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Tuesday's Quarterfinals:

James River hosts Albemarle, time TBA

Bethel hosts Chantilly, time TBA

Colonial Forge hosts Cosby, 6:30 p.m.

Lake Braddock hosts Indian River, time TBA



Friday, the winners of the first two games as listed above will play at 3:00 p.m. The winners of the third and fourth games listed above will play at 7:00 p.m.

Championship game is 3:00 p.m. Saturday.
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Correction: The game has been called official, James River wins, 5-4. Austin Stadler gets the win despite perhaps not having his best stuff; Jake Matthews gets the save. Stadler hit a solo shot and Robert Oldham a 2-run blast for the Rapids. Andrew Bradley had the big hit, a 2-run blast, for Albemarle, while Nick Bradley made it close with an RBI double. (Not sure if those two are brothers.)

James River moves on to the Final Four!
I agree as to Albemarle. I know if the shoe had been on the other foot, we would not be happy campers. It's a crummy way to see your playoff dreams end. But I don't know what you can do about it. They tried to play the game, the weather wouldn't let them, and the VHSL (NOT JRHS) called the game. I'm sure JR would rather play it off than have anyone question the legitimacy of the win.

After the second lightning delay began, they sent the teams home because it appeared darkness would fall before the rules would permit the game to restart. This has led some to question whether the game should have ever been scheduled at a field without lights. It's a moot point, though, because before that time came, we got hit with a torrential downpour that continued for hours. There were even funnel clouds in the area (none touched down, thankfully). So, had they kept the teams there, they still would never have resumed play, and the game still would have been called official when the washout came.

Maybe they should suspend the called game rule for the playoffs, like they do the slaughter rule, but you can't go changing the rules in the middle of the game. So that's maybe an issue to take up with an eye to the future, but we can't do anything about it now. It's frustrating, but what're you gonna do?
I had a thought -- and saw Emanski's post on Virginiapreps.com to the same effect -- that the rain around the state yesterday could have an impact on the outcome of the whole tournament. The upper bracket games are both done, but the lower bracket games are (1) suspended and (2) not yet begun at all. In the lower bracket, I would think that would rule out any thought of bringing back your game 1 starting pitchers in game 2. And whichever team might advance to Saturday out of that bracket might be compromised if their Saturday starter has one less day's rest than the upper bracket's finalist.

That'll be interesting to watch.
Colonial Forge knocked off Cosby, 3-1, in the quarterfinal game postponed from Tuesday. Weather again played a big role in the outcome.

Ronnie Shaban led off the game with a HR, but Cosby didn't score again until the top of the 6th. In the meantime, CF put 3 on the board in the 4th and 5th, keyed by a Levi Hyams double.

Younger brother Bradley Shaban led off the 6th with a HR to make it 3-2. Two singles brought a very dangerous Jake Lowery to the plate with no outs, but lightning then suspended play, and then rains washed out the entire inning. Score reverted to the end of the 5th, thus the 3-1 final.
Last edited by Midlo Dad
Friday's games at Westfield HS in Chantilly:

3:00 James River v. Bethel

7:00 Lake Braddock v. Colonial Forge


It's supposed to be ridiculously hot all day. Makes me wonder what happens if we get still more thunderstorms?

Last year they played at noon and I think 3:00 p.m. That would've been smarter. Now we're heading into the teeth of thunderstorm time of day.

Maybe we'll luck out and miss the hottest part of the day without incident. Keep your fingers crossed.
Austin Stadler pitched a perfect top of the 8th, then hit a walk-off HR in the bottom half to lead James River past a tough Bethel team, 2-1.

The game featured a pitchers' duel for the first 7 innings. Daniel Marrs held Bethel to 2 singles and only 3 balls out of the infield and walked none, but he hit batters back-to-back in the 5th, then Justin Shively got one of the hits to put Bethel ahead.

Bethel sophomore Jake Maxey walked a tight rope early, getting out of one bases-loaded jam and also getting DP balls in the 1st and 3rd. A 2-out single by Eamon Schwartz, followed by an RBI double by Stadler, tied the gmae in the bottom of the 5th. But Maxey set the Rapids down in order in the 4th, 6th and 7th to send the game to an 8th inning.

Schwartz led off with a single, leading Bethel to bring in its ace, Shively, to face Stadler, albeit on only 2 days' rest. Bethel ran a diversion pickoff play that caught Schwartz for an out. But instead of walking Stadler, Bethel pitched to him. He pounded one ball HR distance but foul, then nailed the first pitch solidly out to center to win it.
The story was simple. James River had fresh pitching, Colonial Forge had used up just about everything just getting to the title game. James River left the bases loaded in each of the first two innings or it could've been much worse than 3-0 at that point, but a 5-run 4th blew it open. Pretty much everyone produced. Austin Stadler went 6 and junior Jake Matthews closed.

It was 100 degrees and we were happy not to have tension to add to our discomfort. Friday's game met our tension and drama quota for one tournament!

In the two games in Chantilly, James River pitchers went 15 innings and allowed only 7 hits, none for extra bases. 2 batters were hit but absolutely no walks were issued. You'll win a lot of games that way!

Daniel Marrs went 7 innings in 77 pitches Friday. Stadler went 1 inning Friday in 13 pitches, 6 innings Saturday in 66 pitches. Seemed like either could've gone longer, and the Rapids didn't hardly need Matthews, the hero of the regional championship game. Oh well, he'll be numero uno next year!
Four years ago, there were 4 outstanding 8th graders on the JRHS JV squad. I had had the delight of coaching them in travel ball up to that point. One day I picked them all up from practice and they were complaining that they couldn't believe how little team spirit and hustle there was -- not just on the JV, but on the varsity as well. The program had never come close to a winning record (school opened in 1994) and usually did not qualify for even the district tournament.

I told those guys that it would be up to THEM not to get dragged down to that level, but instead to set a new standard for the program and to show their teammates how winners went about their business. Not by screaming at each other, mind you, but by going about things the right way and making it clear that it was nothing special, just what was expected of everybody.

Not that they wouldn't have done it if I hadn't said so, but 4 years and 3 months later, it's been one heckuva ride. One of those boys actually transferred to the Governor's School, which was a darned shame for JRHS since he ended up on scholarship to UVA and also taken late in the pro draft (only because he was deemed "unsignable"). Would've liked to have had him! But the three that stayed, they were big time leaders in turning this program around. And they were very fortunate to survive a miserable coaching experience and live to flourish under a new coach who was absolutely everything you could ask for in a HS coach.

Those three boys were senior co-captains this year.

One is on his way to Longwood on scholarship. This is one outstanding young man whom I regularly kid about how he has my permission to court my daughter in a few years. (Except, I'm really not kidding. I'm counting on the power of suggestion.)

The other two were drafted Friday (also "unsignable", 40th round). One was an AFLAC All-American and the other is this year's Gatorade VA Player of the Year. And those two are both heading to Wake Forest.

Things at Wake are light years ahead of where JRHS was back in 2004, so don't get me wrong, Wake is a solid program already and it's not in need of a savior. But make no mistake, these boys intend to win and they intend to do everything in their power to make it so. And I know they aren't the only ones in that incoming class -- one of the top recruiting classes in the country including Buzz Jr. -- who feel that way. It's going to be great!

There's a guy who likes to post on this site that Wake is a "third tier" program in the ACC. It ain't so now. And I guarantee you it won't be in the coming years.

See you at Ernie Shore come 2009! And at Fenway in May ... and in the NCAA's after that ... and then we'll see just how far it goes!
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The great point in Midlo Dad's post is that in order for a program to truly take off, the players have to take ownership of their program. It can take a long time to turn around a losing tradition and a losing attitude, but once the players show they're accountable and willing to take that responsibility on their shoulders, that's when truly great things can happen.

Eventually, it becomes (hopefully) a self-perpetuating kind of thing, where future players don't want to slack off of the standard that has been set. This is not say that they'll necessarily be state championship contenders every year, but just that they'll do things the right way, work and play hard, and then you let the chips fall where they may.

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