Saturday, May 15, 2010

Brooke Point 5, North Stafford 1

Brooke Point's David Dilegge gets the first home run of his career after he
crushes a third-inning North Stafford pitch. (Free Lance-Star)

Two articles, one in the Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star and one in the Washington Post, provide great summaries of last night's Black-Hawks victory over the 1st-place North Stafford Wolverines.

Excerpts from the Free Lance-Star (Black-Hawks have Wolverines' number):

North Stafford's march to the Commonwealth District baseball title this season is its third under coach Jim Labrusciano.

On Tuesday, the Wolverines clinched the regular- season championship and a berth in the upcoming Northwest Region playoffs later this month.

And while most of the district has had trouble finding a way to beat the talented Wolverines and their deep pitching staff, there's one team that has thrived on the opportunity...

"We've had great pitching and played great defense all year, and today we got the hits when we needed them," said Brooke Point coach Brian Mays after watching his Black-Hawks claim a 5-1 victory over North Stafford last night.

It was the second time this season the Black-Hawks have handed the Wolverines a district loss. Last month, they rode the pitching of Evan Houde and a surge of power hitting to a 9-3 victory...

"It's a big rivalry when we play them in any sport," said winning pitcher Andrew Tyree. "And we seem to hit the ball better whenever we play them."

Tyree's complete-game effort on the mound gave Brooke Point a big boost in dealing the Wolverines (12-7, 10-3) their third district loss. The senior transfer from Caroline struck out nine and scattered eight hits to improve his record to 4-0.

"He's been a pleasant surprise," said Mays. "He's a good kid and a warrior. He's aggressive and he doesn't back down."...

Tyree held the Wolverines' normally potent bats in check for most of the game. He also got a lift from the Black-Hawks' defense on several occasions to help seal the win.

One defensive gem came in the top of the fifth. Thomas Brandon and Nate Connaughton led off the frame with singles to start a potential rally for North Stafford, which trailed 2-0 at that point.

But the next batter, Steve Buel, popped up to Tyree, who fired a strike to second to double-off Brandon. Black-Hawks catcher Travis Cole then threw out Connaughton on a steal attempt at second.

The Black-Hawks got only seven hits in the game, but made the most of them. First baseman David Dilegge scored their first run in the bottom of the first after he reached on an error and then came home on a double by J.J. McDaniel.

Dilegge increased the Brooke Point lead to 2-0 in the third, when he drilled the first home run of his career. The junior drove a change-up from Connaughton over the right-center field fence.

"I got behind it and then the wind helped it a little," Dilegge said. "Once we started hitting, I think we fed off each other."

The Black-Hawks padded their lead with insurance runs in the fifth and sixth innings. In the sixth, they scored twice on RBI hits by Houde and Matt Cammuse...

Excerpts from the Washington Post (Back in a comfortable place, Brooke Point's Tyree excels):

... Tyree arrived at Brooke Point this semester, the result of a family move to Stafford County after a rocky 11 months that started when Tyree's father, Conrad II, died of heart failure on Feb. 13, 2009.

After his father's death, Andrew Tyree snapped at his mother and his friends. He also began skipping school. He gained nearly 20 pounds and became a shell of the right-handed pitcher he once was, one with a devastating change-up and a looping curveball.

"I got away from what I was and started going down the wrong path," said Tyree, who credited his arrival at Brooke Point, giving him the chance to join a few close friends with whom he had grown up playing baseball, for the turnaround in his life.

On Friday night, Tyree, like he always does, began the night by writing his dad's name in the dirt on the back of the pitcher's mound. He said a prayer. And once the game started, he dominated.

Tyree went all seven innings, allowing eight hits and walking one. He struck out nine batters, including all three in the fourth inning, to run his record to 4-0...

He threw 69 of his 105 pitches for strikes, including 18 of 29 first-pitch strikes...

Brooke Point scored in the bottom of the first on third baseman J.J. McDaniel's two-out double and went ahead 2-0 in the third inning after first baseman David Dilegge's first career home run.

The Black-Hawks struck again on a wild pitch in the fifth before second baseman Evan Houde and designated hitter Matt Cammuse each had run-scoring hits in the sixth...

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