2016 Playoff Preview – First Round – (4) South Boston Saints vs. (5) Revere Rockies

SBS v RR

Season Review

As two of the league’s winningest franchises in recent memory, the South Boston Saints and Revere Rockies are set to square off this Tuesday in what will surely be a hard-fought opening round matchup.  Having never missed the postseason, freshman coach Nate Laliberte’s Rockies faces a tough test in future Hall of Famer Jon Tenney’s South Boston Saints, who have made it to postseason play in 8 of the last 9 seasons.

Down 2-0 in last year’s opening round, the Rockies made a heroic comeback to advance past the Al Thomas A’s, later bowing out to an East Boston Knights team stacked with elite arms in the semi-finals. But the Purple & Black entered 2016 as a team to beat, considered by many as early-season favorites to repeat as an impact playoff squad.

Thanks in part to a hot June which saw Revere cruise to wins in 8 of 9 games, the Rockies have been amongst the league’s best all season.  The season nearly derailed in early-June when ace Alex Wong went down with an elbow injury.  However, the Rocks added newcomer Pat Shore (Stonehill) to an already deep pitching staff which overcame Wong’s absence to finish in the top 3 in both ERA and WHIP.  Offensively, the experienced lineup (They will enter postseason play with over 1,000 playoff at-bats under their belt) faced some ups and downs in 2016 but still managed to finish in the league’s top 5 in scoring.

The Saints opened up the year having lost an entire squad’s worth of YBL All-Stars to retirement, injury, and adulthood. Faced with fielding a squad without names like Graham, Wicks, Hueston, Evans and Geoghegan in the starting lineup, the Saints mustered together one of the league’s best offenses with a mix of new blood and veteran talent.  Overcoming an early season slide that had them well below .500 at the all-star break, South Boston would go on to win an incredible 12 of 13 games down the stretch, en route to securing the league’s #5 seed.

The story this year for the Saints has been all about timely hitting and superb defense.  While their pitching staff has struggled at times (5.04 ERA & 132 walks), they’ve managed to fill up the bases offensively, and sport the league’s 3rd best average at the time of this writing.  South Boston will look to ride their impressive July wave straight into a first round victory.

Probable Matchups

Game 1 –Adam Del Rio (5-0, 34.1 IP, 1.63 ERA, 27 K’s) vs.  Stephano Stravoravdis (6-4, 65.2 IP, 3.94 ERA, 48 K’s)

Game 2 – John Young (3-3, 38 IP, 3.13 ERA, 27 K’s) vs.  Dan Shaw (5-2, 50.2 IP, 4.28 ERA, 35 K’s)

Game 3 – Chris Sandini (0-3, 30 IP, 3.50 ERA, 29 K’s) vs.  Brad Bousquet (1-2, 32 IP, 6.56 ERA, 32 K’s)

Players to Watch

Adam Del Rio turned in a Cy Young-caliber campaign for Revere, going 5-0 with a 1.63 ERA.  At the plate, the usual suspects were back at it in 2016, with Chris Santosuosso leading the way with 35 hits, and Bobby Foote shaking off a tepid start with a torrid July to finish with a club-best 19 RBI.  Keep an eye on Chris Hartery – a career .345 hitter with over 300 hits, he’s starting to heat up at the plate after a slow start.

Former Babson College standout Trevor Boyce, who once won a Rawlings Gold Glove award for his skills in center field, remains one of the league’s top defenders.  Adding a .392 campaign with 29 runs scored and a team-high 40 hits, and Trevor’s impact cannot be understated.  Joining Trevor offensively is Cambridge-product Ted Downing, who chipped in with 29 hits of his own in his rookie campaign.  Jon Tenney drove in 21 runs (his highest total since 2007) and has tallied 300+ hits and 450+ innings pitched in his illustrious career.

Wild Cards

Who cares if he went 0-3 this regular season…Chris Sandini has the makeup and experience to anchor the Rockies pitching staff this August.  Chris brings 111 career playoff innings and 9 career playoff wins into the 2016 postseason, elevating his game when the lights are the brightest.

Despite the staff’s pitching woes overall, South Boston workhorse Stephano Stravoravdis led the YBL in innings pitched (65.2) with key wins against playoff teams from East Boston and Brighton.  A win in game 1 will set the tone for a Saints series victory.

Series Prediction

“It’s not how you start…it’s how you finish”

Inspirational internet memes aside, it really is all about peaking at the right time in this game.  The South Boston Saints have saved their best brand of baseball for the run-up to the playoffs, and if they keep this momentum rolling into Tuesday, Revere is in trouble.  If the Rockies’ veteran arms show up to play, they will likely earn the right to face Al Thomas in the semi-finals.  If they don’t, The Saints of South Boston will finally escape the “Boondocks” of round one and advance.

South Boston edges out Revere 3-2 in a first round that goes the distance. 

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2016 Playoff Preview – First Round – (1) Al Thomas Athletics vs. (8) Brighton Black Sox

AT v BBS

Season Review

Sporting the YBL’s most potent and formidable offense, the Al Thomas Athletics enter the 2016 postseason as the league’s top seed on the heels of a franchise record 28-win season. The A’s look to avenge last year’s heartbreaking first round loss to their rival Revere Rockies – a series which had them leading 2-0 at one point in the best of 5 series.   A perennial powerhouse, Al Thomas has no shortage of talent with playoff experience, and many have ATBC pegged as the squad who will hoist this year’s championship plaque.

Sporting their deepest lineup in recent memory, the Sluggers from the South Shore can flat-out hit. Coach McDougall’s veteran squad has terrorized opposing pitching staffs all year long, averaging nearly 9 runs per game, while drawing an unheard of 173 bases on balls – the highest walks total by any franchise since .400Hitter began tracking statistics.  With 7 Al Thomas hitters ranking in the top 13 in the league in runs scored, there is simply no room for error when facing their lineup.

Their bats are buoyed by a solid pitching rotation and deep bullpen. Bolstered by the return of former Pittsburgh Pirates 5th round selection Pat Bresnehan (6-0, 4.46 ERA, 34 K’s), Al Thomas is primed for a deep playoff run in 2016.

Looking to play the role of “spoiler” in round 1 are the #8-seed Brighton Black Sox, who enter postseason play with a 14-18 record. Piping hot out of the gate, the Black Sox rifled off big wins against defending champion Somerville and semi-finalist Stoneham en route to a 10-5 start. Relying on his bevy of veteran arms and a talented, fast, young corps of bats, Coach John Griffith created a winning atmosphere at his team’s new home at Brandeis University.

Then July hit…

First, the Sox lost promising young shortstop Jake McGuiggan to a pro contract with the New Britain Bee’s of the Atlantic Professional Baseball league. Then, the injury bug got hold of the usually sturdy Black Sox staff, with staff ace J.T. Ross tallying less than 40 innings pitched for the first time since 2009.  With a 2016 regular season that was back-loaded with an inordinate amount of July games, the Black Sox did what they could to find pitching wherever they could, with catchers, first basemen and coaches shouldering the load on several occasions. They limp into August on a 4-13 skid, hoping for some postseason magic to aid them in their efforts to unseat the league’s top team.

Probable Matchups

Game 1 –Pat Bresnehan (6-0, 67 IP, 1.78 ERA, 48 K’s) vs.  Matt Nicholson (1-3, 41 IP, 2.39 ERA, 14 K’s)

Game 2 – Willie Archibald (3-0, 36 IP, 1.94 ERA, 39 K’s) vs.  Jared Rooney (4-5, 51 IP, 3.43 ERA, 33 K’s)

Game 3 – Bobby Freeman (6-1, 34.2 IP, 2.83 ERA, 28 K’s) vs.  JT Ross (3-3, 39.2 IP, 3.00 ERA, 36 K’s)

Players to Watch

Since the franchise-ruining free agent pickup of Freddi Carrera in 2013, the Athletics have deployed a 3-headed monster of Freddi/Katsy/Lambo to score runs in bunches on a nightly basis. Carrera turned in another MVP-worthy campaign in 2016, leading A’s hitters in batting average (.423) and hits (41).  James Katsiroubas lead the league in runs scored (36) and extra-base hits (16) while Steve Lambert pitched in with 31 runs and 30 RBI’s of his own.  The all-star trio was joined by MVP-hopeful Matt Rodriguez, who paced the A’s with a league-best 40 RBI’s. The speedy Tom Trull turned in a career year, leading the circuit with 22 stolen bases, and a resurgent Jon Kostas finished up 2016 hitting at a .400 clip.  Assuming the bats will remain true to form, the Al Thomas postseason might hinge entirely on which Willie Archibald shows up in August – the record-setting 2014 version who rattled off 5 playoff wins? Or the 2015 version whom surrendered 6 ER in 3.2 IP in a do-or-die game 5 against the Rockies.

Wheaton College standout Apolinar De La Cruz packs a whallop in the middle of the Black Sox order, leading his team in runs scored (20) and extra base hits (9). New addition, Spencer Tonies, turned in a fine rookie campaign with 30 hits and a .390 average. Former Washington Nationals 33rd Round pick Billy Cather has arguably the sweetest left-handed swing in the league and could create some matchup issues for the Al Thomas right-handed starters, along with Apo, Spencer, Rob O’Neil and the other Black Sox lefties.

Wild Cards

Mike Hicks reached base at a .438 clip in 2016 thanks in large part to his league-leading 14 HBP’s. Establishing the inner half on Hicks and teammate James Katsiroubas could be a difference maker for opposing pitchers.

Black Sox catcher Cam Owens answered the call when his team needed an emergency start and he held the defending league champs to 1 run, scattering 5 hits over 6.2 gutsy innings. Griff may hand him the ball to see if lightning strikes twice.

Series Prediction

The fact that the Al Thomas Athletics do not have their name etched on the YBL championship plaque this decade is criminal. They have been too good for too long to go home empty-handed once again.  Griff’s Black Sox have plenty of talent, and have proven time and again that they can not only compete with, but BEAT the best teams this league has to offer…but ATBC lineup is just too deep and they’ll punch an early ticket to Round 2.

Al Thomas sweeps Brighton 3-0 in the first round.

 

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YBL Players of the Week (Jul25-Jul31)

PITCHER OF THE WEEK: Adam Del Rio – Revere Rockies – #10

Del Rio

With some strong pitching performances to pick from last week, the POW committee had some options. Smitty had another brilliant performance shutting out the Beacons. Rookie Sam Bennett for EBK shutout the Astros carrying a late no-hit bid. And Chris Dion tossed a complete game win over the Alibrandis. However this week’s award is going to tilt towards quantity in addition to quality. The Rockies’ Adam Del Rio threw 12 innings over 2 starts, giving up only 1 run apiece in wins over the Knights and the upstart Townies. Over those 2 starts, the Donkey allowed 8 hits and struck out 9 batters…..but perhaps most impressively not walking a single batter.

Fantasy Impact: Inexplicably, Adam was not selected as a pitcher in the fantasy league. Must have been something to do with only throwing 5 innings last season. But he has matched innings pitched in 2015 with wins in 2016 and is now the proud owner of a 5-0 record. Over 34.1 innings, Del Rio has delivered a 1.63 era and .961 whip…..and a superb 27:3 k:bb ratio. Managers, take notice.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK:  Ted Downing – South Boston Saints  #14

Downing

Apparently displeased with being relegated to a mere ‘honorable mention’ for his efforts last time around, Cambridge product Ted Downing kept the pressure on and forced our hand this week. The Saints’ rookie has kept up a torrid pace as of late, his hat now securely in the ring for a potential ‘Rookie of the Year’ award. After a 5-for-9 performance 2 weeks ago, Ted improved on that last week going 7-for-12. Over these 5 games where Downing has been turning it on, the Saints have run the table. It appears at this point that the Saints and Rockies will be doing battle in the first round of the playoffs, and the Saints could win out and put pressure on the Rockies for home-field advantage. For good measure, TD also contributed a W with 2 innings of work against the Maddogs on Thursday.

Fantasy Impact: A big time rookie who projects to be a early/middle-round target on draft boards in 2017, Downing has improved to a .429/.587/1.059 slash line. Worth noting, he is now 2-0 in 5 relief appearances with a 1.11 era.

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Player Profile: Cam Bando (Charlestown Townies #18)

Bando

Introducing Cam Bando, #18 for the newest franchise in the Yawkey Baseball League the Charlestown Townies, has been a crucial part to the Townies inaugural season. Cam has taken on the task of catching the Townies pitching staff this summer and has been the back bone of the team out there on the field and a threat in the middle of their lineup. Hidden behind the talent of the Townies pitching staff has been Cam’s ability to get the most out of his pitchers. He has been the perfect player this summer and has done everything asked of him without hesitation. Cam is looking to take his baseball career to the next level and continue to play in college. Although still undecided where that might be, Cam will for sure have his choice of schools to pick from when he decides to make that leap.

(Introduction courtesy of Devin Santilli)

Nickname: Never really had one besides “Bando”

Position(s): Catcher

Bats/Throws: Right/Right

Club(s) Played for in YBL: Charlestown Townies

Where did you grow up? Wakefield, MA

Where do you live now? York, ME

When is your birthday? 5/29/1996

Where did you go to college? Still in the process of finding one.

What do you do for a living? Hopefully not for a living but I work for Earls Kitchen and Bar.

If you played pro ball, where have you played, and what was the most interesting city you called home? I should probably think about college first before pros.

What baseball awards / honors have you won in your life? Received Independent School League All- League honors sophomore junior and senior year and 2015 MVP at St. Paul’s School.

Do you coach/play anywhere outside the YBL? Where? The Townies and also a local baseball league in Wakefield.

Been part of any championship teams prior to / outside of the YBL? In 2012 I was a part of the Wakefield all-star team that won the state championship.

What years have you been an All-Star in the YBL? This is my first year.

Favorite MLB player(s) of all time? As a kid I had an obsession with Mark Maguire, he lied about taking steroids but I still like him.

What are the three best movies you’ve seen in the last year? The revenant was really good, I could watch the movie Warrior over and over again even though it’s not new, and Mad Max.

What concerts have you been to in the last year? I always love going to country fest at Gillette every year.

You’re on your way to a game, what are you listening to in order to get hyped? It all depends on my mood but it’s usually house music or rap, no artist in particular.

Read any good books lately? The Bobby Orr book that came out a couple years ago was really good.

What are your 3 favorite shows right now? House of Cards, Ballers, Curb your Enthusiasm.

What is the best trip you’ve ever taken? I went to the Bahamas with my best friends from school.

Who is the most underrated player on your team? Everybody usually does their job when called upon, couldn’t really pick one if I had to, no one is overrated that’s for sure.

Who else on your team would make for an interesting interview? James Beaton, the kid is a character.

Who have you most looked up to in the YBL? I’ve noticed a lot of professionalism and respect for the game in the YBL so that is something that’s awesome to see in everyone that plays.

What was the most exciting moment you’ve had in the YBL? Getting our first win with the townies was a big rush for all of us.

What are your hobbies/passions outside of baseball? Definitely hanging out by the beach playing spike ball with my two brothers, in the winter it’s playing hockey with my brothers as well.

Who is the most influential person(s) in your life? My dad has certainly been the most influential person, he’s taught me everything I need to succeed and be a good person in life.

Do you have any pets? I have two black labs that are awesome, Forrest and Wyatt

How does your significant other handle your baseball habit? She handles it like everything else I do, she just deals with it, thankfully.

What drives you to keep playing ball every summer? Baseball in the summer is perfectly coexistent, you can’t have one without the other, and I don’t know what I’d do without playing some baseball on a beautiful summer day.

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YBL Players of the Week (Jul18-Jul24)

Our next installment of the Players of the Week features a pair of stalwarts who have been terrorizing the league for years…..two of the most feared competitors in the YBL.

PITCHER OF THE WEEK: Mike Smith – Brighton Braves – #17

Smith

In his lone start of the week, Mike Smith straight dominated the South End Astros with a complete game shutout. Smith allowed only 3 hits….to the team leading the league with 14 HRs on the year….and struck out 10 (with no walks) along the way.

Fantasy Impact: A shutout to go along with a nice WHIP-dip should help Dirty Sandinis (mgrs: Nate Laliberte / Chris Santosuosso) make up a little ground. Following up this effort with another shutout against the Beacons this past Monday, the first pitcher taken in the draft has proven his worth. Smitty is now 5-3 with a 1.17 era and 1.106 whip on the season, and leads the league in innings pitched and strikeouts.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK:  Freddi Carrera – Al Thomas Athletics  #4

Carrera

Yet another ho-hum week for Carrera, as he goes 10-for-17 (.588 avg) with a triple, 6 runs, 5 rbi and 2 steals over 5 games in the midst of an 8 game winning streak for the Athletics.

Fantasy Impact: Another first-round selection, Freddi has not only been the table setter for the Athletics, but has also been the meat and potatoes for the Deane Street Hooligans (mgr: Travis Adams). With just a few games left, the Hooligans have been trouncing the YBL Fantasy League in most offensive categories, most of the credit due to Carrera’s stat line: .440 avg, .571 slg, 1.119 ops, 28 runs, 29 rbi and 17 steals. At this point of the season, Freddi is arguably (and I use the word ‘arguably’ somewhat loosely) the front-runner for 2016 YBL Most Valuable Player. As of this posting, the Athletics have clinched the #1 seed in the YBL playoffs.

Honorable Mention: Rookie Ted Downing is making a name for himself in YBL circles, and had a solid past week going 5-for-9 in 2 games for the South Boston Saints as they make their playoff-positioning push down the stretch. In those 2 games, Ted collected an extra-base hit of each variety to go with 3runs and 4rbi. On the season, Downing has thrown his hat into the ring for Rookie of the Year consideration, boasting a .392 avg, 1.017 ops and 15 runs in 15 games.

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Buckley: What drives aging amateur baseball players to keep going?

Whether you played in college, were good enough to dabble in the pro ranks, or simply love to be around baseball, we can all relate to Yawkey League Hall of Famer Steve Buckley’s article in this past Sunday’s Herald. Featured in the article are long-time Boston ballplayer Franz Strassman (pictured below with Doc), as well as 2 of the YBL’s own. Jake McGuiggan is currently on the roster of the Brighton Black Sox. And of course, our fearless leader Marc DesRoches (additional photos follow the article).

Franz Strassman and Marc DesRoches of the Somerville Alibrandis Seniors talk at Trum Field before their game on Monday, July 18, 2016. Staff photo by Matt Stone

Steve Buckley Sunday, July 24, 2016

The baseball world is abuzz with the David Ortiz Retirement Tour. Big Papi is tearing through the schedule, hitting for average, hitting home runs, hitting everything thrown at him.

But he is 40 years old. He is as slow-moving as late afternoon traffic on the Zakim Bridge, and it’s a daily challenge for the training staff to get his balky legs stretched out and wrapped up in time for the national anthem. The game is hard.

But Ortiz makes millions of dollars to play baseball, and he lives in a world of high-end chartered flights, five-star hotels and chefs who will knock your socks off. And when you’re Big Papi you never have to circle the Back Bay for a parking space. Somebody does that for you.

But what if, aw shucks, you’re not a big leaguer but you still have a jones for playing ball? In Greater Boston alone, hundreds of amateur players — their high school and college days behind them — continue to swing for the fences, race to the hole and throw the high, hard one. They play in the Boston Park League, the Intercity League, the Yawkey League. These are circuits for players aged 28 and over, 38 and over . . . and beyond.

There are All-Star games, tournaments, and trips to Cooperstown, N.Y., for exhibition games at storied Doubleday Field. And then there are the independent minor league teams, staffed with players either ignored or already released by big league organizations, but still willing to give it a go.

We chose three players of various ages from the various ranks and asked them: How long are you going to keep doing this?

Put another way, when will their own David Ortiz moment of clarity arrive?

THE LIFER

Franz Strassman

Franz Strassman plays for so many different teams in so many leagues that you wonder if he’s ever shown up at the wrong park on the wrong night.

“No,” he said, “but I’ve shown up for the right game wearing the wrong uniform. It happens.”

Strassman expects to play 120 games this season, suiting up for Grossman Marketing in the Boston Park League, Somerville Alibrandis in the 38-and-over division of the Men’s Senior Baseball League, the Brockton Athletics in the MSBL’s over-28 division and three different editions of the Waltham Braves in the Boston Amateur Baseball League — the over-38 squad, the over-48 squad, and the over-55 squad.

He is also a Belmont police officer, a practicing attorney and owns rental properties.

And — wait for it — he is 58 years old.

“I may know the most about baseball, I may know the least amount,” said Strassman, who, in case you were wondering, is single. “The one thing I can talk about is that every year it takes a little bit more to still be able to play. And every year you play amateur baseball reinforces the love you have for the game because of the effort it takes to compete and play without injury. You can compensate for age by working out in the gym and eating right.”

From the looks of him, Strassman lives inside a gym. He is a 5-foot-10, 185-pound keg of muscle, a man of boundless energy who can rattle off his life story in less than two minutes — from playing the trumpet in the Belmont High band, to wandering out to California for a year, to his days at UMass, to becoming a cop, a lawyer, and then stumbling upon his Vision Quest: amateur baseball.

He had always kept himself in great shape, proudly pointing out that he still owns a suit he bought at Thompson’s Clothing in Amherst Center during his freshman year at UMass. “The pants still fit,” he said. “The jacket’s a little tight.”

But when he joined an over-30 baseball league upon turning 30, things really got revved up. He had played baseball in the BPL in 1980 and ’81 before moving on to softball, but his return to baseball was eye-opening, and for keeps.

As he likes to say, and says it often in one way or another: “If someone my age with my baseball history were playing in the Park League the first year I played, it means World War II would have still been going on the first year they played.”

Sure, Strassman has had problems along the way. He had elbow woes for nine years, and couldn’t throw without a brace.

“I tried everything, acupuncture, different medications,” he said. “It finally went away on its own.”

But he still pitches (“fastball, curve, changeup, slider”) and still plays the outfield.

So, how long is he going to play?

“As long as I can,” he said. “People put this artificial list on everything they do in life. When people say, ‘Geez, you’re too old to play baseball,’ those are the people who have given up. Look, there’s no reason for me to stop playing. No one wants to admit they’re a step slower, or can’t hit the ball as far. You can accept the reality of your age, but that doesn’t mean you have to accept other people’s limitations.”

THE DAD

Marc DesRoches

Marc DesRoches fashioned a 14-1 record at Providence College in 1999, which happened to be the last year the Friars fielded a baseball team. He hoped he might be drafted, but he was coming off ulnar nerve surgery during the previous year, and, as he puts it, “I wasn’t exactly lighting up the gun.”

He contented himself, then, with amateur baseball. The Cambridge native had started playing for Somerville Alibrandis entry in the Yawkey League in 1996 when he was 19, and now, returning home, he decided to keep on keeping on.

Alibrandis became a Yawkey League power, winning 15 championships in 18 seasons, with DesRoches and his teammates growing older and wiser, but apparently not slower and weaker.

Now 39, he has transitioned to the Men’s Senior Baseball League.

“I don’t think I’m that out of shape yet,” he said. “I think moving to one or two games a week instead of three or four certainly allows the body to get rested. It’s paced out in a way that as you get older you can still play at a high level.”

But there’s more to all this than aching muscles. For DesRoches, it’s also family life. He met Michelle DeRoeck at the 40th birthday party for teammate Mike Powers in 2009, and then, on May 26, 2010, she showed up at a game. DesRoches is very clear on the date.

“That was it,” he said. “We’ve been together ever since.”

They were married Oct. 27, 2012 and now have a daughter, Morgan, aged 16 months. They’re building a house in Dracut.

“Family life is a good reason to move to one or two games a week,” said DesRoches, whose day job is as a placement consultant with Lightwave Partners in Waltham. “I still get to be a good husband and a good dad, and then on those couple of days I have a game I can concentrate on those and play as hard as I can.”

So, how long is he going to play?

“I’d say a couple more years,” he said. “Maybe when the second child comes along, that will be the writing on the wall.”

THE KID

Jake McGuiggan

For Jake McGuiggan, the 2016 season began with him playing shortstop for the Brighton Black Sox of the Yawkey League. The 24-year-old Hingham native and 2015 Harvard University graduate had played independent minor league ball the previous summer, but alas: The Garden State Grays, a travel team in the Cam-Am League, went belly up after the season.

He hooked on with the Black Sox, who play many of their home games at Brighton’s Rogers Park, just a couple of relay throws from Harvard’s O’Donnell Field, where McGuiggan was a four-year varsity starter, hitting .303 for his college career.

This season, he was hitting .388 with a .474 on-base percentage in 10 games with the Black Sox, prompting a call from the New Britain Bees of the Atlantic League. And off went McGuiggan for another taste of indy ball.

“I’m playing with and against guys who have Double-A, Triple-A and big league experience, so it’s been great for me,” he said. “And it’s a chance to improve my game and take it to the next level.”

The next level would be for a major league organization to sign him for one of their farm teams. Improbable? Absolutely. But Kevin Millar and Daniel Nava, both of whom played on World Series winners with the Red Sox, got their start in the indy leagues.

“Playing in the Yawkey League was a good opportunity, because it’s really good baseball and it was a way to stay in shape for a potential independent season,” McGuiggan said. “And New Britain provided that opportunity.”

But McGuiggan also has a degree in government from a prestigious university, and his desire to work in baseball isn’t limited to the playing field. He has a Plan B: When/if he’s no longer playing, he will climb into a suit and tie, polish up his resume, and apply for jobs in Major League Baseball and its 30 teams.

So, how long will he play?

“I’m not setting a timetable right now,” he said. “I can only see myself playing beyond the next couple of years if it’s professionally, whether independent ball or affiliated. Hopefully that can continue.

“But I feel that physically and mentally I have a lot more to give to baseball at this level,” he said. “I’m not ready to stop.”

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