Never nervous

Pennsville LL Senior Softball All-Stars rally twice to beat District One for state title, heading back to Massachusetts for regionals

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

MORRIS PLAINS – Pennsville’s senior softball all-stars hadn’t faced much – if any – adversity in their first six games of the State Little League Tournament ladder, but they had all of it they could handle Tuesday night.

And handle it they did.

Pennsville came behind twice in the middle innings against Morris County District One – the only times they had trailed at any stage in the tournament – and beat their nemesis 8-7 to win their second straight state title and earn a berth back to the East Regionals.

Winning pitcher Kloi Tighe (L), starting pitcher Jess Bretz (C) and catcher Kylie Harris hold the championship trophy.

The victory sends them back to Worcester, Mass., where they’ll look to exorcise some demons from a year ago. They’ll face Maryland champion Havre de Grace in their first game of pool play Saturday.

“We handled it well,” Pennsville manager Chris Watson said of the adversity. “Nobody lost control. Nobody backed away. They all faced it full on and they did their jobs. They executed and they came back hard.

“A lot of these girls have been together for several years and we have played from behind in the past, we have walk-off wins in our history, so they don’t back away … I didn’t really have any worries. I was nervous, I didn’t want to have to play a second game here tonight, but, no, I didn’t have any concerns about that.”

Pennsville trailed 2-0 in the fourth and 7-4 in the fifth but rallied in the bottom of each inning to assume the lead.

Savannah Palverento delivered twice to give the District 3 and Section 4 champs the lead. She had a two-run triple in the fourth to put them ahead 3-2 and the go-ahead solo homer in the fifth to make it 8-7.

“With the triple I knew we needed to get our energy up,” she said. “I went into the dugout and said this isn’t how we play  this isn’t how we play, this isn’t Pennsville, this isn’t the Pennsville that gets tight, chokes and that’s not us, that’s not how we play. I was just looking to get on base. I don’t care what she threw because my at-bat before that was really bad. I needed to get on base and find a way to do it.

“On the homer my mind was kind of blank. I didn’t think at all. There were no thoughts going through my head when I hit that. I probably started tearing up when I touched home plate.”

Jess Bretz set the stage of Palverento’s heroics when she blasted a three-run shot on the first pitch she saw in the fifth to tie the game 7-7. It was her first at bat after being replaced in the circle in the top half of the inning and came after Avery Watson drew a four-pitch leadoff walk and Kylie Harris singled.

“That ball was at least 250 feet; she crushed it,” manager Watson said. “A lot of pitchers struggle and give up the lead, they’re going to be a mess the next time they come up. She was the third batter to come up and just absolutely unfazed crushed the ball and tied the game. Again, they’re unfazed. They don’t mind adversity. They don’t let the pressure get to them.”

“I’ve played with Jess a long time,” Palverento said. “She likes to say if she’s pitching she’s not going to do well hitting and if she’s not pitching she’ll do very well hitting. The second she gets pulled off the mound she hits a three-run home run.”

Kloi Tighe gave a masterful relief performance in the circle behind Bretz to get the win.

Making just her second appearance in the circle this tournament season, Tighe came in after the hosts stretched their lead to 7-4, but she got the last out of the inning with the first of her four strikeouts and then completed 2 1/3 innings of one-hit relief. She struck out the final batter of the game on three pitches with the tying run on third base.

“She came in and she did her job,” Watson said. “She was hitting her spots like I’ve never seen her hit her spots before. There might have been one or two called balls; she was just in the zone. Totally unfazed.”

“We were trailing when I came in and I knew I had to come in and step up for the team,” Tighe said. “I knew I had my teammates behind me. I wasn’t really worried about it because I knew we were able to hit two more times. I just knew I had to throw strikes and I have my teammates behind me.”

SENIOR MOMENTS: It’ll be a quick turnaround for the team. It leaves for Worcester Friday. Organizers will put together a GoFundMe page to help fundraise for the trip … Bretz faced the minimum in the circle through the first 3 1/3 innings, thanks in part to Harris cutting down two runners on the bases … Last year, Pennsville was in the driver’s seat in the regional final when a 10-run inning proved their undoing. “It is the theme,” Watson said. “It’s already come up a couple times from the girls that we have unfinished business up there. We need to go up there and be serious about making some noise.”

NJLL Senior Softball 
Championship Game
Morris Plains  000 250 0 – 7   3  1

Pennsville       000 440 x – 8 10  1 
WP: Kloi Tighe (1-0). LP: Leah Scalzo (2-2). 2B: Abby Herzog (MP). 3B: Savannah Palverento (P). HR: Jess Bretz (P), Savannah Palverento (P).

Pennsville (NJ) Regional Schedule
at Worcester, Mass.

July 22 – Maryland (Havre de Grace), 1:30 p.m.
July 23 – Delaware (Smyrna), 6 p.m. 
July 24 – Pennsylvania (Stroudsburg), 5 p.m.
July 24 – New York (Warwick), 8 p.m.
July 25 – Quarterfinals
July 26 – Semifinals
July 26 – Finals

The players on the Pennsville LL Senior Softball team are all smiles after winning a second straight state championship Tuesday night.

Worcester can wait

Sunday’s LL Senior Softball state tournament games canceled, Pennsville likely to play for state title Tuesday with advantages lost

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PARSIPPANY – For all the advantages that come with playing outdoor sports in the summertime, the biggest drawback is they play at the mercy of the weather. And Mother Nature stepped to the plate Sunday morning, much to the disappointment of the Pennsville LL Senior Softball All-Stars.

Heavy rain and deteriorating field conditions conspired to cancel all the games in the New Jersey LL senior and junior softball tournaments here Sunday. The earliest games could be played would be Monday, but it’s most likely Pennsville wouldn’t play for the state title until Tuesday.

An elimination game between Morris County (District One) and Roberto Clemente LL of Jersey City must be played before Pennsville can even retake the Par-Troy West field. And the junior bracket winner reports to their regional Wednesday, so they’ll have field priority.

Pennsville manager Chris Watson and many of his players and parents headed back to South Jersey Sunday and would return whenever their game is rescheduled. Watson said he was hoping to have an update later this evening.

The cancelation was not welcome news for the team that was in the tournament’s driver seat. The state champion is set to check in at the East Regional in Worcester, Mass., Friday. With Delaware scheduled to play its title game Sunday night, New Jersey will be the last team in its regional pool to determine its representative.

In addition, all the momentum Pennsville had built on Saturday’s first day here is basically washed out as well. 

“It’s deflating,” Watson said. “You’re chomping to get on the field and it’s kind of the worst case weather-wise for us, because of the travel distance.

“To potentially be playing Tuesday instead of today it throws everybody’s week up in the air and, if we were to win, puts us on a short turnaround for getting to regionals with Friday being a travel day. It was a fast turnaround last year and we were done on Sunday. This year we’ve got to do it in half the time if we win.”

More than two inches of rain fell in an already saturated area Saturday. Little League district administrator Chris Graham initially informed the teams of the likelihood of a cancelation as dawn was breaking Sunday morning.

“I sent a message out to all the leagues at 5 in the morning,” Graham said. “We didn’t have a field that was playable even at 5 and it got worse.”

He said it was “highly unlikely” Pennsville would be playing Monday. Graham said he does look for any fields that are available within his district and Pennsville’s 12-2 opening win over District One Saturday was moved to the Par-Troy East complex in an attempt to beat the weather, but moving to alternate sites “generally doesn’t happen” for logistical reasons.

While the adults in the room were finalizing their departure plans Sunday, the players waited things out in the hotel lobby.

Pennsville third baseman Bella Farina shared her teammates disappointment.

“It 100 percent bums me out because playing softball with my team is probably my favorite thing to do,” the rising Pennsville senior said. “Having to postpone it makes my anxiety 10 times worse having to wait – and I hate that.

“I thought we were going to get it done. I thought we were going to be able to get that state title today and definitely go home and enjoy ourselves. We usually go back to Chris’ house and all jump in the pool with our uniforms on.”

But now, Worcester can wait.

LL SENIOR SOFTBALL EAST REGIONAL
at Worcester, Mass.
Pool A:
Connecticut, Host (Mass D4), Massachusetts, Rhode Island
Pool B: Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania

New Jersey Schedule
July 22 – Maryland (Havre de Grace), 1:30 p.m.
July 23 – Delaware (Smyrna), 6 p.m. 
July 24 – Pennsylvania (Stroudsburg), 5 p.m.
July 24 – New York (Warwick), 8 p.m.
July 25 – Quarterfinals
July 26 – Semifinals
July 26 – Finals

Pennsville senior softball players and parents hang out in the lobby of the team hotel after learning their state championship game Sunday was canceled due to weather.

Closing in on state

Pennsville senior softball moves to within one win of another state title after another run-rule win and Bretz no-hitter 

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PARSIPPANY – One of these days Jess Bretz is going to throw a no-hitter that actually feels like a no-hitter. She has done it once before – on a level that seems a lifetime ago – and she admitted it felt “a lot better” than the ones she’s spun most recently in the Little League Senior Softball Tournament.

But, you know what, an ugly game or not, everybody on the Pennsville side of things will take the ultimate outcome from what Bretz has been bringing. After all, if you don’t hit, you can’t score. And if you can’t score, you can’t win.

Bretz spun her third no-hitter of the State Little League Tournament program Saturday, helping Pennsville turn back District One (Morris County) 12-2 in a six-inning walk-off at the Par-Troy East Little League complex. Now they play the Morris County-Roberto Clemente LL winner potentially for the state title across town Sunday at 12:30 p.m., a time moved up from the original in hopes of beating bad weather.

A win in that game will send Pennsville back to the East Regional July 22-26 in Worcester, Mass. A loss would force a winner-take-all game currently scheduled for Monday night. State champions from Maryland (Havre de Grace), Pennsylvania (Stroudsburg) and New York (Warwick), pool opponents for the New Jersey winner at the regional, already have been crowned. Delaware will be crowned Sunday.

Bretz most recent no-hitter followed the same pattern as the one she spun against Middle Twp. in the section tournament July 3. In this latest one, she walked six, hit two and gave up two runs in throwing 108 pitches. No balls made it to the outfield off the bat and she struck out 13.

In the one against Middle, she walked three, hit two and was charged with four runs in 74 pitches over four innings. She also threw a four-inning no-hitter with four walks and two hit batsmen against Elmer-Alloway in the district tournament.

“I like to keep it interesting,” the rising Pitman junior said after her sixth win in the tournament. 

In the three games of the district tournament, Bretz’ command was sharp. She gave up four runs, seven hits, walked nine and fanned 29. In the three sectional and state games, she has given up nine runs, three hits, walked 16 and fanned 32.

She doesn’t blame the loss of sharpness on the games getting bigger – “I thrive on pressure,” she said – but rather limited prep. She threw five bullpens in the run up to the district tournament, but only one prior to each the sectional and state tournaments.

“I just haven’t prepared as well as I should,” she admitted.

Pennsville manager Chris Watson said his ace shouldn’t try to do it all herself.

“We talk a lot about command with her,” Watson said. “I don’t ever want her to feel like she needs to strike everybody out. We were talking about that a lot during the game; you don’t have to strike everybody out, be a little more democratic, get the players in the field involved. Use your defense, they’re a great defense and they want to be part of the game.

“It’s great to have a dominant pitcher, but I don’t want her to feel like she’s got to do it all. She should never feel like that. She should never feel like she’s got to gas every pitch. I think she wants to pop the glove and it’s like addictive and she wants to pop it every time and she gets a little wild. Kylie’s glove pops really nice when she hits it.”

The no-hitter didn’t feel like one to catcher Kylie Harris, either, but belonged as much to her as it did Bretz. Harris called all the pitches and positioned all the defense as the team’s self-described puppet master behind the plate.

“I can’t do it without my catcher calling all my pitches because if she calls the wrong pitches, it’s over,” Bretz said. “We go and scout every team so we know what they can’t hit and if she doesn’t remember that and she doesn’t know what to call or doesn’t check the swing, then it’s over.”

“How I describe it to a lot of people is basically they’re my puppets,” Harris said. “I’m the puppet-master. I’m doing all this, I’m calling everything. I’m working behind the scenes. They make me look good and I make her look good because I’m doing everything behind the scenes.”

Pennsville’s bats were popping just like Bretz’ fastball. They collected 15 hits, four for extra bases, and walked it off on Savannah Palverento’s double in a four-run sixth inning. They broke a 1-1 tie with five runs in the third, highlighted by back-to-back Bella blasts – RBI doubles by Bella Rappa and Bella Farina.

Each of the first seven hitters in the lineup had at least one hit; Farina and Leadoff Lily Edwards both had three. Bretz, Palverento and Rappa had two apiece. Harris, Bretz and Rappa each had two RBIs and Rappa scored the run that sealed it.

Four of Pennsville’s six tournament wins have come by the run rule. They have never trailed.

Pennsville pitcher Jess Bretz comforts teammate Bella Rappa as the players from both teams observe a moment of silence to honor Bella’s dad, Nick, who passed away last weekend.

Pennsville was playing its first game since the passing of Rappa’s father Nick last weekend. The team honored his memory by wearing black “Nick 00” armbands, hanging his “00” silver chain in the dugout and displaying his photo on the bench. Tournament officials paused during player introductions to observe a moment of silence.

Bella had two hits and two pop ups and said her RBI double in the third inning “made me feel better about the whole game.”

“The whole week coming up it was very emotional because last year my dad was there (at the state tournament) and when we won he was the first person I ran over to,” she said. “He won’t be here this year so it’s kind of a shell shocker and when they did the moment of silence I didn’t know about it but it made me feel very good and really meant a lot. I had a little breakdown, but it was fine.

“In the beginning (of the game) it was on my mind, but like (Watson) said we’re a family and they’ll pick up you in a heartbeat, and that’s what they did. They made everything easier and took my mind off it a little bit.”

There were a lot of usual elements to the game. Among them –

Harris put Pennsville ahead in the first inning with a sacrifice fly to shortstop. Edwards led off with a bunt single and raced all the way to third when the throw to get her was wild.

Morris County tied the game in the second when a special pinch runner Watson challenged (and was overruled) scored from third on a ball-four wild pitch. Middle Twp. was denied the same type runner in the sectionals when the plate umpire at the time told its manager the rule had been changed to disallow it in June.

The game went into a 30-minute weather delay in the top of the sixth inning with two on, one out and the count full on the Morris County batter. During the delay, the original batter had to leave for work. A new batter was in the box when play resumed and she struck out swinging at the first pitch.

“It definitely was not the oddest (game she’s been involved in), but it was definitely one that stuck out,” Harris said. “Me and Jess communicate on the mound all the time; we just look at each other and we know. I was giving her looks all game that were like, are you serious? We kept looking at each other, like, what’s going on?”

Pennsville 12, District One 2
District One  010 010 –   2    0  1

Pennsville     105 024 – 12  15  1
WP: Jess Bretz (6-0) . LP: Leah Scalzo. 2B: Jess Bretz (P), Bella Farina (P), Bella Rappa (P), Savannah Palverento (P).

NJ LITTLE LEAGUE SENIOR SOFTBALL
State Tournament
at Parsippany
Saturday’s games
District One 10, Roberto Clemente LL 2
Pennsville 12, District One 2
Sunday’s games
at Par-Troy West LL
District One vs. Roberto Clemente LL, 10 a.m.
District One-Roberto Clemente winner vs. Pennsville, 12:30 p.m.
Monday’s game
at Par-Troy West LL

If necessary, 5:30 p.m.

Pennsville pitcher Jess Bretz (L) and catcher Kylie Harris clown around after their team beat District One (Morris County) in the state Little League senior softball tournament behind another Bretz no-hitter.

Doing it for you, Dad

Pennsville first baseman Bella Rappa more determined than ever to help her team win following her dad’s passing

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNSVILLE – In almost every interview they’ve done since the start of this all-star summer, the players on the Pennsville Little League senior softball team have talked genuinely and passionately about how much they are a family.

Now, on the cusp of their biggest tournament so far, that family is hurting and the players are once again rallying behind one of their own.

Saturday night, two days after successfully defending their Section 4/South Jersey championship and a week before their state tournament opener, the team lost one of its parents and biggest supporters.

Nick Rappa, the father of first baseman Bella Rappa, passed away early Saturday morning after suffering a cardiac arrest the day before. He was 51. Less than two weeks earlier dad and daughter were celebrating Bella’s first ever over-the-fence home run in the team’s district tournament opener at Franklin Twp.

This coming Saturday, Pennsville will play its first game in the New Jersey LL State Tournament in Parsippany and Bella will be in her customary spots: batting cleanup and playing first base.

“My first reaction was there’s no way she’s going to continue, but then I realized it’s Bella Rappa we’re talking about and how important softball was to her and her dad,” Pennsville manager Chris Watson said. “Of course, she’s playing. She’s absolutely playing. She’s more determined now to win than ever. Said she wants to do it for her dad.”

Nick Rappa is a big reason his daughter is playing the game today. Among Bella’s fondest memories is going to her dad’s High-Arc Softball games and getting to hit and field between games of his doubleheaders. His teammates would play makeshift games with her in the lineup and purposely overthrow on her hits so she could run the bases.

He encouraged her to play up in youth leagues to accelerate her development and stepped up to coach a team when there wasn’t one for her to play on. When her team won the LL senior softball state title last year he was the first person she ran to. When she got home the night of her home run he was over the moon greeting her.

“My love for the game came from being with my dad,” Bella said. “A lot of like Chris and them didn’t think I was going to play, but mom and dad would want me to play and I would want to play for my dad. On a post I made for my dad on Facebook I said ‘we will win the World Series.’ There’s nothing that’s going to stop me.”

“Words can’t describe what I am feeling right now … Who am I gonna giggle with at 3 in the morning when we can’t sleep and we put on some dumb scary movie. Who am I gonna call when I have a bad game and need someone to talk me from quitting. Who am I gonna talk to about college and playing D1 softball … I can promise you this, everything I will do is gonna be for you and I can promise you We WILL win the World Series for you dad.” – Portion of Bella Rappa’s Facebook post to her dad.

This isn’t the first time these Pennsville players have faced adversity – personal or otherwise. They’ve had two deaths and one serious illness all within the immediate family over the past three seasons and every time they’ve been there for each other and on the field they’ve exhibited extreme resiliency.

“It’s not just a cliche, this is a real family and it shows the way they circle the wagons in moments like this,” Watson said. “Bella has not been alone since this has happened. She has a big family, too, but she also has this softball family and the girls have been with her all weekend. She has a support system like none other.”

“I’ve never had a more supportive group in my life,” Rappa said. “Bella Farina came to my house as soon as she heard. Everyone reached out, saying no matter what we’re here for you … It’s like a second family and I wouldn’t trade that in for the world.”

Watson said the team had “something in the works” to honor Nick’s memory, but he wasn’t prepared to disclose those plans. Funeral arrangements are pending, but it was his intention for the players to attend the service as a group.

Bella, meanwhile, plans to wear the silver chain and “00” pendant her dad wore “forever” at the games going forward. If the rules won’t allow her to wear it, she plans to hang it in the dugout where she can see it every minute of the game.

Bella Rappa connects during Pennsville’s Section 4 senior softball championship game. (Top photo) Bella strikes a pose as the team unfurls its District championship banner. (Photo by Lorraine Jenkins)

Home sweet home

Pennsville senior softball headed back to state tournament after winning another Section 4 crown; breaks game open with big inning, then holds on

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNSVILLE – Chris Watson lost another coin toss, but his Pennsville senior softball team got their dugout back. They were back in their comfort zone and the good vibes sent them back to the state tournament.

Pennsville won the Section 4 championship Thursday night with a 14-5 win over Middle Twp. on Watson Field at the Pennsville Little League complex. It was the fourth straight sectional title for most of these players going back to 12U.

Bella Farina pulls her two-run double down the left field line in Pennsville’s nine-run third inning Thursday. (Photo by Lorraine Jenkins)

The win propelled Pennsville to the New Jersey Little League Senior Softball State Tournament in Parsippany July 15-17. The Section 4 champs will play the winner of the Morris County-Roberto Clemente LL opener at 3 p.m. July 15 with a chance to play for the title at 3 p.m. July 16.

Pennsville actually won by losing. Watson doesn’t have a lot of luck when it comes to coin tosses and when he lost the one Thursday night Middle Twp. took the home team option and the first base dugout. That allowed Pennsville to occupy its more-favored third-base dugout.

Middle relegated Pennsville to the first-base dugout in Monday’s sectional game — even after the District 3 champs had set up shop in their normal digs — and Pennsville won 15-4 with Jess Bretz spinning a no-hitter.

“They expect me to lose the toss; it’s gotten ridiculous at this point,” Watson said. “But, yes, they’re much more comfortable when everything is the same as they’re used to. They want to be visitors, they want to bat first and they want to be in that dugout.”

“I like this side better; I feel like there’s more hype,” outfielder/closer Kloi Tighe said. “Over there (in the first-base dugout), that sign thing (Eagles Softball screen) is all in the way. I just like being on the third-base side because all our fans are all lined up on this side. It’s really, like, more energy.”

The energy spilled over in a crazy nine-run third inning that really took flight when Middle dropped Bretz’ bases-loaded potential second-out foul pop around the plate. Moments later the Pennsville pitcher ripped a grounder to third and Tighe scored when the catcher couldn’t hold the throw at the plate.

Bella Rappa followed with a hot force at third that brought home another run and Bella Farina followed that with a double that raised chalk behind third and scored two more to make it 4-0. Pennsville sent 12 batters to the plate in the inning. Tighe scored a second run on Avery Watson’s two-run double when she knocked the relay throw out of the catcher’s mitt.

Pennsville’s Savannah Palverento steals second base during Thursday’s senior softball section championship game against Middle Twp. (Photo by Lorraine Jenkins)

Eight of Pennsville’s nine starters had at least one hit in the game and every starter scored at least one run, offsetting their lack of focus in some other areas of the game. Catcher Kylie Harris went 4-for-4 with an HBP and then shuffled off to Buffalo to join her travel team for a Friday morning game. Leadoff Lily Edwards, Farina and Grailynn Weber (two doubles) all had two hits.. 

“We started kind of slow so we knew we had to get on the board at one point so we just broke it open and when we did we just kept going and going and going,” Tighe said.

But what started to look like another run-rule victory got to be a little uncomfortable in the middle innings. Bretz lost her command in the fifth and Middle scored four runs without the benefit of a hit to make it 10-4. She allowed only three hits and struck out eight in her first four shutout innings. She struck out 10 and walked seven in the game.

Tighe came on with bases loaded and two outs and put out the fire on four pitches, then finished the game. She gave up a run in the sixth, but her teammates gave her some breathing room by scoring four in the top of the seventh.

“I face adversity well,” Tighe said. “I don’t let anything get to me, so it wasn’t really anything, honestly. I knew I was going to get out of it and I had my team behind me backing me up.”

SENIOR MOMENTS: Pennsville outscored its opponents 65-12 in the district and sectional tournaments. The first three batters in their lineup scored 24 of those runs … Pennsville never trailed in five tournament games … Harris was 11-for-16 with 12 RBIs in the two tournaments. Edwards was 10-for-15 and Bretz was 6-for-11 with 11 RBIs … In five games in the circle (25 2/3 innings) Bretz gave up 10 hits, seven earned runs and struck out 50 … Pennsville beat the District 1 winner (Morris County) twice last year to win the state tournament.

SECTION 4 CHAMPIONSHIP
Pennsville     009 100 4 – 14 14 1

Middle Twp. 000 041 0 –   5  7  5
WP: Jess Bretz (5-0). LP: Grace Hall. 2B: Grailynn Weber 2 (P), Kylie Harris (P), Bella Farina (P), Avery Watson (P), Lily Edwards (P), Sammie Schaffer (M).

NEW JERSEY LITTLE LEAGUE
SENIOR SOFTBALL STATE TOURNAMENT
At Par-Troy West Park Road Complex, Parsippany
July 15
Game 1: Morris County vs. Roberto Clemente LL (Jersey City), 10 a.m.
Game 2: Morris County-Roberto Clemente winner vs. Pennsville, 3 p.m.
July 16
Game 3: Game 1 loser vs. Game 2 loser, 10 a.m.
Game 4: Game 2 winner vs. Game 3 winner, 3 p.m.
July 17
If necessary, 5:30 p.m.

Lily Edwards (85) slides across the plate with the second run in Pennsville’s nine-run third inning Thursday night against Middle Twp. (Photo by Lorraine Jenkins)

‘One of those days’

Salem silenced in 12U baseball, Middle Twp. senior softball swamps Monroe to set up championship rematch with Pennsville

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

VINELAND – The Salem Little League 12U All-Stars’ dream of reaching this year’s state tournament ended Wednesday night under the weight of a 6-0 loss to East Vineland.

They had beaten East Vineland and pitcher Luca Buono in the first round of the double-loss elimination portion of the District 3 tournament, but it was a different story this time around.

Buono pitched a complete-game two-hit shutout and struck out eight. Salem had scored 24 runs in their three tournament wins, but in each of their last two games they couldn’t deliver a timely hit.

“Offensively, it was one of those days,” Salem manager Brian Dolbow said. “We saw the same pitcher last week, got him under some pressure and he kind of cracked a little. Unfortunately, tonight we just didn’t get any base runners, weren’t getting walks. He pitched well. We just didn’t make a lot of contact and when we did it was weak contact, so credit to the pitcher.

“That’s how baseball goes. Unfortunately, the past two games our bats just went quiet at the wrong time. Nothing to be ashamed of, it’s just sometimes how baseball goes, the bats kind of go quiet. Every team goes through those kinds of things, you’ve got to work your way out of it, but tonight we weren’t able to get any big hits when we needed them.”

Trailing 3-0, Salem threatened to get a run back in the bottom of the fourth inning. Ben Parkell led off with a double and advanced to third on a passed ball, but was cut down at the plate on a grounder to the left side of the infield.

Noah Blunt got Salem’s first hit on a bunt single in the third inning. He went to second on a one-out passed ball and to third on a two-out wild pitch, but was stranded there.

Salem finished third in the district, one win shy of playing for the championship. East Vineland now hosts undefeated South Vineland for the district title 7 p.m. Thursday. An “if necessary” game is scheduled for 7 p.m. Friday at East Vineland.

“After last year with the run Alloway and Salem made I went into it with the expectations that we’re just as good as those other teams,” Dalbow said. “One thing, East Vineland and South Vineland, those kids play travel together, they play Little League together, they work together all year. Our team, literally, we’re three towns, five different Little League teams, coming together. 

“When we started on June 1 we had kids who didn’t even know each other. The way they came together and put this run together, for me, it was fun to be a part of, it was great to watch, and credit to them for being able to do that. 

“The fact these kids came together and were able to get basically the third team left that says a lot about the work they’ve put in. It was a good accomplishment for us just based on the way we’re set up and organized versus the teams we’re playing. I thought our kids showed really well.” 

East Vineland  020 121 – 6 8 1
Salem                000 000 – 0 2 4

WP: Luca Buono. LP: Drew Sutton. 2B: Anthony Abrams (EV), Enzo Candelario (EV), Aiden Knowles (EV); Ben Parkell (S).

Section 4 Senior Softball

MIDDLE TWP. 24, MONROE TWP. 1: Middle decided this one early, erupting for 10 runs in the top of the first inning, setting up a championship game with undefeated host Pennsville Thursday night.

Middle sent 16 batters to the plate in the first. They faced 66 pitches, drew eight walks and had two hit batsmen. Sophia Nemeth had two of their three hits in the inning – a leadoff triple and an RBI double.

Eight of the nine starters had at least one hit and 10 of their 11 batters had at least one RBI. Nemeth went 3-for-4, Charlotte Romberger had two hits and four RBIs, and K.J. Schaffer had two hits and two RBIs. Monroe pitchers issued 18 walks and hit four batters in the four-inning game.

Grace Hall, who got roughed up by Pennsville in their game Monday night, worked the first two innings, facing seven batters. She allowed two hits and struck out three before Brynn Brophy closed.

The Section 4 champion will play the winner of the Morris County-Roberto Clemente LL game in their state tournament opener July 15 in Parsippany.

Middle Twp.   (10)74 3 – 24 11 1
Monroe Twp.      000 1 –    1  3 4
WP: Grace Hall.

In the driver’s seat

Bretz homer, no-hitter propel Pennsville Senior Softball within one win of another South Jersey title, trip to state tournament

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNSVILLE – Jess Bretz drove all the way over from her home in East Greenwich Sunday to scout Middle Twp. pitcher Grace Hall for Monday night’s Section 4 Little League Senior Softball playoff game.

She was seated alongside Pennsville manager Chris Watson prepared to take copious notes to help her at the plate. Because of the circumstances of the game Bretz only got to see Hall throw to four Monroe hitters.

But apparently that’s all she needed.

Bretz belted a long two-run homer in her first at bat to set the tone for Pennsville’s 15-4 five-inning victory that placed it one win away from a fourth straight South Jersey title and another trip to the state tournament.

Bretz had settled in for a full game Sunday night, but the game was called in the bottom of the first when a Monroe player fell ill leaving the team with only eight to play. Monroe batted in the top of the first with Hall recording two strikeouts, a ground out and giving up a triple to the only batters she faced.

The Pennsville slugger and pitcher had seen enough to know what she needed.

“Whenever I come to scout a pitcher I’m getting my timing every single pitch,” Bretz said. “Even if I’m just sitting there and talking to my friends, I’m going to stand there and get my time with my hits every single time.

“I know where she’s throwing, how fast she’s throwing, so I was thinking just hit it out in front because if I hit it out in front it’s going to go every time. Yesterday I knew that.”

Pennsville’s Jess Bretz connects on her two-run homer in the first inning that set the tone for the night, then is greeted at the plate (top photo) by her teammates after circling the bases. (Photos by Lorraine Jenkins)

It didn’t surprise Watson at all his pitcher made the 45-minute drive down the interstate on what amounted to an off day to do some special reconnaissance. She’s been going the extra mile all year.

“One hundred percent committed this year,” Watson said. “She was committed last year, don’t get me wrong, but this year it’s another level. She’s committed to our goals here and to put this team where we want to be.”

The win moved Pennsville into Thursday’s 6 p.m. district title game against the winner of Wednesday night’s Middle Twp.-Monroe game. If an “if game” is needed, it will follow at 8 p.m.

Pennsville hit throughout the order. Seven of the nine spots in the lineup had at least one hit and one run; all nine spots reached base at least once. Six of their 12 hits went for extra bases. They scored in every inning they batted, batted around twice and led 10-0 after two innings.

Leadoff Lily Edwards went 2-for-3, Kylie Harris went 3-for-3 with three RBIs, Bretz reached base all three times she batted and Llily Birney had a pair of RBIs. Pennsville has scored in 10 of their last 12 innings and have run-ruled their last three tournament opponents.

“I think that’s how we’re going to win this year; every single person in our lineup can hit the ball,” Bretz said. “Last year we went 17 innings with this team. This year we didn’t even go seven.

“I think that’s going to be the difference this year in going all the way to the World Series – we have every single girl on our team who can hit.”

Bretz’ big night wasn’t just confined to the plate. In addition to the home run, she pitched a five-inning no-hitter and stole four bases, including home. When she stole third in the second inning, somebody in the stands asked, “What can’t Jess Bretz do?”

“I don’t know the answer to that, because we haven’t seen the limit yet,” Watson said. “I think we’re just starting to see the beginning of what she can do, honestly.”

“I can’t golf,” Bretz said.

The no-hitter was her second in the tournament, but she admitted it didn’t feel like one. She had a four-inning no-no in the first game of the district finals against Elmer last week. Middle had 11 base runners and scored three runs in the fifth inning that threatened to extend the game.

“No, it didn’t, just because of all the errors I personally made,” she said. “It doesn’t feel like it because they were making contact, which to me doesn’t feel like a no-hitter. I know it was, but it just doesn’t feel like it.”

Pennsville made easy work of their section tournament opener, but Watson knows “it’ll be a lot harder Thursday” when Middle’s ace Gabby Cruz will be back from a travel ball tournament in South Carolina. Last year, Bretz and Cruz battled for most of the 17 innings in their two games of the sectional championship round.

“The good thing is we are in the driver’s seat and they have to beat us twice,” Watson said. “So, even if they do get us the first game, the chances of her (Cruz) pitching 14 strong innings that night is a big advantage to us.”

SECTION 4 LL SENIOR SOFTBALL
Middle Twp. 001 03 –   4   0   3

Pennsville     464 1x – 15 12   2
WP: Jess Bretz (4-0). LP: Grace Hall (1-1). 2B: Kylie Harris (P), Gina Shinn (P), Lily Edwards (P), Bella Rappa (P). 3B: Savannah Palverento (P). HR: Jess Bretz (P).

Wednesday’s Game
Monroe vs. Middle Twp., 6 p.m.
Thursday’s Game
Monroe-Middle winner vs. Pennsville, 8 p.m.
If necessary, 8 p.m.

STATE TOURNAMENT
At Par-Troy West Softball Complex

Parsippany, N.J.
July 15
Game 1: Morris County vs. Roberto Clemente LL (Jersey City), 10 a.m.
Game 2: Section 4 winner vs. Game 1 winner, 3 p.m.
July 16
Game 3: Game 1 loser vs. Game 2 loser, 10 a.m.
Game 4: Game 2 winner vs. Game 3 winner, 3 p.m.
July 17
If necessary, 5:30 p.m.

Pennsville Senior Softball manager Chris Watson (R) gives direction to his runners as daughter Avery pulls into third base during Monday’s sectional playoff game. (Photo by Lorraine Jenkins)

How sweep it is

Pennsville senior softball scores a pair of run-rule victories to sweep Elmer for this group’s sixth straight District title

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

PENNSVILLE – For a team supposedly playing under the weight of some pretty high expectations, the Pennsville Little League Senior Softball stars sure are a loose bunch.

The players Wobble and line dance in front of the dugout before the game, they play country music between innings, the pitcher spins with a pretzel rod in her back pocket and, in a twist on an older theme, this year they give manager Chris Watson white eye-black moustaches on his upper lip.

There’s nothing it seems that fazes these girls.

Pennsville pitcher Jess Bretz exhales after getting the final out of her team’s district championship sweep of Elmer.

That looseness translated into big things Thursday night. It produced an eight-run first inning in the first game of their District 3 championship series with Elmer and an eventual 15-0, 11-1 run-rule sweep for this group’s sixth straight district title.

Now they’re off until Monday after drawing a bye in the first round of the Section 4 Tournament they host. They’ll face the winner of Sunday’s game between Middle Twp. and the District 15 champs.

“I think the fact that we’re loose as a team helps us play better,” pitcher Jess Bretz said. “We’ve had games where we’ve been tight and all been overthinking everything that’s been happening. The fact we hit the “Wobble” before every game and we do the “Cotton-Eyed Joe” we bond together and being loose on the field helps us mold together better.”

Watson isn’t one to join in the fun, but he “let’s them be them.” He admits he allows them “get away with a little more than I should sometimes.”

This is a team with designs of going to the Little League Senior Softball World Series in Delaware later this summer and they played like it Thursday night. 

They batted around in each of the first two innings of the opener, opening a 14-0 lead. Leadoff Lily Edwards accounted for five runs in the eight-run first, walking and scoring the game’s first run and later clearing the bases with a double and scoring when the cutoff throw to get her at third was wild.

They were having a high time of it. Seven starters had at least one hit in the game and they got runs from eight spots in the lineup. Bretz went 2-for-2 with three RBIs and Avery Watson went 3-for-3 with three RBIs.

“We just have to come with energy; it just gets us excited and relaxed and in the zone,” Edwards said.

Sometimes, however, they can have too much of a good thing. It was a little slower to start in Game 2, but they got it going again and erupted for seven in the second inning of what was a come-from-behind win.

They sent 10 batters to the plate in their big inning. Kylie Harris had the big hit, a two-run single. Edwards, Bella Rappa and Sawyer Simmons also drove home runs in the inning.

“I have to watch them and make sure they maintain that energy because every once in a while they dip and they dipped a little today at the beginning of that second game and it showed,” Watson said. “They get flat, they get tired. As soon as that energy drops so does our play. I think all the girls have realized that so they’ll start poking each other and getting each back up again. It’s kind of become our identity.”

Bretz pitched a four-inning no-hitter in the first game and a five-inning two-hitter in the nightcap. She struck out seven in the first game, nine in the second.

She allowed five base runners in the opener and got out of a jam in the second inning. She got the final out of the gem when catcher Kylie Harris threw through to pick off a runner at second base.

The first hit Bretz allowed all night was Aubrie Rennie’s single in the first inning of the nightcap and Rennie scored on a wild pitch. Elmer loaded the bases in the second, but Bretz got out of it unscathed and then retired the last nine in a row.

In 16 innings over three district tournament games, the hard-throwing right-hander allowed one earned run, seven hits and struck out 31.

This group of Pennsville softball players has been collecting district titles for the past six years, a run that started as 10Us; only a walk-off loss their first year together kept it from being seven straight. Three players – Savannah Palverento, Avery Watson and Kloi Tighe – have been on all of them.

And while the post-game celebrations may not be as spirited as they once were, the winning never gets old.

“I feel like it’s still very important to know what you need to do in order to get to where you want to get,” Palverento said. “Districts, yeah, it’s only one step, but it’s still an important step to get where you need to be.”

DISTRICT 3 SENIOR SOFTBALL
Game 1
Pennsville  861 0 – 15 11 1
Elmer          000 0 –  0   0  0

WP: Jess Bretz (2-0). LP: Ava Schneider. 2B: Kylie Harris (P), Avery Watson (P), Lily Edwards (P). 3B: Jess Bretz (P).

Game 2
Elmer          100 00 –  1  2  4
Pennsville  272 0x – 11 7  0
WP: Jess Bretz (3-0). LP: Ady Stewart. 

SECTION 4 TOURNAMENT
At Pennsville
Sunday’s Game
Monroe vs. Middle Twp., 6 p.m.
Monday’s Game
Monroe-Middle Twp. winner vs. Pennsville, 6 p.m.
Wednesday’s Game
Monroe-Middle loser vs. Game 2 loser, 6 p.m.
Thursday’s Game
Championship Game, 6 p.m.
If necessary, 8 p.m.

These three players have been part of Pennsville softball’s last six straight district championships: (From left) Savannah Palverento, Kloi Tighe and Avery Watson.

Finished business

Pennsville picks up where it left off the night before, completes 10-2 District 3 Senior Softball win over Franklin Twp.

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

FRANKLINVILLE – It may have taken another day and another trip down U.S. 40, but the Pennsville Senior Softball stars finished what they started the day before, saved themselves a game and will play for a district title Thursday night on their own field.

Pennsville put the finishing touches on a 10-2 victory over Franklin Twp. Wednesday that started Tuesday and was suspended for weather after only 14 pitches in the top of the first inning. By completing the victory, they eliminated Franklin Twp. from championship contention in the District 3 Tournament and will now host Elmer in a potential championship doubleheader at 5:45 p.m. Thursday.

Had Franklin Twp. won, Pennsville would have had to play their final pool game against Elmer Thursday with the potential of tiebreakers determining the two championship teams in a title round starting Friday. If Pennsville and Elmer split Thursday, the winner-take-all “if” game will be played Friday.

The Section 4 Tournament starts Sunday in Pennsville.

“I’m relieved,” Pennsville manager Chris Watson said. “This was a huge game because if we did not win this then we’re probably playing on Friday … and nobody wants to play on Friday.”

Pennsville took a 3-0 lead into the restart, but it took them a little while to get started. Their first five batters of the day all struck out against Franklin Twp.’s Iris Chapman and Watson admitted he was “concerned,” but once they got to the top of the order again they started to pull away.

The first four batters in their lineup went a combined eight for 14 with seven runs and eight RBIs. Leadoff hitter Lily Edwards was 4-for-4 with three runs and two stolen bases. Kylie Harris went 2-for-4 with a two-run homer in the third inning and four RBIs. Pitcher Jess Bretz had a two-run single and three RBIs and Bella Rappa hit a homer before Tuesday’s suspension of play.

“I guess that’s just how the top of the order sparks us,” Watson said. “It’s like we need Lily to lead off a night. With all the home run hitters we have on this squad, and there are a lot of them, Lily is like our biggest weapon. She gets on base, she scores.

“We’ve been working on it (the top of the lineup) for years. We put Lily at leadoff three years ago playing Franklin Twp. in sectionals and she took them apart then, too.”

The restart wasn’t without a little drama. Franklin Twp. leveled a protest that the game should be restarted from scratch instead of resuming at the point of suspension. District 3 officials called the Little League Eastern District office for clarification and it was ruled the game would resume from the point of suspension.

It didn’t much matter. Pennsville outscored their hosts 7-2 in the innings that were played Wednesday. They broke it open in the third on Harris’ two-run homer and a two-run double by Savannah Palverento, taking a 7-0 lead.

“It was really important to jump on them early from the start, make sure we get that lead and maintain it,” Harris said. “It shuts the other team down right away so you can back them up more (and) go home early.”

Bretz was strong in the circle. She pitched all seven innings with a pretzel rod in her back pocket, but didn’t go to it once, although she was tempted. Last year during Pennsville’s 17-inning day in the Sectionals, the coaches brought her chicken tenders in the circle to keep her energy up.

Her energy and velocity was up plenty Wednesday. She allowed five hits, nine base runners and struck out 15. She threw 115 pitches, 77 for strikes. Ten of her first 12 outs were strikeouts and she had at least two strikeouts in six of the seven innings.

“The last two years we’ve been here I haven’t been nervous, but today was different because it’s a new team, we have a few new players this year,” Bretz said. “It helped my game today because I knew what I had to do and I had a job.

“I’m feeling this because we have expectations because we went so far last year and for some of the girls it’s their last year so we want to go as far if not farther this year.”

DISTRICT 3 LL SENIOR SOFTBALL
Pennsville       304 201 0 – 10 10 1
Franklin Twp. 000 110 0 –   2  5  2
WP: Jess Bretz. LP: Iris Chapman. 2B: Avery Watson (P), Kylee Harris (P), Savannah Palverento (P), Iris Chapman (FT), Laney Vecchio (FT). HR: Bella Rappa (P), Kylee Harris (P), Riley Hunter (FT). 

Pennsville leadoff hitter Lily Edwards went 4-for-4 with three runs scored in Wednesday’s win. Top photo: Pennsville battery Jess Bretz (L) and Kylie Harris battered Franklin Twp. Bretz struck out 15 in the circle and had three RBIs at the plate, Harris homered and drove four runs home.

Thunder and lightning

Rappa’s homer highlights Pennsville’s fast start, but District 3 senior softball opener suspended in first inning; play resumes Wednesday at 5:45 p.m.

By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News

FRANKLINVILLE – Imagine driving an hour to play a game, getting 14 pitches and four productive at bats, then having the bottom fall out and calling it a night.

That’s what happened to the Pennsville senior softball stars Tuesday night in their District 3 tournament opener at Franklin Twp. 

Pennsville opened a 3-0 lead with its first four batters before their game was suspended with one out in the top of the first due to weather. Forecasts called for rain well into the night. The game will pick up at that point whenever it resumes.

District officials announced late Tuesday evening the teams would reconvene in Franklinville Wednesday at 5:45 p.m. to resume play. If Pennsville hangs on to win Franklin Twp. would be eliminated and Pennsville’s home pool play game with Elmer Thursday becomes a 5:45 doubleheader for the district championship.

“Everybody will tend to cancel pretty quickly,” Pennsville manager Chris Watson said. “The players and coaches wanted to play; we would’ve waited until 8 or 9 o’clock tonight to play that game. The girls were fired up. Each one of them wanted to be there and wanted to play, even if it was going to take all night.

“It’s in everybody’s interest to wrap this thing up by Thursday, including the district, because they want to send a strong team to sectionals and we need to wrap it up because sectionals (at Pennsville) start on Sunday.”

Nevertheless, it was a pleasant ride back for the Pennsville players, especially Bella Rappa. The rising Pennsville senior hit her first over-the-fence home run ever to highlight the abbreviated first inning.

Rappa had hit many balls off the top of the fence that bounced back into play before and did have an inside-the-park homer in last year’s regional tournament in Massachusetts, but the rising 0-1 pitch she hit to center Tuesday night was the first time an umpire waved his hand signaling her to touch ‘em all.

“I really didn’t think it was going to go over because it didn’t hit the full barrel of the bat,” Rappa said, “but it was kind of really cool when the umpire started waving his little finger around. To be able to trot the bases and know I just hit a solo home run was pretty cool.

“It’s always been on my mind like I would really like to hit a home run, but it’s not something I always strived for because we don’t always need it. I like to say small ball is more important than hitting the long ball. But it’s a nice feeling when you finally hit a long ball.”

One pitch to Bella Farina after Rappa brought the thunder, the umpires brought the teams off the field for lightning. Usually, it’s the other way around – the lightning, then thunder.

Pennsville came ready to play. Lilly Edwards led off with a single and scored on Kylie Harris’ double. Harris went to third on the throw to the plate and scored on Jess Bretz’ sacrifice fly. Rappa followed with her homer to make it 3-0.

Bella Farina came to the plate and drew a first-pitch ball before the Franklin Twp. coaches informed the umpires of lightning in the area and the game was halted.

“It was everything I would have hoped to start off a game,” Watson said. 

“The whole team had really good energy,” Rappa said.

Three teams will come to Pennsville for the Section 4 tournament. The District 3 winner draws a first-round bye while the District 15 and 16 winners play. The Section winner also draws a first-round bye at the three-team state tournament.

District 3 12U LL Baseball

Some games did get played to completion Tuesday night. Millville American eliminated Elmer 4-2 and clinched the No. 2 seed in the American Division.

Salem and Buena, meanwhile, had their game suspended and they’ll resume Thursday at 8 p.m. in Buena. Before that, however, Salem will be out to keep its playoff chances alive with a 5:45 p.m. Wednesday home game against winless South Cumberland.

A Salem victory Wednesday would make that Thursday game with Buena for the No. 2 seed in the National Division. South Cumberland lost both of its first two games 15-0.

Pennsville and Elmer will play out their pool schedule Thursday 5:45 p.m. in Elmer.

So, the District 3 12U double-loss finals look like this:

Friday at Elmer
East Vineland vs. National No. 2 (Buena or Salem), 5:45 p.m.
South Vineland vs. Millville American, 8 p.m.