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Published - Tuesday, July 22, 2008

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Legion Juniors reach title game

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Tomah was the second-best team in the regional tournament, but it couldn’t match the experience and pitching depth of the tournament’s best team.

Reedsburg capped an impressive run through the American Legion Region 4 Tournament with a 9-5 victory over Tomah in the championship game Saturday at Dennis Senz Field.

The regional title earned Reedsburg a berth in the state 16-and-under tournament beginning Friday at Prairie du Chien.

For Tomah, the loss in the championship of the six-team, double-elimination tournament ended its season with a 4-7 record.

Tomah won four of its final seven games, and Tomah coach Matt Dutton was encouraged by how his team played late in the season. The team will form most of Tomah High School’s varsity and varsity reserve squads next year

“The future for Tomah baseball is very, very bright,” Dutton said. “I think the kids and the community have some good, exciting baseball to look forward to.”

The championship game didn’t have much excitement when Reedsburg led, 8-0, heading into the bottom of the fifth inning, but Tomah added some legitimate suspense late in the game.

Erik Egstad launched a Tomah rally in the bottom of the fifth by lacing a one-out single. Tyler Von Haden followed with another single, and Joey Organ loaded the bases by reaching on an error.

Wyatt Blado snapped the shutout with an RBI single that scored Egstad, and Jared Dietzman and Tommie Liddane were both hit by pitches with the bases loaded to cut the margin to 8-3. Kyle Kikta gave Tomah its fourth run of the inning on an RBI groundout before Reedsburg reliever Chad Mazur got a strikeout to end the inning.

Kikta, who took the mound in relief in the top of the fifth, held Reedsburg scoreless in the sixth. Tomah appeared ready for another big inning after Ryan Felber led off with a double, and Egstad reached on a ground ball after Reedsburg unsuccessfully tried to gun down Felber at third.

Felber scored on a Von Haden single, but Reedsburg got lucky with Organ at the plate. Organ smashed a smoking line drive that was speared by Mazur, who easily doubled Egstad off second.

Mazur then got a strikeout to end the inning and pitched a scoreless seventh, which meant a second championship game didn’t need to be played Sunday.

Reedsburg finished the tournament undefeated and outscored its four opponents by a combined scored of 43-10.

Although it was a loss, Saturday’s result was much better than Tomah’s 19-0 loss to Reedsburg in the first round of the winner’s bracket Friday (Tomah defeated Richland Center, 6-5, Wednesday, and most of Thursday’s action was postponed to Friday). Reedsburg led just 1-0 after three innings, and things didn’t get ugly until the seventh inning, when Reedsburg scored 11 runs.

Tomah never got a runner past third base. Von Haden got two of Tomah’s three hits.

Win over Portage

Tomah, however, erased the bad memory of the Reedsburg loss hours later by staying alive with a 10-9 victory over Portage.

Portage led, 6-3, heading into the bottom of the sixth before Tomah unloaded with seven runs. Kikta launched the rally with a one-out single, advanced to second and third on wild pitches and scored when Felber’s chopper over second base scooted through the infield.

Trenton McCaskey followed with a walk, but Tomah still trailed 6-4 with two outs after a strikeout. Von Haden kept the rally alive with an RBI single, and Organ was hit by a pitch to load the bases. Tomah then took its first lead of the contest when Blado smacked a hard line drive to left field that scored McCaskey and Von Haden.

Organ scored when Dietzman reached on an error, and Kikta delivered a big two-run single that gave Tomah a 10-6 lead.

Continued from page 7A

Tomah would need every one of those insurance runs. The first four Portage hitters of the seventh inning reached base, and Kikta was summoned as the reliever with the bases loaded, nobody out, and Tomah leading 10-7.

Kikta promptly uncorked a wild pitch that cut the gap to 10-8. However, he rang up a strikeout, coaxed a fielder’s choice that gave Portage its ninth run and ended the game with a routine flyball to centerfield.

Ryan Felber was the winning pitcher. He pitched six complete innings before leaving after facing the first two batters of the seventh inning.

Dutton said his team showed character by coming back to beat Portage.

“They’re starting to buy in to what we’re teaching them and wanting to be a good, fundamental team,” Dutton said. “They’re starting to believe in themselves and that they can compete.

“I tell them to look at a team like Reedsburg and how they play the game and composure they have,” Dutton said. “I think our kids are moving in that direction.”
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 Comments »

Parent coaches wrote on Jul 28, 2008 6:57 AM:

" All those so called experts got suddenly quite. "

Speaking of parent coaches... wrote on Jul 26, 2008 10:39 PM:

" A plethora of coaching opportunities are out there for all you Bobby Knights, Vince Lombardi's and Diamond in the Rough coaches in the public.
Middle School Cheer, football and volleyball as well as High School Dance, freshmen football, hockey and head boys basketball still remain.
So whoever won the 5th grade 'B' level tourney back in '92 can step up and try to defend their title. "

re parent coaches wrote on Jul 25, 2008 2:10 PM:

" I agree with the last poster that says "winning and being successful at a younger age has no bearing on how the kids will be in high school." At the younger ages you are basically dealing with kids their own age (maybe one year older or younger). Kids and PARENTS learn what the "pecking order" is for that age so everyone gets along. But when they reach HS now that "pecking order" is thrown out of wack. A freshman makes the varsity team---now the age group that he came from isn't is as good. In addition (and this is where the big problem comes in)someone in the older group gets a 'spot' taken that they had for all those previous years. Now you have the older kids (and parents) wondering why the younger kids are playing instead of them. You also have former teammates (and parents) of the younger kid wondering why they are not good enough to move up since they played with this kid all the previous years. You would not believe the dynamics of a high school program unless you dealt with it first hand. It looks all so 'cut and dried' from the stands but believe me it is not so. On top of all that, when some kids reach HS they just plain lose interest or develop different interest. Therefore,they are not nearly as dedicated as they were when they didn't have as many choices set before them. Along that same line, today I see alot of kids that are just plain "burnt out" and don't want to deal with the pressures put upon them by outside sources. So, to wrap this all up, as you can see there are many reasons why teams aren't as successful at the HS level as they may have been at the younger level. You can't always blame the coach for "dismantling" teams. I also agree with the previous poster that said you can not compare wrestling or any other individual sport (ie golf). Most team sports are rather subjective when it comes to evaluating ability. "

re parent coaches wrote on Jul 25, 2008 10:21 AM:

" Winning and being successful at the younger ages has no bearing on how the kids will be in high school. Coaches don't dismantle the high school teams, parents do. You also can't compare wrestling with basketball. Wrestling is an individual sport ( Why isn't my kid on varsity? Simple, he can't beat the kid ahead of him) end of conversation with the parent!! "

confused wrote on Jul 24, 2008 7:21 PM:

" What would happen if no boys basketball coaches are hired? "

parent coaches wrote on Jul 24, 2008 3:55 PM:

" Obviously I don't have a problem with parents teaching their kids about sports when they're very young. I'm sure you provide great coaching when you're teaching your sons/daughters everything you know about basketball, baseball, hockey, whatever. What I have a problem with is the parents "coaching from the stands" undermining the coach on the field and teaching poor sportsmanship skills in the process.

If you think teaching your own kid they're 5 and coaching as coaching a dozen or more of other people's kids when they're 18 is the same thing, then you're grossly oversimplifying the process.

It's too bad though. This was the year for the parent coaches. They ran plenty of coach outs of the programs, and from what I hear, there were very few, if any teacher/union applicants for the positions, particularly in basketball. But, as has been pointed out, parent coaches don't have to guts to subject themselves to the same kind of punishment they inflict on the coaches themselves. "

re parent coaches wrote on Jul 24, 2008 12:41 PM:

" Yea you know all about bad parent coaches. DO you realize that if parents didn't coach then kids would not have a clue on how to play any sport until Middle school. WHO DO YOU THINK COACHES THEM WHEN THEY START OUT. Parents give many hours to very young children in all sports to teach the kids and not just their kids how to play. How many paid coaches do you see for 5 and 6 year old kids. You chide these parents that coach from the stands but many of them were very involved in teaching and coaching when their children and most of the children they are watching new nothing about the sport. You watch a group of kids grow together and play for 8 ten years together and then get to High school to watch the paid coach dismantle 10 years of teaching and playing. When year after year you see teams win at every level they have ever played and then get to high school and lose constantly to the same teams they have been beating for years something is wrong. Thats what frustrates parents in the stands. Do you see very many angry parents at a wrestling match? No success breeds tolerance. Anyway parents cant coach in high school since we have to have teachers or union members first. "

re RE hoops coach wrote on Jul 24, 2008 11:25 AM:

" It will never happen. These parents might think they know it all, until they have to do the job. Then they will see that they have a WHOLE team of players to coach and not just their OWN kid. Then they might actually see that someone is better than their own. It is EASY to be a 'coach in the stands.' Thats why you see very few sucessful PARENT COACHES. "

RE hoops coach wrote on Jul 23, 2008 11:43 PM:

" Do you think there's anyone dumb enough to try and be a basketball coach in this town? They don't have a chance.

It's odd that there aren't many applicants though. I mean...there are dozens of parents who know everything about basketball. I wonder why one of them doesn't step up. "

hoops coach wrote on Jul 23, 2008 10:45 AM:

" Are they ever going to hire a boys and a girls basketball coach? "

reedsburg parent wrote on Jul 22, 2008 3:58 PM:

" If you think that Tomah High School is a "graveyard" for sports, you should look at the wrestling team! They are awesome and well-coached! Tomah has the same problem that every other high school has. The economy forces the youth to have jobs and this is the main focus of their summer. You guys had a good tourny and the coach had so much energy! Thanks for the compliment regarding Reedsburg. "

re Bright future wrote on Jul 22, 2008 7:08 AM:

" I couldn't agree more. "

RE Bright future wrote on Jul 21, 2008 8:27 PM:

" You're right...it's much more appropriate for a coach of 15-16 year old kids have quotes in the paper like "This team is terrible. There's no sense in taking any interest in the program. These kids are horrible baseball players, and not worth the effort."

Heaven forbid someone have a positive outlook. The reason Tomah is such a "graveyard for sports" as you say, is people like you. "

Bright future wrote on Jul 21, 2008 3:29 PM:

" Typical coach in TOmah went 4-7 had a hard time getting 9 kids on the field and future of Tomah High school BB looks bright. Thats why Tomah is such a graveyard for sports. "


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