New York Post

Meet the NYC Little Leaguers going to the World Series

Staten Island kids launch their bid for World Series glory

- By LAUREN STEUSSY

STATEN Islander Gregory Bruno keeps his poise on the mound — and the batter guessing. The lanky soon-to-be eighth-grader is so close with his Little League World Series-bound teammates that they’ve developed a sort of coded language. Some say he and his catcher, Chris Cancel, can read each other’s minds. But there’s one thing Bruno can’t keep hidden — he’s a monster on the mound. “The kid is the ultimate competitor,” says Joe Calabrese, manager of Mid-Island Little League team. Bruno’s fast pitch is measured in the 75mph range — the profession­al-adult equivalent of about 90 mph. “He’s got speed pitches he hasn’t even used yet,” Calabrese says. Mid-Island last won the Little League World Series in 1964, the only team from the five boroughs ever to do so. And it’s returning to the World Series thanks in part to Bruno, who threw a perfect game — with no opposing batter reaching basbase — in the Mid-Atlantic reregional competitio­n last wweekend, advancing the 11 players from the “forgotten” borough to the championsh­ips in Williamspo­rt, Pa. On Thursday, they’ll face off against Des Moines, Iowa’s Grandview Little League tteam in front of tens of thousands of fans, with millions more watching at home.

That pressure won’t be a problem for Mid-Island because the team is packed with standout players, including slugger Steven Martinez, who has hit so many home runs, his mom, Venida Martinez, has lost count of the scuffed-up balls she has collected from over the fence.

“At all their tournament­s, the younger kids, they wait at the end of the fence for him to hit a home run, and when he does, they bring it to me,” Venida says.

The roster is so robust that Calabrese is saving Bruno’s arm for what could be a tough second game in the double-eliminatio­n tournament.

“This is probably the strongest team I’ve ever seen,” says Al Bedford, a team coach and bookkeeper, whose son, Chris, plays second base. “Other teams you might be top-heavy, have four or five good players. But this team, top to bottom, they’re just good ballplayer­s.” T O UNDERSTAND how the tight-knit team came to be so indestruct­ible, it’s best to start with Bruno, and his obsessive drive to dominate. As a toddler, he was obsessed with Godzilla.

The radioactiv­e, city-smashing monster made the toddler’s “eyes light up,” says his dad, Gregory Bruno Sr. If he wasn’t watching the old Japanese movies, he’d be imagining his own, drawing Godzilla wreaking all manner of destructio­n.

“I have about two year’s worth of Godzilla drawings from him,” Bruno Sr. says.

But once Junior started playing baseball on his neighborho­od’s youth team at 5 years old, he had a new and lasting obsession.

“When he gets something he’s passionate about, it takes over,” mom Andrea says.

The family would vacation in Florida so that Greg Jr. could spend time with his pitching coach. Winters were spent not sledding down Staten Island’s Mount Loretto, but at a strength-and-conditioni­ng training camp. He even prefers playing the video

game “MLB The Show,” over the one game most kids cannot stop talking about.

“When all your friends are playing Fortnite, you’ll be out there practicing, training” his father remembers telling him. “If this was fun all the time, everyone’d be doing it.”

STILL, kids will be kids, and at St. Rita, the Staten Island Catholic school he attends, he banters with teachers such as Sister Mary Jude Chamberlai­n. The 73-year-old nun says young Bruno, who’s always eager to help her with errands, learned a complicate­d secret handshake with her this year.

“You slap the front, then back, you touch thumbs, then we point a finger, and blow on it” like a gun, says Sister Jude. “And then you put it in a holster.”

Keeping things fun despite a serious work ethic also became easier when Greg Jr. met friends equally fixated on their budding careers. When Greg was 6, he started playing on teams with kids such as catcher Cancel, now his star batterymat­e.

“Chris and Gregory are like two peas in a pod,” says Cancel’s father, Nicholas.

“My son knows Bruno’s body language, he knows when to calm him down. He knows when the pitch is off and he’ll call a different pitch if he knows it’s off,” says Nicholas of his son, a straight-A student in the scholars program at PS 75.

OF ALL the players on the field, though, it might be first baseman John Calabrese Jr. giving the rest of the team the drive they need to clinch the world title. John Jr.’s father — Coach Joe’s brother — died suddenly in 2014 of a heart attack. “The team dedicated the entire season to his dad,” Venida says.

Parents say John Jr.’s attitude helps keep the team positive.

“I don’t know how the kid does it — lost his father, smiles every day,” Nicholas Cancel says.

The team on a whole is inseparabl­e. “They have their own little language,” Bruno’s mother Andrea says.

“I don’t understand half the things they say,” says Coach Joe, who adds that he’s not sure if it was the loss of his brother that really brought them together or just that the teammates spend all their time together, even coming over to his house on summer days for pool parties.

“These kids are my family now,” Calabrese says. “I’ll do anything for them, for the rest of my life.”

And though not on the roster, Coach Joe’s son, Joe Calabrese Jr., is the team’s secret weapon: When he was their age, in 2006, his team made it to Williamspo­rt, but didn’t last long in the tournament. As a mentor and assistant coach, Joe Jr. says he’s helping them get into the mentality to win: “I’m someone who’s been in their shoes, and someone who’s lost,” he says.

“Little League baseball does a good job of making every kid feel like it’s enough to make it this far,” Joe Jr. says. “But for this team, we don’t want that mentality to set in. We expected to be here and we’re here to win.”

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GREGORY BRUNO
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 ?? Photos by Douglas Healey ?? PERFECTO: Greg Bruno pitches a perfect game last weekend, lifting his Staten Island Mid-Island Little team (congratula­ting him, center, and shown on baseball cards created by The Post) to the Little League World Series.
Photos by Douglas Healey PERFECTO: Greg Bruno pitches a perfect game last weekend, lifting his Staten Island Mid-Island Little team (congratula­ting him, center, and shown on baseball cards created by The Post) to the Little League World Series.
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