PITTSFIELD, Mass. – Pitching depth was key for the Pittsfield Babe Ruth 13-year-old All-Stars in Wednesday’s Western Massachusetts tournament opener.
Four different hurlers combined to hold Westfield to four hits in a 5-3 win at Deming Park.
Jason Fields earned the win after allowing one run in 2 and a third innings of work on the hill.
Pittsfield skipper Bryan Maloy said he had to change gears when it became clear his starting pitcher was not going to be able to go deep into the game.
“I was going to go with [Sebastian Herrera] for the full 95 [pitches],” Maloy said. “He got a little arm soreness. So we ended up going by committee, and everyone did their job.”
Herrera threw just 33 pitches before leaving with nobody out in the top of the third.
Robby Bazinet, Fields and Gavin Maffuccio combined to eat up the rest of the outs.
Bazinet, who moved from shortstop to the mound in the third, inherited bases loaded and nobody out.
He got a stellar play on a foul pop from catcher Sam Gyurjan and a strikeout and appeared ready to get out of the jam with no damage when Westfield’s No. 2 hitter popped up to the infield.
But an error on the play allowed two runners to score and give the visitors a 2-0 lead.
Balancing out the miscue was the inning’s second web gem when center fielder Mario Zerbato ranged well to his right and made a diving catch for the third out.
It stayed a 2-0 lead for Westfield until the bottom of the fourth, when the top of Pittsfield’s lineup got a second crack at the visitors’ starting pitcher.
Maffuccio led off with a single up the middle, the first of four straight hits for Pittsfield.
Herrera singled to left, and Gyurjan singled to center to load the bases for Bazinet, who drove in a pair of runs with a single to left field and took second on the throw home.
Gyurjan and Bazinet then scored on RBI groundouts from Zerbato and Cameron Reynolds, respectively, to give Pittsfield a 4-2 lead.
Westfield got one of those runs back in the top of the fifth, but Pittsfield stretched its lead back to two runs in the bottom of the frame.
Maffuccio worked a two-out walk and scored on Herrera’s RBI double to left-center to make it 5-3.
And that is where it ended with Fields delivering a 1-2-3 sixth and Maffuccio pitching around a two-out infield single in the seventh.
Pittsfield goes to Westfield on Thursday to continue the best-of-three series at Bullens Field. The rubber match, if necessary, will be on Tuesday back at Deming.
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Pittsfield Celebrates Arbor Day at Taconic
By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
Mayor Peter Marchetti presented the framed original cover art for the day's program.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Generations of Taconic students will pass the tree planted on Arbor Day 2026 as they enter school.
Pittsfield's decades-long annual celebration was held at a city school for the first time. Different vocational trades at Taconic High School worked together to plant the Amelanchier, or flowering serviceberry, mark it with a plaque, record the ceremony, create artwork for the program's cover, and feed guests.
Parks, Open Space, and Natural Resources Manager James McGrath said the students' participation reflects the spirit of Arbor Day perfectly: learning by doing, serving the community, and helping Pittsfield grow greener for generations to come.
"It's not unknown that trees help shade our homes, help clean our air and water, they support wildlife, and make our neighborhoods and public spaces more beautiful and resilient," he said.
"And Arbor Day is our chance annually to honor that gift and to remember that when we plant something today, we are investing in the future of our green world."
The holiday was established 154 years ago by J. Sterling Morton and was first observed in Nebraska with the planting of more than a million trees.
CTE environmental science and technology teacher Morgan Lindemayer-Finck detailed the many skilled students who worked on the event: the sign commemorating this Arbor Day was made by the carpentry and advanced manufacturing program, specifically students Ronan MacDonald and Patrick Winn; the multimedia production program recorded the event, and the culinary department provided refreshments.
The program's cover art was created by students Brigitte Quintana-Tenorio and Austin Sayers. The framed original was presented to Mayor Peter Marchetti.
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