Berkshire All-Stars Fall Short in Bay State Games Finale

By Stephen Dravisiberkshires Staff
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ROXBURY, Mass. — Some of the best high school girls basketball players in Western Massachusetts went east with one simple mission: to show the world that Berkshire County hoops is legit.
 
Message delivered.
 
The West came up a little short on Sunday evening — literally and figuratively — in a Bay State Games gold medal game where the Bostonians' height proved decisive.
 
But after going 5-1 over three days and splitting with the Metro team that won the title, 78-65, on Sunday, the Berkshire all-stars have nothing to feel down about.
 
"I think the biggest thing is these kids came out here just wanting to prove they can play," West coach Matthew Ward said. "A lot of the people here think all of our kids are from Springfield. I think it's extra special that they're all from Berkshire County.
 
"We have really good basketball out there. That's what these kids wanted to prove, and they certainly did that."
 
West had no answer for Metro's dominance in the post on Sunday. Six-foot forward Melissa Baptista of Somerville scored 17 points, and 6-1 pivot Denia Stewart of Boston's New Mission grabbed 21 rebounds with four blocks.
 
The Metro team led by as many as 22 in the fourth quarter before West pulled within 11 with 30 seconds left with Pittsfield High rising sophomore Peyton Steinman hit a 3-pointer to make it 76-65.
 
But Metro's guards Tan'egra Drayton and Kathiana Monestine made two of four foul shots down the stretch to put the game out of reach.
 
Steinman finished with a game-high 29 points, and Pittsfield resident and Miss Hall's School sophomore Grace Guachione grabbed 10 rebounds to go along with six steals.
 
The West team featured six public high school players and six prep school players.
 
From Ward's Miss Hall's team, he selected Guachione and Dalton's Sarah Wilson. The Berkshire School contributed four players: Stockbridge's Mary Ward, Lenox's Sarah Kinney and Lee's Madison and Camryn Biasin.
 
Steinman was joined by her Pittsfield teammate, senior Lauren Carnevale. Two players came from Mount Greylock: senior Lucy Barrett and sophomore Jenna Benzinger. A couple of recent graduates — Lenox's Liz Mitts and Drury's Emily Moulton — rounded out the roster.
 
"I hadn't known that much about the Bay State Games," Barrett said. "I'd heard that the West got killed by 60, 70 points every game.
 
"I know I went in just hoping to change that around. I didn't know what the other competition was going to be like, but I knew our team was going to give it everything they had every single game. And that would get us somewhere."
 
 

 


Tags: bay state games,   high school sports,   womens basketball,   

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Pittsfield Celebrates Robert 'Bob' Presutti on Arbor Day

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Bob Presutti, right, is presented the Hebert Award in 2017 for his volunteer efforts at Springside Park. He died in 2023 at age 88.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A tree has been planted next to the Berkshire Athenaeum in honor of local "giant" Robert Presutti.

Officials celebrated Arbor Day on Friday by installing a commemorative plaque next to the American elm sapling. This is a tree that James McGrath, the city's park program manager, said Presutti would have been particularly proud of.

"Today is a day where we yes, celebrate trees, but today is also a day where here in the city we intentionally try to acknowledge the good work of folks in our community who spend their time and their efforts and their talents to make Pittsfield a more beautiful place," he said to a crowd of about 20 people.

"Today we are honoring a longtime community volunteer named Bob Presutti. I'm sure a lot of you here know Bob and know his contributions to the city, not only when it comes to trees and parks but also to the Retired Senior Volunteer Program."

The longtime volunteer passed away last year at the age of 88. He contributed more than 10,600 hours to RSVP and had great impacts on the Parks Department over the years from sharing his knowledge and talents to ensuring that workers were safe when working on trees.

"This morning I went through my emails to see how many emails Bob Presutti sent me since the year 2001 when I started with the city. Bob Presutti sent me 14,000 emails and nearly every single one of those was about trees," McGrath said, prompting laughter and smiles from attendees.

One thread struck him as particularly important because it showed Presutti's empathy when it comes to the safety of city workers while caring for trees.

"There were multiple emails from Bob about the need to get the Parks Department maintenance guys into a program learning about chainsaw safety and learning about ladder safety. He was really into making certain that our city workers were well cared for and had all of the instruction that they needed and in fact, he even offered his own time and services after he became certified to teach our city workers," McGrath said.

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