Brakettes Right Ship, Take 3 of 4 from China with 4-2 win on Kellie Clout

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. June 30, 2006: The Connecticut Brakettes had lost 5 of 6 games after a pair of errors cost them a 2-1 loss to China Tuesday evening, but the Brakettes found their batting eyes and longballed China to three consecutive losses Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenings in Straftford, Connecticut tting the Brakettes back into second place in the National Pro Fastpitch standings with an 10-5 record, 1 game behind the Chicago Bandits. They took the series Friday night handing China their first three losses in the states, on a three-run homer by Kellie Wilkerson in the 5th inning off China’s Li Qi, after Wilkerson had driven in the first Brakette tally in the third with a sacrifice fly. Sarah Pauly won her second of the series against China, running her record to 5-2.



FASTPITCH SUNSET: The Brakettes play their amateur farm club, the Stratford Brakettes in a father-son management clash when Manager John Stratton manages against his son, Jay Stratton in  an old-fashioned twilight-night doubleheader Saturday at Frank DeLuca Hall of Fame Field at 6:05 P.M. For info on upcoming action, go to www.brakettes.com. Photo, WPCNR Sports



Kellie Wilkerson, Germaine Fairchild, Kellie Kretschman and long ball leader Jessica Merchant found their strokes this week.


Germaine Fairchild, the quiet leader of this team, turned around the Brakette slide Wednesday evening and helped give Sarah Pauly the hitting support she needed. After China got off to a 1-0 lead, Fairchild homered to tie the score 1-1 in the second. That’s how she stayed with Pauly matching  18 year old Zhou Yin pitch for pitch. In the fifth, Yin walked Kretschman and with two out Kellie Wilkerson got a Baltimore Chop single. Yin fanned Merchant but the pitch was wild going to the backstop and Merchant was safe at first. Apparently Yin lost her poise and with the sacks Braketted, Fairchild worked Yin for a walk to make the score 2-1 and Yin also walked Aimee Minor to make it 3-1. Pauly made the runs stand up and the Brakettes had snapped their losing streak. Kretschman made a great diving catch in centerfield in the seventh to choke off a double and short-circuit a rally.


Thursday night, Jessica Merchant opened the Brakette barrage with a solo homer in the second off Lu Wei. China tied it up in the fourth on three singletons off Nikki Myers, then the Brakettes broke the game open in the last of the fifth.  Wei walked Callie Piper and Kelly Kretschman to start the past of the fifth and surrendered a single to Aimee Minor. Then Kellie Wilkerson came to the plate, worked the count to 3-2 and belted one for a grand slam homer to make the score 5-1. Kelly Kretschman added a two-run shot in the sixth and the Brakettes had given Nikki Myers the runs she needed to avenge Tuesday’s rip-your-heart out loss in the seventh when Myers lost 2-1 on two consecutive errors with the bases loaded. Myers is now 4-1.


Friday evening, Kellie Wilkerson continued to wear the China National Team out, driving in all 4 runs.

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Westchester County Sends Aid to Upstate Flood Stricken Areas.

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Westchester County Department of Communications. June 30, 2006: Westchester County has responded to the needs of rain-soaked, flooded upstate New York, sending emergency workers, police and fire officers to help with rescue and cleanup efforts.

Westchester’s assistance to Broome, Delaware and Montgomery counties is being coordinated by the county departments of Emergency Services and Public Safety.  The area (including the city of Binghamton) has been devastated from this week’s rainstorms, with some streets submerged under 4 feet of water. On Thursday, Gov. Pataki declared a state of emergency in the region.


(More)


         


A contingent of 54 area firefighters from 15 departments across Westchester County left for Broome, Delaware and Montgomery counties yesterday to assist with rescue operations. The Department of Emergency Services pulled the team together after upstate counties requested help. The Department of Public Safety is also sending a team of four police officers and a sergeant to assist the Delaware County Sherriff’s Department. The Sherriff’s Department, which is overwhelmed by the demands of the emergency, asked for help to augment their staff. Police will be helping to patrol and assist with anti-looting details.


Firefighters sent from Westchester were split into three teams and dispatched to the towns of Conklin, Deposit and Vestal. They returned today and were replaced by another team of 16 firefighters who brought with them eight 4×4 vehicles to help with evacuations. The second team is expected to return home on Sunday.


“They were really tired, but they accomplished a lot,’’ said Deputy Emergency Services Commissioner and Fire Coordinator John Jackson. “They aided in the evacuations and helped to secure homes and property, ensuring that electric lines were safe.”



 Four staff members from the Department of Emergency Services’ Office of Emergency Management were also dispatched to Delhi, N.Y. to help staff Delaware County’s emergency operation center – the nerve center of rescue and clean up operations. OEM and staff from the county’s Department of Information Technology staff assisted the New York National Guard Units dispatched from the Valhalla Armory by supplying them with maps specific to the areas where they were being detailed.   


Those Westchester agencies involved are:


Hartsdale FD


Verplank FD


Croton Falls FD


Somers FD


Montrose VA FD


New Rochelle FD


Chappaqua FD


Pelham FD


Fairview FD


Briarcliff Manor FD


Montrose FD


Mohegan FD


White Plains FD


Purchase FD


Yorktown FD

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C.J. Follini — North Street Community Head– Interviewed on White Plains Week

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WPCNR Media Free Westchester. June 30, 2006: C.J. Follini, Managing Partner of the North Street Community, a 391-unit senior condominium and assisted living project planned for the former St. Agnes Hospital site that will be the subject of a public hearing July 5,  will be interviewed on White Plains Week, the city news roundup show in its sixth consecutive year of cablecasting the stories behind the stories,  this evening at 7:30 P.M.


John Bailey, the CitizeNetReporter, Peter Katz, former ABC News White House Correspondent, and Jim Benerofe, the editor of suburbanstreet.com.  grill Mr. Follini, and the mercurial entrepreneur delves deeply into details of his project, the market for it, and reveals new benefits of it to the City of White Plains


 



The Big Three: John Bailey, Peter Katz and Jim Benerofe interview C.J. Follini of North Street Community tonight and Monday evening on White Plains Week, the city news roundup show. The program “cables” on WPPA-TV, “The Spirit of 76”, Channel 76 at 7:30 P.M. Friday evening. It will be shown again Monday evening at 7:30 P.M.  Photo by RKO Keith.


 

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Councilman Robert Greer Is Dead. 16 Years a Councilman.

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WPCNR MILESTONES. Special to WPCNR.  June 28, 2006 UPDATED June 29, 2006: WPCNR has received word from Don Hughes that Robert Greer, suffering these last two years with Lou Gehrig’s disease died this morning at his home. The family will be sitting Shiva Friday, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday from 2-5 at their home at 20 Cushman Road in White Plains. The service will be July 7th at 11am at Kol Ami, 255 Soundview Avenue in White Plains. Burial will be private.


Mayor Joseph Delfino of the City of White Plains, upon learning of Mr. Greer’s death issued the following statement: “The passing of Robert Greer is a tremendous loss to the City of White Plains and for me personally. Bob was a gentleman in every sense of the word, and possessed all of the attributes that allows a person to excel in public service.  Bob’s leadership and his years of service as a Councilman will always be looked upon as a time of progress for the City of White Plains. Bob had a vision for what the City could and should be, and on that level we certainly related.  Working alongside Mr. Greer during his time on the Council was special for me. He will be missed both personally and professionally.”


 



Robert Greer,  Election night, 2003. Robert Greer is shown with his longtime colleague, Benjamin Boykin, center,  Representative Nita Lowey and, far left,  County Legislator, Bill Ryan. Photo, WPCNR News Archive.



 


Robert Greer was a member of the White Plains Common Council for 16 years. 


He had Lou Gehrig’s disease (ALS) for over two years.

Councilman Greer was a White Plains District Leader since 1983. 


He was chairman of the party, and he ran for Mayor in 2001. 


Some of the things that he saw as his accomplishments while on
the Common Council included:


* Voting for the improvements leading to the Westchester Mall;
* Supporting SHORE´s imaginative plan for combining housing for working families and formerly
homeless families;


* Working to save The Greenway;


* Fighting for movies at Main and Mamaroneck.


* Fighting for a Stop & Shop supermarket.


* Sponsoring legislation establishing minimum fines for landlords violating occupancy codes.


* Working to end the badge drain.


* Trying to  encourage White Plains to take advantage of 21st century technology.


He was especially proud of working for the construction of the new children’s room at the White Plains Public Library and the opening of the White Plains Performing Arts Center.


Bob recently received an award from the City’s Human Rights Commission for his work with agencies that include Family Services of Westchester, Head Start, and the White Plains Public Library.


During a Common Council meeting early last year Mr.Greer said, “one area of the body that is not attacked by ALS is the mind. I will always be me. My life has been enriched by the opportunity to serve as your councilman for the past 14 years. I intend to remain your councilman and serve the White Plains community as long as I am able.”

Let us all offer our support with cards and calls to his family as they work through the final part of
this devastating disease.


— Don Hughes

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Architect Advising Committee on $67.5M Project, Fees Based on Total Cost

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. June 27, 2006: Kaeyer Garment & Davidson, preparers of the White Plains City School District Facilities Review  and advisors to the Capital Projects Committee reviewing the feasibility and scope of the $67.5 Million infrastructure and facilities upgrading project for the Board of Education, will make millions in commission based on the total cost of the Capital Project, based on their contract currently being considered by the school board it was learned Monday evening.


 


The architectural firm originally proposed $95 Million in recommended construction, which was then reduced by the district to $67.5 Million. The architect  will make it appears, millions in commissions included in the cost of the now $67.5 Million capital projects effort now being considered by the school district for referendum in the fall, according to sketchy details of the contract outlined very briefly by the Board of Education Monday evening.



 


The Board of Education, at the suggestion of Peter Bassano, tabled voting on the contract for KG & D, architects for the 2001-2004 high school renovation ($27 Million). Bassano told WPCNR the Board had not been given an opportunity to review the contract prior to Monday evening. Bassano remarked Tuesday evening in the Board session that KG & D’s fee for their work on the capital projects would be based on 8% of the infrastructure projects under $5 Million and 7% of new construction over $5 Million.


 


This would result in KG & D earning approximately $5 Million in fees over the five year construction period, ($3,382,643 from the new Post Road School project, $744,604 on the Mamaroneck Avenue School project, and $1,062,544 on the infrastructure improvements.


 


The details of the contract were not made available, and it is not known at this time if there are other fees in addition to these percentages that the firm will be paid, or a cap provision is written into the contract.


 


KG & D Defends costs.


 


KG & D is the source for estimated costs on the $67.5 Million project, in addition to the construction management firm (Triton Construction, a long-time collaborator with KG & D), and stands to earn more the higher the costs of the project, which have been pointed out frequently by the architect, will rise past $67.5 Million the longer it takes to get the project started. Planning now is to begin construction on infrastructure in 2007, and in 2008 on the new school, allowing the new Post Road School to be completed by 2010-11.


 


The architectural firm is serving as sole advisors on the school board-appointed committee reviewing the scope, cost, financial and physical impacts of the project on the district to make a recommendation to the Board of Education on which aspects of the project should proceed to referendum, if any should, in the fall.


 


In meetings attended to date by WPCNR , KG & D has consistently defended the costs of the project as being cost-effective in the long run for the school district. They recommend and support the synthetic turf installations and new stands to be installed at Loucks Field and Highlands Parker Stadium. They have consistently urged a new school construction at Post Road School, and the construction management firm Triton Construction which is working with KG & D on five other projects around the region has supported KG & D’s preliminary costs on the $67.5 Million endeavor. The only matter KG & D conceded their costs might be out of line was on the windows estimates for Damman House at the high school which called for replacements of windows at a cost of over  $600,000.


 


The KG & D  support of the Parker and Loucks Stadium renovations has backed off the substantial cost savings they referred in previously months to that of the advantage of sharply increased usage of the stadiums, and reduced injuries, once the fields are synthetic turf-equipped, noting that the turf may have to be replaced after 8 years.


 


Land Question Involved in New Post Road School Decision.


 


Presently the Capital Projects Committee of the school district  which meets tonight at 7:30 P.M. to discuss the new Post Road School, is awaiting a “task force” review of other site locations in the city for a new school, making the case for the school district to ask for a variance from New York State Education Department on the rule that a new elementary school for 600 pupils has to be built on at least 10 acres of property. (The Post Road School property is only 5-1/2 acres).


 


In order to build the new Post Road School at the Post Road site, the school district has to show the NYSED why there is no land elsewhere in the city to build there. An NYSED Facilities Manager told WPCNR last week that a variance should not be a problem for the city school district provided the district makes a good case for Post Road being the only site possible to build upon in the city, and that there are no 9-1/2 acre sites available in the city.


 


Previously, the Capital Projects Committee has with 5 persons attending one meeting, and 7 persons another, stood squarely behind the synthetic turf installations and stadium stand construction at Parker and Loucks Fields at the cost of $9 Million; and similarly endorsed the Post Road School, after attending a tour of the school earlier this month, citing poor electrical facilities, a mildewing dampness to the school, cramped classrooms and split library facility. The tour convinced those members of the committee that a new school was definitely needed.


 


 

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SCHOOL BOARD NEARS FINAL CONTRACT FOR STRATEGIC PLANNING FOR FUTURE.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. June 28, 2006: The Board of Education is nearing agreement with a strategic planning firm to pay a planning consultant to orchestrate a communitywide “planning review” to formulate school district goals, issues, and policies over the next 15 years, and identify and establish policy decisions.


The firm has been selected, but not officially announced yet by the Board, pending agreement on a contract.  Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors stated he expected the firm would being in the fall and take eight months to execute the review. The “Strategic Plan Review” is being done independently of the Capital Projects review  Connors has said previously because the planning organizations the district has been considering indicated linking the capital projects to the Planning Review was too much for the district to undertake simultaneously. Both planners being considered have told the district according to Connors that short-term facilities requirements should not be linked to long range planning.


 


Connors informed the Board of Education Monday evening that the Strategic Planning process would begin this fall with data collection from the district, interviews with district residents, school personnel and the Board, all stakeholders. Part of the process would consist of the forming of another city wide committee of stakeholders, numbering 75 to 100 people, whom the Strategic Planner would orchestrate through a process to evaluate, articulate and prioritize long term goals and objectives of the School District involving how students are educated, considering academic goals, growth of the district, school facilities, demographics, and community involvement, and other issues.


 


Connors said he would take responsibility for selecting the members of the Strategic Planning Committee which would be working with the Planner.


 


When it was suggested by Board Member Bill Pollak citizens be invited to volunteer for this committee at this time, Connors said to do so now would be premature, since the process had not been defined in detail.

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North Street Community to Make Assisted Living Available to WP Residents

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WPCNR East Side Story. By John F. Bailey. June 27, 2006: In a citywide mailing this weekend, North Street Community presented a composite description of its senior residential community. A public hearing on the project is scheduled for July 5 at the next monthly meeting of the Common Council. The brochure announces for the first time that doctors’ services and the services of the renovated St. Agnes Hospital planned to feature residential apartments  for those in need of assistance with daily activities and medical conditions requiring nursing care will be available to residents of White Plains.


 


 


C. J. Follini, one of the Managing Members of North Street Community confirmed this policy in an interview on the White Plains Week television program which will be -cablecast this Friday at 7:30 P.M. on WPPA-TV, in which Mr. Follini, interviewed by John Bailey, Peter Katz and Jim Benerofe stated the assisted living units and long-term care units would also be available to White Plains citizens needing end-of-life care.


 


Follini said the details of the financial arrangements and conditions had yet to be worked out. A White Plains resident seeking assisted living or long-term care, he said, would not have to own a condominium apartment in the complex to use either the doctors services or the St. Agnes assisted living/nursing care facility.


 


According to the 4-color brochure received by this reporter, the St. Agnes Hospital building will be converted to contain 40 “assisted living residential units” and 40 “long-term care” units and medical services. As has been stated publicly previously by Mr. Follini,  emergency services will not be made available in the former St. Agnes Hospital site.


 


The condominium residential component of the project will consist of “390 independent living senior residential condominium units” that will be from four to seven stories in height. Follini notes on the program that the location of the condominiums is in a downward sloped section of the property to present the lowest profile possible to the surrounding area. The entire project, the brochure notes, will cost $125 Million. Condominium units are designed, and be price-pointed from $400,000 to  $900,000. Projecting an approval by the Common Council this year, Follini expects the project to be completed by 2008.


 


In the program, Follini makes a case for the need for senior living facilities in Westchester County, and describes a continuum of health care standing by for condominium buyers, as well as White Plains residents who may avail themselves of the doctors’ services on site, as well as the choice of the planned assisted living and long-term care nursing facility in the remodeled St. Agnes Hospital.


 

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Videoing, Recording, Pix OK in Meetings. Mayor Will Remove Blindfold Ordinance

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. From The Mayor’s Office. June 26, 2006: Reacting swiftly to an uproar raised against over a city attempt to restrict picture-taking by reporters and video-taping of council meetings by citizens without prior written permission at last Wednesday’s Common Council work session and Special Meeting, Mayor Joseph Delfino issued a statement today promising to introduce legislation to rescind the 63 year old ordinance the Mayor’s Office attempted to enforce last Wednesday.


At that Wednesday, June 21 meeting Carl Albanese a videographer who has been taping city meetings for at least five years, was presented with a policy statement by the Mayor’s Office staff forbidding Albanese from videotaping or recording council meetings without written permission.


The CitizeNetReporter, when I arrived after the meeting had commenced, was also told by a police officer, I could not take pictures of the work session either, without permission. The CitizeNetReporter interrupted the council meeting at a natural break in the action to ask the Mayor (who was conducting the meeting)  if this was true. The Mayor on the spot gave the CitizeNetReporter permission to take pictures of the meeting. Later Paul Wood, the Mayor’s Executive officer suspended the ordinance for the evening, saying WPCNR and Mr. Albanese and all other media had to apply for permission to photograph future meetings. Inquiries by WPCNR of the city legal department to ascertain the policy procedure to get that blanket permission were not answered.


Media reports of Mr. Albanese’s confrontation with Paul Wood, the City Executive Officer on the matter, followed by a outraged editorial in the Sunday edition of The Journal News followed.


Today the Mayor issued this statement on the “access” issue:


“At a recent meeting of the Common Council I directed members of my staff to disseminate copies of a City ordinance that regulated the use of recording devices and photography. Upon reviewing the implementation of this ordinance further, it is clear that this was a mistake. This was an attempt to address concerns raised by constituents regarding the disruptive actions of some residents and members of the press during public meetings. In doing so, we relied upon the only existing legislation, and the opinion of Corporation Counsel, to regulate this activity. I am in the process of drafting new legislation, and rescinding the ordinance that currently exists. It is my sincere hope that the Council will support my initiative at the next meeting of the Common Council. I would only ask that those wishing to film/ record/ photograph during public meetings do so in the least disruptive manner possible.” 

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Banditas speed, smart-hitting take command of Brakettes, 7-2, 2-0

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. By Fastpitch Johnny. June 23, 2006: The Chicago Bandits who fell a run short of the NPF Championship last August took command of the NPF the last two nights, dropping the Connecticut Brakettes out of first place with two impressive victories, showing a mix of smart-hitting, pitching depth, short-game execution and speed that pressured the Connecticut Brakettes. With two games left Saturday at 7:05 and Sunday at 5:05 P.M., the Brakettes hope to find their hitting and fielding stride against the relentless Bandits.



 


Fielder’s Choice: Chicago’s Vicki Galindo after backhanding Jessica Merchant’s grounder (Merchant is rounding first)  in the hole and tagging Stephanie Best running by, watches the third base umpire call Stephanie out. The play prevented big damage in the third in the first game of the Bandit series Thursday night in Bridgeport. Photo, WPCNR Sports.





The Brakettes are loaded with strong power hitters,  but despite numerous opportunities to brake the game open against the Bandits Thursday, they could not get the big bop or bingle when they needed it. Bandit speed broke open the game. Patience and intelligence at the plate turned the tide against the Brakettes’ Kaci Clark who pitched into and out of jams, but tired in the fifth and sixth innings as the Bandits overcome a 2-0 deficit with crooked numbers in the 5th and 4 in the 6th . 


 


The Connecticut Brakettes lost their third straight game Friday night. Sarah Pauly pitched a complete game surrendering two runs on three hits, fanning seven, and one unearned run.


 


Nicole Trimboli, reached on Stephanie Hill error at first. Mackenzie Vandergeest sacriced the runner and catcher Selina Collins singled to right field to give Chicago a 1-0 lead and get the Bandit’s first hit. 

In the sixth, Vicky Galindo got to second on what should have been a single, reaching second when leftfielder Aimee Minor who did not see Galindo sneaking into second base. Pauly missed the fielders choice on the next hitter. Walked Jaime Clark intentionally, but Nicole Trimboli grounded to the right side to drive in the second run.


The unsung heroine of the New York Juggernaut championship season of 2004, Gina Oaks 1-hit the Brakettes after a shaky start, shutting them out 2-0, with Sarah Pauly (4-2) taking the loss.


 



Little Leaguer throws out the first ball Thursday night before opener of the Bandit-Brakette Series. Photo, WPCNR Sports.


 


Bandit Bounceback


 


You have to like this Bandit club, arriving an hour late due to airplane delays they took the field at 8, and kept Kaci Clark in trouble every inning, taking the diminutive fireballer into long counts, going to school and tiring her out. Of course, the same was happening to Jessica Salinger, because that connoisseur of the strike zone, Clem De Rosa was calling balls and strikes.


 



Fiery Competitor Jessica Salinger throwing heat for the Bandits Thursday night. Photo, WPCNR Sports


 


 


 


Mr. DeRosa savors each pitch like a food critic and if it is not to his taste and just right he calls it a ball, or if it has merit, he calls it a strike. He produces a lot of agitation from both benches with his long counts produced by his picky, inconsistent strike zone. We saw this last week when he was behind the plate for the Racers game. Hitters and pitchers suffer brutally with Mr. DeRosa behind the plate. Thursday evening was not exception.


 


 


The Brakettes  threatened in the second and broke through on a single by Stephanie Best a walk (on 3-2) to Kellie Wilkerson. A fielder’s choice nifty grab by Vickie Galindo, the Bandit third sacker got the second out on sharply hit ball to her backhand side by Jessica Merchant, and she tagged Best out going to third. Then Mr. DeRosa the umpire took over the game.


 


Salinger worked Kelly Kretschman to 3-2 and several fouls that brought groans from both benches, and lost her on a very close pitch to load the bases. Stephanie Hill hit a grounder to short that the Bandit shortstop Jaime Clark lost her grip on and threw it wildly to first, allowing Kellie Wilkerson to score the first run. Christina Enea, the first baser tried to tag Steph coming down, but missed her. Enea throw wildly to Serena Collins at the plate allowing Merchant to score. Kaci Clark had a 2-0 lead.


 



 


Kaci Clark In Motion. Photo, WPCNR Sports.


 



UCLA’s Andrea Duran debuted for the Brakettes Thursday night. The UCLA star will be with the Brakettes for the season. Photo, WPCNR Sports.


 


Kaci struck out the side in the fourth and the 150 fans on hand were confident.


 


In the fifth the tiring Clark fell victim to the Bandit speed. Anne Stefan bunted down third way and beat it out for a hit. Vicki Galindo, lefty hitter slap hit sharply deep in the shortstop  hole the Brakettes’ Jess Merchant did not have a play. Two on. Nobody out. Kaci muscled up and struck out Trina Peel. 


 


Jaime Clark the cleanup-woman, attoned for her error in the third and her strikeout in the third with two in scoring position.  She took Kaci’s fastest two pitches of the night for 2 strikes. Then Kaci threw a bad 0-2 pitch –  righty hitting Clark struck the ball on a line to right to the opposite field sharply sinking.  Adrienne Alo making her first start in right for the Brakettes was indecisive as to whether to dive for the ball. She stopped and it skipped off her glove past her 10 feet. She threw to third allowing Steffan to score, to make it 2-1, with Galindo to third and Clark taking second.


 


Clark said of her game-tying hit, “Just trying to not try to outthink her. She was pitching to me. I thought maybe they wouldn’t, so I was being a little bit passive at the plate. If I was going down I was going down swinging so I took the pressure off myself. I think it was a curve ball. It was a good pitch to hit, we had the runner going, so I took advantage of it..yeah…yeah.”


 


With Nicole Tromboli up, Kaci threw a wild pitch 5 feet over catcher Fairchild allowing Galindo to scamper in and tie the score, 2-2. To add insult, Clark induced Tromboli to ground to first holding the runner.


 


Mackenzie Vandergeest had been made to look bad by Kaci her first two times up, striking out twice. Not this time. On a 3-2 pitch, Mackenzie ripped a single up the middle to score Clark with the winning run.


 


After the game Mack told how she adjusted after Clark had struck her out twice:  “She was going outside with a lot of them and I was staying off the rise ball a little bit better. Just made adjustments, shorter swing instead of such a big hack I shortened up a little bit and put it in play.”


 


In the fifth, the Bandits Salinger tried to protect the 1-run lead. The Brakettes attempted to strike back. Kellie Wilkerson worked Salinger for another 3-2 Clem De Rosa walk. Gene Lenti, Bandit Co-Head Coach had had enough. He went out gave Jess the hook and brought in Amy Harre, the fireballing blonde Valkeree.


 


On a 2-0 pitch Harre served one up a little too good to Jessica Merchant and she blasted it into the right centerfield alley to the fence. Wilkerson was at third when the ball was picked up but Patti Fernandez the Brakette third base coach did not send her in to attempt to tie the score.  Harre was still in mucho trouboles.


 


Not to worry. She induced Kelly Kretschmer who is off to a bad start against big league pitching to induce a check swing roller to the circle for an easy out. Wilkerson languished at third.  Next Harre got Stephanie Hill on another late swing grounder to first. End of threat.


 


The Bandits continued their havoc against Kaci Clark in the sixth, scoring four more runs after Kaci was almost out of an inning that started badly.


 


  Stacy May singled sharply through the shortstop hole. Clark hit Annie Steffan in the hand with a pitch. Two on. Nobody out.  Galindo sacrificed the runners up perfectly. Peel hit into a force play. Two down.


 


 Up came Jaime Clark, the clean-up woman and she burned Kace again on the very first pitch to ice the game. On Clark’s first pitch she drove the ball high far and one-hop to the fence in deep right center in the humid night, for a bases clearing triple to score May and Steffan. It was 5-2, Bandits. However the Brakette outfield took a long time getting the ball in. Nicole Trimboli singled to right on a 1-2 pitch to score Clark and it was 6-2.


 


Then the Brakettes lost their concentration on a steal attempt when the catcher’s throw went off the glove of the shortstop into center but no one was backing up. Trimboli scampered to third and centerfielder Kretschman’s throw to third went wild allowing Trimboli to score to make it 7-2.


 


Harre finished off the Brakettes in the sixth and seventh and the Bandits had a surprise win to end a bad travel day.


 


 


 


Friday night the master of subtle movement, Gina Oaks blanked the Brakettes.  Connecticut now trails Chicago by 2-1/2 games for first place with a 7-4 record to the Bandits’ 10-3.  Gametime Saturday is 7:05 P.M.


 


Inside Fastpitch


 


 Bandits Co-Head Coach, Gene Lenti was really pleased about the come-from-behinder win Thursday after the long journey in from Chicago:  “We told them it was a great effort tonight. We had a lot of difficulties travel-wise. They just overcome it. They don’t even think about it. It’s never really a bid deal to them. We don’t allow it to be and they don’t allow it to be. We started off a little shaky, one inning we had a lot of errors and a lot of mistakes but then we came back we just never really gave up. And that’s been the way the Bandits have played ever since we’ve been in existence. No matter what the score, or the situation, we don’t give up. I think that’s indicative of the inning we scored the four runs. It was all with two out.”


 


“We struggled a little bit against China Taipai. They’re a very good team. We took the last two, and we’re in good shape going this way now. We’re working hard out there and putting runs on the board.”


 


Asked how the Bandits were drawing in Chicago, the manager said, “We had our biggest crowd out Monday night against China Taipai, drawing 1,300. Tuesday night, over a thousand. It’s starting to pick a bit. School’s over. Graduations over. We’re starting to get the travel teams coming in.”


 


WPCNR asked what adjustments they made with their hitters against Kaci Clark tonight: “We thought she was really owning the outside part of the plate. She was getting us out on the outsidehalf. In the inning we scored three runs and the 4 runs, we tried to take those outside away from her. You can see we had a lot of balls to rightcenter, rightfield. That’s the thing you got to do. You can’t fight Kaci’s pitches you have to go with them. We didn’t want her to dominate both the outside and the upper part of the plate. So we said let’s get this one on the top of the plate and take away the outside and make it a little bit more the middle.”


 


I asked how he figures out what to do, if the hitters tell him what’s happening:


 


“They’re getting themselves out. It’s different if the pitcher’s getting you out. But you’re getting yourself out when you’re swinging and missing on good pitches over the plate and we’re not making adjustments.  There are some things we want to encourage the pitcher to do and some things we want to discourage the pitcher to do. “


 


The National Pro Fastpitch Standings June 24, 2006:


                                           W      L       GB


Chicago                          10     3        ____


 


Connecticut                     7    4         2-1/2


 


Texas                                 9      6       2-1/2


 


Akron                                 7      5        2-1/2


 


New England                   4      4          5


 


Arizona                              7      8           4


 


Philadelphia                      3       7          5-1/2


 


 


 

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Legislature Passes Bradley HMO Bill.

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    WPCNR ALBANY Correspondent. From Assemblyman Adam Bradley’s Office. June 23, 2006:   Assemblyman Adam Bradley (D-White Plains) announced today that the Assembly and Senate have both passed bipartisan legislation he authored to bring sweeping reforms to the health care system (A.11996).  Bradley’s measure will establish fair, uniform and consistent procedures for the processing of health claims, the processing of overpayment recovery claims and the credentialing of physicians by health plans.


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    Inconsistent and cumbersome procedures cause physicians to waste valuable resources dealing with the administrative burdens of health care plans, rather than treating patients,” said Bradley. “To address these issues, my legislation would enact much needed reforms by attempting to assure fairness, uniformity and consistency for physicians and health plans.”


 


       Specific provisions of the legislation include:
      


·        requiring Health Plans to accept the American Medical Association’s Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes when processing all health care claims


·        limiting the time period for health plans to demand refunds from 6 years to 24 months, with limited exceptions; and


·        requiring health plans to complete physician credentialing to participate in the insurer’s network within 90 days.


 


        Bradley noted that his bipartisan legislation responds to common health care concerns such as dealing with confusing health plan rules used to adjudicate claims submitted by physicians and hospitals, excessive demands for refunds of claims paid several years in the past, and unjustifiable delays by health plans in credentialing physicians to participate in the health plans network.


 


“I will continue working in a bipartisan fashion to ensure that our healthcare system works for the New Yorkers it was designed to serve – not the bureaucrats that have been lining their pockets with hefty profits,” Bradley said. “By making our health insurance regulations more efficient, we can reach the goal of putting patients before profits. I urge the governor to quickly sign this measure into law.”


 


 

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