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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, August 25, 2005

California, Japan win semifinal contests

By Dan Gelston
Associated Press

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SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Talk about a net gain for Rancho Buena Vista.

A disputed call went its way, and now the team from California is on the way to the United States title game at the Little League World Series.

An apparent three-run home run by Maitland, Fla., was instead ruled a double, and that was just the break Rancho Buena Vista, Calif., needed in a 6-2 semifinal victory yesterday.

"We play all year setting goals," Rancho Buena Vista manager Marty Miller said. "Now our goal is to get to the (World Series) championship game."

In an international semifinal game yesterday, Japan was an 11-0 winner over Surrey, British Columbia.

Guam will play defending series champion Willemstad, Curacao, and West O'ahu of 'Ewa Beach will face Lafayette, La., in the other semis today.

The world championship is Sunday.

The controversial play came in the bottom of the third with Maitland down 2-0. With two runners on and two out, Mike Tomlinson laced a line drive off winning pitcher Kalen Pimentel that hit about a foot up the netting attached to the left-field foul pole, hit the top of the wall and bounced back into play.

Tomlinson thought he homered, but the umps immediately ruled the hit a two-run double. Maitland manager Sid Cash dashed out to argue, but — without the benefit of replay — the call was not reversed.

"It just hurt the momentum for us," Cash said. "I think if we're up 3-2, we'd have the lead and then see how they'd respond. It has an affect on everything."

Little League spokesman Lance Van Auken issued a statement of support for left field umpire Steve Ouellet.

"It is very easy to make a call after seeing a replay at various angles. Even Major League Baseball umpires make mistakes," Van Auken said.

Cash refused to let Ouellet off the hook.

"For him not to come out and look at it, he has no base calls to make," Cash said.

Miller was too busy celebrating — and talking about potential U.S. championship game opponents — to worry about the call.

"I really don't want to get into the umpire situation," he said. "The tape will speak for itself."

The disputed call came back to hurt Southeast champ Maitland (2-2) even more in the fourth.

Rancho Buena Vista's Reed Reznicek walked and went to second on a sacrifice bunt. Johnny Dee's single was bobbled by the center fielder, allowing Reznicek to score for a 3-2 lead. Dee was thrown out trying to stretch the hit into a double.

Maitland threatened again in the fourth, putting runners on first and second with one out, but left them stranded. The lost home run was too much for Maitland to overcome.

"We needed that momentum to make them come after us," Cash said.

Rancho Buena Vista (4-0) scored three runs in the sixth to seal its 24th straight win.

Japan 11, Canada 0: Takuya Sakamoto tossed one-hit ball over four shutout innings, and Yusuke Taira hit a two-run homer and drove in four runs to lead Japan over Surrey, British Columbia.

"This is the hitting I was hoping for through the whole series," Chiba City manager Hirofumi Oda said through an interpreter.

The game was stopped after Surrey (2-2) hit in the fifth inning because of the 10-run mercy rule.

Sakamoto was sharp in his second start of the series for Chiba City (4-0), the Asia champion. He struck out six and walked none.