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If you were a fan of either side it was a tough game to watch. Every pitch and every play had the potential to win or lose the game. Neither side blinked, but the Nationals did come up one play short, losing to the Milwaukee Angels 3-2 in the Milwaukee County Championship game. Tom Donovan put the Nationals on the board first with a towering home run in the fourth inning. The Angels countered with two runs of their own, however, to take a 2-1 lead. After several rallies stalled prematurely, the Nationals finally knotted the game in the seventh inning. Mike Wajerski drew a two out walk, stole second, and scored on a line single to left center by Jake Paige. Paige advanced to second on the throw home, but was stranded to end the inning. The Angels responded by scoring the deciding run in their half of the inning on D.T. Nokovic's second RBI of the contest. The Nationals again pressured Angels starting pitcher, Nate Schwartz, in the eighth. With two down, James Herkowski and Brian Gibson drew walks, but Jim Dettman's ground ball in hole at short was fielded cleanly and Gibson was forced at second. A disputed third strike call on red-hot Mike Wajerski took the wind out of the team in the ninth. Wajerski, who to that point had two singles, a walk, and three steals, was rung up on a low and away curveball. The Nationals opted for a pitcher by committee strategy in the contest. Starter Tim Spata went the first four innings, allowing two runs. Tim Ustruck followed with two and one third innings, allowing one run, and Pat Bovee threw the last inning and two thirds, holding the Angels scoreless. The Nationals completed another fine season with a 21-11 overall record (15-5 league) and stable of young, battle-tested talent. West Allis Nationals 15-5 (21-11) Milwaukee Athletics 13-6 (14-8) Rookie's Cubs 11-8 McGuire's Cats 3-17 Milwaukee Angels 16-4 (20-6) Kingpins 13-6 (14-8) West Allis White Sox 7-11 Jetsetter Pilots 0-20 Players will be honored at the team's annual Golf Outing and Picnic on SUNDAY AUGUST 31 at MADISON PARK GOLF COURSE. TEAM MVP: Joe Kissler HARVEY KUENN BATTING CHAMP: Tom Donovan DAVE KUHNKE PITCHING CHAMP: Joe Kissler JEFF NEIBAUER SPIRIT AWARD: Tim Spata, Mike Wajerski, Laura Zimmer VETERAN OF THE YEAR: Alex Franson ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: Tom Donovanimage
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Kissler Earns Bittersweet Award

Posted by Steve Elliott at Aug 16, 2003 5:00PM PDT ( 0 Comments )
It's tough to find individual performance to celebrate when the team loses a tough championship series, but Joe Kissler's efforts need to be mentioned. Kissler's 6.3 innings of shutout baseball allowed the Nationals to win game one of this season's championship series. The level of this accomplishment was magnified days later when the rest of the staff was unable to shut down the Angels offense, ultimately succombing by scores of 11-4 and 3-2. Great season, Joe!
Most games are lost, not won. That lesson was demonstrated not once, but twice on Saturday night as the West Allis Nationals and Milwaukee Angels split the first two games of their best-of-three championship playoff series. The Nationals took game one 3-0, but fell in the nightcap 11-4. The opener was a pitchers duel. The only runs of the game came in the third inning due in part to Angels miscues. Brian Gibson led off the inning with a double down the right field line. After Jason Koconis was unsuccessful bunting him to third, Angels catcher, Ben Krey, did the job in allowing a ball to get by him to the screen. Koconis quickly capitalized with a line single to left field and the Nationals were up 1-0. Next up was Jake Koutnik. Koutnik's sacrifice bunt was fielded by Krey and thrown away down the right field line, scoring Koconis. A third Angel miscue in the inning-a ground ball under the glove of the shortstop-allowed Koutnik to score and put the Nationals in command at 3-0. That was more than enough for Joe Kissler. Kissler battled the Angels with 6 1/3 innings of shutout ball. Kissler lacked his usual velocity and command, but made big pitches to get out of several jams. Tim Ustruck got the final two outs to secure the victory. The tables turned in game two. The normally slick fielding Nationals were stung by a couple of tough hops in the first two innings and fell behind 3-0. Nick Kibler started the game on three days rest and was the unfortunate recipient. Kibler left after four innings and the team down 6-1. Jim Dettman mopped up, but the offense failed to get charged up until the seventh inning when the game was out of hand at 11-1. Tuesday night will decide the Milwaukee County Championship. Game time at Zirkel Field is 7PM.
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"DOYNE OPEN" TO BE HELD AT MADISON PARK

Posted by Steve Elliott at Aug 14, 2003 5:00PM PDT ( 0 Comments )
Due to Milwaukee County budget cuts, the Doyne Park Golf Course will close effective August 18. Not to worry golf fans. The "Doyne Open" lives on! Click on the link and learn more about the Nationals annual year end golf outing and awards ceremony.
Little has come easy or been predictable for the Nationals this year. Tuesday night's elimination game versus the Kingpins was no different. Shortly before game time the team learned that starting CF Erik Dunn would be unable to play after turning his ankle. In one quick moment, Dunn joined a long list of Nationals outfielders to have been sidelined this season. Though hurt by his loss, the team did as it has done all year, patching together an alternative lineup. Jim Dettman, assumed the CF duties despite having played there very little this season. The Kingpins capitalized immediately. After starting pitcher, Nick Kibler walked Rick Lopez to start the game, second basemen, Nate Miller smoked a line drive to center that Dettman misplayed into a triple. Three hits and a hit batsmen later, the Kingpins had a 3-0 lead. Kibler escaped with no further damage but the Nationals failed to respond in their half of the first inning. Kibler then took control. The veteran righthander struck out two of the three men he faced in the second inning and followed by setting the side down in order in the third, fourth, and fifth innings as well. Kibler's command allowed the Nationals offense to get the team back in the game. Consecutive singles by Tom Donovan and James Herkowski were followed by a Brian Gibson RBI double and the team had its first tally. Unfortunately, Herkowski was thrown out at the plate on the play and the rally was halted prematurely. Not to worry. Mike Wajerski led off the following inning with a bunt single, stole second, and moved to third on a ground out before Alex Franson drove him home for the team's second run. James Herkowski's leadoff homer in the fourth tied the game 3-3 and Nationals appeared to be on the verge of breaking the game open. Brian Gibson followed with a single and Jim Dettman walked, but the rally fizzled with no further damage. The fifth inning saw the Kingpins bring their ace righthander to the hill. Rebounding from a 145 pitch effort on Saturday, Nick Witthuhn promptly walked Alex Franson and beaned Trevor Koepp to give the Nationals runners on first and second with no outs. Witthuhn responded, however, by striking out Donovan, Herkowski, and Gibson in order to end the fifth inning threat. The game remained deadlocked at three until the bottom of the seventh inning. With the count 3-2 and two outs, James Herkowski fought off an inside fastball for a single over the first basemen's head. The Nationals had their first lead at 4-3. An RBI groundout by Alex Franson in the bottom of the eighth gave the team a security run, but the Kingpins were not finished. Nick Witthuhn led off the top of the ninth with a triple to left center field and scored on a single by Kevin Miller to cut the lead to 5-4. Alex Franson then made a key play, picking Miller off first base after a botched attempt at a sacrifice bunt. A lazy fly to Trevor Koepp ended the game and the Nationals escaped with a 5-4 series clinching victory. Next up is the Milwaukee County Championship series versus the National Division Champion Milwaukee Angels (18-5). The Nationals (20-9) and Angels last squared off in June when the teams split a doubleheader. The Angels, no doubt, will be looking to avenge last season's playoff losses to the Nationals. The Best of Three series begins Saturday night August 16 with a doubleheader starting at 6PM at Zirkel Field in McCarty Park.