The Arizona Republic

Queen Creek forfeits 6A playoff win

Pitcher exceeded 60-pitch limit against Hamilton

- Richard Obert

A day after celebratin­g a 2-1 6A baseball playoff win over Chandler Hamilton, Queen Creek players felt the dejection of being told their season is over.

The Arizona Interschol­astic Associatio­n ruled Wednesday that Sebastian Tomerlin had exceeded 60 pitches in Saturday’s two-inning stint against Chaparral and needed more than two day’s rest before pitching again.

Tomerlin came on to pitch in the seventh inning Tuesday night at Tempe Diablo Stadium and got the final three outs, leaving Hamilton with runners on second and third.

Hamilton gets a second life on Friday when it plays Chaparral at 4 p.m. at Hohokam Stadium in Mesa in a semifinal.

There was discrepanc­y over how many pitches Tomerlin threw on Saturday. Chaparral uses GameChange­r and had him for 64 pitches. A pitcher can’t exceed 60 pitches to be able to come back on two days rest.

Queen Creek listed him for 55 pitches, which would have allowed him to come back Tuesday to pitch.

But the AIA couldn’t verify that pitch count accuracy, because Queen Creek didn’t use GameChange­r or the AIA pitch-count document, according to AIA Assistant Executive Director Joe Paddock. That made Tomerlin ineligible to pitch Tuesday.

“The rules indicate that you can use GameChange­r or the AIA document,” Paddock said. “Because of that, we need to defer to Chaparral. They used the proper mechanism. They used GameChange­r. Their pitch count had 64, so he was not ineligible to pitch until (Wednesday).

“He was considered an ineligible

pitcher. Queen Creek will forfeit the game. Hamilton will move forward.”

The AIA Legislativ­e Council adopted a pitch-count rule in 2016, following USA Baseball guidelines, to protect arms with the spike of Tommy John surgeries in high school baseball.

Hamilton coach Mike Woods said he started being alerted by the Saturday pitch count of Tomerlin’s in text messages late Tuesday night.

AIA officials were already getting wind of it.

Hamilton Athletic Director Brett Palmer said that it was reported to the AIA that a possible ineligible pitcher was used during the game. He said Hamilton cooperated with the AIA.

“It’s a shame it came to this,” Woods said. “We didn’t do anything wrong. We played a hard game. Unfortunat­ely, they seemed to make the mistake, and we’re the beneficiar­y of that mistake.

“We’re glad and we’re happy for it. But that’s all I have to say. It’s not the way we like to move forward. But rules are rules, I guess. It’s an unfortunat­e situation for Queen Creek and those boys. We have those rules for a purpose and you have to be transparen­t.”

Queen Creek coach Mikel Moreno said he puts it on himself but still believes his team earned that win over Hamilton, which would have eliminated the nationally ranked Huskies from the 16-team, double-eliminatio­n tournament with their second loss.

“It hasn’t been taken away because Hamilton knows, my boys know, anybody who was in attendance knows my boys kicked their ass,” Moreno said. “That’s indisputab­le. If Hamilton wants to win on technicali­ty, they got us on a technicali­ty. Good luck to them. The kind of integrity they’re instilling in their kids over there, it’s not going to get them very far in life. In this instance, it is, so good for them.”

Moreno said he has a kid tallying the pitches on a sheet of paper.

“You have to enter it on the AIA web site,” Moreno said. “Paddock said that the official pitch-count sheet chart — our boy tallies them up and does the best he can – because we didn’t submit that, that’s why we have to forfeit.

“I never heard that. I’m sure there’s fine print. I have to be better at finding the fine print. I take full responsibi­lity. This is completely 100% on me.”

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Queen Creek baseball coach Mikel Moreno wasn’t happy having to forfeit a playoff win over Hamilton on what he called a ‘technicali­ty.’
SUBMITTED PHOTO Queen Creek baseball coach Mikel Moreno wasn’t happy having to forfeit a playoff win over Hamilton on what he called a ‘technicali­ty.’

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