Where EAST meets the Northwest
Asian Reporter web extra, August 28, 2022
The Honolulu team from Hawai‘i takes a victory lap in Lamade Stadium after
defeating Curacao 13-3 in four innings in the Little League World Series
Championship game in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania, on August 28, 2022. (AP
Photo/Gene J. Puskar)
Honolulu’s Jaron Lancaster delivers a pitch in the first inning of the Little
League World Series Championship game against Curacao in South Williamsport,
Pennsylvania, on August 28, 2022. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)
Honolulu’s Jonnovyn Sniffen, top left, Esaiah Wong, and Kama Angell (#14) hug
pitcher Luke Hiromoto, bottom left, while celebrating their win over
Nolensville, Tennessee, in the United States Championship baseball game at the
Little League World Series (LLWS) tournament in South Williamsport,
Pennsylvania, on August 27, 2022. On August 28, Honolulu defeated the Curacao,
the winner from the international bracket, to win the LLWS championship game.
(AP Photo/Tom E. Puskar)
Hawai‘i wins Little League title, beating Curacao 13-3
By Jake Starr
The Associated Press
www.asianreporter.com
August 28, 2022
SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) — For a week and a half at the Little League
World Series (LLWS), no team came close to Hawai‘i. The championship on Sunday
was no different.
Hawai‘i got back-to-back homers from Kekoa Payanal and Kama Angell in the
first inning, sparking a 13-3 win in just four innings over Curacao.
The LLWS title is Hawai‘i’s fourth. It won in 2018 and this same Honolulu
team finished third last year, when COVID-19 travel restrictions prevented
international teams from participating.
How good was Hawai‘i? In six games — all victories — the closest margin was
four runs. Hawai‘i outscored opponents 60-5.
"We’re fortunate that everything clicked at the right moment," Hawai‘i
manager Gerald Oda said. "I’m very grateful that these kids played loose and
relaxed."
Part of that run was without Oda, who missed several games with COVID-19. Oda
also managed Hawai‘i’s 2018 team.
"After 2018, I thought the next time I came to Williamsport was going to be
as a spectator," he said. "I never thought in my wildest dreams I’d be back in
2022 coaching a team."
Hawai‘i starter Jaron Lancaster was dominant once again Sunday as he threw
all four innings, while only allowing three runs, three hits, and striking out
10 Curacao hitters.
"I knew Curacao was going to be a great team," Jaron said. "My mindset was to
go out there, do my best, and do my thing. I know my offense and defense got my
back."
Jaron’s father, James Lancaster, said all the work that went into the title
run was worth it.
"It’s been a rough ride," said Lancaster, whose family lives about 4,800
miles from central Pennsylvania. "We haven’t been home in over a month."
Curacao took the first lead of any team over Hawai‘i in the tournament when
Davey Jay-Rijke led off the game with what looked like a bloop single, but he
bolted on to second when neither middle infielder were covering that bag.
Davey-Jay eventually came around to score on a wild pitch.
"Sooner or later, someone’s going to score," Oda said. "We told our kids to
keep fighting and battling. It’s going to be a great day."
Hawai‘i only trailed for a few minutes. A home run from lead-off hitter Kekoa
to left field, and a shot by Kama that barely cleared the wall in center,
reignited the Hawai‘i side and put the team from the West region up 2-1. It also
chased Curacao starter Shemar Jacobus.
"Any time when someone can score a run that’s huge," Oda said. "When someone
hits a home run, the whole team gets excited and lifts everyone’s spirits."
The game ended in the fourth inning when Kama hit a single down the
left-field line that scored Esaiah Wong to clinch the victory and another
championship for Hawai‘i.
Under Little League rules, a team wins if it is leading by 10 runs or more
after four innings.
"I saw the ball go down and I saw coach sending in Ruston (Hiyoto)," Kama
said. "I was very emotional. It was the best time I had in my life."
Curacao sits at one title, which came back in 2004. But the team from a small
Caribbean island with a population about the size of Springfield, Massachusetts,
made it to the final in 2019 as well as this year.
"I’m so proud of these guys," said Curacao manager Zaino Everett, whose team
won five elimination games to get to the title game. "We are a champion and the
second team in the whole world. Nobody expected us to be here."
After the trophy presentation and news conference were over, and most fans
were gone, the Hawai‘i players celebrated their title in just the way a bunch of
10-to-12-year-old boys would. They went sliding on cardboard sheets down the big
hill behind Lamade Stadium.
Jake Starr is a Penn State journalism student.
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