Category: Headlines

Herts acquire catcher from Florida

Ahead of the climax of the 2012 British baseball season Herts has received a boost with the addition of catcher Andrew Fulford.

Fulford comes from Tampa, Florida, and he moved to Hemel Hempstead in time for the last few deciding weeks of the regular season.

Herts’ coaching staff had a difficult decision to make. Should they add him to the Herts Falcons roster in the National baseball League or to one of the club’s minor league teams? With only a few more games remaining for the Herts Falcons, Fulford would not have been able to meet the postseason requirement of playing in 45% of the Falcons’ regular season games. However, the 45% requirement does not apply at AA level and Fulford would be able to meet the 20% postseason eligibility in the AA if he appears in all of the Hawks’ remaining regular season games.

On the basis of this the coaches decided to add the American to the Hawks roster. The team is in the middle of an almighty battle with the Sidewinders, London Mammoths and the Daws Hill Spitfires for the top spots in the AA standings, which would give two out of the four teams a home field advantage and a more favourable route through the postseason playoffs.

Andrew Fulford is 21-years-old. His primary position is catcher. He has also played in second base, and can fit pretty much anywhere else in the field. He started playing when he was 4. After spending his early years in the Citrus Park Little League, Fulford went on to play for the varsity team at Sickles High School and later with Cambridge High School finishing as Florida Sate runners-up in 2009. During his career he has played under former MLB players Jody Reed, who played as second basemen for the Boston Red Sox, and Sam Marsonek who was a pitcher with the New York Yankees.

Despite being born in America, Fulford may soon be eligible to play for the Great Britain national team and it wil be interesting to see how he will settle into the British leagues and whether he will be able to attract interest from the GB national team coaches.

Herts Baseball legend carries the 2012 Olympic Torch

At 4pm on Monday afternoon fans of Herts Baseball Club tuned into BBC to see a true Herts Baseball legend carry the Olympic Torch through the streets of London.

Jason Greenberg joined Herts in 2005 upon his arrival from Seattle. Since then his contribution to the club has been incredible. He has performed countless roles within the club – player, manager, webmaster, board member, youth team coach, radio presenter, event organiser, journalist and many more. It is not a coincidence that the club’s most successful era coincides with Greenberg’s time with the club.

Jason Greenberg (left) with Nic Goetz after winning the 2008 AAA National Championship

He was a key member of the 2007 Falcons who won the AA pennant and were promoted to the AAA League. In 2008 he was appointed Manager of the Falcons and he put in place a structure which even some professional clubs would be envious of. This paid off immediately as the Herts Falcons became AAA National Champions at the first time of asking with a memorable 6-3 win against the Oxford Kings in the Final. The Falcons achieved back-to-back promotions up the leagues which made Jason Greenberg the first manager in Herts Baseball history to take the team to the highest league tier of British Baseball. In the team’s first year in the NBL, Greenberg took the Falcons to the postseason playoffs.

As a player of the Falcons, Greenberg was always one of the team’s top performers winning numerous honours including the highest honour of Herts Falcons’ Most Valuable Player (MVP) in 2007.

Jason Greenberg honours as a Herts player

2006, Most Runs, Herts Falcons (AAA)

2007, MVP, Herts Falcons (AA)

2007, Home Run Champion, Herts Falcons (AA)

2007, Most RBIs, Herts Falcons (AA)

2007, AA South Champion, Herts Falcons (AA)

2008, AAA National Champion, Herts Falcons (AAA)

2009, Home Run Champion, Herts Falcons (NBL)

2009, Reached NBL Playoffs, Herts Falcons (NBL)

In 2011 he turned his attention to the Great Britain National Team becoming the General Manager where he has since applied the same professional approach which he adopted at Herts. This has been recognised by the rest of the baseball world and Great Britain was recently added to the qualifying round for MLB’s 2013 World Baseball Classic.

Baseball was taken out of the list of Olympic sports just 3 days after the Games were awarded to London, but with Jason Greenberg carrying the torch it is great to see that the organisers have not forgotten one of the most popular sports in the world. It is extra special for members of Herts, who apart from Jason, have several other representatives like Mark Caress and Nick White who are involved in various other roles in the Olympic Games.

Herts Baseball Club President, Aspi Dimitrov, said: “Everyone was chuffed to bits when we learned that Jason was going to be one of the carriers of the Olympic Torch. It is a fantastic tribute for one of the hardest working members of British baseball. It is a very fitting recognition of Jason’s contribution to Herts, the GB Team and British baseball and softball as a whole”

“Jason will soon be moving to America and everyone will miss him, but there is always the hope that his career will bring him and his family back to this country.” – added Dimitrov.

 

Eagles go toe-to-toe with unbeaten Marauders

Oz Kemal had one of his best games for the Eagles this year

by Duncan Hoyle

Herts Eagles had their playoff hopes dented by a strong London Marauders team, who in doing so booked their place in the postseason.

The match was played on a warm evening in Finsbury Park with a good attendance of park goers stopping to watch the game.

Herts got the scoring going in the first with some good baserunning from Joseph Osborne Brade and then had Hawks star Vassil Botev on the mound, dropping down to the Eagles for some pitching time as he made his return from injury. Botev went on to pitch 4 innings finishing his stint with 9 strike outs and only 2 conceded hits. Botev showed some excellent speed and velocity, not always completely on target as he managed to connect with the helmet of Marauders batters on two occasions, but when he was accurate he was very difficult to hit. Oz Kemal had his best game for the Eagles behind the plate and they were able to play a big part in keeping the Eagles close to the Marauders.

Theo Scheepers replaced Botev on the mound and continued to keep things tight up to the end of the 6th inning, and Herts kept on chipping away at the Marauders lead to bring them within 2 runs and keeping up their hopes of pulling off a shock victory against the unbeaten Marauders.

In the middle of the 7th the score was 9-7 to the Marauders and Herts were hoping they could stay close and get their noses in front to put a bit of pressure on the Marauders. However, the Marauders had a big squad and were able to bring in a number of fresh subs to up the tempo and ultimately push ahead of the Eagles during the 7th and 8th innings.

The game finished 17 – 7 at the bottom of the 8th which was a harsh final score for Herts. The Eagles can take away a lot of satisfaction in the effort and character shown during this game.

There is still plenty left this season for the Eagles with several friendly games lined up, the Hunlock series and the final league game at Hove on 5th August now becoming a must-win game if the Eagles are going to stand any chance of making the playoffs.

The calm before the storm

Grass cut, lines marked, and eerie silence. This was the scene at Grovehill Ballpark on Saturday evening ahead of the NBL Special Event which will take place this Sunday, 22 July 2012.

All 8 NBL teams will be on show. The event opens at 11am with the Herts Falcons versus the Bracknell Blazers. At 12pm is arguably the most anticipated of the matchups as league-leaders Harlow Nationals and the third-placed London Mets do battle.

Subsequent start times will depend on how quickly the first games end. At 3:30pm the Southampton Mustangs will be eager to get a win against the Lakenheath Diamondbacks in the hope of avoiding having to go through the Wild Card Playoff game.

To end the day at 4:00pm the Essex Arrows play the Croydon Pirates. The Arrows are not out of the playoff race, but they will need a win.

FULL SCHEDULE

11:00, Falcons at Blazers (7 innings) (New Diamond)

12:00, Nationals at Mets (9 innings) (Old Diamond)

13:30, Falcons at Blazers (7 innings) (New Diamond)

15:30, Mustangs at Lakenheath (9 innings) (Old Diamond)

16:00, Arrows at Pirates (9 innings) (New Diamond)

 

9-year-old pitches no-hitter in U14 league as Herts clinch walk-off win

The Herts Under-14 team ended their regular season schedule with an edge-of-the-seat walk-off win against the Bracknell Wildfire.

They started on a sour note as they came up against a very competent Bracknell pitcher who kept the Herts batters down to a total of 2 hits over the course of the game. Only Alex Guthrie and Alex Deacon managed to record a hit and the team as a whole scored only 1 run. Herts also struggled defensively. Bracknell drove in 19 runs making it a very painful 19-1 loss for the team from Hertfordshire.

Click to view game 1 box scores and play-by-play

They didn’t feel sorry for themselves and got down to business from the first pitch of the second game. Making his debut on the mound was Tom Jansson-Wright. Although he did walk 9 batters he allowed only 3 hits. He had much better run-support compared to the first game. Herts scored 10 runs in the first two innings and he reached his pitch-count limit with the score tied 10-10.

With several key players either unavailable or on tour with the Great Britain Under-15 team in Canada, Herts were running out of pitchers.

It was time to give one of Herts Baseball Club’s most promising young prospects the ball and to see how he performs under enormous pressure with the game on the line. Alex Deacon is only 9 years old and he was asked to go on the mound to face batters who are as much as 4 years older than him. The pitching mound behind his tiny frame reared like a mountain over him, conveniently providing shelter in the event of a slightly stronger breeze potentially blowing him off the rubber.

He took the mound with 1 out in the third inning and runners on first and second base. The first two batters he faced reached base on a walk and hit by pitch, but any tension, which he may have felt, was no longer there after that. He struck out the next two batters and went on to pitch a total of 3 and two-third innings all the way to the end of the game and completely shut down the Bracknell offence. No hits and no earned runs were allowed while he was on the mound. The two runs which were scored by Bracknell were unearned i.e. due to fielding errors.

Going into the bottom of the final inning Herts were trailing 12-11 and facing an agonising second loss of the day.

Alex Guthrie with only half a season of baseball under his belt, gave Herts a glimmer of hope when, with one out, he drove the ball deep over the centerfielder’s head for a double. Bracknell’s closer walked the dangerous Callum Vangundy and Alex Deacon who were 3-for-3 and 2-for-2, respectively, in the game. That loaded the basis and Alex Guthrie took advantage of a wild pitch to advance home and tie the game 12-12. However the next Herts batter struck out so with two outs and runners on second and third, all eyes were on leftie centerfielder, Tom Adams. A swing of the bat produced what appeared to be a routine ground ball out for Bracknell to turn and take the game into extra innings, however the ball was so delicately placed that it sucked both the pitcher and the first baseman to try to field it, which they did cleanly, but that meant that first base was left unattended allowing the speedy Tom Adams to take advantage and reach first base safely and for Callum Vangundy to score the winning run from third.

Click to view game 2 box scores and play-by-play

A walk-off win for Herts which sparked a field-invasion and wild celebrations for the home team. There are still many areas which the Herts U14 team will need to improve on, in what is a transitional year for the new generation of players in that age group, but the signs are very positive that the team has the potential to compete against the best over the next few years as these young Herts players develop.

With school holidays commencing this weekend, the British Baseball youth leagues will take a break for a few weeks and all attention will turn to the postseason playoffs which will take place in September. Herts will be represented in both the Under-14 and Under-17 playoffs. We will keep you updated as the teams prepare for the season’s showpiece events.

 

Falcons and Mets take a win apiece in only NBL encounter

Jordan Farkas was back for the Falcons after several weeks out of action and picked up a key win for Herts against their direct rivals (photo by British Baseball Magazine - click image for more)

by Trevor Clissold (this article was first published on hertsbaseball.com)

Game 1: London 5, Herts 2

Game 2: Herts 8, London 5

London had lost some ground on the leading pack in recent weeks and knew they would have to get off to a fast start to keep the visiting Falcons under pressure. The Mets jumped out to an early lead thanks to a two-run home run from Grant Del Zoppo in the bottom of the third inning and, although Herts would tie the game at 2-2 in the top of the fifth, the Falcons struggled to build any offence against Dan McAneney who pitched four and 2/3 innings of two-run ball against a strong Herts lineup despite a recurring blister.

London were quick to respond in the bottom of the fifth and would take the lead for good as they built on a clutch two-run double from Jonathan Cramman to add three runs in the inning. Noah Frankel came in as emergency relief for McAneney and shut Herts down through the final two innings as the Mets closed the game out 5-2.

With Frankel being unexpectedly called in to Game 1 Sam Sproule was given the start for the second game but London could not reproduce their solid defensive plays from the first game allowing five runs in the third inning on the back of two Mets errors and some timely hitting from the Herts bats.

With good offensive support Falcons starter, Jordan Farkas, pitched efficiently throughout as the visitors built an 8-2 lead heading in to the sixth inning. London began to chip away at the lead as they clawed back three runs but it was to prove too little, too late as Farkas settled back in to his rythm to finish the game in the seventh with a classic 6-4-3 double play to take an 8-5 win.

Herts head coach, Lee Manning, had mixed emotions following the games – “we were frustrated at the delayed start and I think we took that in to the first game but both games were well fought and one win each is probably a fair result on the day.”

London manager, Freddy Vibert remarked “both teams played really good baseball today despite the conditions with numerous double-plays home runs a good hitting. I know a lot of the Herts players from our time at Richmond and it felt good to see everyone again. We’ve still got a long road to reach the playoffs but I am sure we will be meeting Herts again in August for what promises to be a beautiful battle”

 

Roundup: 2012 International London Tournament

by Duncan Hoyle

Saturday, 14 July 2012

Game 1, Herts 7 Richmond 13

The 2012 London International Tournament started with a loss for Herts to a mixed Richmond side. Theo Scheepers was on the mound for Herts and held Richmond to 13 after 4 innings. Despite some good hitting from Rob Crouch and Ken Pike, incuding a 3 RBI double from Pike Herts fell short. Joseph Osborne Brade was impressive in his first appearence at first base.

Game 2, Croydon 11 Herts 1

With the rain tipping down for the duration of this game, the playing surface resembled a muddy farmyard rather than a baseball diamond. Adam Landau – Smithers, with his tiny strike zone was able to extract a walk and get round to score in the first. Ken Pike pitched for the duration of the 5 innings and looks to have regained some pitching form.

Sunday, 15 July 2012

Game 1, Herts 3 Guildford 5

Reagan Wood was impressive on the mound to shut out the AA Guildford Mavericks for the first 2 innings. Herts opened up a 3 run lead but Guildford came back in the bottom of the 3rd to score 5 and clinch the victory.

Game 2, Essex Redbacks 27 Herts 2

The AAA Redbacks who had lost their 2 fixtures on the Saturday found themselves in the Frank Brady Cup which they would go on to win by hammering Herts. The Redbacks where simpy leagues ahead the Single A Herts Team. Litte leaguer Callum Vangundy made his debut on the mound from the full distance, and he pitched very well. Sadly he wasnt backed up by his visibly tired fielders who made numberous errors in defence.

Overall a tough tournament for Herts. However there where some good performances along the way and the experience of playing against good teams should be beneficial for the rookies and youth teamers who represented Herts. The guys who made the trip to Croydon to represent the club shoud be proud of their efforts.

A big thankyou to Herts one supporter and scorer Maureen Scheepers who showed real dedication in watcing the team all weekend!

Squad: Michael Cresswell, Rob Crouch, Duncan Hoyle, Adam Landau-Smithers, Kieran Manning, Joseph Osborne-Brade, Ken Pike, Simon Roberts, Theo Scheepers, Adrian Smithers, Ryan Turtill, Keanu Wood, Reagan Wood, Callum Vangundy.

 

The greatest ever?

by Ken Pike

One of the wonderful things about popular sports is the debate that it causes. No matter whether listening to my girlfriend’s brother discussing the merits of the latest round of walk spoiling (golf), or hearing the commentators of Euro 2012 hailing Spain as possibly the greatest football team of all time, there is endless debate to be had thanks to the endless supply of ways to measure greatness.

Spain have won two world cups and a Euro competition back to back now and entered the record books for most goals in a final and many other reasons too, whereas the magical abilities of Pele et al in 1970 remain football legend over 40 years later. Whether Spain 2012 or Brazil 1970 is the greatest team of all time could only ever be settled by pitting the two sides against each other, but unless time travel is invented and applied to the use of measuring sporting greatness, it is both a sad fact and a beautiful thing that we shall never know.

The simple thing is that winning margins, statistics of accuracy, efficiency etc are all determined not only by the winning team, but by the class of the teams they face. It could be argued that Spain were phenomenal in 2012, but frankly much of their opposition was mediocre at best with their expected big final opponents Germany getting knocked out by the same France side that barely beat a poor England side.

In the world of motor racing, for much of the 90s Michael Shumacher dominated the championships winning race after race by enormous margins. He has records that will likely never be broken over a glorious career. However, his comeback into the sport three years ago have put all of that into question as he now races in a less potent car than the blistering Ferrari, he is regularly out qualified by his young compatriot teammate, and he has failed to get a win since his return. Was his amazing form in the 90s due to having by far the fastest car and weak opposition or was it due to a greatness and spark that he has now all but lost?

There are countless more examples I could go through of seemingly unbeatable records getting smashed: Mark Spitz’s five Olympic golds got ruined by Michael Phelps getting eight, youngest racer to win a grand prix Fernando Alonso got beat by some German lad called Sebastian who might be quite good some day, Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron no longer have their names next to home run records thanks in no small part to medicinal advances helping the likes of Bonds to achieve improbable muscle mass, and so on and so forth. But does that mean the modern versions that superseded them are better, or do they face weaker opposition and are they helped by better sport science (or possibly steroids in some cases – let’s face it, some cases have been pretty clear cut, but even unproven accusations mean that whether Usain Bolt is a force of nature or a force of medicine is likely to be debated long after his career is over and he is just one current example of many such allegations among current sporting excellence.)

So it is rare the be able to unequivocally say that a team or player is the greatest ever. What is more possible is to say that a team is having its greatest year or period ever. The Spanish football team are certainly claiming that one right now, Bolt must be looking at London 2012 with a feeling of supreme confidence and young Mr Vettel can look back at last year as being an early pinnacle in his career that he can aim to surpass in future years.

It gets even harder when you talk baseball. Most wins in a season? 1906 Cubs/2001 Mariners. Most hall of famers? Complicated: as one of the oldest teams Giants have 56 that ever played for them, Yankees have 21 whose names are associated with them primarily, and 1927 Yankees had the most at one time including some blokes called Ruth and Gherig. Some recent current teams, notably the 98 Yankees, have line-ups that include a lot of future hall of famers but they are not yet eligible and can’t be discounted. Biggest winning margins? Again the ‘27 Yankees outscoring opponents by almost 400 runs. Win streaks? Dynasty eras? Overcoming the toughest opposition? Who knows.

Best players, let alone their best years are just as hard if not harder to measure even if you boil it down to position. Would you rather have hall of famers Aaron, Ruth, Gherig, Dimaggio, Young, Ryan, or current greats like Rodrigues, Puyols, Halladay, Hamilton or Lincecum on your dream team? Let’s face it, a large part of your decision making process in this question will be based on what shirt you choose to wear on your days off watching ESPN. Being a D’backs fan I would probably pick some names that would have experienced pundits (and many of you) in fits of laughter.

Some will analyse further looking at the stats, but do these take into account developments in the sport? Hamilton and Lincecum are pitching against the grain with modern sports science helping batters extract every last ounce of speed and power from every hit. Pujols and Rodrigues are certainly more athletic opponents than Ryan or Young faced back in the day. There are other metrics which can’t even be reasonably compared, for example the fastest officially recorded pitch is 105 mps by Aroldis Chapman in 2010 at PETCO ballpark, but anecdotally Nolan Ryan hit that speed regularly.

So what about Herts baseball club? I don’t have access to individual player records so I won’t go into that at this level but throughout the relatively brief (in baseball terms) history of the club, there have certainly been some impressive highs. The Falcons have won the double A league in 2004 and 2007 and the Triple A in 2008. The junior teams have had recent success with the Herts All Stars winning the Under 14s Futures Tournament and the 2010 National Baseball Championship heralding a very bright future. The club has been the largest club in the leagues by membership numbers, and in amateur sports that alone is a measure of success.

This year however, with the playoffs only a few short weeks away, all four senior teams have hit highs that were never expected 12 months ago. The Hawks and Falcons are fighting tooth and nail to gain top spot going into the post season, while in the single A both the Eagles and Raptors are in with a shout of making the playoffs. Admittedly the Eagles are facing very long odds that would require a mixture of other results going their way and some impressive upsets against top of the league teams, the Raptors have one toe in the door with a win against the mid table Mavericks next weekend all but securing their passage to the playoffs and a second win against barrel scraping Richmond sealing the deal.

As a club, rather than four individual teams, the Herts are experiencing a real renaissance after a difficult couple of years. Last year’s departure of many top players thanks in no small part to departing players forming their own team and pulling top class players with them left all three remaining teams struggling to compete at their respective levels. The Falcons finished 2011 with a 4-19 record that was not much to sing about, the Eagles taking a sabbatical from appearing at all thanks to a lack of players, the Hawks marginally bettered the Falcons record with 5-15 and the Raptors had started the season depleted of experience and getting beaten up by teams that should have arguably played at a higher level though they turned around the second half and finished with three wins to their name providing a glimpse of things to come.

The Falcons started the season with a win against Bracknell. Can they keep the momentum going as they face the Blazers again this Sunday?

This year has been a case of night and day. Impressive big name acquisitions in the pre season at the Falcons level had the effect of solidifying all the lower teams, allowing the Hawks and Raptors to cling on to players that might have ordinarily been asked to do their best at a higher league. The Falcons now boast some of the best players in the leagues and as such are fighting a pitched battle with the Nationals and the fading Mets for top spot.

The Hawks led ably by the managing partnership of Andy Cornish and Greg Bochan who both provide hitting power coupled with catching and pitching might respectively, are joint top with the Mammoths and Sidewinders with everything to play for in the last few games.

The Raptors started slightly shakily in their first two games but soon moved up the gears and now play with ever increasing confidence with a stunning win over the Old timers putting their playoff future in their own hands courtesy of a homer from powerhouse Gilberto Medina, 6 for 6 batting by yours truly and a composed and solid pitching performance by young Jake Caress adding to a season accented by the impressive performances of the young additions to the squad. They go into a must win game against the Mavericks knowing that if they can take the Archers to the wire and beat the grumpy men from Enfield, they can bring the fight to anyone in the league.

The newly reformed Eagles settled in to the single A with low expectations placed upon them as supposed training grounds for new and young blood. New manager Duncan Hoyle had different ideas from being the whipping boys though and benefitted from some very talented new players including the defensive powers of pitcher Reagan Wood and offensive abilities of the current Eagles home run leader Aidrian Smithers (he has 1). They now sit level on games with the supposedly superior Raptors (who they fought well against earlier in the season despite ultimately losing) however facing much tougher opposition for their final games and head to head results against the Raptors and other nearby teams going against them.

Could one, two or perhaps three of the Herts teams be national champins again this season?

The Falcons, Hawks and Raptors all hold the reigns now and can decide their own futures by winning from here on in. The Eagles face a battle, but having already far exceeded expectations, I would not be the one to bet against them, and just how great would a semi final playoff between the Eagles and raptors be? What are the chances of all four teams getting to the playoffs? Slim, admittedly, but possible. The chances of winning the whole lot and finishing with three new trophies in our cabinet? The chances of making the best year in Herts history? The chances of turning the 2012 Herts into a three league winning club?

The greatest season ever can only be determined by history, by ultimate results, and the names on the trophy at the end of it. With equal parts steel, determination, teamwork, skill and importantly luck Herts can achieve staggering heights. In this country, August is when baseball history is made.

What might be the greatest Herts season ever, has only just begun.

PLAYOFF SCENARIOS

Falcons

Falcons face double headers against rivals Mets and Nationals next followed by easy games against bottom of the table Croydon Pirates and Bracknell Blazers. Four out of four against the Mets and Nationals would put them in top spot and leave their fates in their hands. Four losses would leave them with a good chance of playoffs but the Diamondbacks and Mustangs would likely be taking them to the wire. With this many games left there are too many permutations to list them all.

Hawks

The Hawks also face the Sidewinders and Mustangs in their fight to make the playoffs but with several rain postponements there are still a lot of games to play. Wins against the top teams would put them in a strong position but there are not many easy games left for them with the Brentwood Stags providing the only bottom three club for them yet to face, the rest are mid table must winners. Again, with 7 games left, there are too many permutations to list.

Raptors

The win against the Old Timers puts them in the driving seat. With head to heads largely going their way with their opponents, a win against Guildford next week puts them firmly in charge of the wildcard spot. Head to head results against the Eagles, Old timers, and Mavericks makes a win against bottom of the table Richmond would guarantee passage regardless of results, but even a loss in the second game would need freak results elsewhere to knock them out. A collapse by Hove Tuesday could even get them top wildcard place, but the Marauders and the Archers have pretty much sealed the top spots. However, a loss to Mavericks spins that on its head and leaves them needing results elsewhere to go their way whether they win the following week or not.

Eagles

The Eagles sit level with the Raptors on wins and losses, but behind in the table having lost their head to head. To make matters worse, their final opponents are Hove Tuesday and London Marauders, both teams they will have a tough time beating. For the Eagles to progress they would likely have to win both games and other results would need to go their way. Either Hove would need a complete collapse for the rest of the season paving the way for Raptors and Eagles to both qualify, or the Eagles do it at the cost of the Raptors, but they need to better the Raptors record not equal it.

 

Herts players begin their tour of Canada with the GB U15 Team

Toronto Blue Jays greet the GB U15 Team on the big screen at the Rogers Centre

Three members of Herts Baseball Club departed form Heathrow Airport on Friday as part of the Great Britain U15 National Team’s tour of Canada.

They are Carlos Casal Jr, Marty Cullen Jr and Tom Everex Armstrong and play for Herts in the U17 league.

39 players tried out for the team at the start of the year. The 2012 full team roster was reduced down to 27 players including three more Herts players (Brodie Caress, Callum Vangundy and Jose Morillo).

The roster was reduced to 18 players for the trip to Canada and Casal, Cullen and Everex-Armstrong will now have the rare opportunity to play on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean.

Whilst in Canada, the players will have the opportunity to practice and play on first class fields against very tough competition. During their time in Canada, the Cadets will be playing teams from Oshawa, Bowmanville, Whitby, Ajax at Kinsmen Stadium in Oshawa and travelling to Niagara Falls for a game against the city representative.

The Cadets will be based in Oshawa during their stay and playing three double-headers under lights. This will be the first opportunity for players to gain this experience.

On Saturday the team went to see the MLB game between the Toronto Blue Jays and the Cleveland Indians at the Rogers Centre.  The Blue Jays greeted the team by showing them the big screen at the stadium (pictured above).

The GB U15 Team at Heathrow Airport, ready to depart for Canada

 

at the Rogers Centre ahead of the Blue Jays vs Indians MLB game