New York Post

Upstate Endwell reaches LLWS championsh­ip

- By TRAVIS JOHNSON

SOUTH WILLIAMSPO­RT, Pa. — With the Little League World Series title game looming Sunday, the Endwell, N.Y., players planned on taking a break from baseball if only for one evening.

They’ll retreat to their dorms near Lamade Stadium and dive into their other preferred pastime.

“A lot of ping pong,” infielder Jack Hopko said.

Hopko broke a scoreless tie with an RBI single in the bottom of the fourth and Michael Mancini struck out 11 in a 4-2 victory over Goodlettsv­ille, Tenn., in the U.S. final Saturday.

The Mid-Atlantic champs will try to win their first title against internatio­nal winner South Korea on Sunday. South Korea beat Panama 7-2 earlier Saturday in the internatio­nal final.

“I don’t think I can describe it, maybe the boys can,” New York manager Scott Rush said. “Just an unbelievab­le feeling.”

New York players Mancini, Hopko, Billy Dundon and Jude Abbadessa appeared in the postgame media room and all used the same word — “Amazing.”

It was Mancini’s pitching that inspired his teammates, shut down Goodlettsv­ille and earned him praise from the opposing manager and a standing ovation from Endwell fans who packed the first-base side of Lamade Stadium when he exited in the fifth.

Mancini allowed just one hit through 4 2/3 innings and his offense came alive in the fourth. Then, Dundon drove in two runs, and Hopko and James Fellows each had an RBI for New York.

“The curveball is usually my biggest pitch because I know if I’m down in the count I can throw that and get back up and maybe get them out with that pitch,” Mancini said. “So you never know what can happen with that pitch.”

Tennessee manager Joey Hale praised his players’ approach while acknowledg­ing his hitters struggled to find Mancini’s elusive curve ball for much of the game.

Jon Luke Simmons broke up Mancini’s no-hit bid in the top of the fifth. After Mancini got his 11th strikeout one batter later, Rush opted to replace him with Abbadessa.

“He doesn’t make mistakes,” Hale said. “He’s truly polished. Most kids at this age have good breaking balls but they don’t always throw them where they should be thrown. If you watch, man, every ball that crossed the plate was down below the knees. That’s just the mark of a great pitcher.”

South Korea 7, Panama 2

Youbin Choi struck out 14 and South Korea beat Panama in the internatio­nal final.

Choi gave up six hits in six innings.

Seum Kwon and Jaekyeong Kim hit two-run homers and Wontae Cho also connected for South Korea (4-0).

Carlos Gonzalez had three hits for the Latin American Region champions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States