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WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (Sept 17, 2004)

James M. Gerstenslager will assume the
duties of director for Little League Baseball and Softball’s West Region,
it was announced today by Stephen D. Keener, president and chief executive
officer.

Mr. Gerstenslager of San Diego, Calif., has served as a district
administrator in District 32 of California for 15 years, and has been a
member of the Little League International board of directors since 2001.
On Oct. 12, he will succeed outgoing director, Mike Legge.

Mr. Legge has been director of the West Region since 1999. He will be
leaving California for Little League’s South Region Headquarters in St.
Petersburg, Fla., where he will assume the title of League Development
Manager.

“I am pleased to have the opportunity to take on this position,” said Mr.
Gerstenslager. “I’m a firm believer in Little League’s rules and
philosophy, and I think my background at the various levels of Little
League will help me tremendously.” 

With nearly 700,000 players participating on more than 45,000 teams, Mr.
Gerstenslager inherits the second-largest region in the United States. His
duties will include managing the region’s operations, running the West
Region complex in San Bernardino, Calif., and continuing his work with the
Little League community.

“Jim’s work as a district administrator has given him experience in the
needs and concerns at the local levels of our program, and he also he has
a global understanding through his time on our international board of
directors and our advisory board,” Mr. Keener said. “Assuming the
responsibilities of director is a role Jim is well-suited for, and we
welcome him to this position.” 

The West Region oversees chartered leagues in: Alaska, Arizona,
California, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and
Wyoming. Each summer, along with several clinics, the facility’s Al
Houghton Stadium hosts the West and Northwest major division regional
tournaments, which send its winners to Williamsport for the annual Little
League Baseball World Series.

“The West has an excellent Little League family,” said Mr. Legge. “It’s a
large region. We cover four time zones, with every climate you could
imagine, but I found incredible amounts of support and a willingness to
work with Little League.”

Mr. Gerstenslager, 58, has been affiliated with the Little League
organization since 1978. Professionally, he was a senior manufacturing
engineer for the Solar Turbines Incorporated, a division of Caterpillar
Corp.

A native of Galion, Ohio, Mr. Gerstenslager is a graduate of Galion High
School and served in the United States Air Force. He and his wife, Roxann,
are residents of Clairemont, Calif., and are the parents of two adult
sons, James and Clinton. 

Both of the Gerstenslagers’ children are Little League graduates and he
has served many roles in the Clairemont Little League, including
umpire-in-chief, safety officer and league president. At the district
level, he has been safety officer and an assistant district administrator
before his election as district administrator in the summer of 1989. He
has been re-elected four times by the leagues in his district.

While a member of the Little League International Board of Directors, Mr.
Gerstenslager sat on the executive, operations and nomination committees.
Other assignments included two terms on the Little League Congress Rules
Committee (the second as chairman), one term on the Little League
President’s Advisory Committee and one term on the Little League Advisory
Committee to the International Board of Directors. As part of his
administrative duties at the West Region, he was a member of the regional
tournament committee and advisory committee.

  • West Region 7/16/04

    The news came today (7/16/2004) that Mike Legge and Sandy will be leaving the Western region for a new job with Little League.  Mike and Sandy will  be moving back to St Petersberg Fl some time in October.  This is a good thing because they will be close to their family.

    Mike will be missed more than any of could ever tell him.  He has been a strong supporter of the Umpire program and all of the programs in the West.

    Please let Mike know how much he has meant to each  of you and the all the umpires in the Western Region.  We will miss him and Sandy very much!

    Sam Palmer

Click here to e-mail Mike and say thanks!


Subject: RE: Florida player hit in temple with ball last year (2003 season)

For those of you who weren't following this, last year at about this time, in a practice, Austin Shepard, of the Port Charlotte Little League, was hit in the left temple by a thrown ball during infield practice.  Austin SHOULD have been wearing a catcher's helmet, but wasn't, and was looking the other way when a throw came in from left field.  Austin was in a coma for months as a result of the injury.

Austin, now age 12, is still making a slow recovery.  He is basically all there mentally, but still suffers physical disability as a result of the brain damage he suffered from the accident.  His right arm and right leg are both less mobile and coordinated than his left, and he still limps somewhat. He is very up-beat, and pragmatic about the accident - it was just "something that happened."  Right now, his goal is to strengthen his arm to the point that he can do 35 pushups.

Prior to the accident, Austin was a star athlete in both baseball and football.  It's not clear how close to "normal" he will ever recover physically.  A tragic accident - and a preventable one.

Any time you see a catcher catching infield practice, whether in practice or before a game, I implore you to make sure he/she is wearing a helmet per Rule 1.17: "All catchers must wear a mask, "dangling" type throat protector and catcher's helmet during infield/outfield practice, pitcher warm-up and games."
 

 

Little League umpires striving to improve
 

By BRIAN SMITH
Special to The News Journal
02/02/2004

NEWARK -- When actor Trey Wilson played the role of baseball manager Joe Reardon in the movie "Bull Durham," he summed up the sport in three short statements.

"This is a simple game," he told his players. "You throw the ball. You hit the ball. You catch the ball."

While that may be an interesting way to view playing baseball, it doesn't apply to umpiring the game. Whether it's making a simple call on the bases or understanding the intricacies of the infield fly rule, umpires have a lot to worry about - even at the Little League level.

That's why 85 Little League umpires from throughout Delaware spent Saturday learning how to become better at their craft at the Delaware District 2 Umpires Clinic at the Bob Carpenter Center. Andy Konyar, the Little League Baseball umpire-in-chief, and Mike Messick, an instructor at the Little League Umpire School, spent seven hours discussing the details of umpiring with the participants, who volunteer their time.

While some umpires were new at the job, others were there to learn even though they have years of experience. Ron Atkins, 55, of Millsboro has been umpiring in the Millsboro Little League for 32 years and will be one of two umpires representing the Mid-Atlantic region in the Little League World Series at Williamsport, Pa., in August. He wanted to hear Konyar's take on things.

"You always can learn more things," Atkins said. "When different plays come up, you always learn, and that's the way you always get better the more you do it. There's always something you haven't seen that's going to happen, and you're constantly learning."

Mike Skodzinski, 37, of Bear is entering his fourth year of umpiring in the Canal Little League. The league gave him some training when he started, but the clinic helped him build on that foundation. To become a Little League umpire, volunteers are required only to go through training provided by their local league.

"There's a lot of basic stuff that I've learned over the years, and just to hear them go over it again, there's always something you've missed," Skodzinski said. "I'd come to this same thing again, even if they went over the same information, because I know there's something I'd pick up that I didn't get this time."

The art of umpiring is much more complex than it appears. Konyar came equipped with a laptop computer and projector to show presentations on a movie screen, and participants received several reference books and other information. One of those was the Little League Baseball Umpire Clinic Manual, a 48-page book stuffed with information on subjects like umpire mechanics and positioning and tips on handling a wide variety of game situations.

"A lot of people are just shocked [at the details]," Konyar said. "They think you put a blue shirt and gray pants on and walk on the field and say, 'You're out.' It's a lot more than that. It's being at the right place at the right time, and to do that, you have to know what your areas of responsibility are and how to get there."

Tom Disharoon, 41, of Seaford, who will represent the Mid-Atlantic region in the Senior League World Series at Bangor, Maine, in August, was surprised at the effectiveness of the clinic the first year he attended.

"I myself did not realize how positioning on the field and certain mechanics can help a long way in making the correct call," he said. "Your timing is one thing that is very important in umpiring."

Little Leagues across the country are held together by volunteers who coach, maintain fields and sell refreshments. But the role of umpire is one that often gets overlooked, and many leagues find it difficult to get volunteers to fill the positions.

"It's getting tougher," said Mike Hirschman, umpire-in-chief for District 2. "The fact of the matter is people have less time, and it's a volunteer gig. You do what you can to try to keep the volunteers in as long as possible."

Konyar's home league in Lewisburg, Pa., is no exception. During the regular season, Little League's top-ranking umpire might find himself working a game with a parent who has never umpired before.

"My league will assign me to umpire the plate in a game, and the local rules call for the home team to get somebody out of the stands as a second [umpire], which is tough," Konyar said. "If Little League baseball has 7,000 programs in the world, probably 5,000 or 6,000 of them struggle every year with getting umpires out to help them do ballgames."

Those who do umpire put themselves in what can become a precarious position. Little League umpires are like any other sports official in that sometimes a coach, player or parent will disagree with a call. The criticism can drive umpires to quit, and make it difficult to recruit new candidates. But many umpires said they don't let it bother them.

"It's not personal," Skodzinski said. "The parents are worse than the kids. I just enjoy the kids, myself. If they're having fun, then I'm having fun. If I didn't enjoy it, I wouldn't do it."


The News Journal/WILLIAM BRETZGER
Andy Konyar, umpire-in-chief of Little League Baseball International, conducts an umpiring clinic with prospective and current volunteer Little League umpires Saturday at the Bob Carpenter Center. Konyar and Mike Messick, of Pennsville, N.J., reviewed an assortment of scenarios and how to best handle them. They also stressed good communication between umpires.

 

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