Sunday 24 August 2014

Chicago-South Korea LLWS final set

After Joshua Houston allowed a two-run home run in the top of the fifth inning that cost his team the lead, he was face down near the mound and pounded his fist into the turf.



"After that home run, I got scared. Very scared," he said.

But he recovered to escape further damage and then drove in the tying run with a line single in the bottom half of the inning to push Chicago's Jackie Robinson West past Las Vegas Mountain Ridge 7-5 in the U.S. final on Saturday and into the Little League World Series title game.

"I thought we were just going to give them the lead," he said of his feelings after Brad Stone's two-run shot had put Las Vegas ahead 5-4. "But I thought at some point we were going to get something going."

Two walks and Houston's rocket off the glove of the second baseman in the bottom half tied it. A fielder's choice and an error made it 7-5.

Ed Howard then came on in relief of Houston, getting a 1-6-3 double play to end the game and send the Chicago team up against South Korea, which is seeking its third World Series title in Sunday's championship game.

While the Chicago team celebrated on the field and posed for pictures, "Saturday In The Park" by Chicago fittingly played over the public address system.

There were also chants of "U-S-A! U-S-A!"

Back in Chicago, friends, family and fans joined in the celebration, too.

"We saw people dancing in the streets," said Trey Hondras, who hit a two-run homer and had two of his team's six hits while driving in three runs. "I swear it looked like Michael (Jordan) was still playing back there."

The Great Lakes Region champions trailed 3-0 after the first inning and 5-4 heading into the home half of the fifth. But they came back against a Las Vegas squad which had rolled over them 13-2 on Aug. 17.

The Illinois team, called "the pride of Chicago" by mayor Rahm Emmanuel, had eliminated the Taney Dragons from Philadelphia, featuring Sports Illustrated cover girl Mo'ne Davis, by a 6-5 score on Thursday night in its most recent game.

The latest win was almost too much for exhausted manager Darold Butler to handle.

"It's still unreal," he said. "I'm still going through the game in my mind, how exciting it was and how intense it was. Right now it hasn't hit me."

The Chicago team is the first member of the Urban Initiative -- formed in 1999 to help local Little League programs in low-income urban neighborhoods -- to make it to the LLWS since Harlem in 2002. FULL STORY

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