|
|
Series is
canceled Cyclones to be named co-champs,
tickets to be refunded
By Gersh
Kuntzman for The Brooklyn Papers
The remainder of the
New York-Penn League championship series pitting the Brooklyn Cyclones
against the Williamsport Crosscutters has been cancelled.
It is
likely, according to a Cyclones team spokesman, that both teams will be
named “co-champions” of the New York-Penn League 2001 season.
The
Cyclones, who won the league’s McNamara Division playoff beating the
Staten Island Yankees two games to one last week, held a 1-0 advantage in
the best-of-three championship series, the result of a 7-4 win over the
Pinckney Division champs, the Crosscutters, Monday night in
Williamsport.
At press time, the co-champion status of both teams
had yet to be made official, but Cyclones spokesman Dave Campanaro said
that it was “highly likely” to happen soon.
Minor League Baseball
President Mike Moore said in a separate statement that the decision to
cancel the remaining playoff games was made “out of respect to the
families and friends of those people who lost their lives or were injured
in [Tuesday’s] tragic events.”
In a subsequent statement posted on
the Cyclones’ official Web site (www.brooklyncyclones.com), the team broke
the news to fans.
“In the aftermath of Tuesday’s tragic events, the
New York-Penn League Championship Series has been canceled,” the statement
read. “The games the Brooklyn Cyclones were scheduled to play against the
Williamsport Crosscutters at Keyspan Park on Wednesday and Thursday will
not be made up at a future date.”
The team urged all ticketholders
to wait “a few days” before inquiring about refunds — although a team
spokesman promised that refunds would be provided.
Despite — or,
perhaps, because of — the drama of yesterday’s terrorist attack, Cyclones
fans filled the team’s unofficial fan Web site to oppose the decision to
cancel the remainder of the series.
“We are dealing with cowardly,
gutless sub-humans … disgusting animals [who] want nothing more than to
force us to change our lifestyle,” wrote a man known to his fellow
Cyclones fans only as “CoreyNyc.” “I agree that the games should be
postponed today, but it saddens me to think that they are being canceled.
This is exactly what those [mothers] want … The games should have gone on,
as our lives have to go on.”
Others recalled the aftermath of the
San Francisco earthquake in 1989 — which occurred just as fans were
gathering for Game 3 of the World Series between the Giants and the
Oakland A’s. Then-commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti suspended the Series
for a week — but insisted that the games be played.
“Playing the
games, say, in two weeks or so would be a big step forward in the healing
process,” Staten Island resident Jonathan Weissman, 26, posted.
As
the scope and scale of Tuesday’s horrific events envelopes every American,
the Cyclones’ victory over the Crosscutters Monday night recedes rapidly
into irrelevance. But as these may be the last words to be written about
the Cyclones for many months, it feels important to point out that the
team’s wildly successful debut season closed on a successful
note.
Even though the Crosscutters sent to the mound Pittsburgh
Pirates starter Jose Silva, who was playing for the Class-A squad as part
of a rehab assignment, the Cyclones scored four runs in the second inning
on RBI doubles by John Toner and team MVP Frank Corr. Shortstop Robert
McIntyre followed Toner with an RBI single and secondbaseman David Bacani
finished the scoring with a single.
After the Cyclones added a run
in the third on Corr’s sacrifice fly, the Crosscutters proved pesky,
chipping away at the lead with single runs in the third, fifth and sixth
innings. But reliever Ryan Olson shut down the Crosscutters over the last
three innings, including striking out the side in the ninth.
After
the game, Cyclones skipper Edgar Alfonzo praised the Crosscutters in words
that are now eerily obsolete. “Obviously, it feels much better to be
headed home with one win under our belts,” Alfonzo said. “We know that
Williamsport has a great team, though, and that they’ll battle us for the
rest of the series.”
No, Fonzie, they
won’t.
Gersh Kuntzman covered the Cyclones for The Brooklyn
Papers all season. He is also a columnist with the New York Post and
Newsweek.com.
Septmeber 17, 2001
Issue
BACK TO
TOP |