Category: Headlines

Nats vs Falcons build-up: Stats don’t lie but they don’t tell the whole story

Herts-vs-Harlow clashes always keep fans on the edge of their seats (photo by Richard Lee richardleephotography.org)

The Herts Falcons and Harlow Nationals were the two outstanding teams of 2012, and the Nationals deservedly lifted the NBL championship trophy.

12 months ago the Nationals were leaders in all the main statistical categories. This time around the numbers are not in their favour. The Falcons are ahead of them in all offensive and defensive categories. It is often said that statistics don’t lie, but on this occasion they certainly do not tell the whole story.

Judging by the figures shown in the table below, the Falcons should win this game hands down, but only two months ago the Nationals came just short of sweeping the Falcons in the doubleheader at Grovehill Ballpark. It required a superhuman effort by Herts to come from behind on both occasions to win by the smallest of margins 3-2 and 8-5.

The slow start of the season for Harlow distorts their season stats. They go into Saturday’s semi-final with more or less the same squad which beat the Herts Falcons in game 6 of the 2012 NBL final.

It is not a secret that many Herts fans see the Nationals as a very awkward opponent. Finishing as the top seed does not seem to have carried much of an advantage for Herts in the semi-final pairing. Having said this, the teams in the other semi-final are just as strong. It is all set for a fascinating weekend of baseball at Farnham Park. It would take a very brave person to make any firm prediction of the outcome of the semi-finals and final this year.

HERTS

FALCONS

HARLOW NATIONALS

CLUB FACTS

1996

Year founded

2011

2

Adult baseball diamonds

1

0

Youth baseball diamonds

0

0

Softball diamonds

0

NUMBER OF BBF LEAGUE TEAMS

1

National Baseball League (NBL)

1

1

AAA League

0

1

AA League

0

2

A League

0

1

U17 League

0

1

U14 League

0

7

Total

1

NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS (Runner-up in brackets)

0 (1)

NBL

2 (0)

1 (0)

AAA League

0 (0)

0 (1)

AA League

0 (0)

0 (0)

A League

0 (0)

0 (0)

U17 League

0 (0)

1 (1)

U14 League

0 (0)

2 (3)

Total

2 (0)

NBL 2013 SEASON

24-4

Wins-Losses

15-13

1st

League position

4th

W18

Current streak

W3

8.36 (1st)

Runs scored per game

6.89(4th)

2.82 (1st)

Runs allowed per game

5.21 (4th)

.342 (2nd)

Batting average

.280 (7th)

.456 (1st)

Slugging average

.362 (7th)

8 (1st)

Home runs

5 (6th)

2.03 (1st)

ERA

4.63 (5th)

25 (3rd)

Fielding Errors

38 (8th)

Another Herts vs London epic expected this Saturday

2010 U14 National Final - London 1 Herts 2
2009 (click to enlarge)

This Saturday, 14 September, Herts Harriers go into battle with their old rival, the London Mets. Over the years these two clubs have locked horns and have produced some of the greatest games in British baseball.

The generation of players playing in the Under-17 league this season first met in the 2009 Under-14 national final. It was an epic game which the Mets won 1-0 (click to view). The following year the two teams met again in the U14 final. On that occasion Herts had their revenge with a come-from-behind 2-1 win which gave them the club’s first national title at the U14 league level (click to view). In 2011 London and Herts met in the U14 league quarter-finals Herts had the upper-hand again slugging their way to the semis with home runs by Brodie Caress, Richard Ganster and Zack Longboy (click to view). Herts went on to finish second losing in the final to LYBL. 2012 was the first meeting between Herts and London in the U17 league postseason. London dominated winning it 13-2 (click to view).

2011 (click to enlarge)

This season it would take a brave person to predict the outcome of this Saturday’s U17 semi-final between the two teams. They met twice in the regular season. In the first meeting the game was tied 11-11 and went into extra innings, ending with a wild scoreline of 24-11 to the London Mets (click to view). On the final day of the regular season Herts turned the table with a 14-7 win over the Mets (click to view).

What will Saturday’s titanic semi-final clash bring? One thing is certain. There will be drama. The game is scheduled for 10:30am this Saturday, 14 September, and will be played at Farnham Park in Slough (postcode SL2 3BP). The game is expected to attract a record number of Herts fans who will be there to support both the Herts Harriers and the Herts Falcons who are in semi-final action in the afternoon.

 

 

HERTS HARRIERS U17

LONDON METS U17

CLUB FACTS

1996

Year founded

1998

2

Adult baseball diamonds

1

0

Youth baseball diamonds

1

0

Softball diamonds

1

NUMBER OF BBF LEAGUE TEAMS

1

National Baseball League (NBL)

1

1

AAA League

2

1

AA League

1

2

A League

1

1

U17 League

1

1

U14 League

1

7

Total

7

NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS (Runner-up in brackets)

0 (1)

NBL

2 (0)

1 (0)

AAA League

0 (0)

0 (1)

AA League

0 (0)

0 (0)

A League

0 (0)

0 (0)

U17 League

2 (2)

1 (1)

U14 League

2 (1)

2 (3)

Total

6 (3)

2013 U17 LEAGUE SEASON

8-3

Wins-Losses

5-1

1st

Postseason seeding

2nd

W7

Current streak

W1

11.72 (2nd)

Runs scored per game

8.00 (1st)

6.09 (2nd)

Runs allowed per game

7.00 (3rd)

.287 (n/a)

Batting average

n/a

.399 (n/a)

Slugging average

n/a

1 (n/a)

Home runs

n/a

5.23 (n/a)

ERA

n/a

33

Fielding Errors

n/a

Herts Falcons and Herts Harriers need two wins this weekend to make history and clinch the biggest prize in British baseball

When the dust settles, who will emerge as the 2013 NBL champion? (photo by Richard Lee richardleephotography.org)
Herts Baseball Club’s 17-year history has included some big games, but none can compare to this weekend’s climax of the 2013 British baseball season. The Herts Falcons will be aiming to win the National Baseball League championship trophy for the first time since the club was founded in 1996. If they succeed, the trophy will be coming back to Hertfordshire for the first time since the Watford Sun-Rockets won it back in 1969.
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The Falcons will face the reigning champions, Harlow Nationals, in the semi-final this Saturday, 14 September. This is a chance for revenge after the Nationals broke Falcons’ hearts 12 months ago beating them 6-3 in the final to clinch the NBL championship.
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The game will be played at Farnham Park in Slough (postcode SL2 3BP), which opened just a few weeks ago. The unveiling of this new venue has added to the excitement in the same way as the new Wembley Stadium and Olympic venues when they were opened. A record number of Herts baseball fans from around the region are expected to be in attendance. The game will start at 14h30.
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If the Falcons overcome Harlow, they will be through to the Final on Sunday at 15h00 where they will meet the winner of the other semi-final between the London Mets and the Southampton Mustangs.
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Also on Saturday and at the same venue, the Herts Harriers will be looking to carry the flag for the club in the Under-17 national championships. In the semi-final they will come up against the London Mets, who have been the dominant force in the U17 league in this country over the last 3 years. The game starts at 10h30. The timing is ideal for Herts fans who can cheer on the Herts youngsters in the morning and then walk over to main diamond to support the Falcons. Herts has one national title in the Under-14 league, which they won in 2010, but this is the first time that the club has a team which has reached the semi-final stage of the Under-17 league.
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If the Herts Harriers win their semi-final, they will play in the final 24 hours later (on Sunday, 15 September) against the winner of the Cobham Cougars vs Halton Polecats semi-final.
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To receive a Herts Fan Pack for this weekend’s national championships, contact Herts Baseball Club.
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Put your questions to the panel previewing this weekend’s NBL championship on Herts Baseball TV

There will be nail-biting moments this weekend in the NBL championships (photo by Will Baxter)

We are building up to the climax of the 2013 baseball season with the National Baseball League (NBL), Under-17 and Under-14 League champions to be decided this weekend.

On Thursday night Herts Baseball TV will broadcast a panel discussion previewing the NBL championships. All four semi-finalists, Harlow Nationals, Herts Falcons, London Mets and Southampton Mustangs, will be represented on the panel.

The show will have a similar format to BBC’s popular Question Time programme. Herts Baseball TV is inviting questions from the audience for one, several or all of the panellists. Questions can cover any of the following subjects:

• the teams involved this weekend;

• the NBL regular season;

• the NBL semi-finals and final;

• the NBL as the country’s flagship baseball competition and its future;

• making British baseball better;

• Farnham Park

• BBF

• Other topics of your choice

We cannot guarantee that all questions will be put to the panel, however, all questions will be considered and we will try to fit as many of them as possible.

You can submit your questions using this contact form. Please submit your question along with your name, and any affiliation (e.g. Bracknell Blazers fan etc).

 

Cruel end to Raptors’ outstanding season

Theo Scheepers driving in Will Zucker to make the score 6-3 (photo by Rob Jones)

Single-A League Semi-Final, Farnham Park

Haverhill Blackjacks 10 Herts Raptors 6

Some of the Herts Raptors players were in tears on Saturday after a late Haverhill rally knocked them out in the semi-final. This was the first time that a Herts team had reached the semi-final stage of the Single-A League and the Raptors had one foot in the final with a 6-3 lead and just 3 innings left to play. Herts scouts were also monitoring developments in the other semi-final and the news filtering through was that the favourites, London Marauders, were about to get knocked out by the Richmond Dukes who had used their ace pitcher in the process, which meant he would not be able to pitch in the final. It seemed like all the pieces were falling into place to reward the Raptors with a trophy at the end of a season, which they put every last ounce of energy into. But the game of baseball can be very cruel sometimes.

The Raptors 15-men roster reported for duty bright and early on Saturday morning. Manager, Arnie Longboy, had the difficult job of deciding which 6 players will start on the bench and the unpleasant task of giving them the bad news. However, all of the players who were on the bench stayed professional and they did all the things which do not show up in the box scores but certainly contribute to the team’s performance. It was a privilege just to be part of the team and this was emphasised by the large number of players from the other Herts teams who had come to support the team.

The Raptors had waited for this day for more than a month and during that time they had planned and prepared meticulously. Herts fans outnumbered any of the other sets of supporters who had made the trip to Farnham Park in Slough, so they went into the game with optimism.

Arnie Longboy entrusted 16-year-old pitcher Will Zucker with the daunting task of starting on the mound with all the pressure of the occasion and elimination baseball. There was no margin for error and Zucker was outstanding. From the first to the 95th pitch of his outing, his sidearm delivery was effective against a powerful Haverhill lineup.

Raptors shut down the Blackjacks offence, but there was no respite at any time during this semi-final (photo by Rob Jones)

The Blackjacks took a 2-1 lead going into the bottom of the second inning. The Raptors responded with 3 runs in that frame to make it 4-2 which included a 1-run double by first-baseman, Jeff Witter. In the third, Will Zucker lined a 2-out triple into right field and Theo Scheepers drove him in to make the score 6-3.

Haverhill hits and several defensive mishaps turned the game on its head. 3 runs came in to score. We were going into the final inning with the game tied 6-6. Will Zucker had reached his 95-pitch limit which applies to players under the age of 17 and had to be substituted. Relief pitchers Brodie Caress and Theo Scheepers tried to halt Haverhill’s momentum, but were not able to. 4 runs came in to score in the top of the seventh. It was going to take something special from the Raptors to come back in the bottom of the final inning. They put 2 runners on base, but were not able to pull the trigger.

Credit must be given to the Blackjacks who started the game losing a player during warm-up followed by another two players during the course of the game through injury, but kept going to the end to reach the final in their first year of existence.

The Raptors camp will feel down for a considerable period of time. At a time when they should be proud of their outstanding achievement, the feeling of coming so close but missing out will haunt them all winter, however the pain they are feeling now will spur them on when they report for Spring Training in 2014.

Baseball gods, birthday gifts, baked goods

The first pitch was up around my shoulders. I left it, and it was called a strike. The second pitch was a little higher, but I swung at it anyway, and missed.

This being a training game between the playoff-bound Raptors and the cobbled-together Herts Rebels, I was still ribbing the umpire — and being ribbed by the catcher — when the third pitch came down. It was low in the zone and somehow I managed to stroke it imperiously towards the outfield. And thus began my 41st birthday present from the baseball gods.

The Herts club has had an amazing year, and still has the prospect of three teams winning post-season silverware. So there is a lot to talk about. But the advantage of having a personal quasi-blog is that I can still talk about my own fun on a baseball field.

My standing excuse remains that my own experience reflects that of many British baseball part-timers, and I am sticking to it. If the game is not about a collection of great personal moments creating a greater whole, then what is it?

And so, back to the story. As warm late summer sunshine bathed Grovehill I was taking part in a loose but nonetheless competitive training game for the Raptors. And I had just driven that 0-2 pitch over and past the centre fielder. I was running hard out of the box and straight to second base and as I approached I could see the ball was still at the base of the fence. So I kept going.

Heading for third I shouted for a clear sign about what to do and was met with a wheeling arm. Carry on. As the Rebels bench rose in encouragement, and the catcher began to set up to take the throw, I wrung the last out of my newly-aged legs to head for home. It wasn’t a classic Major League slide taking me through the plate and into a pop-up. It was a desperate slide to simply get a toe to the plate and grind to a halt.

But it was a success. And it was, unquestionably, an inside the park home run. Never in over a decade of baseball have I scored a home run. Elsewhere on this blog you will find references to the hits which have come closest. And there have been times when overthrows and blatant errors have allowed me to get all the way round in one go. But this was the real deal.

My sister characterises baseball as “Swing, miss. Swing, miss. Swing, miss. Sit down”. Wag that she is, she asked if I still had to sit down after scoring a home run. I replied that no, I had to lie down, as it was exhausting!

It had been six weeks since I played any baseball at all and the pace was hard to handle. After the first ten minutes or so of fielding drills at second base – not only taking my own grounders, but covering first and going to second for cut-off throws – I was thoroughly knackered. But somehow this turned into a day when everything went right.

At the plate, I hit two more singles, and didn’t make an out.  In the field, I tagged out two runners at second. Both were a credit more to the pickoff move of young Zack, and the arm of the Hawks catcher Hunter Devine. But they were fun outs to get.

As the day came to an end the remaining players split to make two seven-man teams so we could continue. One hit got through and sped away into our vacant outfield, but I sprinted after it, made a good throw to Adam, who made a great cut and relay and the batter — who was outrageously trying to follow my earlier example and score an inside-the-parker — was cut down at the plate. Result.

Finally, as the sun sank so low behind home plate that the batter and catcher became an anonymous silhouette, I made my final stellar contribution – as a relief pitcher.

My memory may be tinted by rose-coloured sunglasses, but the way I recall it – and how history will now mark it — is that I got the final two outs to save the win. (Yes OK so I walked in a run first, but that’s being picky)

It all ended with me fielding a sharp comebacker off Eagles slugger Adrian Smithers, despite barely being able to see the ball. A simple throw to first and it was over.

This had been my 41st birthday. And it had been a good one. There were home-made cakes, courtesy of my long suffering wife, for everyone involved. Quite literally, icing on the top of a fine day.

The year had once again thrown up many obstacles to prevent my regular appearance in a Herts uniform, and I’m not sure that I made it to a single training session at Grovehill. But there is something deeply satisfying about a storybook ending, and I will call this one of those. The sun shone. Everyone was relaxed and was just having fun. And doing some simple things right made it even more fun.

Will it be champagne-time this Saturday as the Herts Raptors try to win the Single-A League national championship

The next few weeks hold great promise for the club, with the Raptors the first to step to the plate. They have a great spirit and a lot of talent and they deserve success. The Falcons, having secured the NBL pennant, can now top that by going one better than last year and winning the playoffs.

I will be watching from the sidelines, but at all times I will be willing for those players to experience the exuberant feeling I know you can get from playing baseball.

Herts Falcons will face Harlow Nationals in the NBL semi-final

Grovehill Ballpark saw a good crowd for the NBL playoffs. The place would have gone mad if the Herts Falcons were in action (photo by Richard Lee richardleephotography.org)

On Sunday the last two semi-finalists in the National Baseball League were decided at Grovehill Ballpark. The reigning champions, Harlow Nationals, are through after a 17-4 win over the Bracknell Blazers. Matt Gilbert was the winning pitcher. Slugger Edwin Alcantara loosened up for Farnham Park with a home run.

Southampton Mustangs had a real fight on their hands against the Essex Arrows but eventually secured a 10-6 win. Tomas Zondra was the winning pitcher.

The results mean that the Herts Falcons will face the Harlow Nationals in the semi-final in a repeat of last year’s NBL Final. Southampton will face the London Mets in the other semi-final.

Both games will be played at Farnham Park on Saturday, 14 September. The Herts Falcons vs Harlow Nationals game will be the second game of the day with an estimated start of 2:30pm. Mustangs and Mets start the day at 10:00am. Judging by the amazing race in the regular season these are expected to be thrilling encounters.

Despite Herts Falcons finishing in first place and being the top seed in the NBL, most of the experts have tipped the London Mets as the favourites to lift the NBL championship trophy.

 

Herts Raptors chasing the Single-A National Championship this Saturday at Farnham Park

The British Baseball Federation has just announced the format and schedule of this Saturday’s Single-A League National Championship. Herts Baseball Club is represented by the Herts Raptors who reached the Semi-Final stage by finishing top of their division and are the second seed overall with 10 wins and 4 losses in the regular season.

A win for the Haverhill Blackjacks over the Guildford Mavericks in the quarter-final on Sunday has determined that the Blackjacks will be the Raptors’ opponent in the Semi-Final.

Haverhill had a record of 7 wins and 7 losses during the regular season. In their head-to-head meeting on 23 June the Raptors came out on top with a 31-12 win, so the team from Hertfordshire may have the psychological advantage but the form guide goes out of the window in the postseason as shown by the very closely fought quarter-final games last weekend.

Herts Raptors manager, Arnie Longboy, will have some difficult decisions to make when determining his starting lineup. One of them will be to select the team’s starting pitcher in this knockout game. Among the potential starters are Under-17 players Brodie Caress, Charlie Mayhew, Will Zucker and Zack Longboy, but the team also has several older pitchers such as Jeff Witter, Jim Arnott and Theo Scheepers.

Both semi-finals will be played at Farnham Park this Saturday, 7 September. The Herts Raptors vs Haverhill Blackjacks game will start at 11:00am. The winners will meet in the final on the same day with estimated start time of 3:00pm. The brand new baseball venue is expected to be packed with baseball fans as eight other teams are in action on the same day as part of the AAA and AA-League semi-finals.