Petaluma National Loses Epic Battle In Little League World Series To Tennessee, 24-16
PETALUMA (CBS SF) -- The Petaluma National Little League team lost the U.S. Little League Championship to Tennessee Saturday afternoon 24-16.
Tennessee players threw their gloves in the air as they converged near third base before falling to the ground with big smiles.
The exhaustive 24-16 victory Saturday over Petaluma will be remembered back home for a while—and not just because it earned Goodlettsville's favorite sons a berth in the Little League World Series title game.
Brock Myers hit a tie-breaking double in Tennessee's nine-run seventh inning. Tennessee had its big inning after California scored 10 runs in the bottom of the sixth to tie it.
"I can't believe it," Tennessee manager Joey Hale said. "I tell people this is like Christmas on steroids and I'm having a blast."
Tennessee will face Tokyo on Sunday. Japan beat Aguadulce, Panama, 10-2 in the international final.
Only California's 10-run comeback to send the game into extra innings tied at 15 could overshadow Tennessee slugger Lorenzo Butler's extraordinary day at the plate. Butler set a single-game record with nine RBIs, and tied a record with three homers to lead Tennessee.
Tennessee finally held on in the bottom of the seventh.
The California boys might have lost, but they had nothing to be ashamed about—especially not after the improbable rally.
Pitching aside, they took part in a Little League classic.
The teams combined for 40 runs—another World Series record—in a game that lasted more than three hours.
Cole Tomei had a two-run double in the sixth, and Hance Smith's solo shot with two outs tied it at 15.
"The message will be you never gave up," said Hance's father, Petaluma manager Eric Smith. "All we've asked of them all year was their best effort. I never saw them quit and I never saw them think they were out of it."
Luke Brown's strikeout to end the game set off a wild celebration on the field. Tennessee ended up near their dugout in front of third, giddy with exhaustion before they had to get up for the customary postgame handshakes.
"I finally get to rest," Tennessee catcher Cole Carter. "My legs were killing me after catching seven innings."
The U.S. title game looked as though it might also be a blowout with Tennessee leading 15-5 in the sixth.
That's when Petaluma powered up at the plate.
Every run that drew Petaluma closer turned up the intensity in the Lamade Stadium stands. "Petaluma! Petaluma!" California's fans pleaded throughout the sixth.
Smith's homer finally completed the comeback.
And soon enough, Tennessee surged ahead again with nine runs in the seventh.
Logan Douglas scored on an error for Petaluma in the bottom of the seventh with two outs to make it 24-16, and anxious fans wondered again if Petaluma could pull off another miraculous rally.
But it wasn't to be.
"They certainly knew it was going to be easy, but they weren't moping around the dugout," said about his team's fortitude. "I'm fine with that. I don't think I've seen a game like this, coming back from 10 runs and then giving up nine."
Butler had such a big day at the plate his name at one point was a trending topic on Twitter. He hit a trio of three-run homers, including the final one the opposite way to right in the sixth to make it 15-5.
After each blast, Butler looked calm in the dugout, seeming as collected as a big-league hitter in a tense playoff game.
"Yes sir, first time I hit three homers," the 12-year-old slugger said simply.
Japan relied on the bats in the early game, too, getting five homers, including two from 13-year-old slugger Kotaro Kiyomiya, for the international championship.
The 6-foot Kiyomiya is imposing at the plate, and he set the tone early with a first-inning blast that sailed deep down the right-field line.
Edisson Gonzalez had an RBI single in the first while Daniel Castro added a run-scoring double in the second for Panama. Those runs got Panama to 4-2 going into the third.
But Japan didn't let up.
Rintaro Hirano homered to center in the third before Kiyomiya went deep again in the fourth, this time the opposite way to left-center to make it 7-2.
Starter Yuta Ishida allowed four hits and struck out six over four innings, while three relievers combined for two shutout innings to close out the game.
"Yes we can! Yes we can," Panama's fans chanted in Spanish through the sixth, down by eight.
The game was such a big deal for Panama that Mario Jaramillo, the country's ambassador to the United States, watched the game.
But it was Japan celebrating at the end. Their players smiled and posed for a picture at the mound with their new prize—the international championship banner.
Coach Junji Hidaka would rather his team not rely so much on the long ball come Sunday,
"We only scored on home runs today, I would advise the players not to try for more homers" Sunday, Hidaka said. "We need to string our hits together."
Panama committed four errors on the day, including two in the second that led to another Japan run. Still, Panama showed signs of keeping up with Japan's powerful offense after Castro's double made it 4-2 in the second.
Ishida shut them down from there and didn't allow a base runner over his final 2 1-3 innings.
"It was a difficult game against a good pitching team," manager Luis Gonzalez said. "The team had confidence after scoring in the first inning but (two errors in the second) really stopped our momentum."
A traditional World Series powerhouse, Japan has won the international bracket five times in the past seven years. But it has won the World Series title game only once during that span, in 2010.
A California team has won the Little League World Series title seven times in the history of the tournament.
The last time a Bay Area team won the Little League World Series was in 1962 when a team from San Jose won the title. The last time a Bay Area team reached the final game was in 1991 when a team from San Ramon Valley played in the championship.
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