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Minor Bantam AAA Hawks are OBA Champions!!!!!

2016-09-05


The 2016 Newmarket Minor Bantam Hawks after winning their OBA AAA championship in Etobicoke on Sept. 4, 2016

The 2016 Minor Bantam Hawks followed up their 2015 "dream season" - Baseball Ontario Major Peewee Eliminations Champions, 5th place finish at the Baseball Canada 13U National Championships, and 59th Lions CNE Tournament Champions - with an OBA AAA championship.

Despite being the only team in the final three not to receive a bye in the OBA Minor Bantam AAA Championships and having to play three games on Saturday and another three on Sunday, the Newmarket Hawks outlasted the field to win the coveted OBA champion rings.

Friday game result: Newmarket 6-Kitchener 4
Saturday game results: Newmarket 8-Scarborough 0; Newmarket 12-Whitby 2; Newmarket 12-Etobicoke 2
Sunday game results: Windsor 2-Newmarket 1; Newmarket 4-Windsor 1; Newmarket 11-Whitby 2

In the championship final, the Hawks took a slim 3-2 lead into the bottom of the 5th inning when Whitby loaded the bases with none out.  After getting the next batter to fly out, the Hawks turned a 1-2-3 double-play to end the threat, and then their bats got hot with 5 runs in the top of the 6th and 3 more in the top of the 7th.

The team is very proud to represent the Newmarket Baseball Association.  Congratulations to players Russ Agar, Grant Beetlestone, Mitchell Bratt, Bradley Edwards, Jaden Hums, Matthew Kobryn, Reid Lunney, Brycen Pascal, RJ Tuck, Nicolas Velocci, Brady Wagenhoffer, Lucas Wessinger, and Luke Witty, and to head coach Doug Lunney and assistants Brian Bratt, Rob Hums, and Conrad Wagenhoffer.

The OBA preview article below (by John Cudmore) appeared in the Newmarket Era on Sept. 2, 2016

Minor bantam Newmarket Hawks search for elusive Baseball Ontario title

Even in a dream season in 2015 not everything dropped into the gloves of the peewee Newmarket Hawks.

The team had, after all, won the Baseball Ontario Eliminations provincial playdown tournament to secure a berth to the Canadian championships, ultimately placing fifth in the country. Then there was the CNE tournament crown, another coveted victory for the squad of 11 and 12 year olds.

One can hardly blame the youngsters if they’d been a little battle weary by Labour Day 2015 weekend and beyond 70 games played. Not terribly surprisingly, the Hawks exited early from the triple-A championships in Vaughan.

Together, however, the aforementioned titles would be quite enough to cement the Hawks’ status as the premier peewee baseball team in Ontario. A triple crown would have provided a nice finishing touch.

It is confusing, even redundant, that a Baseball Ontario tournament championship tournament is contested barely four weeks after a Baseball Ontario provincial championship leading to a national tournament has been declared.

Flip the calendar pages ahead by 12 months and the now minor bantam Hawks are among the favourites at the 12-team triple-A championship tournament starting Friday at Connorvale Park in Etobicoke. With no Elims or CNE, it is the only title up for grabs to minor bantams this season among triple-A teams.

“It just seemed kind of less important last year,” said Hawks’ field manager Doug Lunney, whose team qualified out of the York Simcoe Baseball Association in a tournament at Vaughan in early August. “This year it is the big thing to play for. The kids seemed almost overkilled (in 2015), but this year they’ve been eyeing OBAs all season.

“We still wanted to win last year, but we just didn’t have our best bats in the final tournament.”

A season for the ages is never easy to match up against. However, the Hawks have been on their game in finishing atop their regular season standings in the Toronto-York Simcoe interlocking league with an 18-4-2 record. They have been to three tournament finals, winning once, in Aurora.

“It’s definitely been hard to top the excitement part, that’s for sure,” said Lunney. “This year has been a little more normal, but we have had to learn to pitch on mounds and hit with wood bats.

“I think we adjusted quite well to most things. It’s been a struggle for a lot of the kids, but you learn new ways to get on base, score runs and just play the game.”



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