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I'd be interested to hear about amazing things people have seen on the field in youth/HS baseball. I'll get it started with something I witnessed last summer.

My son was asked to play on a thrown-together team of 13 year-olds for the purpose of going Anaheim to play in a California tournament. In the semi's we played a good Michigan team which had a great looking catcher, a big rangy agressive kid.

He was at bat against our best pitcher, a kid (not my son) who was not all that big, but had real good control, a nice curve, and a bit above average speed.

I was the scorekeeper.

The batter worked the count to full, and then fouled off the next 10 pitches. Among those pitches were some great breaking balls that he somehow fouled off. On the sixteenth pitch he finally swung and missed at another great curve.

I remember thinking that I wasn't sure whether I was more impressed by the batter or by the pitcher. I've seen a few 10, 11 and 12 pitch at bats before, but I don't believe I have ever seen a 16 pitch at bat at any level.

It was a remarkable performance by both kids. Talk about a battle!

That is what I love about baseball.... so many games within the game.
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Throwing 40 K's in HS game and losing. No question that is amazing:
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Prep Righty Sets Record With 40 Strikeouts
By Alan Matthews
May 27, 2004


Major milestones are usually accompanied by lavish celebrations. But when Illinois high school pitcher Joe Labek set a new national record for strikeouts in a game with 40, there was no tickertape. He didn't dance off the mound.

Heck, his team didn't even win.

Ridgewood High fell to Evergreen Park High 2-1 in a 24-inning game played over two days, a week apart in suburban Chicago. Labek gave a yeoman's effort, pitching the final 21 innings of the game for Ridgewood and striking out 40, but he gave up a run in the top of the 24th to take the loss.

"I felt bad for Joe," Ridgewood coach Paul Frerking said. "He pitches great and loses that game. Nobody was interested (in the strikeouts). You lose that game and it just took the wind out a little."

Labek said he was unaware of his strikeout total though he thought it was "somewhere in the 30s" when he came off the mound and saw all the "K" signs fans had posted along a fence. He learned it was an Illinois record when he read a story about the performance in the Chicago Tribune, but didn't realize it was a national record until told by a Baseball America reporter.

Labek, a 6-foot-1, 190-pound righthander, just took his final high school exam--he'll play baseball at Arizona State next year--and was savoring his record-setting performance.

"I have it on my mantel," he said of the ball used in the final inning. "I don't know if anyone will (break the record), but I want this for awhile."

It started out so routine. Labek came on in relief in the fourth inning of a scoreless game against Evergreen Park May 17. He tossed nine shutout innings with 18 strikeouts, three hits and a walk, but Ridgewood also couldn't score. The game was suspended after 12 innings due to darkness, and Labek and his teammates left feeling frustrated they were unable to scratch across a run. They figured the game wouldn't be completed because of heavy rain in the area and the approaching end of the regular season.

Ridgewood went on to sweep a doubleheader against Riverside Brookfield High three days later, with Labek tossing a shutout in the second game, striking out 12. Ridgewood was left tied with Riverside Brookfield in their conference standings, so the Ridgewood-Evergreen Park game had to be finished on Tuesday.

Frerking sent Labek back out for Ridgewood, figuring it would take an inning or two to snap the tie. Labek's 86 mph fastball and good, 12-to-6 curveball were sharp again as he struck out the first nine batters he faced before getting a groundout, followed by four more strikeouts to run his total to 31.

"You just keep marking K's in the book but . . . I am not thinking about strikeouts, but how we're going to score a run," Frerking said.

"My mechanics just started coming together and my fastball started getting up there and I was nailing the corner," Labek said. "I can pretty much lay them all in there for strikes."

Finally in the 19th inning, Evergreen snapped the scoreless tie when Labek issued one of his three walks, a single, a sacrifice and a wild pitch. But Ridgewood answered in the bottom of the inning, scoring on a two-out balk to tie it at 1-1.

The game remained deadlocked through the 23rd, when Labek tied the all-time national mark, notching his 37th strikeout of the game to work out of a jam. The previous record for strikeouts in an extra-inning game was 37, set by Billy Brimm of Asher (Okla.) High in 1971 in a 17-inning game.

"I could tell he was getting a little tired," Frerking said. "I talked to him and I said, 'Do you want to come out?' He said he still had it."

"I told him no, I was going to stick in there as long as I could," Labek said.

Labek gave up a leadoff double in the 24th and walked the next batter intentionally. He broke the record against the next hitter before a bloop single brought home the go-ahead run. He struck out the next two hitters to reach 40, but Ridgewood couldn't score in the bottom half, making for a sour ending to an epic outing.

Labek threw 86 pitches in the first nine innings of his outing. A week later, he tossed 121 pitches, the last of which was a fastball that sailed into his catcher's mitt for his 40th strikeout. The game was also the longest in Illinois high school history.

He completed the regular season with 144 strikeouts in 92 innings, allowing eight earned runs and 15 walks. He says the Arizona State coaching staff has discussed using him only at third base next season, though, as he hit .552-2-36 in 105 at-bats. He hopes his claim to fame might influence the coaches to give him a chance on the mound next season.
My 12U AAU team a few years back was part of an incredible game. We were in the semi finals of the State NC AAU championships. We had not given up more than five runs in any single game that entire year. We were up 7-0 in the fifth inning. The team we were playing scored 10 runs in the bottom of the fifth and we did not commit one single error. Going into the top of the sixth we were down 10-7 and had two outs no one on. Our Lead off hitter homers to make it 10 to 8. Next hitter homers 10-9. Next hitter homers 10-10. My youngest son homers 10-11. We get a double then a single and go into the bottom of the sixth up 12-10. Well their first guy singles. He gets picked off then the guy up homers on the first pitch to make it 12-11. They end up with the bases loaded with one out and we turn a 6-4-3 to end the game. It is still the most amazing game I have ever witnessed or been a part of.
on my hs baseball team my soph. year someone hit a fly ball/line drive deep to center and our center fielder was set up underneath it about 6 ft from the warning track and it hit the top of his mitt and then proceeded to hit the top of the piping on the fence and bounced of the fence....therefore resulting in a three run homerun...we then we down in the game and prolly lost becuase my team sucks

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