Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Sunday, December 15, 2024 75° Today's Paper


Sports

Maui Little League team advances to U.S. championship

1/3
Swipe or click to see more

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Nakea Kahalehau, 9, was greeted by Caleb Chai, 14, after scoring against South Riding, Va., Wednesday during the fourth inning of a game at the Little League World Series tournament in South Williamsport, Pa.

2/3
Swipe or click to see more

ASSOCIATED PRESS

South Riding, Virginia’s Chase Obstgarten was tagged out attempting to steal home by Central East Maui’s Duke Aloy, ending a big third inning at the Little League World Series in South Williamsport, Pa., on Wednesday. The Virginia team rallied from an 8-2 deficit to tie it with a six-run inning. But the Wailuku team pulled away with a run in the fourth and three more in the fifth for a 12-9 victory.

3/3
Swipe or click to see more

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Central East Maui’s Nakea Kahalehau scored ahead of a tag by South Riding, Va.’s Noah Culpepper during a five-run first inning.

Central East Maui moved into Saturday’s U.S. championship game of the Little League World Series by beating South Riding, Va., 12-9 Wednesday in Williamsport, Pa.

Maui will face the winner of today’s game between Virginia and Louisiana for the right to play in Sunday’s overall final of the Little League World Series. Japan advanced to the final on the International side of the bracket. The Japanese kids will play the winner of today’s South Korea-Curacao matchup on Saturday as well.

First pitch for the United States game will be at 9:30 a.m HST.

Despite Maui blowing a six-run lead, reliever Bransyn Hong stopped the bleeding with two outs in the third. He went the rest of the way, giving up one run on one hit in 31⁄3 innings of relief. There were a total of 21 runs scored on 21 hits with nine errors and 290 pitches thrown in the marathon affair.

For the third straight game, the Maui kids struck early and often thanks in part to some suspect pitching by starter Justin Lee and reliever Liam Thyen, who gave up a combined five runs on two hits, uncorked three wild pitches, hit two batters and walked another two in the first inning.

>> Photo Gallery: Little League World Series: Hawaii vs. Virginia

Maui got things started on a fielder’s choice to Hong, who went to second after Jaren Pascual was hit by a pitch. Nakea Kahalehau singled to right but Hong, who held at third, scored on a wild throw to the plate. It was the first hit given up by Virginia in the World Series. The throw from right fielder Michael Bowden was high, allowing Kahalehau and Pascual to go to second and third. Pascual scored on a passed ball to make it 2-0 for Wailuku.

It kept building from there. Logan Kuloloia drew a one-out walk. Kahalehau scored on a wild pitch that bounced in front of the plate, barely beating the tag to make it 3-0.

Meanwhile, Kaleb Mathias got hit by a pitch to put men at first and second for pinch hitter Shiloh Gilliland. All he did was clear the bases with a double to right-center to give Maui a 5-0 advantage.

Virginia came back with two runs in the bottom of the first on an RBI triple by Colton Hicks, scoring Lee. He reached first on a fielder’s choice. Hicks scored on a wild pitch to make it 5-2 after one. Maui added a single run in the second on an infield hit by Nicholas Nashiwa. He was originally called out at first, but the review showed he beat the throw. The two-out hit scored Isaac Imamura from third. He opened the inning by drawing a walk.

Virginia had a mild threat in the bottom half of the second. After the first two batters went down, the next three got on base, sending Brady Yates to the plate with the sacks full. He looked at a called third strike on a beautiful backdoor curve to keep the score at 6-2 after two. Maui plated two more runs on a wild pitch by reliever Chase Obstgarten with the bases loaded that scored Marley Sebastian.

Lee, who was now the catcher, compounded things making a bad throw at the plate trying to get Sebastian. That allowed Nashiwa to come around to score from second as Maui now led 8-2 heading into the bottom of the third.

But back came Virginia with six runs of its own as 12 batters went to the plate against starting pitcher Kaedyn Miyake-Matsubayashi and the dam opened up as Virginia showed why it was unbeaten coming into this critical game.

Nashiwa struggled as a reliever before Hong came in to get the final out with the score tied at 8-8. Miyake-Matsubayashi went 2 1/3 innings, giving up six runs on five hits, four earned. He struck out three and walked one. Nashiwa got only one out, giving up two runs on two hits. He walked two and struck out one.

So, now it was Maui’s turn in the top of the fourth against Yates, the fourth Virginia pitcher. And once again the local boys did some damage, scoring a run on an RBI single to left by Gilliland to make it 9-8. The clutch hit scored Kahalehau from third after he opened the fourth with a double to left.

Maui kept up the pressure by getting the first two batters on in the fifth holding that one-run lead. Imamura yanked a single to left and then went to second on a walk to Hong. Both runners came in to score on a double by Pascual that extended Maui’s lead to 11-8. It went to 12-8 on an error at short on a routine grounder by Kuloloia.

Virginia came right back getting its first two batters on in the fifth. But Hong got Obstgarten to line out to second, Yates to pop out to short before Lee walked to load the bases. Up stepped Hicks, who hit into a fielder’s choice to end Virginia’s last serious threat.

After Liam Thyen was hit by a pitch to lead off the bottom of the sixth, his teammates went down in order.

By participating in online discussions you acknowledge that you have agreed to the Terms of Service. An insightful discussion of ideas and viewpoints is encouraged, but comments must be civil and in good taste, with no personal attacks. If your comments are inappropriate, you may be banned from posting. Report comments if you believe they do not follow our guidelines. Having trouble with comments? Learn more here.