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Page 14 THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, AugusT 11, 2023 REMEMBER WHEN? It was 20 years ago when Everett Little League 12s fell to Saugus American in Mass. State Tournament Championship Final! saugus went on to win NE Title before a magical run in Little League World series that drew national attention By Steve Freker Note: Some of the following info comes from the Massachusetts State Tournament website. “W hat if?” holds a prominent place in the lexicon of sports at any level. It is even more lofty than the run-of-the-mill “Woulda, Coulda, Shouda” triplets. “What if?” means a team was one hit, one touchdown, one putt away from something sensational. It means a team or individual was “thisclose” to a truly spectacular feat. So it was for the 2003 Everett Little League 12-year-old Williamsport All-Star Team – which went further in All-Star play than any team in the city’s history. This year’s win by the 2023 Everett “12s” for the District 12 title, followed by a run in the Mass. Sectionals, prompted a look back in history. Lo and behold, a memory was resurrected – and it comes in a milestone year. Added to Everett’s history-making year was another piece of Little League history. In 2003, Everett won both the District 12 and Section 4 championships and did indeed advance to its one and only appearance in the Mass. State Little League Championship. After a one-sided drubbing in the opening round by Middleboro (17-1), Everett rallied back and made it all the way to the Mass. State Championship Game, where they fell in the double-elimination tournament to Saugus American, 11-1, In the 2003 Mass. State Tournament held at Stanley Johnson Field in Oxford, Mass. Yes, that Saugus American! This would be the 2003 Saugus American team that would go on a tear – where they would not lose another game for a month – in the United States Championship game of the Little League World Series, to Boynton Beach, Fla. Like Everett, Saugus American reached the Massachusetts State Tournament for the fi rst time by upending Weston, 16-1, in the Section 4 championship game at Reinfuss Field in Lynn. For Saugus, it was the beginning of a summer of fi rsts: fi rst state championship, fi rst appearance in a nationally televised game, fi rst region championship – and fi rst-ever trip to the Little League World Series. Saugus started its soon to be well-known penchant of manufacturing “the big inning” at the Mass. State Tournament, something they would duplicate at each of the next levels, the New Englands, then the ultimate, the Little League World Series. The “What if” looms large! Just what if Everett had topped Saugus in that State Championship Tournament and it was Everett – not Saugus – that carried itself through the New Englands to the Williamsport World Series? In the Mass. State Tournament, Saugus scored seven times in the top of the second inning and never looked back, topping Everett, 11-1, in the state championship game. It was the third consecutive state tournament game in which Saugus overwhelmed the opposition with a big inning. Saugus toppled Westfi eld North, 16-6, behind a nine-run fourth inning rally in their state tournament opener, then used a five-run third inning rally to defeat Middleboro, 7-1, and gain the championship game. Saugus rang up its big innings with a swarm of little hits. The team’s three home runs at the state tournament were all solo shots, and only one came in their decisive rallies. “They found a way to get the SAUGUS AMERICAN TEAM AT WORLD SERIES: Shown at the 2003 Little League World Series are the members of the Saugus American State and New England Champion team – as well as Little League World Series runner-up. (Courtesy Photo) ball over the infi eld and in front of the outfi eld,” said Middleboro manager Ron Holmgren after Saugus sent his team to the elimination bracket. “[They] did that today, and last night when I scouted them. They put the bat on the ball and don’t strike out.” Another Saugus “big inning” came at a critical time in their state tournament opener. Westfi eld North took a 6-4 third inning lead against a depleted Saugus pitching staff , but the District 16 champions strung together seven hits and capitalized on a pair of Westfi eld errors to score nine runs in the fourth inning. Saugus loaded the bases on a walk and a pair of bunt singles to open the inning, and then tied the game on hits by Dario Pizzano and Joe Kasabuski. Matt Muldoon reached on an error that plated two runs, and Dave Ferreira made it 9-6 with an RBI single. Yano Petruzzelli added a two-run double, and two more runs scored on a throwing error following Tyler Calla’s bunt. The rally made a winner out of Chris Cole, who relieved starter Mark Sacco in SAUGUS AMERICAN TEAM HONORED: When they came home from the Little League World Series, the members of the Saugus American Little League team were honored at a Town Day at Stackpole Field in Saugus. (Courtesy Photo) the third inning. Everett, which eliminated Westfield after its opening round debacle against Middleboro, then gained revenge against the District 7 champions with a 4-3 win in the elimination bracket fi nals. Middleboro led 1-0 in the early innings, but after third baseman T.H. Horan pulled a leg muscle while hustling to fi rst base, the District 7 champion’s makeshift defense suffered. Everett scored four unearned runs, breaking a 2-2 tie when Brian Nuzzo reached well out of the strike zone to deliver a bases-loaded, two-out, two-run single in the fourth. Middleboro got one run back in the fi fth, but Everett pitcher John Forte escaped further trouble and lifted his team into the championship game. Everett had lost to Middleboro, 17-1, in its fi rst game, but beat Westfi eld North, 5-1, and eliminated Middleboro, 4-3, to get to the fi nal. Everett stayed with Saugus early in the championLITTLE LEAGUE | SEE PAGE 15

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