tournament champions
Good pitching will stop good hitting and it did in last night’s Ocean County Baseball Tournament championship game.
Let’s bounce around a bit this morning but let me first say I was invited by Seaside Heights Mayor Bill Akers to meet Prince Harry yesterday but gave my spot to someone else. I’m in the company of royalty on a regular basis anyway.
The Shore Conference Tournament was seeded on Monday night, which means those top 10 seeds are currently the most relevant top 10 list out there right now because it is the only one that has any bearing on the games being played.
It was an upset-filled week in Shore Conference baseball as teams jockeyed for spots in the NJSIAA and Shore Conference Tournaments, and another legendary head coach reached a career milestone.
For the first time it appears New Jersey is on the verge of joining the rest of the country and crowning overall public school group champions in football.
It was 14 months ago when I first shared with you the story of Sean Martyn, who was fighting a rare form of pediatric cancer which was discovered following a high school football game he played for the Brick Township Green Dragons.
The division schedules are winding down this week, which means the Shore Conference Tournament is just around the corner.
All six Shore Conference divisions crowned champions last week and the Ocean County Tournament whittled down the field to the final four teams as the postseason starts to heat up.
Some 400 people packed the main banquet room at the Sheraton in Eatontown Sunday for an event that’s both a celebration of past success and an introduction to one of the shore’s signature annual events.
For some of us the glory days are but a distant memory but not for a group of men who this summer will once again try and prove that that memories can still be made even if you’re not in the prime of your baseball career.
Thousands of runners took to the streets for the New Jersey Marathon, cheered on by crowds who faced tighter security measures imposed after the bombings at the Boston Marathon.
Berkeley Little League President Bob Everett announced Friday night that former manager Tom Murphy is suspended indefinitely and banned from all league functions following Thursday's incident with a juvenile umpire.
The Berkeley Little League Board of Directors will meet Friday night to review the slapping of a 17 year old umpire on Thursday night by a manager during a disputed call.