Category: Adult Leagues

16 teams will signal the arrival of Spring in the 2013 HSL

UPDATE: After this article was posted the Essex Arrows (NBL) made a last minute HSL entry to make it 17 teams in total.

Herts Baseball Club has confirmed that 16 teams have entered this year’s Herts Spring League (HSL). The teams come from all British baseball leagues including the National Baseball League (NBL), Triple-A, Double-A, Single-A, Under-19 and Under-17 Leagues.

The HSL teams will be divided into three divisions based on their league ranking going into the 2013 season.

HSL – MAJORS

Before the 2012 NBL champions make their return to Grovehill Ballpark they will clash with the AAA champions Liverpool Trojans at Leicester's Western Park

The reigning NBL Champions, the Harlow Nationals (20-6 in 2012), go into the competition as the top seed. They will make their first appearance at Grovehill Ballpark since they lifted the NBL trophy last September. Before that they will be involved in an intriguing match-up versus the best team in the North, the Liverpool Trojans. This game is part of the Leicester Spring League. The second seed in the HSL Majors are last year’s NBL runners-up, the Herts Falcons (17-6) who have once again been in the news signing new players ahead of the new season. The London Mets (13-10) go into the HSL as the third seed, but judging by the noises coming out of Finsbury Park, they will be a major player in the race for the title. Entering the HSL for the first time are the South London Pirates (2-21), formerly the Croydon Pirates. The team goes into the season with a new name and the hope of a return to winning ways. The BBF announced the promotion of the Essex Redbacks (16-10) from AAA to the NBL this year and they go into the HSL as the fifth seed. These Spring League games will give fans an indication of what they can expect from the Redbacks in their NBL debut season. Completing the HSL Majors lineup are the London Mets U20 team, which is expected to feature players who are fighting for a place in the Mets NBL Opening Day roster.

HSL – AAA

The Cambridge Royals (15-11) were one of the pleasant surprises of 2012 when they made their debut in the AAA league, and reached the postseason. On top of that they took the eventual AAA champions, Liverpool, right down to the wire losing 3-2 in the Semi-Final which was arguably one of the most nail-biting games of the season. They are the number one seed in the HSL AAA division. The Milton Keynes Bucks finished second in the AA league last season losing to Nottingham making it very clear that the Midlands conference is now too good for their AA opponents in the South and North. The BBF League lineup has not been announced yet, but rumours around the leagues are that the success of the Midlands teams will prompt the BBF to promote them into the AAA league tier this year. On that basis the MK Bucks’ (9-5) ranking as the second seed in the HSL AAA division is fully justified. The Herts Hawks (11-4) are the third seed after their successful run to reach the AA playoffs going out in the Semi-Finals. The London Mammoths (11-5) finished just half a game behind the Hawks last season. The HSL will give us a glimpse at what we can expect in the race for the 2013 AA playoffs. The final team in the HSL AAA division is the London Mets U16 team. They have been seeded last, but this is purely on the basis that they have not faced senior league teams. They could prove to be one of the big surprises within this group.

5 London teams have entered this year’s HSL and all of their rosters feature predominantly young and upcoming prospects

HSL – AA

The AA bracket is led by the Kent Mariners who had a 4-14 record in AA last year. They finished third in the same division of the HSL 12 months ago and they are the favourites to win it this year. The fifth London team in the HSL is the Marauders (8-2). They reached the Semi-Finals in last year’s Single-A League playoffs and are seeded second. The Herts Raptors (6-4) and Herts Eagles (5-5) are the third and fourth seed in this bracket. The 16th team in this year’s HSL is the Herts Harriers. This is the Herts Under-17 League team and this is their debut year in the HSL.

To view the full HSL lineup, click here.

SCHEDULE AND FORMAT

The HSL will be played over three weeks commencing on the weekend of 23 and 24 March and ending on 6 and 7 April. The HSL format and games schedule are expected to be announced in the next few days and hertsbaseball.com will bring this and all other HSL news as they happen.

WEAR THE HERTS BASEBALL JERSEY IN 2013

Herts Baseball Club welcomes youth players from 6 to 16 and adult players from 14 to 50+ from complete beginners to experienced ballpalyers. New players can join at any time of the year. For more details on how to give baseball a try contact us.

 

2013: A New Hope

Rob JonesThe Herts club’s occasional blogger, equally occasional player, and former Chief Correspondent Rob Jones has returned for another year of baseball. Here he offers his random views, glimpses and hopes for the coming year.

The sound echoed around the hall. It was of a loud slap, a loud snap, not unlike the report of a gun. It was a baseball hitting a leather mitt. Baseball season had begun.

Fifty or so players were there on the first week of indoor Spring Training, and the fact that a cavernous sports hall seemed crowded showed how far Herts has come in the past couple of years in expanding its reach. By the time I was there — barely even a few minutes late, which is excellent by my standards — there seemed hardly room to throw. On the second week there were slightly fewer of us, but still dozens of players, all turning out on a cold Sunday morning. The first excellent result of the season.

Never fear, though, about the apparent lack of space.  Once the session had got rolling and the coaches had stepped in to organise, every inch of the hall was well used. At the second session, the club’s new strength and conditioning coach made his first appearance and worked the players into submission. Crouching like crabs, jumping like grasshoppers, lunging like refugees from Python’s silly walks sketch. The Herts media department kindly used a photo of the event which showed me as the only player bent double trying to recover from the exertion!

Spring Training
Your correspondent (centre) working on his drive with Kimi Saionji

It was the sort of excellent targeted work-out that I would never have come up with for myself. It left me aching for days — in fact, my calves and thighs were so dumbstruck that every time I got up from my desk on the Monday I had to re-learn the art of walking. However, it felt great! And I have already used some of the drills we were shown when working out in my local park.

I am by no means a hardcore devotee of exercise. But I do love to play, and the last thing I want to do at a session is stand around waiting for stuff to be sorted. And that doesn’t happen here at Herts. It hasn’t for years now, and we have reaped two benefits from that. Number one — passionate, hard-working club staff. Number two — better players.

Those players include some of the top names in British baseball — Robbie Unsell, Ryan Bird — who now turn out in a Herts uniform and helped take the club to the NBL final in 2012. It also includes some excellent youth players who have begun to pull on the jersey for our adult teams, and who could take us even higher in the future. Guys who already had great talent going for them — Kyle Lloyd-Jones; the Caress brothers — seemed to have grown a foot taller over the winter and to have filled out. They will be an imposing presence on whichever diamond hosts them this season.

Carlos Casal in action in 2009
Caros Casal argues his case during the Hunlock Series in 2009

There are plenty of new faces, as well as some which have returned from the past. The Casal family, who always play with fire and passion, will be a shot in the arm for the club on the field after a successful sojourn at the Harlow Nationals. A return is also on the cards for Ross Asquith, the King of the Bunt, the Fastest Thing in the South from the early days of the Herts Hawks, I think it was. Because we now have a fifth adult team, we will need a deep bench, but that seems to be a luxury we are developing.

Last weekend was the first of many sessions which I will miss this year. Work often keeps me away from Herts baseball, but like so many others I keep coming back. Last season was a bit of a low ebb for me, in terms of playing time. I only made it to five games, I think, and one of them was incomplete. I never really got my swing together and batted only about .440, disappointing after previous seasons. But my OBP remained high, and I felt I was contributing to the team and to a few victories.

Who knows what 2013 will hold for me, and for Herts. But that is one of the great things about Spring Training. Anything seems possible. Everything is out there to be worked for, and aimed at. The grainy photos of Herts part-timers in a cavernous sports hall are the equivalent of those sun-dappled pictures from the MLB’s Spring leagues. But although the visual image is rather different, the spirit is the same. It is about hope, and about what it can bring.

Herts fans choose Ravens!

The poll closed a few minutes ago and Herts Baseball Club can officially confirm that the name of the new Herts adult league team is Herts Ravens.

The Ravens proved to be the most popular name amongst Herts baseball fans with 40% of the vote, but it was a close race won by the narrowest of margins. The Herts Harriers were in the lead with just 6 minutes remaining, but a flurry of activity in the last few seconds of voting pushed the Herts Ravens into the lead.

Herts Harriers and Herts Red Kites may have lost this battle to the Ravens, but the voting to name the Herts U17 and Herts U14 is still to come and fans of those two team names will be able to support them again. Details of these two remaining polls will be announced shortly.

 

TEAM NAME POPULARITY (%)
Herts Ravens 40.00%
Herts Harriers
37.80%
Herts Red Kites 22.20%
VOTER TYPE SHARE OF VOTE (%)
Herts Baseball Club member
82.20%
Herts Fan 13.30%
Fan of another British Baseball team 2.20%
MLB Fan 0.00%
other 2.20%

Herts Hawks infielder to make 387 home run trots without a break for Crimestoppers UK

At the London Marathon Ralph Bartholomew will have to cover a distance equivalent to making 387 home run trots around the bases, without a break.

2011 Infield Gold Glove winner and Herts Hawks member Ralph Bartholomew has been unable to participate in Spring Training this year as he’s deep into a training programme to prepare to run in the 33rd Virgin London Marathon this April. Although Ralph is not normally a long-distance runner and prefers the slightly less gruelling sport of baseball, he’s taken up the challenge in order to raise funds for the charity Crimestoppers UK.

As you might know, Crimestoppers runs a nationwide anynymous tip line that leads directly to over 20 arrests every day, as well as running outreach programmes for young people in communities across the country. Crimestoppers have set a fundraising target for Ralph, so unfortunately he can’t do it without a little help. If you can make any contribution to support a good cause (no donation is too small), please visit Ralph’s fundraising page.

 

Before the birds soared: A history of baseball in Hertfordshire

While the neighbouring county of Essex adds a rich layer to the history of British baseball, the sport has burgeoned in Hertfordshire only in recent years. This article by Joe Gray, Herts Baseball Club’s newly appointed historian, chronicles adult baseball in the land of the pasqueflower.

The most remarkable feature of baseball’s history in Hertfordshire up until the last quarter of a century is the dearth of teams that have formed and the transiency of those that did.

The records and documents available at the time of writing reveal the existence, before 1987, of just a pair of teams from Hertfordshire that have competed in the British baseball leagues. Both appeared to have played for a solitary season. The first of these teams was the De Havilland Comets.

In 1954, after having played friendlies the previous year, the De Havilland Comets put together a 2–6 record to finish fourth out of five teams in the South Eastern Baseball League’s second tier. They did, however, claim some silverware, for they beat the Aveley Cubs—sufferers of a winless season in the top tier—by a score of 14–13 in the final of the league’s Invitation Tournament.

The Comets played their home games in 1954 in Leavesden—an urban continuation of Watford’s northern suburbs, today famous for its film studios—which was the home of the De Havilland aircraft manufacturer’s engine-building offshoot. During the years immediately preceding World War II, the aircraft manufacturer had sponsored the De Havilland Comets baseball team in the London County Baseball Association’s Senior Amateur League, but at time they played in Edgware, north-west London.

By 1955 the Comets had folded once more. But at least the airline manufacturer had an enduring impact in the field of long-distance travel. Its plane the DH 106 Comet, which was developed and manufactured at the company’s Hatfield site, became the first commercial jet airliner when it made its maiden flight with fare-paying passengers in 1952. Whether the baseball team of the 1950s was named after this aircraft or followed the moniker of the pre-World War II outfit is not known. That team from the late 1930s was probably named after the DH.88 Comet, an early aviation record-setter.

In 1961, it looked like league baseball might return to Hertfordshire. That season, a company named BSP Industries affiliated itself with the Southern Baseball Association as a non-competitive entrant. It secured the use of Borehamwood Football Club’s ground and announced that its team would be playing in a blue uniform with yellow trim. But the outfit never played league baseball and had folded before the 1962 season.

Thus it is not until 1969 that league baseball seems to have re-emerged in the county. In what appears to have been their only season in British baseball, the Watford Sun-Rockets (combining the name of their affiliate firm Sun Printers with the “Rockets” on the jerseys donated to them by a US Air Force base at Ruislip) made their home at a playing field in Oxhey, south Watford, in the second-tier Southern Senior League. Famously, they beat the Liverpool Trojans in the final of a national knock-out competition that determined the British champions that year.

(image courtesy of www.projectcobb.org.uk)

The final was played at Harvey Haddon Stadium in Nottingham on Monday 1 September and was one of the all-time classics of British baseball. The game entered the top of the eighth with the Trojans holding a 6–3 lead. In that frame, Watford managed to load the bases with two outs, and Don Spencer, who had entered the game in the sixth, tripled to tie up the game. The Trojans stranded Spencer at third but could not retake the lead in the bottom half of the frame or, after having blanked the Sun-Rockets in the ninth, in the bottom of the final regulation inning either.

In the 10th inning, Don Brock scored the go-ahead run for Watford on a sacrifice bunt, which was laid down by Don Cummings. This time Liverpool managed to respond, scoring a tying run to take the game into an 11th inning. Once more, though, Watford were able to score a run in the top half of the inning, with Lea being driven in by a hit off the bat of Brock. This time the Trojans could not keep the game alive, falling 8–7. For years after the Trojans maintained that Watford had illegally made use of US service personnel to bolster their squad.

There is no record of league baseball in Watford, or anywhere else in Hertfordshire, between 1970 and 1986. Somewhat cryptically, the Sutton Braves’ 25th anniversary publication, from 1987, refers to a spectacular double play being turned at a game in Watford in the late 1970s or early 1980s, but league listings from those years do not reveal any Hertfordshire-based teams.

More generally, the sparseness of Hertfordshire baseball, before the last quarter of a century, cannot simply be attributed to gaps in the annals. The record is sufficiently rich to reveal the booming baseball scenes of nearby counties, which included: Fred Lewis’s incredible programme around the Oxfordshire town of Chipping Norton in the first half of the 20th century; the colourful patchwork of metropolitan Essex baseball both before and after World War II; and even a six-team senior league centred on Buckinghamshire’s furniture-making hub of High Wycombe in the late 1930s. Similarly, heading only a few miles over the Hertfordshire border into north-west London, one encounters areas—around Barnet, Totteridge, and Mill Hill, for example—where baseball gained a real stronghold at points in the past.

After the famine of many decades for Hertfordshire baseball, the latter half of the 1980s saw the emergence of a relative glut. On 3 May 1987, the Hemel Rebels lost 29–16 to the Waltham Forest Roadrunners. The game was played at Jarman Fields (near where the indoor ski slope is situated today) and was possibly the first competitive baseball game ever played in Hemel Hempstead. This was opening day for the northern bracket of division III (run by the British Baseball Federation South [BBFS]). Over in Enfield, in the same pool, the Hemel Red Sox—another Jarman Fields-based team—bested the City Slick Sidewinders 24–9. The results started a pattern that carried through the season: the Red Sox won the pool with a 12–0 showing, while the Rebels finished bottom with the reverse record. The Red Sox’ unbeaten record looked under threat in the final game as they trailed the Basildon Mariners 10–8 after seven innings, but they flipped the 2-run deficit into an eventual 2-run winning margin.

The Red Sox claimed more silverware by also winning the BBFS division III knock-out shield, toppling Burgess Hill 23–8 in the final, which was played at Rosehill Park on 4 October. To get to the final the Red Sox had overwhelmed the Ashford Condors 45–2, beaten Croydon Bluejays II 16–5, and pipped the Reading Royals 8–7. The double-trophy success continued this run of Hertfordshire teams starting with a bang.

Following their promotion, the Red Sox stormed BBFS division II too in 1988, compiling a 22–2 record to claim a second consecutive divisional title. The Rebels fared slightly better than they had done in their first season, winning three times in their 20-game schedule in the division III central bracket. A third Jarman Fields-based team competed as well that season, in the shape of Red Sox II. They finished with a 6–13 record in the same pool as the Rebels. In division III north, the Hoddesdon Sharks, who made their home at Wormley playing fields, had a 1–21 debut season as a fourth Hertfordshire team.

Following their second straight promotion the Hemel Red Sox found themselves in the top tier in 1989. They finished bottom of the southern pool, but with a respectable 7–17 debut effort. Red Sox II had a 5–13 campaign in the division III central pool, finishing ahead of only the 1–17 Hoddesdon Sharks. Red Sox II folded before the 1990 season began and Hoddesdon had met the same fate within the next couple of years.

The Hemel Red Sox were the first tenants at Grovehill Ballpark in the early 1990s

After one season in the top tier, the Red Sox competed in the lower divisions until 1995, when—following a division I title the previous year—they returned for another brief stint in the southern top-tier bracket. They finished with a 5–19 record in 1995 and a 3–18 tally in 1996 (a year in which Hertford University announced it was starting a baseball programme). Those were the club’s last seasons in any level of the league.

Thanks to the Red Sox’ star slugger, Sean Ozolins, they ensured that they left an indelible mark on the British baseball record books. On 9 April 1995 he had a two-homer game against the Crawley Comets. On 9 June 1996 he hit for the cycle against the Essex Arrows. And on 18 August 1996 he clattered a grand slam, against the Arrows again.

Stevenage also had a baseball team in the 1990s. The Stevenage Knights won the Anglia area championship in 1992 and then continued in the lower divisions of southern baseball. But they folded after the end of the 1997 season. It was thus south Watford, or Bushey to be specific, that picked up the Hertfordshire baseball torch once more.

In 1996, the Bushey Falcons were formed and today that outfit, now based in Hemel Hempstead, has flourished into the five-team Herts Baseball Club. The history from 1996 to the present day can be browsed here.

The catchment area for today’s Herts Baseball Club extends beyond the county boundary, most significantly into north-west London. There the game has a tremendously rich history, and this is a potential subject for a future article.

 

3 Finalists. Voting to decide winner has begun.

The preliminary voting round to determine the name of the new Herts AAA League team has now ended. The fans have spoken and the three most popular team names going through to the final voting round are Herts Ravens, Herts Harriers and Herts Red Kites. The finalists were very evenly matched in the preliminary round so it is difficult to say who the favourite is.

The Final Voting Round has just opened (CLICK HERE TO CAST YOUR VOTE). Voting will end at 23:59 on Friday, 15 February 2013.

Nine other team names picked up enough votes to make the Top 12 list which means they will be in the Final rounds of voting to select the names of the Herts U17 and Herts U14 teams, which will begin after the Herts AAA team vote.

Here are some more details from the preliminary round of voting.

RANK TEAM NAME POPULARITY
1 Herts Ravens 19.30%
2 Herts Harriers 15.80%
3 Herts Red Kites 14.00%
4 Herts Kestrels 7.00%
5 Herts Cardinals 5.30%
6 Herts Red Wings 5.30%
7 Herts Crows 3.50%
8 Herts Griffins 3.50%
9 Herts Loons 3.50%
10 Herts Ospreys 3.50%
11 Herts Red Deers 3.50%
12 Herts Woodpeckers 3.50%
13
Herts 71’s
1.80%
14 Herts Attack 1.80%
15 Herts Blue Jays 1.80%
16 Herts Breakers 1.80%
17 Herts Buzzards 1.80%
18 Herts Condors 1.80%
19 Herts SR71’s 1.80%
20 Herts Accipiter Castanilius Shakira Accipiter badius (Chestnut Flanked Sparrow Hawk) 0.00%
21 Herts Barn Owls 0.00%
22 Herts Caracaras 0.00%
23 Herts Cassowaries 0.00%
24 Herts Hedgehogs 0.00%
25 Herts Hellcats 0.00%
26 Herts Huskies 0.00%
27 Herts Juicy Chickens 0.00%
28 Herts Owls 0.00%
29 Herts Pterodactyls 0.00%
30 Herts Red Birds 0.00%
31 Herts Rockets 0.00%
32 Herts Vultures 0.00%

.

VOTER DEMOGRAPHIC SHARE OF VOTERS
Herts Baseball Club member
73.70%
Herts Fan 15.80%
Fan of another British Baseball team 7.00%
MLB Fan 1.80%
non-baseball fan 0.00%
other 1.80%

Another major signing for Herts thanks to Jethro Tull

Joe Gray (left) receiving his BBF Life Member award from BBF President Mark Salter

Herts Baseball Club has announced that Joe Gray has joined the club after spending 2011 and 2012 with the double NBL champions, Harlow Nationals. Before that, he was with the Croydon Pirates going back to their own double championship years of 2004 and 2005. On the experience he brings, Joe Gray commented: “I have learned many things from being immersed in the superb coaching environment at the Nationals, and it was great to see the young players blossoming there. I’ll also never forget the many enjoyable seasons I had with the Pirates. Dave Ward has been a great diplomat there, for more years than he’d probably care to remember, and it’s heartening to see the re-growth of the club being driven by Conor Riffle and Alex von Rosenbach. But I’m now ready for a new challenge.”

Herts Baseball Club President, Aspi Dimitrov, said: “Only people with inside knowledge of baseball in this country will be able to realize the huge significance of this.” He added: “While the fight for the national championship grabs the headlines, there is a more important battle to grow and promote the sport of baseball and win market share in the leisure industry. With Joe Gray aboard, our club is in a very strong position to succeed in Hertfordshire and the North West quadrant of London.”

Joe Gray is a resident of St Albans and the home ground of Herts Baseball Club is located just a short drive away (or a slighlty longer cycle, on a pleasant day). “The combination of geographical proximity and peerless infrastructure that the club has draws me strongly to Herts and I’m really looking forward to getting stuck in,” said Gray. “Of course, I can’t deny that the Club President’s penchant for Jethro Tull and Dire Straits on the PA system also factored in the decision,” he added.

Joe Gray is one of the most respected members of the British Baseball community. He is probably best known for Project COBB, which he founded. It is an online collaboration co-ordinated by him to support research and publish historical details of British baseball, help make digitized copies of British baseball artefacts available online and promote the preservation of history today, through scoring and photography. He recently unveiled the revamped Project COBB website.

It is largely thanks to Joe Gray’s efforts, via Project COBB, to pool his own work on National Baseball League statistics with that of other key contributors, including, most notably, Alan Smith and also Brian Holland and Josh Chetwynd, that numbers exist, in varying levels of completeness from 1976 to this day. Preserving these has created an invaluable resource for fans, clubs and the media to utilise.

Gray has also authored and edited popular baseball books. “What about the Villa?”, on which he was the sole author, was his first effort, while on “Nine Aces and a Joker” he was editor of the project, which brought together some of his own writing with that of other leading British Baseball writers. He is now in the process of writing his third book, which moves away from the world of non-fiction into the creative format. A novel with a working title of “The Bushleaguers” is currently undergoing revision at the draft stage. Gray is also a writer for BaseballGB, which was founded by Matt Smith and provides the best independent coverage of baseball from a British perspective. He makes regular appearances on TV, radio and documentaries as one of the leading experts on British Baseball.

In 2011 the British Baseball Federation (BBF) and community as a whole recognised Joe Gray’s outstanding contribution by inducting him as a BBF Life Member.

Joe Gray will join the Herts Baseball Statistics Department, working alongside Greg Bochan, but he will also have involvement in other areas such as media and club history. His addition to the media department will strengthen Herts’ activities in this area even further.

Apart from his involvement with Herts and the various other baseball projects, in 2013 Gray will also be continuing his written reflections on the NBL as a whole, on BaseballGB, to complement the growing journalistic coverage of the NBL and other divisions being driven by BSUK. As part of that he is expecting to do quite a lot of travelling around the different NBL grounds.

As the season progresses and statistical data builds up, Joe Gray could play a key role for the Herts Falcons providing game strategy analysis in key clashes in the latter stages of the regular season and in the postseason, if they qualify. The statistical analysis work behind the scenes in baseball was not widely known until the Oscar-nominated movie “Moneyball” came to the big screen. The Herts Falcons are going into the new season in a very strong position knowing that Joe Gray is now part of the team. “The samples size we’ll be working with are far smaller than what the guys in Moneyball had at their disposal,” Gray commented, “but there’s certainly enough there to begin to cut through the noise and baseball is a sport where even the smallest margins can make a difference.”

And who knows? Might we also see Gray as a pinch-hitter for the Falcons? He is, after all, the only player on record to have a perfect 1.000 batting average across a multi-season career. “This is an excellent example of just how deceiving small sample sizes can be,” he reflected.

The return of the Casals

Carlos Casal Sr greeting Kimiyoshi Saionji after his home run in the thrilling 12-11 win over the Essex Arrows in the 2010 NBL season

After a two-year hiatus, Herts welcomes back a dynamic family duo that had been a permanent feature at any Herts adult or youth league event. The Casal family, who reside in Hemel Hempstead, is coming back home.

After two years on secondment at the Harlow Nationals, Carlos Casal Sr. and Carlos Casal Jr. are coming back to grace Grovehill Ballpark again. Actually, Carlos Jr. has been playing for the Herts U17 team over the last 12 months (and of course he has been part of the Championship-winning Herts U14 team of 2010). They have both honed their skills, having played at the National League Level in the 2011 and 2012 seasons.

Carlos Casal Sr. will bring his inimitable hunger, competitiveness and drive that can fire up a team to come back from even the deepest hole and help a winning team keep its lead. His plate performances have always been characterised by perseverance and willingness to lay it all out, and he has not lost his touch, as evidenced by the respectable batting average he had with the Nationals (.382 in 2011 and .287 in 2012). And once he gets on base, he turns on the wheels with an aggression that gets him safe more often than not. And of course, he also brings in the diplomatic skills that make dealing with contrary umpires so much fun. Carlos is also a good team leader, as he has demonstrated having managed the Herts Hawks in the past. He will put these skills to good use as he has joined the Herts U-17 team coaching staff in 2013.

Carlos Casal Jr. is an undoubted up and coming talent, who has always impressed not only with his abilities, but also his work ethic. That has stood him in good stead, and Carlos Jr. has been selected for the GB U16 National Team. There is no task too big or goal to distant for him, and the extra experience at the Nationals will only serve to make him a better player and leader. Most importantly, he brings a charismatic ability to unify – you cannot help but like Carlos.

Although team selection is up to the managers, it would be great to have both Carlos Sr. and Carlos Jr. play on the same adult team in 2013. After all, Herts has a long tradition of father-son pairings, and that is one tradition worth keeping.

Last, but not least, the return of the Casals would also mean that we will be seeing more of Miriam and Mariana Casal at the ballpark. Mariana is already a member of the U14 team, and who knows, Miriam may get involved in the Herts softball programme.

One way or the other, the Casal machine is back in action at Grovehill.

 

AUDIO: BBC Radio talking baseball with Herts Raptors’ Ken Pike and MK Dons Manager Karl Robinson

Herts Baseball TV presenter, Ken Pike, appeared on the BBC 3 Counties Radio Sports Show with hosts Luke Ashmead and Geoff Doyle. They talked about the upcoming British baseball league season as well as the announcement that the Herts Falcons have been ranked among the top 50 baseball teams in Europe.

Also in the BBC studio was MK Dons manager, Karl Robinson, and he told listeners about his own baseball experience. Karl Robinson is currently on the radar of all the big clubs around the football leagues following his successful time with the MK Dons which included knocking out big-spenders Queens Park Rangers in the fourth round of the FA Cup.

 

Voting has begun to name the new Herts AAA league team

One of the proposed team names is the Herts Red Kites, which can be seen flying over Grovehill Ballpark throughout the baseball season

Over the last 10 days fans of Herts Baseball from across the globe have been submitting team names for the newly formed fifth Herts baseball team to enter the senior British baseball leagues. In total 33 names were submitted giving fans of Herts Baseball plenty of choice.

Some of the proposals which were submitted carried a great deal of symbolism. One such team name was the Herts Red Deers. The name Hertfordshire originates from the Anglo-Saxon words “heort ford,” which means deer crossing. The Herts Red Kites was proposed on the basis that the Red Kite is a bird of prey which can been seen during the baseball season hovering over the Grovehill Ballpark baseball diamonds.

There were many other team names keeping with the avian theme of the four existing Herts teams. This was also an opportunity to propose several names which were runners-up in a previous team name vote when fans of the club were selecting the name of their third team in 2008. Those were the “Herts Woodpeckers”, originally proposed by former Herts Falcons Manager, Jason Greenberg, and the “Herts Juicy Chickens”, submitted by Herts Falcons shortstop, Yuji Endo.

Some members of the club, like Hawks infielder, Rodney Naghar, went with the spectacular name Herts Accipiter Castanilius Shakira Accipiter Badius (i.e. Chestnut Flanked Sparrow Hawk). Naghar gave his reasons for this nomination: “Got a nice ring to it and includes the name Shakira and the word bad!”. Another interesting suggestion came in from Jonathan Reinebold on the other side of the Atlantic. “There is a minor league team in the USA named the “Great Lakes Loons” who are the A-Class affiliate of the LA Dodgers. Loon is a fish-eating bird”. “Fans of the team would then be referred to as the Loonatics” added Reinebold. The British media would certainly have fun with a name like the Herts Loons.

Whenever a new Herts team has to be named, the name Herts Attack is always in the running. Will it reach the next round of voting this time around? And then there is the name Herts Griffins, which could have the makings of an interesting team logo.

This first stage of submitting team names ended a few hours ago. The preliminary round of voting has now begun. CLICK HERE TO CAST YOUR VOTE

This preliminary voting round will continue for seven days. At 23:59 on February 10 the three most popular names from the preliminary round will go through to the final and deciding voting round. The finalist which receives the highest number of votes will be confirmed as the name of the new Herts AAA team.

 

FULL LIST OF TEAM NAMES WHICH YOU CAN VOTE ON (in alphabetical order)

• Herts 71’s

• Herts Accipiter Castanilius Shakira Accipiter Badius (Chestnut Flanked Sparrow Hawk)

• Herts Attack

• Herts Barn Owls

• Herts Blue Jays

• Herts Breakers

• Herts Buzzards

• Herts Caracaras

• Herts Cardinals

• Herts Cassowaries

• Herts Condors

• Herts Crows

• Herts Griffins

• Herts Harriers

• Herts Hedgehogs

• Herts Hellcats

• Herts Huskies

• Herts Juicy Chickens

• Herts Kestrels

• Herts Loons

• Herts Ospreys

• Herts Owls

• Herts Pterodactyls

• Herts Ravens

• Herts Red Birds

• Herts Red Deers

• Herts Red Kites

• Herts Red Wings

• Herts Red Wings

• Herts Rockets

• Herts SR71’s

• Herts Vultures

• Herts Woodpeckers