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Pittsfield Brings Deep Lineup to Babe Ruth World Series

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com Sports
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Pittsfield Babe Ruth 13-year-old All-Stars have scored 100 runs in eight games between the Western Massachusetts and New England championship tournaments.
 
That does not happen without production up and down a very potent lineup.
 
"You've got someone like Andrew Hammill who, you know, he's a pretty unassuming and quiet guy, but he's just been hitting the ball really hard," Pittsfield coach Ben Stohr said this week.
 
"We feel like, top to bottom, whatever nine or 10 guys we put out there all bring something to the table. Really, all 14 of them all belong on this team. They've put together competitive at-bats, and I feel comfortable with all of them. We've got guys on base every time I'm in the third-base [coaching] box, and I feel like something big can happen that inning."
 
Pittsfield's depth was never more on display than in the semi-final and final of last month's New England Regional.
 
It played those games without either Morrie Fried or Jackson Almeida, who had prior athletic commitments. Fried was hitting over .700 with a home run and five doubles in six games; Almeida was hitting nearly .500 with 14 runs batted in, six doubles and a pair of triples in the same span.
 
Hammill went 2-for-4, and Pittsfield piled up 16 hits in an 11-4 win over Maine in the semifinals. In the title game, Hammill again went 2-for-4, and the team had nine hits in a 6-0 win over Waterford, Conn.
 
This week, Pittsfield is back to full strength with all 14 players available as it heads to Glen Allen, Va., for the Babe Ruth World Series.
 
On Friday, Stohr will lead his squad against Mid-Atlantic Regional Champion from Williamsport, Pa., in the first game of pool play.
 
The other teams in the tournament's five-team "National Division" are: Southeast Champion Winchester, Va.; Pacific Northwest Champion Willamette Valley, Ore.; and Virginia State Champion Manassas, which beat Winchester, 5-3, in the state final but skipped the regional.
 
Add in host Glen Allen, which plays in the tournament's American Division, and Virginia has three-teams in the 10-team field.
 
Pittsfield's Friday morning opener could bring a matchup against Pennsylvania flame-thrower Briar Persing, who struck out eight in three innings of the Pennsylvania state title game and 11 in six innings of the regional final.
 
"I've been doing some research on that first game," Stohr said as he watched his team in its final full practice at Deming Park on Monday morning. "We're playing Pennsylvania. It seems like they have a legitimate stud pitcher. Strikeout to walk ratio is something like 15 or 16 or something like that.
 
"But with our guys, as much as that means he's got good stuff, we feel like if they're thrown in the zone, we can put together good at-bats."
 
In the New England Regional final, Pittsfield faced a Connecticut state championship team that had allowed just four runs total in its first four games and prevailed, 6-0. And the host team, Trumbull, Conn., allowed 32 runs in five games at the regional but more than half, 17, came in a loss to Pittsfield.
 
Twelve of the 14 Pittsfield players are hitting better than .300 over the last month. Eddie Ferris is hitting .542 and started the all-star season red-hot with a 4-for-4 performance followed by a 3-for-4 game against Westfield.
 
On the basepaths, Pittsfield has gotten six stolen bases apiece from Connor Paronto and Noah Arnold and four steals from Brendan Socie.
 
Paronto and Cam Hillard have been the team's workhorses on the mound with 14 innings pitched and 16-and-one-third innings pitched, respectively. Hillard has allowed just one earned run for an ERA of .435 with 20 strikeouts and 12 walks. Paronto has an ERA of 2.00 in five appearances, including a three-inning save of Hillard's win in the regional final.
 

Tags: Babe Ruth,   youth baseball,   

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Pittsfield Kayak Kiosk Proposal Withdrawn After Pushback

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — It is the "end of the road" for a kayak kiosk proposal after pushback from community members and the City Council.

Whenever Watersports has withdrawn its proposal for a kayak rental program at Onota Lake. Safety concerns arose around the company's self-serve model though it was stipulated that users sign liabilities away with a waiver as part of the process.  

"It's unfortunate. I had hoped the outcome would be different and I think (Recreation and Special Events Coordinator Maddy Brown) and you as well thought this was an opportunity to provide an additional level of services, recreation opportunity to folks at the park through a modern-app-based system," Park, Open Space, and Natural Resource Program Manager James McGrath said to the Parks Commission on Tuesday.

"It would have cost the city nothing to have this sited. We wouldn't be responsible for any maintenance but there would be maintenance to the units and to the boats, etc. Everyone was going to get life preservers and there are instructions through the app so we thought it was it was safe and secure and a good fit for the park."

In December, the commission granted a request for the pilot program and City Solicitor Stephen Pagnotta had been reviewing and revising a proposed contract that had not yet been approved. Last week during City Council, residents Daniel Miraglia and Gene Nadeau submitted a petition requesting a legal opinion on the proposal from the solicitor.

Miraglia expressed concerns about the lack of a bidding process, safety hazards, and the impact on a local business that rents kayaks on the lake. Onota Boat Livery owner Caryn Wendling was upset to hear that an out-of-town company would be allowed to operate the kiosk on the same lake as her business and also cited safety concerns.

Councilors asked that Pagnotta look into items such as the commission's authority with entering into contracts and if a bidding process would be needed for this.

Later that week, a request to the Conservation Commission for determination for the kiosk at Burbank Park located within the buffer zone associated with the inland bank was withdrawn. According to the application, it was proposed to be located before the beach area coming from the main parking lot.

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