Received: 8/8/07 8:34:54 PM 
From:  Darryl Smart <dsmart(at)bowesnet.com> 


Subject:  Woodstock Sentinel Review ISC and ISCII Preview  
  

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Go to www.woodstocksentinelreview.com and go to sports to see
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Trying to reach the top of the world


Beginning this weekend, the Innerkip Eagles will try to climb
up the world fastball ladder at the International Softball Congress
World championships while the Tavistock Merchants will defend
their ISC II Tournament of Champions title — by Cory Smith


In their two losses at last year’s ISC world tournament, the
Innerkip Eagles helped author their own demise thanks to a lack
of fundamental fastball. 
Those defeats came against the SoCal Bombers and the host Kitchener
Hallman Twins — two of the best on the world stage. 
So, it’s with some uneasiness and a shrug that the Eagles entertain
The Farm Tavern in their first game at the world tourney Saturday
in Kitchener. 
“It’s not a great first-round paring,” Eagles skipper Jeff Whetstone
said. 
The Madison, Wis.-based team is ranked sixth in the world and
is a perennial contender at the 32-team tournament. Whetstone
knows the Eagles can’t repeat the same mistakes they made after
going 2-2 last year. 
If Innerkip fails to move runners over and play the type of small
ball necessary to keep afloat, it will find itself swimming in
the dreaded losing bracket the rest of the way. 
“You need your top-notch game,” Whetstone said. “You gotta play
an error-free game. You can only give them 21 outs, not four
per inning or 25 or 26 in a game. One through nine they can hit
the ball.”
It’s been five years since the teams last met, when The Farm
won 7-5 in Eau Claire, Wis. A win would match the Eagles up against
Portland or Aurora Sunday  at 2 p.m., while a loss would send
them to the losing bracket against Midland or Napanee Monday
at 9 a.m. 
“In order for us to do it, we need good pitching, hitting and
defence against them,” Whetstone said. “You need timely hitting.
You have to sacrifice guys over from first to second and get
timely two-out hits. If you score early that helps relax the
pitchers.”
In 2004 and 2005, the Eagles compiled an 8-3 record and advanced
to the playoff round. Last year, alternating wins and losses
over four games, they were eliminated midweek following a 4-1
loss to the Twins. 
“I wouldn’t say last year was a step back,” Whetstone said. “If
you look at the teams we lost to, those are teams on paper that
nine out of 10 times we’ll never beat.
“It’s just the (advantage) of money. Compare their budget to
our budget and they should beat us. It’s like the Yankees versus
a Single A team.”
That’s not to say Whetstone isn’t confident his squad can start
the tourney off with an upset. In addition to four new players,
the 20th-ranked Eagles welcome back Steve Running and Dan Skillings
of Innerkip, and Woodstock’s Mike Pullin and Kevin Cassells.

The core of the team has been rock solid for a few years and
has traditionally saved some of its best ball for mid-August.
“We’re going into the first game expecting to win,” Whetstone
said. “It would be nice to play Thursday or Friday, slide into
the playoffs and upset some teams.”


---------


The Ingersoll Crush want to make an impression


By Darryl G. Smart
Sports Editor
INGERSOLL —  The rankings have them at the bottom but that’s
not going to bother the Ingersoll Crush when they go to Kitchener
for the Intarnational Softball Congress II Tournament of Champions.
The Crush, who have qualified for the ISC II ToC for the first
time, will have a good mix of youth and veterans.
“I think our team chemistry is our biggest strength by far,”
Crush manager Rob Deakin said. “We all eat, drink and hang out
with each other. This is a real close-knit team and I think that
will help us in a tournament like this.”
Having umpired in the ISC worlds several times, Deakin knows
about the magnitude of the ToC, which is something he said the
younger players will learn in a hurry.
“We have the veterans to calm the young guys’ nerves down. I
know we’ve played a lot of these teams before and have done well
against them. But this is the Tournament of Champions. The level
of ball is raised, which something I want them to experience.”
The Crush have had a solid season thus far in the Tri-County
Men’s Fastball League, but consistency has plagued them at times.
“I think if we play error-free ball and get rid of the mental
errors, I think we could make it to the playoffs, where anything
can happen,” he said.
And the Crush just have to look at the Tavistock Merchants for
inspiration. 
Ranked 22nd heading into last year’s ToC, the Merchants got on
a roll and beat the 32nd-ranked Palermo Athletics in the final.
The 35th-ranked Crush will begin their quest to climb the ladder
Tuesday against the Kingston Cowboys at 7:30 p.m. On Wednesday
at 11 a.m., they will take on the Hoffman Rise and then the Elora
Brewers at 5:30 p.m.The Crush will round out the round-robin
with the Rockwood Rush Thursday at 11:30 a.m.
“It doesn’t matter who we’re going to play, every game’s going
to be tough,” Deakin said. “But I really think we can  have a
2-2 record and maybe get into the playoffs. But the main thing
is that our guys enjoy the tournament and take in the experience.”
Deakin said not only has the team been committed to doing well
at the ToC, sponsors like Elgie Trucking have been important.




---------


Tavi set to defend title


By Cory Smith
Sports reporter
TAVISTOCK — If the St. Marys/Tavistock Merchants have any hope
of defending their ISC II world fastball championship, they’ll
have to find the missing ingredients they used to win last year.

The Merchants started 2007 ranked No. 1 among ISC II teams, but
a slow start in the South Perth Men’s Fastball League and a disappointing
finish at the Ontario eliminations last weekend dropped the club
to a top-five world ranking. 
Hardly anything to be ashamed of, but the Merchants will have
a bull’s-eye on them all week. 
“We expect to be able to compete. With a little luck anything
can happen,” Merchants manager Steve Kaufman said. “I’m sure
there’s going to be a lot of teams gunning for us.”
First on that list will be the Kitchener Outlaws, who host the
Merchants Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. 
“I don’t think expectations are going to be a problem,” Kaufman
said. “We’ve had a lot of expectations for many years, going
back to Fargo in 2004 when we got second. It was like a relief
to win last year.” 
Nearly everything went the Merchants’ way in Kitchener last August.
Tavistock — before adding St. Marys to its name this season —
went 7-1 over eight games and outscored its opposition 34-7.

The pitching staff — which hurled five shutouts, including a
Ryan Cummings no-hitter — is back this year. There are some holes,
such as the departure of shortstop Mark McKay, who scored the
winning run in the eighth inning of last year’s championship,
but Kaufman is confident that players brought in from St. Marys
will mix with the returnees to form another formidable mix. 
“We need good pitching and good hitting and timely hitting, that’s
what it takes,” he said. “We have the ability to score lots of
runs, but when it comes to playoffs and good teams it’s pitching
and defence that comes through.”




------------


Reds ready for action


By Cory Smith
Sports reporter
HICKSON — While their Oxford County rivals compete under the
glaring spotlight of defending champions, the Hickson Reds will
have no such distraction. 
Prior to the 2007 season, the Reds weren’t even on the ISC II
radar. By July 6, the Reds were ranked 29th. It was a modest
but important blip on the fastball screen for the Reds as they
prepare for the world championships in Kitchener. 
Of course, that means the Reds will face the toughest competition
in Pool F, beginning Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. against the No. 12
Port Elgin Blue Devils. 
The Reds move on to face the Ashland Merchants in their second
game, Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. In their third round-robin game
Wednesday at 4:30 p.m., Hickson plays the Ottawa Team Easton,
ranked sixth as of July 6. 
The Reds close the prelims with a date against the No. 23 Waterdown
Hammer Thursday at 6:30 p.m. 
Hickson sits in the middle of the Smith/Egli division of the
South Perth Men’s Fastball League, but has fared reasonably well
in tournament play thus far. 
The Reds went 3-2 at the Canada East Softball Congress II qualifier
in June, outlasting the Ingersoll Crush and Innerkip Orioles
of the Tri-County Men’s Fastball League. 
Their biggest highlight was a win over the second-ranked Elora
Brewers. Mark VanVliet pitched a strong game to pick up the victory
and the Reds hurler will be a main component for the club next
week. 
Led by hometown manager Al Harmer, the Reds are truly a local
team, boasting 13 players from Oxford County. 














Darryl Smart
519-537-2341 ext. 258
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.woodstocksentinelreview.com




 

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