Monday, August 10, 2009

Courtesy of the Times Argus (the Vermont Mountaineers and the 25th Enduro at Thunder Road)

Vermont Mountaineers

By KRIS MARTIN CORRESPONDENT - Published: August 10, 2009

MONTPELIER — Nothing like stretching it out the hard way. The Vermont Mountaineers survived to play another day, defeating the Newport Gulls 4-3 in game two of the New England Collegiate Baseball League finals. The teams are now tied 1-1 in the best of three series with a champion to be crowned tonight in Newport.A little suspense, some anxiety and a whole lot of controversy will be what the game is remembered for. Rarely does a dropped third strike provide a walkoff outcome, but with the game tied 3-3 and tensions already running high thanks to a tight strike zone, Nick Martinez swung and Ethan Paquette crossed the plate as Martinez scampered to first base and the ball squirted away from Newport catcher Mike Melillo.Melillo, believing that Martinez had fouled the ball off was obviously upset at the umpire's call and the frustration led to a bizarre exchange between the two teams, as players and coaches rushed the field to exchange hostile barbs. Newport manager Mike Coombs was ejected and will be unavailable for game three tomorrow due to a mandatory one-game suspension from the league."It was definitely a unique strikeout," Martinez said. "I've never even been up in a situation like that before in my life. I was waiting for a fastball, and instead I got the slider, a good pitch to strike me out on, one I'm usually a bit anxious for. We almost had a bit of an argument right there in front of home plate. We're a great hitting, great all-around team. As soon as Jayson walked I knew it was a tie ballgame and I wasn't trying to be a hero. I just wanted to hit the ball on the ground and force them to make a play on it."Fortunately for the Mountaineers, Newport reliever Matt Brantham had some trouble finding the strikezone in the ninth, walking three straight batters after Steven Felix doubled to lead off the inning. Mountaineers catcher Jayson Hernandez worked his way to first base via the walk to tie the game at 3-3, setting up Martinez' walkoff strikeout."We hit the ball good today but just couldn't get that clutch two-out hit," Hernandez said. "The first two strikes I took, I just froze up, I didn't pull the trigger. The umpire was consistent all game with a really tight strike zone. We'd work it to two strikes and then bust them inside on the black for the punchout but we just weren't getting it. Fortunately for us, neither were they."Vermont starter Brad Altback pushed through five and two-thirds innings, striking out five and walking three, with Newport's Will Roberts going six innings with five strikeouts of his own. The Gulls' Aaron Westlake contributed a monster homerun to lead off the top of the second inning, and it would stand until TJ Middlestaedt managed to drive in the Gulls' second run when he tripled in the eighth, driving in Greg Garcia. The Gulls added a third run on a Westlake sacrifice fly.Vermont got back in the game in the bottom of the eighth, with Martinez picking up an RBI on a fielder's choice and Jantzen Witte driving home Kevin Vance with a single."I thought Newport played their tails off," Mountaineer manager Troy Moock said. "They got a great start and did everything they needed to do in order to win. They shut us down two or three times with the bases loaded. Brad kept us in it and Andrew Benak and Kevin Vance were solid out of the bullpen. The kids won this one on emotions; they didn't want to go home. It's not how they envisioned the summer ending, and they're still playing one game, one pitch a time. We kept pressing and didn't give up."The three-game NECBL championship series wraps up tonight in Newport.

25th Annual Enduro @ Thunder Road

By TOM HERZIG CORRESPONDENT - Published: August 10, 2009

BARRE — Bill Davis, a 44 year-old mechanic from Monson, Mass., drove a 1985 Chevrolet Monte Carlo to a $5,000 payday in the 25th M&M Beverage Enduro 250 Sunday in front of a packed house at Thunder Road.
...

The Enduro, a full-contact, no caution-flag event that blends country fair demolition derbies and Talladega nights, started 120 cars, many of which were overheating before the start, in three-wide formation. The track was filled to the point that the leaders reached the back of the pack within a quarter lap at the drop of the green flag.

Barre Mayor Thomas Lauzon lasted 32 laps. Seventy cars were still running after 110 laps. With 170 laps left, 44 cars were still ticking and the pace was quickening. In the waning laps, 29 cars were left.

Mike MacAskill of Williamstown won the 50-lap Allen Lumber Street Stock feature that served as preview of the mayhem that was to follow in the Enduro. MacAskill did it the hard way after starting at the tail end of a 39-car field. It was the first win of the season for the second-year driver and the second of his career.MacAskill slipped underneath David Whitcomb at the finish line to complete lap 47 just before the fifth yellow of the race (the red flag was out four times) setting up a three-lap shootout between himself, Whitcomb, Tommy Smith and Tucker Williams.

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