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Pittsfield 10-Year-Olds Open Little League Tourney with Win

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com Sports
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ADAMS, Mass. – The Pittsfield Little League 10-year-old All-Stars Thursday exploded for five runs in the fourth inning to open an 8-0 lead and went on to a 12-0 win over Adams-Cheshire in the Don Gleason District 1 Tournament.
 
Kooper Colon and Luca Bassi combined on a two-hitter on the mound as Pittsfield dropped the tournament’s hosts into the elimination bracket, where Adams-Cheshire will try to stay alive on Saturday afternoon with a rematch against Dalton-Hinsdale.
 
Pittsfield got off to a strong start when Will Knauth doubled in a run and scored and Knoxx Daniels singled in a run in a two-run first inning.
 
And Knauth’s RBI single in the third made it a 3-0 game.
 
But the real damage came an inning later.
 
P.J. Garner drew a one-out walk that started a string of eight runners reaching base – five of them scoring – to put the game out of reach.
 
During that stretch, Pittsfield got three hits, including an RBI double from its No. 9 through 12 hitters: Henry Chevalier, Caleb Tierney and Josiah Rice.
 
“The bottom of the lineup came through really well,” Pittsfield coach Matt Stracuzzi said. “They put the ball in play, ran the bases well. We got a couple of bunts down. I was really happy about that.”
 
With last year’s rule change in Little League that sees all players in uniform batting in a continuous lineup, strength 1 through 12 is a big advantage.
 
“It was a little different this year for me because I didn’t do all-stars last year,” Stracuzzi said. “But I liked that the bottom of the order put the ball in play and put pressure on the defense. That was a good sign for us. We needed that.”
 
Tierney alone went 3-for-3 with a double, an RBI and two runs scored in the No. 10 hole to lead Pittsfield’s offense.
 
Adams-Cheshire got hits from Danny Collins in the first inning and Caden Stump in the fourth.
 
Adams’ pitchers Caleb Gladu, Joey Milesi and Logan O’Neil combined for eight strikeouts in the five-inning game.
 
But Adams’ offense, which scored 14 runs in Wednesday’s opener, was never able to get going against Colon and Bassi.
 
“Both of them had a really good game,” Stracuzzi said. “And they ended the regular season with a rough outing, but they came back tonight and showed some guts. They worked hard at it.
 
“They threw strikes, which was nice. And that’s all you’ve got to do, especially at this age group: Throw some strikes and let your defense do the work.”
 
Pittsfield (1-0) will play on Sunday at noon against the winner of Saturday’s noon elimination game between Dalton-Hinsdale (0-1) and Adams-Cheshire (1-1).
 
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Pittsfield 12-Year-Olds Win District 1 Little League Title

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com Sports
DALTON, Mass. – It took a total team effort for the Pittsfield Little League 12-year-old All-Stars to claim an 11-0 win over Adams-Cheshire in Wednesday’s Don Gleason District 1 Championship Game.
 
And that is exactly what it got as Shaun Boehm hit a pair of triples, and Carmelo Coco went 2-for-2 with a double and a pair of RBIs to help send Pittsfield into next week’s Section 1 tournament, one step away from the state tourney.
 
The defending champs collected 10 hits – just two of them came from the first four hitters in its 12-player lineup.
 
“I let these guys know, they’re not like any other team,” Adams-Cheshire coach Steve Albareda said of Pittsfield. “One through 12 against some other teams, when you get to [hitters] six, seven, eight – you’re going to get those guys out. Pittsfield, they’re one through 12 stacked.
 
“And I told them, OK, you get two, three, four out, whatever it is, six, seven, eight is gonna burn you if you don’t stay the course.”
 
Not that one through four can’t, mind you. But if pitchers do limit the damage at the top of the order – as Adams’s Lador Lawson and Maddox Milesi did on Wednesday night – a mine field awaits.
 
“The kids asked me today if there were any changes to the lineup, and I was sitting there and I was pondering,” Pittsfield coach Joe Skutnik said. “And I said, ‘You know what? We’ve been hitting the ball all tournament. Why would I change anything?’
 
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