http://www.palmbeachpost.com/h.../19/0518trinity.html
By JASON LIESER
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
LANTANA — Trinity Christian catcher Phildrick Llewellyn was at the center of Friday's dugout-emptying fight between his team and Brito Miami, but even he is not a reliable witness to the event.
The altercation interrupted the second game of their best-of-three regional final series at Miami-Southridge and led to the suspension of five players from each side. The teams disagree in assigning blame and the penalties remain unknown, but there is no dispute over which incident ignited the confrontation.
Trinity shortstop Adaric Kelly fired the ball home hoping to throw out Brito's Daniel Bolanos, who stands about 6 feet 5 and 230 pounds. Llewellyn, a freshman who checks in at 5-7 and 145, recalls catching the ball and bracing for impact but has little idea what happened next.
"I just tried to set myself, and after that, I don't remember nothing," said Llewellyn, who held on to the ball after tagging out Bolanos in front of the plate. "He just slammed me.
"I blacked out. I was lying there for a minute or so. My head was spinning."
The details are murky for the Florida High School Athletic Association, too, and it has yet to determine the exact suspensions for the 10 ejected players.
After Bolanos' collision with Llewellyn - during which Bolanos delivered a hard blow with his body and his elbow, coaches from both teams said - the game was delayed 29 minutes while the umpires broke up the fight and sorted out ejections.
All 10 players missed Saturday's Game 3, won by Trinity Christian, and the five Warriors are in question for Wednesday's Class 1A state semifinal.
Trinity Christian will face Tampa-Cambridge (20-7), but the Warriors do not know the status of suspended starters Jacob Johnson, Jonathan Groezinger, Brandon Murray, Richard Bain and Kelly.
Johnson, a Wake Forest signee, is the team's ace, and Groezinger is its No. 2 pitcher. If those players are ineligible, Trinity Christian coach Miguel Cuello will turn to Vince Kossak on Wednesday, followed by sophomore Nick Bougopoulos if the Warriors reach Thursday's title game.
FHSAA associate executive director Denarvise Thornton sent Trinity Christian (27-4) a letter Monday saying the entire 17-player roster is "suspended indefinitely," but the situation remains under investigation. Warriors athletic director Fred Erdman said a teamwide suspension and subsequent forfeit is unlikely.
The FHSAA has a standard two-game penalty for ejections, but it can be shortened or extended after review.
Erdman said the school is appealing for the immediate reinstatement of Johnson, Murray and Kelly, because they did not leave their positions or the dugout during the incident. He hopes to get a ruling before the team boards a bus this morning to head north.
Erdman said Groezinger ran from the dugout and Bain charged in from center field, so the school is not asking for a reduction in their punishment.
Cuello was upset with some of his players for breaking the rules, but he defended their actions.
"I can't tell them it's wrong," Cuello said. "If I'm playing ... I'm going to go after this guy."
Player opinion was equally conflicted. Murray said some Warriors "may have overreacted." Johnson described Trinity Christian's response as necessary.
Bain, a senior, looked despondent as he sat out most of Monday's practice. Wondering if he already played his final game for the Warriors, Bain sat in the first base dugout and replayed the scenario.
"I didn't have a choice," Bain said. "I'm a leader on this team and I'm not going to sit there and watch another team take advantage of a freshman.
"I see both benches clear out and punches being thrown at my teammates. What do you want me to do, sit there and watch them get beat down? I did what anyone would do. It was the right thing to do.
"I'd rather protect my team than play."
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