By Ray Shaw
By Ray Shaw
A unique summer party, months in the making, ushered in August at Newtownâs Fairfield Hills campus as the residents joined to celebrate the townâs tercentennial.
The centerpiece of the party was a well publicized vintage base ball game between the local nine and the much heralded Hartford Senators at the old Asylum grounds.
The Sandy Hooks, coming off a doubleheader loss six days prior, were determined to show their cranks how the â1876 gameâ should be played. Hundreds of town folk and avid vintage cranks spurred by intense media attention arrived to watch Senators captain, âGritâ Moran hurl for the visiting club while Brian âTexâ Casey, Doug âPopsâ Pendergist and Dennis âDoughboyâ Norwich manned the box for the Sandy Hooks.
The early innings belonged to the Sandy Hooks as âMooseâ Margolus lead off the game with a tenacious at-bat forcing the Hartford hurler to throw 20 pitches to set him down. The Sandy Hooks went on to manufacture three unanswered aces, kindled by âSparksâ Marcucilli, while holding the travel worn Senators at bay with splendid pitching, defensive teamwork and timely hitting.
As the innings wore on the battle hardened visitors reached their stride while the wheels on the Sandy Hookâs battlewagon began to wobble. The upstart Hooks would eventually fall short due to on-going fielding miscues that proved their undoing in earlier games. As Moran continued his mastery of the home squad the Senator ballists used their signature station-to-station game supported by base-running brilliance to provoke more unearned runs from the disheveled Hooks.
The highlights of the day was the multi-strikeout full game performance by Moran, a thrilling inside the park ace registered by the awe-inspiring âCrazy Legsâ March and numerous fielding gems exhibited by both teams.
The final score was somewhere in the neighborhood of 14 to 4 when this scribe stopped counting.
The bright spots for the home team was the exceptional hurling of âTexâ Casey, the clutch hitting and base-running of âChiefâ Dieckman and two-hit performance by former Middletown Mansfield and Waterbury standout, and Sandy Hook resident Ron Miller who took a hiatus from the Connors team to perform in his hometown celebration.
The dayâs match ended with the traditional âhuzzahsâ to both sides and umpire Herb Bush for making the eighty-mile trip to supervise the match.
Because of time limitations both teams retired from the midday sun to partake of the culinary treats offered by the local vendors.