sacrifice fly to left field, driving in Sean Lamont from third, and sending Mark Robichau to second. With a runner on second and two outs, Brian Borski worked a walk on a 3-2 count, and Karl Pringle came to the plate. Karl ran the count to 3-2 and fouled off three pitches. Finally, he hit a fly to right field that fell between the right fielder and the second baseman. Mark Robichau scampered home from second with the go-ahead run, but the inning ended when the right fielder fired a bullseye to the East Cobb catcher to nail Corey Triche at the plate. In the middle of 7, K.C. led 5-4. Matt West got the first two East Cobb batters on strikeouts to begin the bottom of the 7th inning. However, with two outs, Josh Means and Nathan Vinyard hit back to back singles to give East Cobb runners at 1st and 2nd. Clay Remoldi ran the count to 2-2, before Matt West struck him out to end the game on a high inside fastball. And just like that, K.C.'s 14's are one win away from the PONY World Series. At 5:30pm today (Tuesday), Corpus Christ Westside plays the East Cobb Astros in an elimination bracket game. Immediately following that game, K.C. will play the winner of that game. If K.C. wins, they are the South Zone champions and go on to the PONY World Series. If K.C. loses to East Cobb or Corpus Christi on Tuesday night, that sets up a winner-take-all game for all the marbles Wednesday evening. This is a very happy, very exhausted, very excited Scott Rothenberg saying, "I love these wins, but could you guys PLEASE make them a little less exciting. The K.C. parents can't take many more of these nailbiters!!!! GOOOOOOOOOOOO K.C.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! (and pass the Rolaids!!!)"
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About KC's Fall Program

Posted by Lisa Zapata at Aug 3, 2003 5:00PM PDT ( 0 Comments )
Kyle Chapman PONY League is dedicated to preparing baseball players for advancement to the next level of play, which is High School baseball and beyond. We expect the same dedication to baseball as High School coaches will demand in the High School programs. DURING OUR FALL SEASON THERE ARE TWO VENUES OF PLAY AT KC. FALL SEASON TEAMS. All players will be distributed among 6 to 7 teams during our Fall Season. There are no divisions, and all teams play each other. The purpose of the KC Fall Season is to keep our returning players’ skills sharp, as well as prepare our incoming 13 year-olds for the Spring season ahead. Returning Spring 03 players from the National League will return to their Spring team. SELECT TEAMS. The newest addition to the KC Program was implemented in the Fall 2002 Season. The League created a Select Program for week-end play, to give the more talented players opportunity to play against a very high level of competition. Practice will be on week-ends which there are no games, at each coaches' discretion. These teams are made up on an By Invitation Only basis. There will be at least one each 13 Y/O and 14 Y/O team. **Incoming 13 year-old players must play on a KC Fall Season team to be eligible for Select Teams.
What does PONY stand for? PONY is an acronym for Protect Our Nation's Youth. The concept for name originally came from boys at the local YMCA in Washington, PA and stood for "Protect Our Neighborhood Youth," but when PONY became an international program in the early 1950's "Neighborhood" was switched to "Nation's."
Kyle Chapman PONY League's 14 year old all-star team combined sensational pitching by righthander Brett Gibson with timely pinch hitting by Joe "the Hammer" Silver and the fleet feet of Sean "Maury Wills" Lamont, to defeat a very tough Garland Cubs team from North Texas in K.C.'s first game of the 2003 PONY South Zone Championship on Saturday night. The visiting K.C. team managed an infield single and stolen base by Matt West, but no more, to go scoreless in the top of the first inning. Garland threatened in the bottom of the 1st inning. With two outs, it converted an infield error and a grounder double just inside the first base line into a second and third situation. However, Brett Gibson induced Garland's big pitcher to line out to Daniel Rothenberg in deep right-centerfield for the third out of the inning. Scoreless after 1. K.C. went down 1-2-3 in the 2nd, and Brett Gibson sandwiched a fly to centerfield between two nice strikeouts to do the same to Garland. Scoreless after 2. K.C. managed only a two out walk to Brian Borski in the 3rd inning, but could not convert. In the bottom of the third, with a runner on second (courtesy of a single and a wild pitch) and one out, Garland hit a ground ball to Brian Borski at third. The runner on second was trapped. Brian ran him back to second, where Corey Triche received the throw, ran him toward third, where Matt West received the throw and ran the runner down for the second out of the inning. Brett ended the inning by striking out Garland's 3-hole hitter, stranding a Garland runner on second base. Once again, scoreless after 3. K.C. went down 1-2-3 again in the 4th inning, and Brett Gibson induced Garland into 3 straight groundouts in the bottom of the frame. Scoreless after 4. In the top of the 5th inning, fleet Sean Lamont hustled out an infield single, advanced to second on a wild pitch, stole third, and scored on a wild pitch. It wasn't pretty, but it broke the scoreless standoff. K.C. leads 1-0 in the middle of 5. In the bottom of the 5th inning, Brett got the leadoff batter to fly out to left field, the second batter to ground out to third, and induced a hard grounder to short. Matt West fired to first, but the throw was a little high. Beau Faulk did his Shaquille O'Neal impression, leaping high in the air to snag the jump ball, and landed on the base a fraction of a second before the Garland runner to keep the Cubs off the board at the end of 5. K.C. led 1-0 after 5. In the top of the 6th inning, Joe Silver pinch hit for Mark Robichau with one out in the inning. Flash back to the night before. Joe managed to tie for second in the home run hitting derby. Well, he took this at-bat as an opportunity to break that tie, hammering a 2-0 fastball down the left field line and over the fence for a 2-0 K.C. lead. In the bottom of the 6th, Garland threatened again, getting a single from its leadoff hitter, who advanced to second on a wild pitch. However, Brett came up big and tough once again for the umpteenth time this post-season. He got three successive batters on a strikeout, a flyout to Beau Faulk at first, and a groundout to Brian Borski at third. After 6, the score remained 2-0 in favor of K.C. Daniel Rothenberg and Beau Faulk opened the 7th inning with twin long flyouts to centerfield. Sean Lamont reached first on an infield error, but was caught stealing to end the K.C. threat. In the bottom of the 7th, the big Garland pitcher hit a long fly ball to left field. Mark Robichau went back to the fence, and hauled the fly in for the first out of the inning. After the K.C. parents started breathing again, Terence Jackson lined a double down the rightfield line. Daniel Rothenberg gathered the ball in and fired a strike to Matt West at second, just a millisecond too late to nail the fast Garland runner. Keegan Johnson flied out to Jamie Reingold in center, but Jackson advanced to third on a wild pitch. A Garland pinch hitter ran the count to 2-2 against Brett Gibson, but with two outs and a runner on third, Gibson was not to be denied. He fired a high hard fastball into the upper right hand corner of the strike zone to advance Kyle Chapman's 14 year old all-stars another step closer to their goal. Final score, K.C. 2, Garland 0. How dominating was Brett Gibson on the mound? Seven innings, NO runs, 4 hits, NO walks, 5 strikeouts, and one VERY sweaty t-shirt. On Monday night at 7:30pm, K.C. will face the winner of the Corpus Christi Westside vs. East Cobb Georgia Astros game that will be played tomorrow (Sunday) afternoon. It should be an exciting game, certainly worth a short 5 hour drive to LOVELY Gonzales, Louisiana. This is Scott Rothenberg saying, "I was up until 2:30am last night due to some veangeful boudin balls, but it was worth it to see tonight's game. GOOOOOOOOOOO K.C.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" image
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PONY 14 South Zone Tournament Update

Posted by Frederick Chan at Jul 31, 2003 5:00PM PDT ( 0 Comments )
Welcome to the PONY14 South Zone Tournament Special Events Pre-Tournament Meeting -- Friday, Aug. 1, 4:30PM at the Holiday Inn -- All Managers and Business Managers are REQUIRED to attend. Tournament Banquet - Friday, Aug. 1, 6:30PM at the St. Amant Park Recreation Center. Team members in uniform shirts, tucked in, without caps, will be admitted free of charge. Parents and other fans are encouraged to attend at a charge of $6 per person. HOME RUN CHALLENGE -- Immediately following the banquet, with participation of two players from each team, the Home Run Challenge will be free of charge to teams and parents. Admission to Tournament games: Tournament passed good for all games will be available at $12 for adults, $6 for age 14 and under. Single game tickets will be sold at $4 for adults and $2 for age 14 and under. There is a full concession stand and NO ICE CHESTS will be brought into the park without appoval of the tournament Director.