Montana motors on at LLWS
SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP)—The boys from Billings have the perfect excuse to miss the start of school Wednesday back home in Montana—they keep winning at the Little League World Series.
Patrick Zimmer tossed five shutout innings and Ben Askelson hit a two-out, two-run single in a 3-1 win over Lafayette, La., on Sunday that kept the Northwest region champs undefeated in South Williamsport.
It’s not a bad start for the first team from Montana to ever qualify for youth baseball’s biggest tournament, even though the players didn’t think they would get here.
“We were just kind of hoping to make it” to the regional tournament, said Ian Leatherberry, 12, who added an insurance run in the sixth with a two-out, RBI double. “That was our ultimate goal, and then we got even farther.”
School begins this week, and if everything breaks right, they might miss even more classes if they advance to the championship game Aug. 28.
Are the players disappointed they won’t be in school? Zimmer, Askelson, Leatherberry and closer Sean Jones immediately responded in unison with an emphatic “No!”
In the other early game Sunday, Yonny Hernandez hit two homers and three pitchers combined for a shutout to help Maracay, Venezuela, stay unbeaten with an 8-0 win over Langley, British Columbia.
Sunday’s late games featured Japan against Mexico and Huntington Beach, Calif., taking on LaGrange, Ky., in the U.S. bracket. The winner of that contest will play Montana on Wednesday.
And to think, the Big Sky league players from Billings once thought they might have trouble just making it through their regional tournament.
But effective pitching, clutch hitting and timely defense have carried them through to make them the most successful Little League team ever out of Montana. Even manager Gene Carlson said he was a little surprised his team started 2-0 at the World Series.
“But once we got here, we knew we belonged,” Carlson said before turning to his players. “They can play with anybody.”
Zimmer struck out four before Jones came on to pitch the sixth and immediately got into trouble.
Louisiana’s Nick Fruge reached on a three-base error, then scored on a wild pitch. Later Cain Castille, who finished 3 for 3, doubled with two outs to put the tying run at the plate, but Jones got a fielder’s choice to end the game.
“We hit the ball, not as well as we wanted us to, but we hit at people, too,” Louisiana manager Leland Padgett said. “That’s baseball, there’s nothing you can do about that.”
Louisiana lost for the first time in tournament play, though Padgett’ not too upset about it.
“The most important thing if you’re 12 years old is learning how to lose, not win. Winning is easy,” the skipper said. “It’s how you lose that makes the character of a man, and that’s what we’re trying to teach these kids, though we’re trying to teach a little baseball, too.”