Penns Grove comes alive late, but it’s not enough to overtake South Vineland in District 3 Final Four opener
DISTRICT 3 FINALS (Double-loss elimination) Monday at Elmer South Vineland 7, Penns Grove 3 East Vineland 9, Millville American 4 Tuesday at Millville G3: South Vineland vs. East Vineland, 5:45 p.m. G4: Penns Grove vs. Millville American, 8 p.m.
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
ELMER – The Penns Grove All-Stars were one of the highest scoring teams in District 3 pool play, but it took them a little while to get going in their bracket opener Monday night.
The Salem County survivors scored three runs in the fifth inning, but it wasn’t enough to climb out of an early hole and they fell to South Vineland 7-3 in the first round of the District Final Four at Elmer LL.
“It just took us a little bit to get the bats going and it just wasn’t enough,” Penns Grove manager Steve Raymond said. “They got down on themselves early. A lot of them have never been in a position to where they’re playing for a championship. I think there was a lot of undue pressure on them.”
They’ll look to stay alive in the double-loss format against Millville American Tuesday at 8 p.m. on their opponent’s home field. Penns Grove won the pool play game between the teams there (7-3) and are expected to send Achillius Vong to the mound against them again.
If they had been a little sharper early they might have made it to the winner’s bracket. Now they’ll have to win four games and beat one of Tuesday night’s winners twice to claim the district title.
Penns Grove hit .329 and scored 32 runs in four American Division pool games, but South Vineland starter Justin Chin held them to just one hit and struck out seven over the first three innings. But they came to life against reliever Mylus Moore in the fifth, scoring three runs, to keep their hopes alive, but by then South Vineland had opened a 7-0 lead.
Bryce Myers and Lucas Vong had RBI singles for Penns Grove in the winning and Lucas Ware scored on error as they started swinging the bats and being aggressive of the bases.
“They started waking up,” Raymond said. “As soon as we started putting pressure on them they started breaking. We needed that chain reaction earlier. That’s what we needed. One person steps up big and we usually build off that and keep going.”
It just wasn’t enough. South Vineland scored a run in the first and two in the second off Penns Grove starter Jimmy LaPalomento, then broke it open with four in the fourth.
EAST VINELAND 9, MILLVILLE AMERICAN 4: The top seed out of the National pool parlayed six walks and three hits into a six-run fifth inning that broke a 3-3 tie. Four of the walks came with bases loaded and Ricky Bones hit a two-run double for the big hit of the inning.
It was a come-from-behind win as Millville scored three runs in the top of the first. The Americans scored the final run of the game as well on Noah Rodriguez’ solo homer in the sixth.
SOUTH VINELAND 7, PENNS GROVE 3
Penns Grove
000 030-
3
6
1
South Vineland
120 40x-
7
9
2
WP: Justin Chin. LP: Jimmy LaPalomento. 2B: Achillius Vong (PG), Derek Cuba (SV), Mylus Moore (SV). RBI: Bryce Myers (PG), Lucas Vong (PG), Mylus Moore (SV), Derek Cuba (SV) 2, Matthew Ramos (SV), Luca Lopez (SV), Matthew Saunders (SV) 2.
Here are the pool play batting and pitching statistics for the four teams in the N.J. District 3 Little League Tournament finals bracket
DISTRICT 3 TOURNAMENT Monday at Elmer LL N2 South Vineland (2-1) vs. A1 Penns Grove (3-1), 5:45 p.m. A2 Millville American (3-1) vs. N1 East Vineland (2-1), 8 p.m. Tuesday at Millville American LL Monday’s winners, 5:45 p.m. Monday’s losers, 8 p.m.
With quarterbacks on the mend or away, Pennsville gives its defense a long look at Ginsburg Classic 7v7
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PITMAN – Most think when a team plays in a 7-on-7 passing tournament it’s all about the offense. That’s where most of the points in the games are going to come from, of course, but it’s just as much about the cornerbacks and safeties as it is the quarterbacks and receivers.
Because they were limited in the quarterback department, Pennsville went into Saturday’s ATF Ginsburg 7v7 Classic at Total Turf with more of an eye on the defensive side of the ball.
They went 1-2 in their pool, beating Gloucester Catholic between losses to Kingsway and Woodbury, but the results weren’t nearly as important as the process.
“Even without the quarterback what we wanted to see on both sides was the basics,” Eagles coach Mike Healy said. “Are we lined up properly where we’re supposed to be, do we know the plays, the coverages and how they’re supposed to run. That was the big thing on both sides. It was a good learning experience.”
QB Ahmad Jones (center) was named MVP after leading Camden (top photo) to Ginsburg 7v7 Classic title Saturday.
It’s tough to play a 7×7 passing camp without a quarterback. Senior starter Robbie McDade is still rehabbing from offseason shoulder surgery on a schedule that’ll have him ready for the season opener. Junior Jake Layfield just went on family vacation. And junior Grady Sanders is recovering from a shoulder injury, but was far enough along in his therapy to give it a shot in the second and third games and in Healy’s mind “did a good job moving us down the field.”
First-team WJFL Patriot Division left tackle Jacob Hand ran the offense in the first game. He threw it to the receivers he was directed to and even threw a touchdown, but the quarterback spot remains in the hands of the three regulars.
“We knew offensively we were going to have some struggles today and we accepted that,” Healy said. “The thing I like about 7-on-7 is while you want to win games what it really allows us to do is this we know what to do, this we’re OK and this we need to work on a lot and teach.
“We were able to run our offense and defensively after the first game we kind of calmed and figured some stuff out. We knew our defense was a little more complete today.”
On the defensive side, safety Hardy had an interception and several deflections. Corner Hayden Sherman, who started as a sophomore but didn’t play last season, broke up a few passes. Kane Green and Danny Knight also did well.
“For the most part they did a pretty good job,” Healy said. “We gave up some big plays, but a lot of it was just on technique stuff that we haven’t gone over yet because we haven’t had the time yet this season.
“I saw a lot of kids make a lot of plays. A lot of kids made mistakes also, but that was expected today. Overall I thought it was a good stepping stone for us going forward.”
The Eagles will get some more 7v7 action at a team camp next month at Kingsway. All three quarterbacks are expected to be back for that.
Camden won the Ginsburg Classic, blanking Paulsboro in the championship game 22-0. Panthers quarterback Ahmad Jones was the MVP.
2025 PENNSVILLE FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Aug. 28 – Gloucester City, 6 p.m. Sept. 5 – at West Deptford, 7 p.m. Sept. 12 – Overbrook, 7 p.m. Sept. 20 – at Audubon, 11 a.m. Sept. 26 – Camden Catholic, 7 p.m. Oct. 3 – at Penns Grove, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 9 – Paulsboro, 6 p.m. Oct. 17 – Lawrence, 6 p.m. Oct. 24 – at Collingswood, 6 p.m.
Millville American edges Pennsville in winner-take-all pool game to claim second division spot in District 3 bracket stage
DISTRICT 3 TOURNAMENT Saturday’s Games Millville American 5, Pennsville 2 North Vineland 5, Buena 3
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PENNSVILLE – As Pennsville manager Jay Weatherbee watched the final out of the game disappear into the glove of the right fielder from the third base coach’s box, his head slumped and his body bent at the waist. He was hoping his Little League All-Stars could add to the legacy set by their predecessors last year, but they just couldn’t pull it off.
The Little Eagles had a shot to advance to the District 3 Tournament finals and were in it to the end, but fell to Millville American in a winner-take-all game for the second seed out of the American Division 5-2. Millville now plays National No. 1 East Vineland in Monday’s 8 p.m. opening round bracket game at Elmer Little League.
When Penns Grove rallied from a two-run deficit to beat Millville Friday and win the American Division pool, it set up Saturday’s last-day showdown between Millville and Pennsville for the final playoff spot. The winner also would be 3-1 in pool play, but Penns Grove held the head-to-head tiebreaker over whichever team won to earn the division’s No. 1 seed.
“They beat us,” Weatherbee said. “Again, small mistakes we make early on in the game come back to bite us, just like every game.
“This time we just couldn’t overcome it.”
Millville took a 2-0 lead in the top of the first, but Pennsville tied it in the bottom of the inning. Chase Dolden led off with a double, moved to second on Pat Galloway’s ground out to short and scored on Brayden Weatherbee’s ground out to third. Starting pitcher Trey Sam followed with a solo homer to tie the game.
“That felt great,” Sam said. “I thought we had a chance, but our defense …”
After the home run Pennsville managed only four hits (all singles) and five baserunners the rest of the game against three Millville pitchers. Hard-throwing Nate Shelton, who finished the Penns Grove game Friday, pitched the final three shutout innings, giving up two infield hits, walking none and striking out four.
“The kids bounced right back after last night’s (loss),” Millville manager Dan Shelton said. “I was definitely a little worried about it, but they came with the heads ready to go and they got the job done.”
Dolden followed Sam to the mound for Pennsville in the third “really hyped” and threw only three pitches to get his first three outs. He kept Millville off the board in the fourth and fifth innings before the visitors pushed a final run across in the sixth.
“Just come in and do what I normally do,” Dolden said of his mindset. “I really wanted to win because I wanted my revenge on Penns Grove.”
Millville manufactured its other three runs to get and extend the lead. C.J. Tipton raced home on a wild pitch in the second inning to break the tie, Lucas Campachano scored on Noah Rodriguez’ sacrifice fly in the third and Nate Shelton stole home in the sixth.
Sam said the Americans were “probably the most aggressive team” he’s faced. They had seven hits in the game and took nine extra bases.
“I play baserunning, baserunning is my thing,” Millville manager Shelton said. “I manufacture runs by baserunning. If a man gets on base, my job is to score them any way possible. That’s just my job. I teach it hard.”
MILLVILLE AMERICAN 5, PENNSVILLE 2
Millville American
211 001-
5
7
1
Pennsville
200 000-
2
6
3
WP: Jackson Haley, LP: Trey Sam. S: Nate Shelton. 2B: Lucas Campachano (M), Jackson Haley (M), Chase Dolden (P). HR: Trey Sam (P). RBI: Noah Rodriguez (M), Nate Shelton (M), Brayden Weatherbee (P), Trey Sam (P).
District 3 standings
AMERICAN
NATIONAL
Penns Grove
3-1
East Vineland
2-1
Millville
3-1
South Vineland
2-1
Pennsville
2-2
Elmer
1-2
North Vineland
1-3
West Cumberland
1-2
Buena
1-3
DISTRICT 3 FINALS (Double-loss elimination) Monday at Elmer G1: Penns Grove vs. South Vineland, 5:45 p.m. G2: East Vineland vs. Millville American, 8 p.m. Tuesday at Millville G3: Winner G1 vs. Winner G2, 5:45 p.m. G4: Loser G1 vs. Loser G2, 8 p.m. Wednesday at North Vineland G5: Loser G3 vs. Winner G4, 7 p.m. Thursday at South Vineland G6: Winner G3 vs. Winner G5, 7 p.m. Friday at South Vineland G7: If necessary, 7 p.m.
SECTION IV TOURNAMENT At West Deptford LL (Double-loss elimination) (Opening games) July 11 District 3 vs. District 16, 6 p.m. District 14 vs. District 15, 8 p.m. July 12 District 3-District 16 winner vs. District 13, 5 p.m.
Program that hadn’t won a district tournament game or gone to district finals in 14 years completed 3-1 run in pool play to claim top seed from American Division
DISTRICT 3 LL TOURNAMENT Friday’s Games Penns Grove 7, Millville American 3 South Vineland 11, Elmer 1
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
MILLVILLE – A Penns Grove Little League program that hadn’t won a district tournament game or gone to the district finals since 2011 – two years before any of their current players were even born – completed a 3-1 run in pool play Friday night to claim the No. 1 seed from the American Division into next week’s District 3 finals.
Penns Grove rallied from a two-run fourth-inning deficit to beat Millville American 7-3 to win their division and set up a winner-take-all showdown between Millville and host Pennsville Saturday for the pool’s second spot. The winner also would be 3-1 in the pool, but Penns Grove owns the head-to-head tiebreaker over both.
Penns Grove will play National No. 2 South Vineland in Monday’s opening round of bracket play at the Elmer LL complex. The Millville-Pennsville winner gets National No. 1 East Vineland. It’s the first time in 18 years they won more than one game in pool play.
“I just told them it’s the first time in 14 years (they’d won in the tournament), 29 straight losses, and now we’re going into the bracket,” Penns Grove manager Steve Raymond said. “I told them they’ve got to realize what they got here. It’s a good team and you saw tonight it’s not just one person. Everybody comes in clutch.”
Penns Grove, which had to win Friday to advance after laying an egg in its last game at Buena, took a 1-0 lead in the first inning. Aiden Robertson get it started with a leadoff triple into the right field corner and scoring on Achillius Vong’s RBI ground out.
Vong made his first start since no-hitting Pennsville last Saturday and held Millville scoreless for three innings with the help of five strikeouts and a couple nice defensive plays by his teammates. But Millville reached him for three in the fourth to take the lead and get him off the mound.
Vong came out after 61 pitches so Penns Grove could have him available Monday.
“We had a gameplan that we came in with (and) we ended up sticking with it,” Raymond said. “Towards the middle when they were starting to get to Achillius, I was kind of bouncing around like should we leave him in and let him finish it and we lose him for the bracket, or do we save him and we get him for the second game.
“We decided to save him. It was a group thing. When I went to the mound I told him we’re thinking of bringing Jimmy (LaPalomento) in so we can have you for the bracket. He was he was good for it. Everybody’s a team player … As long as they come out here fired up with energy they’re going to win. They find a way to win. Whatever we need it happens.”
Manager Steve Raymond tells his Penns Grove LL All-Stars the historical significance of their win over Millville Friday night.
LaPalomento kept Millville off the board for the rest of the game. He threw 2 1/3 innings of no-hit relief and struck out four of the eight hitters he faced.
“I was a little scared at first, but I had the bottom of the lineup so I just tried to gun them all down,” LaPalomento said.
Penns Grove gave their reliever the lead in the bottom of the fourth when they went through three Millville pitchers to score three runs. The runs came on consecutive bases-loaded walks to Tanner Raymond, LaPalomento and Nolan O’Brien (for the lead). They had only two hits in the game but took advantage of nine walks and a hit batsman.
Their other hit, S.J. Poindexter’s two-run bases-loaded double, broke it open in the sixth, a hit for which manager Raymond dug into his bag to present the left fielder a brand new game ball. Vong drove in the final run with another infield out.
“I thought it was going to be caught at first until I saw it heading toward the fence and finally hit the fence,” Poindexter said. “I didn’t think I was going to hit. I struck out a lot of times and lost all my confidence, but once I gained my confidence back by getting the hit I felt good about myself.”
“Shawn hit like that during the season,” Raymond said. “That’s what we expect out of him. He’s a hitter. He’s fast. He’s a hitter. I saw it all season. I think now that he did that we’re going to start seeing a lot more of it.”
Each of the last three years Poindexter, his father and granddad have made the trip to Williamsport to take in some of the Little League World Series. After celebrating his team’s historic win Friday he readily stated his goal going forward.
“I just want to go to Williamsport,” he said.
And he wasn’t talking about as a fan.
“That’s awesome,” Raymond said. “They’ve got goals and hopefully the three of us coaches can get ‘em there.”
Penns Grove catcher Tanner Raymond puts the tag on C.J. Tipton before the Millville runner can get his foot on the plate in the third inning of their District 3 Tournament game Friday night. Top photo, PG manager Steve Raymond presents S.J. Poindexter with a game ball for his clutch two-run double in the fifth inning.
SOUTH VINELAND 11, ELMER 1: South Vineland ended Elmer’s run in the tournament by taking advantage of seven walks and holding their visitors to two hits.
The winners took a 1-0 lead in the first with four walks and broke it open with four runs in the third. They eventually walked it off with four runs in the fifth.
Brandon D’Agostino and Cash Williams had Elmer’s two hits. Cayden Becker scored their only run when he led off the fifth with a walk, then stole second, third and home.
South Vineland will play Penns Grove in the opening round of bracket play Monday at Elmer.
SOUTH VINELAND 11, ELMER 1
Elmer
000 01-
1
2
0
South Vineland
104 24-
11
7
0
WP: Justin Chin. LP: Raylan Baldissero. 2B: Matthew Ramos (SV), Mike Lee (SV). RBI: Elijah Perez (SV), Mike Lee (SV) 2, Jonathan Gonzalez (SV), Ray Mass (SV). Scoring by Elmer LL Gamechanger.
District 3 standings
AMERICAN
NATIONAL
Penns Grove
3-1
East Vineland
2-1
Millville
2-1
South Vineland
2-1
Pennsville
2-1
Elmer
1-2
Buena
1-2
West Cumberland
1-2
North Vineland
0-3
Friday’s Games Penns Grove 7, Millville American 3 South Vineland 11, Elmer 1 Saturday’s Games Millville American at Pennsville, 5 p.m. Buena at North Vineland, 5 p.m. (End of pool play)
DISTRICT 3 FINALS (Double-loss elimination) Monday at Elmer G1: Penns Grove vs. South Vineland, 5:45 p.m. G2: East Vineland vs. Millville American or Pennsville, 8 p.m. Tuesday at Millville G3: Winner G1 vs. Winner G2, 5:45 p.m. G4: Loser G1 vs. Loser G2, 8 p.m. Wednesday at North Vineland G5: Loser G3 vs. Winner G4, 7 p.m. Thursday at South Vineland G6: Winner G3 vs. Winner G5, 7 p.m. Friday at South Vineland G7: If necessary, 7 p.m.
Pennsville holds District 3 LL Tournament destiny in their hands after walk-off win, combined no-hitter over North Vineland
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
VINELAND – Pennsville manager Jay Weatherbee could spend hours trying to figure all the scenarios that would get his team to the bracket round of the District 3 Little League Tournament, but he reduced it all to three words made famous by a legendary NFL owner.
Just win, baby.
Pennsville put itself in a position to advance to the next stage of the tournament with a 10-0 four-inning no-hitter over host North Vineland. As much as the next two days will have a bearing on the seedings, as near as Weatherbee can figure his team just has to win its pool play final against Millville to get in.
“(All those scenarios) doesn’t really matter,” Weatherbee said. “My boys have to come ready to play Saturday. I told them out there win-win, lose we go home. It might come down to run differential and all that, but they don’t need to know that. If we win, we’re good.”
But first Millville and Penns Grove play a huge game in the American Division Friday to set the stage for Saturday’s showdown. There are scenarios for any of the three teams to finish No. 1.
Regardless of what happens Friday, as long as Pennsville wins Saturday it figures to be in. There’s even a scenario that if they lose Saturday they could come out of a three-way tie with the 2 seed (if they give up fewer runs to Millville than Penns Grove).
The National Division pool is a lot less complicated. East Vineland is the 1 seed even after getting routed by West Cumberland Thursday, while the winner of Friday’s Elmer-South Vineland game will claim the division’s second seed.
In any event, Pennsville had to win Thursday to make any of the weekend scenarios possible. They jumped out to an 8-0 lead after two innings and Pat Galloway and Brayden Weatherbee combined on a no-hitter.
The defending district champs walked it off in the fourth when Trey Sam scored on Landon Nazar’s two-out shot into the right centerfield gap. Nazar produced the first two runs of the game when his speed forced a bad throw on a bases-loaded roller to short.
“They played well,” Weatherbee said. “Pat pitched well. He did what I asked him to. I told him he’d come out at 65, save him for Monday if we make it.
“I had him all year on Penn Tire. I relied on him a lot during the season. I know what he can do out here. I know what he had. I know I was comfortable with him putting him out there. He did his job.”
Galloway, who pitched the final two innings of the win over Buena Monday, threw 61 pitches over the first 3 1/3 innings. He walked four and struck out seven. North Vineland put only two balls in play against him, a grounder to second baseman Mason Seaver for the final out of the first inning and a grounder to shortstop Sam in the third.
Brayden Weatherbee got the final two outs on a strikeout and a rundown on the bases.
“I felt amazing,” Galloway said. “Everything was going my way the whole day. I just had to throw strikes and try to get the team a win.”
PENNSVILLE 10, NORTH VINELAND 0
North Vineland
000 0-
0
0
8
Pennsville
350 2-
10
9
0
WP: Pat Galloway (1-0). LP: Anthony Ebner. 2B: Trey Sam (P). RBI: Brayden Weatherbee (P), Trey Sam (P), Landon Nazar (P) 2, Ayden Harris (P).
Pennsville manager Jay Weatherbee encourages the hitter at the plate with his son Brayden standing on third. Top photo, starting pitcher Pat Galloway throws a pitch early in his combined no-hitter.
District 3 standings
AMERICAN
NATIONAL
Millville
2-0
East Vineland
2-1
Penns Grove
2-1
South Vineland
1-1
Pennsville
2-1
Elmer
1-1
Buena
1-2
West Cumberland
1-2
North Vineland
0-3
Thursday’s Games Pennsville 10, North Vineland 0 West Cumberland 11, East Vineland 1 Friday’s Games Penns Grove at Millville, 5:45 p.m. Elmer at South Vineland, 5:45 p.m. Saturday’s Games Millville at Pennsville, 5:45 p.m. Buena at North Vineland, 5:45 p.m. End of pool play
AMERICAN DIVISION PLAYOFF BREAKDOWN
On Friday: if Millville beats Penns Grove: Millville 3-0, Penns Grove 2-2, Pennsville 2-1 If Penns Grove beats Millville: Penns Grove 3-1, Millville 2-1, Pennsville 2-1
On Saturday: Millville beats Penns Grove and Pennsville (and Buena beats North Vineland): No. 1 Millville 4-0, Penns Grove/Pennsville/Buena 2-2 and the 2 seed determined by run ratio (fewest runs allowed based on 6-inning game. Pennsville would be 2 if it gives up fewer runs to Millville than Penns Grove).
Millville beats Penns Grove and Pennsville beats Millville: No. 1 Pennsville 3-1, No. 2 Millville 3-1
Penns Grove beats Millville and Millville beats Pennsville: No. 1 Penns Grove 3-1, No. 2 Millville 3-1
Penns Grove beats Millville and Pennsville beats Millville: No. 1 Penns Grove 3-1, No. 2 Pennsville 3-1
NATIONAL DIVISION PLAYOFF BREAKDOWN No. 1 East Vineland, Elmer-South Vineland winner No. 2
North Vineland catcher GianniLewis Gordillo awaits with the ball to put the tag on Pennsville’s Dante DiMarco in the third inning of their district tournament game Thursday.
Shorthanded Buena erupts for 10 runs in final two innings, scores its first win, hands Penns Grove first loss in District 3 LL Tournament
DISTRICT 3 TOURNAMENT Buena 11, Penns Grove 6
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
BUENA — Penns Grove was on a generational run in its first two games of this year’s District 3 Little League Tournament, but there was something different about it on a hot Tuesday night.
Shorthanded Buena erupted for 10 runs in the final two innings to score its first win of the tournament and hand Penns Grove its first loss, 11-6.
Penns Grove rallied from deficits to 1-0 and 5-3 to tie the game in the home fifth before Buena, down to 10 players due to injuries, erupted for six runs in the top of the sixth to take ultimate control.
Before Buena came to life in the fifth, Penns Grove had given up just three runs in its first 14 tournament innings.
“I think they dealt with same thing last night (at Pennsville) we did tonight,” Penns Grove manager Steve Raymond said. “My guys were flat. They were flat and made some mistakes on the bases … it all adds up.
“We weren’t the team we were the other two games, I can tell you that. But I’d rather get it out of the way now so they know how much it sucks (to lose).”
Penns Grove tied the game 1-1 in the third on Lucas Vong’s RBI single, but had two runners thrown out at home plate. They took a 3-1 lead in the fourth on Achillius Vong’s solo homer and Jimmy LaPalomento’s RBI triple and it looked for a time it was going to stand the way Tanner Raymond was dealing in relief on the mound.
The manager’s son put up zeroes on 23 pitches in the third and fourth innings behind starter Lucas Ware. But Buena solved him in the fifth, scoring four runs with timely hitting and the kind of aggressive base running Penns Grove has been known for early in the tournament to take a 5-3 lead.
Shawn Poindexter, Lucas Vong and Nolan O’Brien all had two hits for Penns Grove. Jace Nimohay had three hits and was a homer shy of the cycle for Buena.
The loss knocked Penns Grove out a tie for first place in the American Division with Millville. They play Millville in their final pool game Friday night, but Millville has a date with Pennsville the next night that could decide everybody’s fate.
“We told them we’ve got to forget this one,” Raymond said. “It’s done.”
Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled Thursday’s Games Pennsville at North Vineland, 5:45 p.m. East Vineland at West Cumberland, 5:45 p.m. Friday’s Games Penns Grove at Millville, 5:45 p.m. Elmer at South Vineland, 5:45 p.m. Saturday’s Games Millville at Pennsville, 5 p.m. Buena at North Vineland, 5 p.m. (End of pool play)
The Tri-Cape All-Stars survive triple-digit temperatures, two one-run games to win their second Carpenter Cup softball title in three years
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PHILADELPHIA – While they were warming up, even before the first pitch of the first game, the Tri-Cape Softball All-Stars made a pact.
It was going to be all or nothing. They went for the all.
The Tri-Capers won three games do-or-die games in Monday’s bracket round to sweep their way to a second Carpenter Cup softball title in three years. They beat Delaware South in the title game 3-2 after taking down Jersey Shore 9-0 and Delaware County 2-1 on a walk-off passed ball.
“Before we even played any games (Monday), when we were warming up, we said ‘All or nothing,’” Pennsville infielder Graillyn Weber said. “If we lose the first game we’d be done or win the first game and win the whole thing. That’s pretty much what it was.”
What it definitely was was hot. The games at FDR Park were played in temperatures that hovered around 100 degrees, but the Tri-Capers didn’t wilt – even under the intensity of a couple one-run games.
They beat Delaware County in the semifinals when courtesy runner Trinity Brown of Oakcrest raced home on a passed ball with two outs in the bottom of the seventh. They took the lead against Delaware South on Tori Jester’s two-out single in the sixth.
Ocean City’s Jess Mooney set South down in order in the seventh with Woodstown’s Ellie Wygand squeezing the final out on a fly ball to left field touching off a big celebration. Weber turned a leaping double play in the top of the sixth to keep the game tied.
“When we first got the trophy we all jumped and held it up,” Weber said. “It was pretty cool. It was like one of those moments you see on TV when a team wins something and holds up the big trophy. That was a cool moment.”
Weber and Wygand both had a hit in the rout of Jersey Shore and Weber had a hit against Delaware South.
Tri-Cape never trailed in the championship game, but they never had it in hand until the sixth. Brooke Douglas’ RBI double gave them a 1-0 lead in the first inning, but Adeline Lutz tied with an RBI single in the third. They regained the lead on Ava Snyder’s RBI single in the bottom of the third, but Delaware South tied it again in the fifth.
“I knew we were going to win it, honestly; I just knew it,” Weber said. “Because we had such a solid team. We had all the best players I felt like.”
“Loved getting to play on the field with so many elite and talented players,” Wygand wrote on her X feed. “What an honor! What a blast!”
Tri-Cape won the Cup in 2023 and 2014. Pennsville coach Beth Jackson has been on the staff for all three titles. Schalick coach Rick Higinbotham has been on the staff for the last two.
This year’s team went 6-0 in the tournament, winning three one-run games, and outscored their opponents 42-13.
“It’s always fun,” Jackson said. “It’s a new group of kids. Every year they’re a great group of kids and they always work together. We only have two practices and they come together and play for two days and they win. It’s always amazing.”
The team will be recognized along with the Carpenter Cup baseball champions in Citizens Bank Park prior to the Phillies’ Aug. 4 game against Baltimore.
CARPENTER CUP PLAYOFFS Monday’s Games SOL/BAL 7, Lehigh Valley 1 Delaware South 4, Berks L/L 3 Tri-Cape 9, Jersey Shore 0 Delaware County 4, Delaware North 1 Delaware South 4, SOL/BAL 1 Tri-Cape 2, Delaware County 1 Tri-Cape 3, Delaware South 2
Pennsville, Elmer keep their hopes for advancing in the District 3 LL Tournament alive with their first wins of the tournament
DISTRICT 3 LL TOURNAMENT Monday’s Games Pennsville 16, Buena 6 Millville 22, North Vineland 1 Elmer 3, West Cumberland 0
By Al Muskewitz Riverview Sports News
PENNSVILLE – Of all the players in the Pennsville Little League All-Stars’ dugout this year, Brayden Weatherbee is the only one who knows what it’s like to win the prize they are chasing this week.
He experienced that thrill of winning a district title last year as Pennsville won its first District 3 title in five years and he’d like nothing better this hot summer than to share that feeling with the next generation of all-stars this year.
On Monday the team experienced its first win in this year’s tournament, routing a Buena team that suddenly finds itself undermanned 16-6.
As a seasoned playoff veteran at the ripe age of 12, Weatherbee holds a unique position on this year’s team and is always willing to share his wisdom when his teammates ask what it’s like. Most of what he tells them is while it’s “nothing” like the Little League regular season, keep playing your game.
His manager/father Jay Weatherbee acknowledges his son’s experience is a valuable resource, but is quick to point out there are leaders throughout the lineup.
“As a manager I rely on him,” Weatherbee said. “I rely on some of the boys I’ve had all year on (league team) Penn Tire to come through a little bit and be my leaders. They’re all 12. I tell them all the time everybody’s a leader. If we all follow the same mindset everybody is going to follow. The whole team is a leader to me.”
Brayden Weatherbee doesn’t hit a lot of home runs like some of the stars of last year’s district champions – “I’m an every once in a blue moon (home run) hitter,” he said – but he connected on a big one Monday. His three-run shot to left center in the fourth inning broke the game open and gave Pennsville a 10-5 lead. It came right after Mason Seaver broke a 5-5 tie with a two-run double.
“It was really cool and it meant a lot because I haven’t hit one in a while, so it felt really good,” Brayden said. “I just went up there to try to drive the ball, like I always do.”
Weatherbee had three hits in the game, as did Trey Sam. Pennsville pounded out 17 hits two days after being no-hit in their tournament opener. Everybody in the lineup had at least one hit or an RBI.
“The boys were a little bit better, their mindset was a little better,” manager Weatherbee said. “They’d never seen a pitcher like that kid from Penns Grove (Achillius Vong). It might have been in their head a little bit. This is more like Pennsville baseball … This is better. Now, we’ve got to keep rolling.”
The big fourth inning came immediately after the teams returned from a 15-minute heat break. Pennsville scored 11 runs and had 14 hits in the three innings after the break.
“That was a good call on (the umpires’) part,” manager Weatherbee said. “If they called that off the cuff that’s a good call because it was deadly out here. It was hot. It definitely helped. It gave us a little bit of a second life out there.”
PENNSVILLE 16, BUENA 6
Pennsville
104 542-
16
17
2
Buena
302 010-
6
7
2
WP: Chase Dolden (1-0). LP: Jude Harvey. 2B: Trey Sam (P) 2, Matthew Walker (P). HR: Brayden Weatherbee (P), Jace Nimohay (B). RBI: Mason Seaver (P) 2, Brayden Weatherbee (P) 3, Trey Sam (P) 3, Pat Galloway (P), Landon Nazar (P), Jackson Sedlak (P), Tyler Colony (P), Dante DiMarco (P); Stephen Pollock (B), Levi Myers (B), Dalton Maldonado (B), Bryce Hutnick (B).
Elmer gets a gem
ELMER – The Elmer Majors All-Stars needed a clutch performance to keep their hopes of reaching the bracket finals alive and Brandon D’Agostino delivered.
D’Agostino pitched five innings of shutout ball, allowing one hit and striking out 11, as Elmer blanked West Cumberland 3-0 for its first win of the tournament. The win sets up a do-or-die showdown with South Vineland Friday to advance from the National Division to the District 3 double-loss playoffs.
“He gave us an outstanding game; I couldn’t ask for anything more,” Elmer manager Bob Baldissero said. “He was really on.”
It was really hot, but D’Agostino was prepared. He had a cooling towel, access to a water hose and whole jar of pickle juice to get him through the day.
He struck out the side in the first, got through a bases-loaded jam in the second and had a no-hitter until two outs in the third. He then retired seven of the last eight batters he faced before giving way to Raylan Baldissero in the sixth after throwing 87 pitches.
“I just felt like I had great command of my fastball,” D’Agostino said. “It was a hot, muggy day. I sweaty, it was hot, I was tired. After the first couple innings I just want to lay down and go to bed, but I just kept pumping strikes.
“I’ve had great games this year and I’ve had not-so-great games and I think I came in from that same state I had in those great games and not those OK or bad games. I knew even if I were throwing strikes right down the middle and they were hitting me, my fielders would make up for it. I knew my hitters would hit and my fielders would field. I think as a whole we did absolutely stunning.”
The hitters rewarded their starter for his strong first inning by scoring three in the bottom of the inning for the only runs of the game. Clayton Bishop opened the game with a triple and rode home of D’Agostino’s sacrifice fly. Grayson Bingham later scored on a wild pitch with Roman Allen at the plate and Allen made it 3-0 with an RBI single.
“The bats came out hot,” Baldissero said. “Starting the game off with a triple, that’s a big deal. Just to get those three runs right off the bat in the first inning gives us the momentum for the game, it sets the tone and enables us to play our game.”
ELMER 3, WEST CUMBERLAND 0
West Cumberland
000 000-
0
1
1
Elmer
300 00x-
3
6
0
WP: Brandon D’Agostino (1-0). 3B: Clayton Bishop (E). RBI: Brandon D’Agostino (E), Roman Allen (E).
District 3 standings
AMERICAN DIVISION
NATIONAL DIVISION
Penns Grove
2-0
East Vineland
2-0
Millville
2-0
South Vineland
1-1
Pennsville
1-1
Elmer
1-1
Buena
0-2
West Cumberland
0-2
North Vineland
0-2
Tuesday’s Games Penns Grove at Buena, 7:15 p.m. Thursday’s Games Pennsville at North Vineland, 5:45 p.m. East Vineland at West Cumberland, 5:45 p.m. Friday’s Games Penns Grove at Millville, 5:45 p.m. Elmer at South Vineland, 5:45 p.m. Saturday’s Games Millville at Pennsville, 5 p.m. Buena at North Vineland, 5 p.m. (End of pool play)