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CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa – This past weekend, 19 players from Eastern Connecticut State University's 2002 NCAA national championship team gathered in North Windham to celebrate and revive old
In five national tournament games, the double play combination of senior second baseman
Noah Plantamuro (shown above) and shortstop Zach Donahue combined on 31 chances
without an error, totalling 25 assists. (Photo by Jimmy Naprstek)
memories during a 20
th anniversary celebration of the most recent of the program's four national titles.
Also this past weekend, 25 players from the current team assembled in Cedar Rapids, Iowa intent on creating new memories at the 2022 NCAA Division III national tournament.
Mission accomplished.
Twenty years and ten days after hoisting their fourth national championship trophy at Grand Chute, WI, the Warriors raised a fifth – each coming at a different site – with a clean sweep at Perfect Game Field – and ended the season by tying the program record of 23 consecutive victories.
After winning its bracket with three straight wins here, No. 1 nationally-ranked and second-seeded Eastern (49-3) swept 2021 national titlist Salisbury University, 11-6 and 3-2 in the best-of-three championship series Tuesday for its 14
th and 15
th straight victories in conference and NCAA tournament play.
With six seniors and two graduate players among its nine starting position players, Eastern trailed only twice (by one run both times) in the tournament, the second time coming in the second game against Salisbury, when a three-run fifth inning wiped out that deficit and sent the team, ultimately, to the title. The Warriors set program records for wins and winning percentage (.942) in claiming the title in only the third non-Covid season under fourth-year head coach
Brian Hamm. Throughout the year, Eastern was driven by last year's disappointment in losing the deciding game of the Little East Conference tournament at home on a walk-off home run, then exiting the Auburn, NY Regional tournament with two quick losses.
NO. 1!
"It's something that we worked really, really hard for," noted Hamm of the championship. "We're really proud to represent the university and get one for all of the people back home," added Hamm, who, during the season, won his 100th game at Eastern and his 300th in 13 years as a college head coach.
After winning the first game Tuesday, only the team's first two-game losing streak of the year would deny it a fifth national title in six championship series appearances. Salisbury (39-12), whose three bracket wins included an 11-inning victory over six-time national champion Marietta College Saturday, ended its season on a two-game losing streak – its longest since late February.
In the first win over Salisbury, Eastern rode senior righty
Bryan Albee's (Killingly) 12
th win of the year without a loss (the most wins by a pitcher without a loss in program history) and a three-run seventh and two-run eighth to move to within a victory of the title. In that first game, graduate first baseman
Josh Tower (Auburn, MA) -- voted the tournament's Most Outstanding Player -- tied the national tournament record with five hits and also drove in four runs when he singled and scored in the second and fourth innings, drove in a run in the fifth, doubled home two runs and scored in the seventh and singled home two more in the eighth. A sure-handed first baseman, Tower had struggled in his previous eight tournament games at bat prior to the nationals (5-for-31), but opened the nationals with two hits and two RBI against Baldwin Wallace and added seven hits over the final three games.
In the final, junior righty
Billy Oldham (Brookfield) and graduate righty
Tommy Benincaso (Norwalk) combined on a six-hitter and senior centerfielder
Ryan Bagdasarian (Glastonbury) drove in two runs with a two-out single when the Warriors scored all three of their runs in the third that wiped out Salisbury's 1-0 lead and gave Eastern its fifth one-run victory without a loss in conference and NCAA tournament play. As he did in an opening win over Baldwin Wallace University Friday, Oldham pitched 6 1/3 innings against Salisbury on three full days' rest, allowing one run on four hits and four walks, with six strikeouts. Oldham struggled until finding his groove in the fourth -- when he didn't allow a hit over the next three innings -- until giving way to Benincaso with one on and one out in the seventh.In recording his first save since Opening Day, Benincaso worked the final 2 2/3 innings, striking out three. He allowed hits to the first two batters he faced in the seventh -- including a two-out single by pinch hitter Ethan Wentzlaff -- but was saved by a heads-up play from senior second baseman
Noah Plantamuro (Bristol) in shallow right field for the second out. On Wentzlaff's RBI single that blooped into shallow right field, Plantamuro corraled the ball and fired a strike to Broadhurst at third base to cut down Cameron Hyder attempting to advance from first to third. Broadhurst's sweep tag was confirmed to have grazed Hyder following a video review of the play. After retiring the final batter of the seventh on a fly ball to Bagdasarian, Benincaso breezed the rest of the way, retiring the final six batters, three straight via strikeout for his first save since Opening Day.
"It was a rough first few innings but I was able to settle in," said Oldham, now 18-3 lifetime. "I didn't have a lot of off-speed pitches going today, it was a lot of fastballs and a lot of quick outs. When I don't have my put-away pitches, my off-speed stuff, I rely on my [near-perfect] defense to get me through the innings where I struggled." In the game, Oldham threw 72 of his 115 pitches for strikes, Benincaso 21 of 34.
A defensive wiz at first base all season long (.994 fielding average),
Josh Tower got his bat going at the nationals en route to being
named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. Tower closed out
his first season at Eastern with a .321 batting average, 33 RBI and 31 runs
scored. (Photo by Jimmy Naprstek
The championship series pitted teams with the top two (Eastern as No. 1) earned run averages in the country, but Eastern collected 25 hits (five of them doubles) off eight Salisbury pitchers in two games. Eastern was limited to seven hits in the final game but finally knocked out previously unbeaten starter Benji Thalheimer (7-1) in the seventh, grouping four of their hits off Thalheime in its three-run fifth.
In the two-game set Tuesday, Eastern's five pitchers struck out 17 and walked five, allowed 19 hits but stranded 19 baserunners. On Tuesday, Tower reached seven times with six hits and a walk, drove in five runs and scored four and senior DH
Jack Rich (Meriden) contributed five hits (two doubles) and scored four runs and junior shortstop and leadoff hitter
Zach Donahue (South Windsor) and Bagdasarian each had three RBI. Plantamuro, whose assist ended both the Super Regional sweep of Rowan University and Tuesday's national championship game, had two sacrifice bunts and a total of four in the Warriors' five national tournament games.
In the nationals, Eastern batted .322 and neither had or gave up a home run. The pitching staff showed a 3.00 ERA, with Oldham winning both of his starts, Beninicaso winning his start and saving the national championship game with 2 2/3 innings of shutout relief in place of Oldham, striking out the first two batters of the ninth before getting No. 9 hitter Luke Weddell on a game-ending ground ball to Plantamuro on a 3-2 pitch. Oldham struck out 16 in 12 2/3 tournament innings while graduate righty
Jack Wallace (Winthrop, MA) pitched brilliantly in two relief appearances (winning one) without allowing a hit or walk and striking out four. One of six undefeated pitchers on the staff, Benincaso fanned 12 and walked only one in 9 1/3 innings, starting one game and relieving in another.
In the tournament, Rich and Tower both had nine hits, scored six runs and batted .474, with Tower driving in a team-high eight runs. Sophomore rightfielder
Jason Claiborn (Prospect), worthy of all-tournament mention and the only non-senior or graduate student in the starting lineup, was 6-for-17 (.353), reached base ten times with six hits and four walks, drove in six runs and scored three batting ninth in the order. He also had ten putouts in the outfield. In the first game Tuesday, he collected his 100th career hit -- a single through the right side that sent home Tower from third with the third run of the seventh inning. Donahue batted .333 (7-for-21) in the nationals and in ten NCAA games, was flawless at shortstop on 36 chances, 28 of which were assists.
With only one error in the nationals and just five in ten NCAA tournament games, Eastern broke last year's program record with a fielding percentage of .973.
In addition to winning titles at Grand Chute and Cedar Rapids, Eastern has been crowned champion at Marietta, OH (1982), Battle Creek, MI (1990) and Salem, VA (1998). The national leader with six championships, Marietta won its first three at home and its most recent three at Grand Chute. Salisbury was attempting to win back-to-back titles for the first time since Marietta in 2011 and '12.
2022 NCAA Division III National Tournament
All-Tournament Team
Most Outstanding Player
Josh Tower, Gr., EASTERN CONN. (Auburn, MA)
SP - from Marietta College, Jr., Trent Valentine
SP – from LaGrange College, Jr., Baley Coleman
SP - Bryan Albee, Sr., EASTERN CONN. (Killingly)
SP - Billy Oldham, Jr., EASTER CONN. (Brookfield)
RP - from Trinity University, So., Harrison Durow
RP - from Salisbury University, Sr., Xavier Marmol
C – from University of Wisconsin Stevens Point, Fr., Anthony Tomczak
1B –Josh Tower, Gr., EASTERN CONN. (Auburn, MA)
2B - from Salisbury University, Jr., Patrick Campbell
3B - from LaGrange College, Sr., Joe Ruth
SS - Zach Donahue, Jr., EASTERN CONN. (South Windsor)
OF – from University of Wisconsin Stevens Point, Sr., Aaron Simmons
OF – from Salisbury University, Sr., Cameron Hyder
OF – from University of Wisconsin Stevens Point, Sr., Payton Nelson
DH –Jack Rich, Sr., EASTERN CONN. (Meriden)