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By Bruce Tillman
East Boston, MA- Dylan Ellis’ gutsy complete game pitching performance sent the Chiefs home from East Boston Stadium with an “edge of your seat” 4-3 playoff win on Sunday afternoon. With the victory, the Chiefs evened their best of five semi-final series with the Testa Corp. Bombers at one game each. 

The Chiefs threatened right away, putting two men in scoring position in the top of the first inning. Bombers starter Eddie Donovan struck out Brendan Pyburn looking leading off the inning. Mike Baillargeon then tripled into the right center-field gap. Jeff Bercume drew a walk and promptly stole second. Peter Copa was next and he hit a one hopper right at Bombers third baseman Mike Adessa, who looked the runners back and threw him out at first. Donovan, who had a 0.84 ERA in seven appearances for Trinity this spring, escaped the inning when he got Mike Andre to ground out to second baseman Vin Eruzione. 

Ellis got the first two outs in the bottom of the first inning before former Harvard star Josh Klimkiewicz unloaded a bomb triple to center. Ellis matched Donovan’s escape and got Nick Martinho to ground to Baillargeon to keep the game scoreless. 

Donovan hit Justin Crisafulli with a breaking ball leading off the top of the second. The Chiefs could not capitalize as Macrina lined out, catcher Bob McCarthy grounded out and Hal Landers flew out to right. 

Ellis struck out ICL veteran Stan DeMartinis for the first out of the Bombers second before Adessa singled to center. Ellis sent the game into the third inning at 0-0 when he retired Steve Wadsworth on a grounder to Pyburn at shortstop and Joe Papa on a chopper to Baillargeon at second. 

The Chiefs broke the scoring ice in the top of the third inning. Donovan retried Pyburn on a grounder to Eruzione to start the frame. Bailargeon then reached on an infield single to third base. Adessa made a nice play to get to the ball, but threw wide of first for an error allowing Baillargeon to scamper to second. Bercume followed and delivered a laser shot home run to left-center, scoring Baillargeon ahead of him and giving the Chiefs a 2-0 lead. Papa then bobbled Copa’s grounder long enough to allow him to reach first on an error. Copa stole second and Donovan got the second out when Andre lined to center. Macrina came up big when he delivered Copa with a RBI single to left jumping the lead to 3-0. Donovan got McCarthy to pop up to end the inning. 

The Bombers came right back to pick up a run in the bottom of the third. Steve Buitkus lead off with a solid single to right. Jay DeFilippo followed with another single to left. Ellis then got Eruzione to bounce to Copa going to his right and he fired a strike to Pyburn forcing DeFilippo at second base. Klimkiewicz cut the lead to 3-1 when he singled down the left line scoring Buitkus. The Chiefs defense came up big when they turned a 4-6-3 doubleplay off the bat of Martinho to keep it a two run game. 

Donovan and Ellis both worked 1-2 -3 innings in the fourth. 

The Chiefs picked up what proved to be the eventual game winner in the top of the fifth but missed a chance to open up some room when they left the bases loaded. After Bercume grounded out, Copa unloaded on a blast to deep left. As he was rounding first, Copa came up lame with a hamstring pull but managed to get to second before going down in obvious pain. Dario Pizzano came on to run for Copa and Andre beat out an infield single to put runners on the corners with one away. Crisafulli then was hit by a Donovan pitch for the third consecutive time to load the bases. Donovan got the huge second out when he struck out Macrina swinging. McCarthy then came through when he lofted a single to right scoring Pizzano that ran the margin to 4-1. Landers then grounded sharply to second ending the inning. 

Ellis got stronger in the bottom of the fifth, again retiring the side in order, including a strikeout of Buitkus.  

The Chiefs appeared poised to open up the game once again in the top sixth but Donovan pitched himself out of another big time jam. After Pyburn flew out, Baillargeon walked and went to third on a Bercume single to right-center. Pizzano, hitting in Copa’s spot, drew a walk to load the bases. Donovan kept the Bombers in the game when he struck out Andre and Crisafulli both swinging. 

The Bombers built on Donovan’s escape job and threatened to take the lead after two were out in the sixth. Things started well for Ellis when he got the first two batters, Eruzione on a foul-out and Klimkiewicz on a pop-up. Martinho then gave the Bombers immediate life when he hammered a long solo home run to right-center that drew them closer at 4-2. They weren’t nearly finished as DeMartinis worked a walk and went to third when Adessa drilled a rocket single to center. Chiefs’ fans surely began feasting on the fingernails when Wadsworth followed with double to right-center scoring DeMartinis, sending Adessa to third, and putting the potential winning run in scoring position. Ellis got tough once again as he struck out Papa looking as the Chiefs headed to the seventh still holding the one run lead. 

The Chiefs wasted a leadoff single by Macrina in the top of the seventh as Donovan got McCarthy on a pop-up, Landers on a fly to left and Pyburn on a fly to right. 

Ellis kept the dramatics to a minimum in the bottom of the seventh when he retired Buitkis on a fly to Bercume, DeFilippo on a grounder to Baillargeon and finished strongly when he struck out Eruzione to end the game. 

Ellis allowed eight hits and struck out six. Donovan gave up nine hits and K’d five. 

Game Three will be played at Tufts University on Monday at 5:20 PM. 

**Bruce Tillman’s Chiefs Chatter & Game Notes are Coming Soon** 

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By Bruce Tillman 
Medford, MA
-They had it, they handed it away on a silver platter, and they desperately and unsuccessfully tried to take it back. 

Such was the story of the Chiefs in a hard to take 7-4 loss to the Testa Corp. Bombers in the opening game of their best of five series at Huskins Field on Friday evening. With the loss, the Chiefs find themselves in a one game to none hole, with Game Two at East Boston Stadium facing them on Sunday afternoon at 4:00 PM. 

Chiefs’ starter Mike DiCato never really found the grove that made him the go to guy during the regular season.  

In the top of the first inning, DiCato got the first out when Jay DeFillipo popped up. Vin Eruzione followed with a hard line single to center. The Chiefs defense took over as Josh Klimkiewicz bounced into a crisp, 5-4-3 (Mike Andre to Mike Baillargeon to Peter Copa) doubleplay. 

In the Chiefs first, Bombers starter Bobby Giarrantani got Brendan Pyburn and Baillargeon to both ground out, walked Jeff Bercume, who stole second, but came out unscathed when Copa flew to center. 

Nick Martinho led off the Bombers second inning with a long double to right-center. DiCato then struck out Stan DeMartinis swinging for the first out. He walked walked Mike Adessa on four straight pitches to put runners on first and second with one away. DiCato pitched his way out of it when both Steve Wadsworth and Joe Papa both grounded out to end the inning. 

The Chiefs came out swinging in the bottom of the second. Andre drilled the first pitch he saw into right field for a single. Justin Crisafulli followed with a double to left putting the Chiefs in business with runners on second and third with nobody out. Giarrantani then got Brian Macrina to ground sharply to third, freezing the runners for the first out. Bob McCarthy followed with a high hopper fielder’s choice RBI to Eruzione at second that scored Andre. Hal Landers then hit a weak fly to shallow left that ended the inning. 

DiCato had to pitch out of trouble again in the top of the third. After Steve Buitkus grounded out, DeFillippo singled to left. Eruzione then grounded to Copa at first for out number two. DiCato, obviously struggling, walked Klimkiewicz and Martinho in succession to load the bases. But he found his best form briefly when he reared back and struck out DeMartinis to end the inning as the Chiefs clung to the 1-0 lead. 

Giarrantani set the Chiefs down in order in the bottom of the third (Pyburn flyout, Baillargeon & Bercume groundouts) and DiCato had his strongest inning of the night when he kept the Bombers quiet in the top of the fourth.  

Crisafulli’s two out single was the all the Chiefs could muster in the bottom of the fourth as the game went into the fifth with the Chiefs still holding on to the 1-0 lead. 

The Bombers fifth started quietly enough when DiCato got DeFillipo swinging for the first out. Eruzione then singled into the shortstop hole and DiCato hit Klimkiewicz with a pitch. He continued to struggle and walked Martinho to load the bases with one out. DeMartinis then hit a chopper back to DiCato, who instead of coming home with what looked like a certain 1-2-3 doubleplay, elected to throw to second base. DiCato’s throw sailed into centerfield for an error and suddenly the Bombers had a 2-1 gift lead. DiCato got Adessa to ground out to Pyburn for the inning’s second out, with both Martinho an DeMartinis moving to second and third. Chris Foundas came on from the bullpen and walked Wadsworth to load the bases. The reliever, who has been hot and cold for the Chiefs this season, then surrendered a huge two RBI single to Joe Papa that extended the Bombers lead to 4-1. 

The Chiefs went quietly in the fifth (McCarthy flyout, Landers groundout, Pyburn flyout) and the Bombers opened up some space in the top of the sixth. DeFillipo led off with a single and Foundas, after two unsuccessful sacrifice bunt attempts, struck out Eruzione for the first out. Klimkiewicz was intentionally walked and he got Martinho to pop up to Baillargeon for the second out. The Chiefs and Foundas looked like they were going to escape the inning when DeMartinis hit a foul ball down the right field line. The Chiefs usually outstanding defense abandoned them once again as the ball ended up going off Copa’s glove, with his back to the plate, with both Baillargeon and Landers looking like they had a better shot at making the catch, giving DeMartinis new life. As fate would have it, the ICL veteran deposited Foundas’ next pitch over the right field fence for a three run homer and a seemingly insurmountable 7-1 Testa lead. 

The Chiefs started to show some life with two outs in the sixth inning. Baillargeon flew to right for the first out and Bercume grounded out to Klimkiewicz unassisted for out number two. Copa then doubled to left and Andre followed with a two run homer over the 379’ sign in right-center that cut the Bombers lead to 7-3. Giarrantani got Crisafulli to ground out to end the inning. 

Rob Machado, who has been nothing short of outstanding lately, came on for Foundas and worked a solid and scoreless seventh. 

The Chiefs started what appeared to be a potentially huge comeback in the seventh only to see the attempt fizzle out. Macrina got things started with a gap shot triple to right-center. McCarthy then drilled a single to left that scored Macrina cutting the lead to 7-4. Dario Pizzano pinch hit for Landers and solidly singled to right. Pyburn followed with another single to left-center that loaded the bases with nobody out and brought the winning run to the plate in Baillargeon. Baillargeon hit a hard shot right back at Giarrantani who made a nice grab and turned it into a tailor made 1-2-3 doubleplay. The Chiefs still weren’t done. Bercume, who was representing the game tying run, brought the faithful to their feet when he sent a deep line shot that appeared headed for the right field corner. It was just not to be on this night as Buitkus made a nice running catch on the warning track that ended the game and sent the Bombers back to Eastie with a game lead and home field advantage in the series.

Chiefs Chatter......The Chiefs out hit the Bombers 9-7 in Friday's game.…...The Medford Americans came from behind to beat the Wakefield Merchants 6-5 in eight innings to take the deciding game of their best of three series in walk-off fashion. Luke Begley scored the winning run on an infield error with the bases juiced. Brian Casey went the route to pick up his first playoff win. ……Congratulations go out to Americans veteran skipper Kevin Burgoyne who picked up the first playoff win of his ICL career on Tuesday night and then made his initial playoff series a winning one…...The Americans will open their semi-final series with the Lexington Blue Sox on Sunday night at 8:00 PM in Lexington….. Game Two of the Chiefs-Bombers series will be played at 4:00 PM on Sunday at East Boston Stadium. The game was originally scheduled to be played at noon but was changed to the later starting time…...The Chiefs will send left-hander Dylan Ellis to the mound while the Bombers are expected to counter with Eddie Donovan…..Chiefs Hall of Famers Dave Clvio and Hank Landers were in the crowd for Friday’s series opener at Huskins .......J.P. Pollard was nursing a severely bruised foot and is day to day…..Jeff Bercume swiped his 15th base of the year in 18 attempts in the first inning…....Bercume’s former college teammate at Merrimack, Steve Buitkus, made an outstanding catch of his deep line drive that ended the game….Bobby Giarrantani surrendered nine hits and did not strike out a batter in the win. The former Bishop Fenwick star plays his college ball at Denison College in Ohio…Several Chiefs continue their climb up the all-time career leaders list. Justin Crisafulli, who tops the charts in home runs (86) and RBI (379), has inched a little closer to Mike Langston as the all-time hit leader. Crisafulli, with his two hits in Game One, now has 486 and trails Langston (538) by 52. Crisafulli began his Chiefs career as a rookie in 1994 before signing with the Cleveland Indians……Veteran Brian Macrina passed Alex Masel last week and now stands in eighth position in career hits with 215. Macrina is currently ninth in career homers with nine and holds position twelve in RBI with 76….Mike Andre, who hit his first post-season home run on Friday, has moved into slot 16 in career RBI with 60 and recently eclipsed Steve Puleo sliding into 17th place in career hits with 104. The former ICL Rookie of the Year in 2006 and two-time ICL all-star continues to make progress from knee surgery in May and raised his overall 2009 average to .309 on Friday night…..In the pitching department, Chris Foundas moved into the sixth spot in career appearances when he took the mound for the 35th time on Friday….Mike DiCato moved into the top dozen in career strikeouts (62) going past Dave Piho of Berlin, PA….The Chiefs have lost the first game of a semi-final series eleven times in franchise history. On eight of those occasions they came back to win the series. In 1968, 1971, 1974, 1980, 1990 & 1993 they came back to win a semi-final series after losing the first two games……Manager Chuck Andre will be shooting for playoff win number 50 on Sunday. The veteran manager had amassed 438 overall wins heading into this year’s playoffs……Monday’s Game Three is still listed as TBA, but barring an unexpected scheduling change to a field with lights, the game is most likely to be played at Tufts University at 5:20 PM…. Bruce Tillman

 

 

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Medford, MA- And now they can rest. At least for a few days. 

After a furious stretch, with twenty four games on the docket in the last twenty eight days, the Chiefs earned themselves a second place regular season finish with a sweep of a two site, three team doubleheader on Sunday.  With the wins, the club finishes at 16-11-3 and gets a first round playoff bye and a ticket into the ICL semi-finals. 

GAME ONE- Chiefs 3, Blue Sox 0
Rookie Rob Machado served up the best performance of his young ICL career in the opener, coming within one out of throwing a no-hitter, in a 3-0 shutout of the Lexington Blue Sox at Tufts University on Sunday afternoon. 

Machado lost his no-hit bid with two outs in the seventh inning when Blue Sox rookie pinch-hitter Chris Shaw lined a clean opposite field single to left. 

The game was scoreless through the first 2 ½ innings until the Chiefs picked up all of their runs in the bottom of the third against Drew Brzozowski. Hal Landers got things going when he led off with a double to right-center. Leadoff man Brendan Pyburn followed and moved Landers to third with a perfect sacrifice bunt. Mike Bailargeon then stepped up a drilled a double to left scoring Landers as the Chiefs took a 1-0 lead. Jeff Bercume then grounded out to second base moving Bailargeon to third and Peter Copa delivered him a pitch later with a single to left making it 2-0. Mike Andre then doubled to left scoring Copa giving the Chiefs a 3-0 lead. 

Machado took care of the rest. The right-hander from UMass-Amherst, who was previously a standout at Malden Catholic, was perfect through the ten batters of the game before surrendering a one out walk to Ross Curley in the fourth. He had 1-2-3 innings in the first, second, third, fifth and sixth.  

In the seventh, Machado got the first out by striking out Boston College’s Kyle Prohovich looking. Clean-up hitter Matt McEvoy followed and bounced back to Machado for out number two. Shaw pinch hit for Ben Hewett and drilled the first pitch he saw to left to break up the no hit bid. Machado gained the shutout when he got Tom Haugh to hit a chopper back to him to end the game. 

Machado threw just 81 pitches, struck out three, walked two, and raised his season mark to 2-3.

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GAME TWO- Chiefs 5, Americans 1
There was more work to do for the Chiefs as they packed up their gear and headed across town to Playstead Park for a 4:00 PM date with the Americans.

This one had serious playoff implications as an Americans win would have put them in the driver’s seat for a second place finish. Lefty Dylan Ellis (4-1) had other ideas as he stopped the Americans on just four hits in the 5-1 complete game win. 

The Chiefs jumped out to a 1-0 lead in the second inning against Americans ace Dave Martin, who entered the game with a 3-0 mark and league leading 0.26 ERA, having allowed just two earned runs in 27 innings. Peter Copa drew a leadoff walk but Martin caught Mike Andre looking for the inning’s first out. Justin Crisafulli followed and drilled a long single off the base of the fence in left-center that moved Copa to third. With runners on the corners, rookie Dario Pizzano hit a high chopper to Americans second baseman Luke Begley, who only had time to force Crisafulli at second, allowing Copa to score. With Pizzano running on the pitch, catcher Bob McCarthy then lined a single to right with Pizzano taking third. Hal Landers drew Martin’s second walk of the inning to load the bases. Americans first baseman Dave Ahern then made an outstanding grab of a hard hit Brendan Pyburn one-hopper and beat him to the bag to avert further scoring and keep it a 1-0 affair. 

Ahern’s play loomed even bigger in the bottom of the inning when the Americans tied the game at 1-1. Ellis got the first two outs of the inning (Mike Kalfopoulos fly-out, Mike Ferriero strike out) before walking Steve Napier on a 3-2 pitch. Jay Olson made that walk hurt when he drilled a blast off the fence in center scoring Napier to tie the game. Ellis kept it even when he struck out Steve Tahmoush to end the inning. 

The Chiefs came right back in the top of the third to re-take the lead at 2-1. Martin retired Mike Bailargeon on a fly to left for the first out and Jeff Bercume drew a walk. Copa then bounced back to Martin for the second out of the inning with Bercume taking second. Andre then delivered what proved to be the game winning hit when he singled to right scoring Bercume. Martin got Crisafulli to pop up to end the inning. 

Ellis took charge in the next two frames retiring six in a row, including striking out the American’s side in order in the fourth. 

The Chiefs gave their southpaw some breathing room in the top of the fifth. Bailargeon led off and drilled his first ICL home run to right center that jumped the lead to 3-1. Bercume was then hit by a Martin pitch and Copa drew his second walk of the game to put runners at first and second with nobody out. Andre then dropped a perfect sacrifice bunt moving the Bercume and Copa up a base. Crisafulli came up big and lined a single to center scoring both runners and upping the margin to 5-1. 

Ellis survived an outfield miscue by Bercume in centerfield off the bat Napier to lead off the fifth and Martin held the Chiefs scoreless in the top of the sixth. 

The Americans appeared poised to mount a comeback in the bottom of the sixth but Ellis and some outstanding Chiefs defense prevented that. Mike DelPonte led off with a single up the middle and Ahern drew a walk to put two men on with nobody out. Ellis then got a huge out when he struck out K.C. McCarthy swinging. Kalfopoulos then hit a hard hit ball at Copa at first, who made a nice play behind the bag, and beat Kalfopoulos to the base for the second out. With runners now at second and third, Ferreiro hit a tough chopper at Andre at third. The Chiefs veteran charged and gloved the ball on a short hop and threw Ferreiro out at first to end the inning at keep the game at 5-1. 

Martin retired the Chiefs in order in the top of the seventh. 

Ellis got Napier to ground to Bailargeon to open the Medford seventh. Olson then kept the Americans hopes alive when he collected his second hit of the day to right. But it was all Ellis from there as he got Tahmoush to hit into a fielder’s choice and ended the game when Begley grounded to Pyburn. 

Ellis, from Merrimack College & Gloucester, struck out eight and lowered his ERA to 1.44.

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Boston.com  

Once More, Taking his Game to Another Level

Hoping for pros, Bercume savors the competition

This summer, he is tearing up the Intercity League for the Medford-based Andre Chiefs, after wrapping up a record-setting career at Merrimack.

Now 5-foot-9 and 185 pounds, thanks to a growth spurt in high school and weight training at the college in North Andover, Bercume makes the most of his strength and bat speed.

Two weekends ago, in a doubleheader against the Mooney Dental Tanners, the speedy outfielder from Leicester went 4 for 7 with two home runs, including a grand slam, and eight runs batted in. He followed that up two days later with another grand slam and five RBIs against the Testa Corp. Bombers, and shared the league’s Player of the Week honors.

Through Tuesday night’s games, Bercume was batting .325 for the second-place Chiefs and led the team with 3 homers, 22 RBIs and 13 stolen bases in 15 attempts. He had struck out just 5 times in 80 at-bats.

As a senior captain on the Division 2 squad this spring, Bercume broke the Warriors’ record for career hits (230) while batting .385, and was selected to the All-Northeast-10 Conference, All-East and All-Region teams.

“Jeff and my son, Mike, were captains at Merrimack this year, and we have a few other Merrimack players on our roster,’’ said Chuck Andre, now in his 19th season managing the Chiefs. “I first saw him play as a Merrimack freshman and immediately liked what I saw.

“I was disappointed that Jeff wasn’t taken in the major-league draft, because he did about everything as a player at Merrimack. He’s a gap hitter with a plus-arm and plus-speed. He bats third and plays the majority of our games in center field, and was a starter in our all-star game against the Boston Park League.’’

Bercume said he had been cautiously optimistic about being drafted in June, “but the reality is it’s an uphill battle and it’s incredibly competitive to get to the next level as a positional player from a D-2 school. Baseball is one of those games where you can go 5-for-8 or 0-for-8, but I never feel I’m overmatched. It’s all about confidence and how you carry yourself.’’

Bercume wrestled at 112 pounds as a high school junior and 135 his senior season. On the diamond at St. John’s, he played for George Reidy, now head coach at Assumption College.

He chose Merrimack as his college immediately after attending an open house there.

“Jeff came to us as an infielder, we moved him to outfield, and he developed a nice swing early on, improved his speed and just kept getting better and better,’’ said Merrimack’s head coach, Joe Sarno. “The scouts were definitely aware of him, and I feel Jeff has the ability to turn pro. He’s the best player I’ve coached at Merrimack in terms of both leadership and ability.’’

Bercume returned to his hometown to play for the American Legion Post 205 squad after his freshman year of college, and then switched to the Chiefs the following summer, when he batted .315.

Last summer, facing Division 1 pitchers in the wooden-bat New York Collegiate Baseball League, he hit a team-best .373 in 39 games for the Bennington (Vt.) Bombers.

“That was a great experience,’’ he said. “My host family was incredible, and the competition was the best I’ve seen so far in my career. I got to play a couple of times before crowds of over 5,000.’’

In his final season at Merrimack, he finished fourth in the NE-10 (which also uses wooden, rather than aluminum, bats) in hitting, led the conference with 23 steals, and was Merrimack’s top producer with five homers, 46 RBIs, and a .447 on-base percentage. He was a two-time captain, and was named to the NE-10’s all-conference first team three times.

And while he hasn’t reached his goal of turning pro despite attending tryouts this year, Bercume is happy to be back with the Chiefs, who play in an amateur league.

“I drive about an hour, sometimes more, to play for them, so that tells you how awesome this is for me,’’ said Bercume, whose teammates include three players from Arlington - backup catchers Eddie McDonald (Assumption) and Kevin McKenzie (Wentworth), and pitcher Connor Bishop (Bridgewater State) - as well as pitcher Chris Foundas (Bryant) of Needham.

“I’m learning from veterans around the league, and the level of competition is pretty exceptional,’’ he added. “I’m passionate about baseball. It’s what I love, and I’m not about to give up hope of getting a shot at the pros, especially with Chuck Andre and Coach Sarno as my biggest advocates.’’

Marvin Pave can be reached at marvin.pave@rcn.com  

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