CMALL Majors: Tigers close out Yankees
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Tony Altobelli
COSTA MESA - It’s rather difficult to be branded with the “dynasty”
label at the Little League level, but for the Costa Mesa American Little
League Major Division Tigers, the brand is hot and ready to go.
The Tigers won their third division championship in four years following
Thursday’s 5-3 win over the Yankees at Costa Mesa High, improving their
four-year record to an incredible 93-13.
“It starts when we draft the 10-year-olds,” Tigers Manager Cliff
Duernberger said. “From there, we pound in the fundamentals at practice
over and over until they become as automatic as possible. That was the
difference today. We made the big defensive plays and had no errors.”
A complete-game four-hitter by pitcher Jamie Tinnion didn’t hurt either.
The righty struck out eight and blanked the Yanks for the first five
innings before a late rally broke up the shutout.
“He was stellar out there,” Duernberger said. “He had good control of his
pitches and even when he fell behind, he battled back and made the big
pitch. Now he’s just got to learn not to shake me off on my breaking ball
signals.”
Tigers’ slugger Andrew Sanford, despite the Yankees trying not to give
him anything good to hit, got the Tigers on the board in the top of the
second inning. He ripped a double to left before scoring on a fielder’s
choice by Nick Peterson.
“He’s so big and crowds the plate, that even when they throw outside, he
can still reach out and hit it,” Duernberger said.
Tinnion helped his own cause in the third with a solo home run to center
field, giving the Tigers a 2-0 lead.
In the fourth, the Tigers took advantage of some Yankee pitching problems
and turned a hit, four walks and a hit batsman into three runs, making it
5-0.
That would turn out to be enough for Tinnion, who allowed only two hits
and had only one runner reach third base the first five innings.
The Yanks refused to go away quietly in the sixth. With a runner on first
and two outs, Jordan Kalke smashed a two-run home run to center, cutting
the lead to, 5-2.
Yankees cleanup hitter Branden Hoffman followed with a towering shot to
left, making it, 5-3.
From there, Tinnion retired the next batter and the game was over.
Kalke, who was hit hard by the Tigers during the regular season, threw 2
1/3 scoreless innings of relief, striking out three.
“He came in and did a great job for us,” Yankees Manager Stein Cozad
said. “He came in with the bases loaded and managed to forget about the
runners on base and threw well. He threw real hard out there for us and
hit his spots well.”
Both teams will move on to the District 62 Tournament of Champions, which
begin next week.
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