Pa. team in U.S. final
SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT — The closest thing to a home team at the Little League World Series is headed for the final of the U.S. bracket. And Lewisberry can expect a full house when it goes for the title.
Left-hander Adam Cramer struck out 13 in five innings, and the undefeated Pennsylvania team beat Pearland, Texas, 3-0 on Wednesday night while thousands of red-shirted fans stood and cheered.
Manager Tom Peifer gathered his team on the field and said aloud what they already knew: They’ll be playing for the title of best team in the U.S.
“I never thought those words would come out of my mouth,” he said.
A quiet left-hander took them the final step.
Cramer threw 87 pitches, allowed three hits, and got only two outs other than by strikeout — a fly ball and a comeback grounder. Jaden Henline moved over from shortstop and got three more strikeouts in the sixth, escaping a bases-loaded threat.
“Adam’s always done that as long as I’ve known him in big games,” Peifer said. “He’s a big-game pitcher for sure. To have 13 strikeouts and 15 outs, that’s pretty incredible.”
Cramer got a flyout to end the first inning and a comeback grounder to open the second. Every other out the rest of the way came by strikeout.
“In the first inning, I threw 28 pitches,” he said. “In the next inning, it was like 13. Then I knew I was in a groove.”
Cole Wagner hit a solo homer, and Henline had an RBI single among his three hits.
Pearland will play Bonita, California, on Thursday for a spot in the U.S. title game against Lewisberry. The winner of that game Saturday will face the International bracket winner for the World Series title a day later.
At least they won’t have so many people rooting against them in that one.
“I don’t think it really affected them,” Pearland manager Andrew Solomon said of his team. “I could be wrong. They’re really a focused group. Obviously it’s not easy to play before 35,000 people when 34,900 are rooting for Pennsylvania.”
Thousands of fans made the two-hour drive from Lewisberry for the game. The crowd estimated at 35,000 packed Lamade Stadium, leaving no room to cardboard slide down the steep, grassy slope beyond the outfield wall.
The dominant performance followed the most exciting games of the tournament, featuring two big comebacks and one pulsating win that sent the undefeated team from Tokyo to the title game of the International bracket.
Tokyo got down to its last strike in the bottom of the sixth inning before rallying to it it, then overcame a two-run deficit in the bottom of the eighth for a 5-4 victory over Barquisimeto, Venezuela, that was among the tournament’s most exciting so far.
“A tough game,” manager Junji Hidaka said, in a tone of voice that didn’t need translating. “The players were great.”
For Barquisimeto, it was as tough as could be. Twice the Venezuelans had a chance to finish them off and couldn’t do it.
