Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

COVID cramps style of LLWS

Foreign teams out due to pandemic

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The Little League World Series is back. There won’t be internatio­nal teams or 22,000 fans in the stands when the championsh­ip rolls around, but the tournament in South Williamspo­rt, Pa., is set to start Thursday.

The coronaviru­s forced the cancellati­on of the tournament in 2020, and this year, the delta variant surge resulted in Little League tournament­s for several older age groups being scrapped. But what most fans understand as the Little League World Series, featuring 10- to 12year-old players, will take place over the next week and a half, with the championsh­ip set for Lamade Stadium on Aug. 29.

“It won’t be the same as what they’ve seen on TV and from years past, but I told them, ‘I don’t care if there’s 10,000 people or 10, you shouldn’t have any problem getting up to play here,’ ” said Dustin Radar, manager of Nebraska’s Hastings Little League team, the top club in the Midwest region.

“I think they’re just really excited for the opportunit­y.”

Though there won’t be fans packing the hill at Lamade Stadium, those close to the players can still see them in action. Each team will receive 250 game passes to distribute to friends, families and community members.

Instead of splitting 16 teams into U.S. and internatio­nal brackets, Little League’s championsh­ip tournament will feature strictly American squads in 2021 because of COVID-19 and the internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns the pandemic brought about. Typically, eight teams from different geographic regions represent the United States, with the rest of the world broken into another eight regions.

This year, each U.S. region’s champion and runnerup moved on, instead of just the champ. Though manager Ben Lutwig’s Upper Providence Little League team of Oaks, Pa., northwest of Philadelph­ia, won the Mid-Atlantic region outright, he feels good about letting the socalled B teams participat­e.

“I think Little League is doing the right thing and everything they can do to make it as good of an experience as possible,” Ludwig said. “A 16team tournament is more robust, so I think it’s great what they’ve done here to expand it out, given the circumstan­ces.”

Ludwig and company are well-prepared for adverse situations. His team lost its second game of the Pennsylvan­ia state tournament, meaning it had to win five games in five days to advance to the Mid-Atlantic tournament.

His group succeeded.

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