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Baseball in the Lower Hudson Valley

Section 1 league honors

June
26

So we had a few names missing from the original all-section list, but it is finally 100 percent complete. You can read the list in its entirety here.

I also finally have all the league honors in. So here’s a peek at those:

League I-A
Coach of the year:
Joe Mazzella, Mount Vernon
MVP: Matt McGovern, Mamaroneck
Pitcher of the year:
Sean Hagan, Mamaroneck
Comeback player of the year: Josh Richardson, Mount Vernon

League I-B
Coach of the year:
Ron Gamma, Suffern
MVP: Jim Brennan, Suffern
Pitcher of the year: Robbie Aviles, Suffern
Comeback player of the year: Jordan Kolinsky, Clarkstown South

League I-C
Coach of the year:
Tom O’Hare, JJEF
MVP: Joe Panik, JJEF
Pitcher of the year: C.J. Riefenhauser, Mahopac

League I-D
Coach of the year:
Mike Anello, Saunders
MVP: Andrickson Zorilla, Saunders
Pitcher of the year: Ruben Reyes, Roosevelt

League II-North
Coach of the year:
Sean Kennedy, Yorktown
MVP: Brendan Hourihan, Lakeland
Pitcher of the year: Joe Malouf, Beacon

League II-South
Coach of the year:
Geoff Curtis, John Jay
MVP: Anthony Iacomini, John Jay
Pitcher of the year: Steve Green, John Jay
Comeback player of the year: John Swertfager, John Jay

League III-A
Coach of the year:
Bob Fletcher, Kennedy
MVP: Anthony Corona, Kennedy
Pitcher of the year: Jordan Sacks, Briarcliff
Comeback player of the year: Joe Humphrey, Kennedy

League III-B
Coach of the year:
Jack Plunkett, Pelham
MVP: Dan Sorine, Eastchester
Pitcher of the year: Kiyota Gomi, Ardsley

League III-C
Coach of the year:
Bruce Miller, Pearl River
MVP: Steve Putnick, Pearl River
Pitcher of the year: Dan Diaz, Nanuet
Comeback player of the year: Steve Prosapio, Nanuet

League IV-A
Coach of the year:
Greg Blake, North Salem
MVP: Chris Krisa, North Salem
Pitcher of the year: Matt Mackenzie, North Salem

League IV-B
Coach of the year:
Tyler Slater, Rye Neck
MVP: Jack Newton, Rye Neck
Pitcher of the year: Kevin McQuade, Rye Neck
Comeback player of the year:
Rob Magliano, Blind Brook

League IV-C
Coach of the year:
John D’Arco, Tuckahoe
MVP: Matt Strickrodt, Tuckahoe
Pitcher of the year: Zack Avalos, Dobbs Ferry
Comeback player of the year: Gary Riefenhauser, Dobbs Ferry

This entry was posted on Thursday, June 26th, 2008 at 1:36 am by Josh Thomson.
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10 Responses to “Section 1 league honors”

  1. Empires Roster

    Anyone know who made Empires?

  2. Mamo

    I know that 4 mamaroneck kids did
    Sean Hagan
    Matt McGovern
    Mike Rosenfeld
    Andrew Benkwitt

  3. TEAM

    I know the coaches in section 1 know each other and everything, however, it cheapens the coach of the year award when you give it to Joe Mazzella instead of Mike Chiapparelli in his league.
    They should give Maz some sort of lifetime achievement award, he had many D1 college players come from Mt. Vernon and a Major Leauger in Roy Smith. But based on this year, it is silly to give it to him.
    But based on this year, you can't just give him coach of the year because he is retiring. Like I said it cheapens things when you do that. He is a great coach, no doubt, but you have to give out the award based on this years merits.
    ON the flip side it was a real nice gesture, even though I disagree with it.

  4. Mazella

    Mazzella is a nice guy and I'm sure at some time he was a good coach but he has not been a good coach for years. From my observations he just sits in the duggout and does nothing. His kids for years lacked the basic fundamentals like bunting, and proper base coverage etc. Chap should have won this hands down though it is a nice gesture.

  5. fan

    ALL-COUNTY any time soon???

  6. Josh Thomson

    Empire roster will be up in a little while.

    All-star and all-county sections won't come out for another two weeks.

  7. westchester

    josh wolfson of the valhalla vikings shouldve won coach of the year for league IV B. the vikes didnt make the playoffs for the past two years and then this year he takes them into extra innings in the sectional championship. should be his hands down

  8. fan

    Hey Josh I read the article on the swing for softball and it was very interesting, is there a article to come about the boys' approach on the at bat or is that the only one

  9. ???

    How does Putnick get MVP over Prosapio in League? Thats a joke. look at numbers. Prosapio is at or about .500.

  10. Logic

    Knowing Coach Chap he probably declined being nominated Coach of Year so that a retiring vet like Joe Mazz could get it.

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Josh Thomson and Jake Thomases tell you who's safe and who's out as they follow baseball in the Lower Hudson Valley.

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About the authors
Jay GallagherJosh Thomson has done some of everything since joining The Journal News in March 2003. He began working for the Gannett weeklies during the winter of 2002 as a freelance writer. He joined the daily staff soon after and has since covered various high school and pro sports. Away from sportswriting, Josh lives in Westchester and spends his free time either with his fiancee, Sarah, or expertly managing his various championship-winning fantasy sports teams. He's visited 21 major-league baseball stadiums and insists that Fenway Park and Wrigley Field are the best by far. Josh graduated from Carmel High School in 1998, then went to Boston University, where, in 2002, he received a degree in communications with a minor in history.
Jake Thomases Jake Thomases has covered baseball, hockey, girls basketball, and girls soccer for the Journal News since arriving in 2003. He previously interned at The Poughkeepsie Journal while attending Vassar College. He is socking money away under his mattress to buy the Knicks, at which time he will trade Jerome James to Cleveland for a ham sandwich.

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Dan Diaz, Nanuet, infielder: Eyes turned to the junior shortstop/pitcher after his 17-strikeout virtuoso on May 2. His next start was a no-hitter, followed by a two-hit shutout. Using a biting slider and upper 80s fastball, he went 7-1 with a 2.10 ERA and 84 strikeouts in 46.2 innings. Over the last month he batted .550 to raise his season average to .446. His 1.258 OPS was No. 3 in the county; his ERA was No. 4. ( Peter Carr / The Journal News )
Steve Putnick, Pearl River, utility: The graduations of Sean Giblin, Ian Reese, and Jeff Allison left Putnick, a pitcher/third baseman, as Pearl River’s one returning star. The Pirates were 6-3 in his starts; 6-9 otherwise. The senior, who will walk on at Marist, threw more innings than anyone in Rockland except Aviles. He was a table-setter in the 3-hole, reaching base nearly half the time. ( Peter Carr / The Journal News )
Adonis Germosen, East Ramapo, infielder: The Titan bats didn’t hit like they were supposed to, with one exception. Germosen, a senior catcher, belted homers in three straight games before April was even half over ‹ the last of which Carmel coach Bob Shilling called the farthest he’s ever seen at his home field. He hit a county-high six while scoring 24 runs and driving in 20, earning a late roster spot at St. Thomas Aquinas. ( Peter Carr / The Journal News )
Bill Smith, Nanuet, outfielder: The senior provided the legs in Nanuet’s multi-pronged attack. He swiped a base in 13 different games and led the county with 16 steals overall. Part of that was opportunity ‹ he hit over.400 with a .479 on-base percentage. Because of all his mischief on the basepaths, he scored 25 runs, third-best in Rockland. ( Peter Carr / The Journal News )
Ron Gamma, Suffern, coach of the year: After suffering a disheartening 16-0 loss on opening day, it became a wire-to-wire season for the Mounties, who quickly established themselves as the top team in Rockland and proved it by making the Class AA sectional final. Other coaches were most impressed that Gamma negotiated his way through 12 League I-B games without a loss. He knew when to step in and when to cede decisions to his pitching coach. ( Peter Carr / The Journal News )
Jordan Kolinsky, Clarkstown South, infielder: When the senior was shelved with an ankle injury in mid-May, Clarkstown South tumbled. The Vikings went 0-7 with their pitcher/first baseman first sidelined and then hobbled. Despite the handicap, Kolinsky managed to bat .414 with 28 RBI. As a pitcher he was carefully confusing, never throwing the same speed twice in the same at-bat. His 1.78 ERA ranked No. 2 in the county. ( Peter Carr / The Journal News )
Jim Brennan, Suffern, outfielder: Potential had exceeded production for the center fielder. Until his junior year, when he exploded for a .467 average ‹ 200 points better than last year ‹ with a county-leading 34 runs, 10 doubles and nearly .900 slugging percentage, with 25 RBI from the leadoff spot.  As Suffern’s third starter he went 5-1, including a masterful playoff performance at John Jay. ( Peter Carr / The Journal News )
Nick Viohl, North Rockland, pitcher: North Rockland leaned heavily on senior pitchers Fasano and Viohl. Viohl delivered with a 1.67 ERA, lowest in Rockland County and eighth-lowest in the section among those with at least 30 innings. He allowed only 26 hits in 46 innings, an incredible ratio. ( Angela Gaul / The Journal News )
Tyler Rorick, Tappan Zee, outfielder: Tappan Zee’s season was almost dead when Rorick pitched the Dutchmen to a 3-1 victory over Pearl River that revived their hopes. As they were winning 12 of 16 he hit in every game. He batted .500 over that stretch and .422 for the year. Without the senior’s clutch stick and arm, Tappan Zee would have folded. ( Angela Gaul / The Journal News )
Joe Ferrara, Clarkstown North, utility: With Chris O’Grady out, the toughest pitching assignments fell to the senior. Even when used in relief, it was in crucial situations, allowing him to pick up decisions in 10 of 11 appearances. As a hitter he was an on-base machine (19 walks) because of a keen eye for pitches. He’ll join Germosen and Wargo at St. Thomas Aquinas. ( Angela Gaul / The Journal News )
George Wargo, North Rockland, infielder: The preseason began with the senior in a battle to be the starting catcher. Coach Tom Lynch has to be happy with his choice after Wargo threw out 60 percent of baserunners. He thrived behind the plate, delivering a .403 average ‹ 100 points higher than last year ‹ to provide rare consistency in North Rockland’s order. ( Peter Carr / The Journal News )
Ryan Fasano, North Rockland, pitcher: Last year’s playoff hero picked up where he left off, tossing seven shutout innings in a 1-0 opening-day win. Though his walks more than doubled, he still only issued 1.9 per seven innings. Three times he pitched more than seven innings. The final start of his career was a complete-game 1-0 loss in which he was robbed of a tying homer in the last inning. (Vincent DiSalvio / The Journal News)
Steve Prosapio, Nanuet, infielder: A victim of his own track record, the Monmouth-bound senior first baseman/pitcher was pitched around regularly. Yet he still repeated as county batting champ (.493). No one in Section 1 brought a swing to every game over the last two seasons like Prosapio. Over that span he hit in 44 of 46 games, including a 29-game hit streak. ( Photo by Christina Jeng / The Journal News )
Mike Chiapparelli, Mamaroneck, coach of the year: In his 29th year in some capacity with the program, Chiapparelli guided the Tigers to their third Section 1 title and first state championship. They finished 30-2, and were paced by an offense that averaged 11.1 runs per game, including 10.1 during their eight postseason games. USA Today’s final regional rankings had Mamaroneck as the No. 6 club in the East. ( The Journal News )
Dan Sorine, Eastchester, utility: As one of the best two-way threats in the area, Sorine, a junior, helped turn the Eagles’ once-floundering season around. He batted .506 with six home runs and 32 RBI and, after overcoming a sore arm, finished 5-1 with 37 strikeouts in 32 innings. He threw a no-hitter against Hen Hud in the Class A quarterfinals, and hit three home runs in a regular season game against Edgemont. ( Christian Roadman  / The Journal News )
Alex Maruri, Stepinac, infielder: Although scoring dipped considerably as the CHSAA used wood bats this season, Maruri still managed to bat .500 as the Crusaders won their second Bronx-Westchester division title in four years. No player in the division earned more all-league votes than the Elon-bound Maruri, who led the team with 23 runs scored, and had seven doubles, two homers and 14 RBI. ( Christian Roadman  / The Journal News )




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