logo
From Little League to Division 2 state champs: Walpole baseball's titles linked by coach Chris Costello

From Little League to Division 2 state champs: Walpole baseball's titles linked by coach Chris Costello

Boston Globe21 hours ago

It's a state title years in the making for the Timberwolves (15-9), who saw their dreams crushed a year ago in the same spot. This time, despite trailing 4-0, then 5-4, they manifested a different result.
'There is nobody in the entire program we would want up in that situation other than Paul Whelan,' coach Chris Costello said. 'The baseball gods wanted that ball to get down the line today.'
Advertisement
FINAL: No. 4 Walpole 7, No. 2 Reading 6
For the first time in program history, Walpole is the D2 state champion.
Paul Whelan the go-ahead two-run hit in 7th. Luca DiGiulio nails out of the bullpen. They trailed 4-0, then 5-4, and won.
— Mike Puzzanghera (@mpuzzanghera)
The Rockets (21-4) jumped out to an early lead thanks to a pair of RBI singles from Sam Clark, and starter Ryan Marino kept the Timberwolves at bay for 4⅓ innings.
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
But the Timberwolves pulled off a stunning sixth-inning rally, plating four runs with just one hit, using a walk, two hit-by-pitches, a sacrifice fly, and two errors.
Richie Hayes came up with the lone hit in the rally, an RBI single to cut the deficit to two. Shane Harrington's sacrifice fly tied the game at 4-4.
Walpole is on the board.
After one run comes in on a throwing error, Richie Hayes hits this loud RBI single to left to score another.
4-2 Reading leads, but the Timberwolves still have the bases loaded and one out here in the sixth.
— Mike Puzzanghera (@mpuzzanghera)
'Not one person on the team thought it was over,' Hayes said. 'We knew something special was going to happen.'
Sophomore Luca DiGiulio fired three strong innings of relief out of the bullpen with three strikeouts to earn the win.
Advertisement
A big portion of the Walpole players won the state Little League title in 2019 — also coached by Costello. After falling in the New England regional, they told Costello they would instead win a title in high school.
Related
:
For Whelan and others on that 2019 team, it meant that much more to see Costello and athletic director and
'I love my dad, but [Costello]'s like a second father to all of us,' Whelan said. 'He's more than a baseball coach, I'd say. He's so awesome to us, he treats us so well. He's the best and I love him so much.'
Walpole's Cole Pileski (5) celebrates after scoring during the Timberwolves' comeback.
Brett Phelps for The Boston Globe
Cash Cantrell slides into home, scoring a run for Walpole.
Brett Phelps for The Boston Globe
For the first time, Walpole baseball lifted the MIAA trophy.
Brett Phelps for The Boston Globe
Down 4-0, then 5-4, Walpole never gave up, going ahead for good in the top of the seventh.
Brett Phelps for The Boston Globe
Andrew Burke pitches for Walpole.
Brett Phelps for The Boston Glob
Mike Puzzanghera can be reached at

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A healthy Garrett Whitlock gives Red Sox options out of the bullpen in the late innings
A healthy Garrett Whitlock gives Red Sox options out of the bullpen in the late innings

Boston Globe

time2 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

A healthy Garrett Whitlock gives Red Sox options out of the bullpen in the late innings

It was his first save since Sept. 29, 2023. 'It's been a while,' Whitlock said. 'Good time for it.' Whitlock entered the game in the eighth inning with runners on first and second, one out and Aaron Judge up. Judge swung through a high fastball. Whitlock then went down and away with a slider. Judge grounded it to third and Abraham Toro started a double play. Advertisement 'Amazing defensive job right there,' Whitlock said. 'It was really cool to see.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up The ninth inning was a 12-pitch wipeout as Cody Bellinger grounded to second before Whitlock struck out Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Anthony Volpe , both swinging at fastballs. Whitlock has worked 8⅔ scoreless innings in his last seven games, allowing only three hits and striking out 11 with two walks. He has a 2.97 ERA over 26 games with 45 strikeouts in 36⅓ innings. With Aroldis Chapman getting a needed two-day rest, Whitlock was the choice to close. Fathers, sons, and baseball In recognition of Father's Day, the Sox players had the names of their fathers above their lockers. Some of the players used light blue equipment. For Sox manager Alex Cora , it's a bittersweet day. He lost his father, José Manuel Cora , to cancer in 1989. Cora was about to turn 13 at the time. Advertisement 'I didn't have too much time with him,' Cora said. 'I was very upset at life because I didn't have my dad but then I was happy I had him for 12, 13 years.' José Cora was a baseball man. He founded the Little League in Caguas, Puerto Rico, and was a radio broadcaster of winter league games. One of Cora's fondest memories was traveling to New York in 1986 with his father to see his brother, Joey , when he was called up to the majors. Joey Cora didn't get in a game but the trip was special because of the time Alex spent with his father. 'Just to be around him was awesome,' Cora said. Back to work Tanner Houck is set to start a rehab assignment with Triple A Worcester on Wednesday against Buffalo at Polar Park. He is scheduled for 2-3 innings. Houck has not appeared in a game since May 12 when he allowed 11 runs over 2⅓ innings at Detroit. In an amazing coincidence, the righthander was diagnosed with a flexor pronator strain two days later and placed on the injured list. Right fielder Wilyer Abreu is set to play for Worcester on Tuesday and Wednesday in preparation for coming off the injured list in San Francisco on Friday. He has been out with a left oblique strain. Wild, wild west The Sox flew to Seattle after the game and will start a nine-game, 10-game West Coast road trip on Monday night against the Mariners. Lucas Giolito , Walker Buehler , and Garrett Crochet will face the Mariners before a day off on Thursday. Three-game series at San Francisco and Anaheim will follow . . . The home run Rafael Devers hit in the fifth inning was the 500th extra-base hit of his career. At 28 years, 234 days, he is the youngest Sox player to reach that milestone. Carl Yastrzemski holds the franchise record of 1,157. Devers is 12th in team history . . . Cora introduced his seven-year-old twin sons to Judge on Saturday. Even a Yankee, he told them, can be a good role model . . . First base coach José Flores was back in the box after missing two games following a medical procedure . . . After a fantastic version of the national anthem by Fenway Park staple Michelle Brooks-Thompson , Jax Buchholz threw out the first pitch to his father, Clay . The former Sox righthander was in town for a charity event. Carlton Fisk and Mike Timlin were at the ballpark, too. Timlin hosted the Sharon Timlin Memorial 5K race in Hopkinton on Saturday to raise money for The Angel Fund for ALS Research in honor of his mother. The race, held since 2004, has raised more than $2 million. Advertisement Peter Abraham can be reached at

Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals: Alex Caruso has been giving OKC a little bit of everything — including a lot more minutes
Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals: Alex Caruso has been giving OKC a little bit of everything — including a lot more minutes

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals: Alex Caruso has been giving OKC a little bit of everything — including a lot more minutes

OKLAHOMA CITY — Through the first seven and a half months of this NBA season, Alex Caruso had only topped 30 minutes in a game twice. The first: a late-March meeting with the Los Angeles Clippers, when injuries to Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren pressed him into duty in the Thunder's starting lineup. The second: Game 4 of the 2024 Western Conference finals, when the veteran super-sub skittered all over the court, guarding Anthony Edwards, Rudy Gobert and every Timberwolf in between in a hard-fought 128-126 win that drew Oklahoma City within one win of the 2025 NBA Finals. Advertisement Now that the Thunder are actually in the 2025 NBA Finals, though? Caruso has played 30-plus twice in four Finals games — the last two, now that you mention it. As the philosopher once said, 'There are no coincidences.' That philosopher's name? Alex Caruso. Oklahoma City Thunder guard Alex Caruso has risen to the occasion in the NBA Finals. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy) (ASSOCIATED PRESS) Caruso cracking 30 minutes just twice in his first 72 appearances this regular- and postseason was emblematic of the Thunder's big-picture plan of attack for a player they'd targeted in a key trade last summer to be the missing piece of a hoped-for championship puzzle … but also a player whose now-legendary relentlessness had led to multiple injuries that cost him significant time over the course of his seven-year NBA career. Advertisement 'Yeah, I mean, it's a double-edged sword,' Caruso said after Oklahoma City's Game 2 win. 'Some of that is I play a pretty erratic style regardless if it's Game 1 [of the season] or if it's Game 2 of the Finals. I just only have one gear — I don't know how to play at 75%. Some of that was keeping me out of my own way, out of harm's way. I don't do a good job of that on my own.' Some of it, though, came down to Oklahoma City being friggin' awesome, with a ton of dudes capable of contributing when given the chance. 'We won 68 games in the regular season,' Caruso said after Game 2.' We had a 12-, 13-man rotation through the year, depending on who was hurt, different teams we played. That just comes with the nature of having a really good, deep team.' Advertisement The Finals have a way of winnowing down a team's depth, though — of erasing the opportunities to see what a precocious rookie might be able to provide you, of rendering more limited contributors particularly vulnerable and thus unviable, of paring a team down to its most essential elements. 'It's the ultimate effort, endeavor, whatever you want to call it,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said after Game 4. 'I mean, it's long. It's arduous. But it's the greatest opportunity going. … It's really hard, and it's supposed to be hard.' It's a crucible: a 24/7 stress test that spotlights and punishes weakness, and that rewards versatility and skill, a game without holes, and an iron constitution. In other words: It's a series built for Caruso, and that Caruso is built for. 'Yeah, you know, I'm a complete basketball player,' he said Sunday. 'There's a lot of things that I do really, really good.' Advertisement Caruso showcased the diversity of his skill-set in Game 4. Everybody knows, at this point, that he's one of the best defenders on the planet, equally adept at chasing jitterbug guards around screens and aggressively bodying up Nikola Jokić in the post. What many might not have been aware of, though, was that he's also a more-than-capable initiator of Oklahoma City's offense, with more touches and time of possession than any Thunderer besides Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams in Game 4, and with more passes thrown than even OKC's two on-ball All-Stars. Or that, when the moment calls for it, he's got enough shake to his handle to be able to get from Point A to Point B off the bounce and make something happen once he gets there: 'Over my career, my abilities have gotten better through some work ethic and a little bit of confidence and understanding the moment and having success in the moment,' Caruso said after Game 4. '... This series — this playoffs, really — teams are forcing me to try and score the ball. That's something that I've been working on for the last three, four years of my offseason. It's been long offseasons not in the playoffs, so I've had a lot of time to work and prepare.' Advertisement That preparation, combined with countless catch-and-shoot reps that have turned him into a 43.2% marksman from 3-point range in this postseason, makes Caruso a legitimate complementary offensive threat playing off the likes of Gilgeous-Alexander, Williams and Chet Holmgren. And that, combined with his ability to defend all across the positional spectrum — and his propensity for wreaking havoc while doing so, in the form of steals, deflections, blocked shots and blown-up possessions — makes him an exceptionally additive player in just about any context you could conjure. 'He is a gamer — you plug him in anywhere, any lineup, feels like any group, he makes a difference,' Gilgeous-Alexander said Sunday. 'Makes everyone else around him better. He is always talking. He always knows where we're supposed to be, where the other team is supposed to be. He has instincts that are special. I don't think you can teach things like that. He just knows where the ball is going, where a rebound is bouncing to, how to get a deflection, timely steals.' That all-around difference was palpable late in Game 4. Caruso contributed a little bit of everything — strong shot contests, aggressive rebounding on both ends, smart cuts, timely help rotations, excellent on-ball defense — as part of the small-ball defensive look Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton said 'got us stagnant there,' and helped set the table for the comeback effort that got OKC even in the best-of-seven series: 'He has a championship ring for a reason,' Gilgeous-Alexander said after Game 4. 'It's no coincidence. He knows what it takes. He put the work in. He's proving it every night.' Advertisement Caruso has proven plenty for Oklahoma City, both over the course of the season and in this series, where he has the best on-court/off-court splits of any Thunder rotation regular besides Holmgren. In a gotta-have-it Game 4, Oklahoma City outscored Indiana by 14 points in Caruso's 30 minutes; through four games, 17 of 26 Thunder lineups that have outscored the Pacers have included Caruso. 'He just has amazing feel for the game and is an insane competitor,' Gilgeous-Alexander said Sunday. 'I think you add those two things together, and no matter where you drop him in the world, any basketball game, he is going to make a difference.' The question facing Daigneault and his coaching staff heading into Game 5 of a 2-2 series: Could Caruso make an even bigger difference in even bigger minutes? Like … for example … starter's minutes? Daigneault's proven very willing to tinker with his starting lineup, shifting away from a more traditional two-big look with Isaiah Hartenstein alongside Holmgren before the series in favor of moving Cason Wallace into the first five to better match speed on the perimeter with Haliburton, Andrew Nembhard and Indiana's high-octane ball- and player-movement game. Daigneault then shifted back to the double-big unit for Game 4, as part of a reorientation of Oklahoma City's rotation and substitution pattern aimed partly at counteracting the Pacers' defensive strategy on Gilgeous-Alexander, thus ensuring the MVP had a bit more gas in the tank come crunch time than he had in Game 3. (Mission accomplished.) Advertisement 'Every game is different,' Daigneault said Sunday. 'Like, we've done it after wins, after losses, throughout these series — we move things around pretty quickly to try to stay unpredictable and also try to scrape for every advantage we can in what turn out to be close games.' Few players in the league are better equipped to scrape out those advantages than Caruso, and with the Finals knotted up and a title just two wins away, Daigneault sounded Sunday like a coach prepared to lean even harder in his direction. 'I think this is the time you've got to do everything you can to try to win the games and pull out all the stops. That's been the mentality,' he said. 'He's been great. Extra rest in the Finals for all the players is a consideration, and you get a lot of rest between games. There's advantages and disadvantages. But one of the advantages is for everybody to recover and be as fresh as possible going into the game.' Advertisement With an extra day of rest between Games 4 and 5, and with a shot at a second date with the Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy getting closer by the possession, Caruso plans to be ready to put his fingerprints on the game, no matter how many minutes Daigneault needs him to play come Monday night in Bricktown. 'These are the games you are judged on … this is the time of year that I live for,' Caruso said Sunday. 'This is the time of the year where games matter, stakes are high, wins and losses are more important. So being prepared for this is important.'

Jaden McDaniels Is Off-Limits In A Potential Kevin Durant Trade
Jaden McDaniels Is Off-Limits In A Potential Kevin Durant Trade

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Jaden McDaniels Is Off-Limits In A Potential Kevin Durant Trade

Jaden McDaniels Is Off-Limits In A Potential Kevin Durant Trade originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Minnesota Timberwolves are still involved in the Kevin Durant sweepstakes. While Durant has already picked the Houston Rockets, Miami Heat, and San Antonio Spurs, according to ESPN insider Shams Charania's sources, the Timberwolves are still a dark horse. Advertisement Some reports have stated the Timberwolves are quite involved in the trade discussions. However, they are unwilling to put Jaden McDaniels in any trade package, as they see him as a crucial part of their long-term future. Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images The Timberwolves would love to get Durant on the roster because he could be a game-changer. Anthony Edwards is their superstar player, but the team must be aware that they could give up too much for Durant. That is where McDaniels comes into the picture. He is one of the most important players and building blocks, so he is untouchable. McDaniels is a young two-way star for the long-term future, and team president Tim Connelly won't be willing to give that up. Related: Kevin Durant To The Timberwolves Is Topping Zach Lowe's "Buzz" Rankings The Risk Is Too High For Trading McDaniels When talking about the Timberwolves' players, two stand out as the most important ones. Those are Edwards and McDaniels, who coincidentally joined the Timberwolves in the same year in 2020. Advertisement McDaniels is the team's best perimeter defender, but he is versatile enough to play as a rim protector. His contributions are regularly overlooked because he does not have gaudy numbers, but he is vital to Chris Finch's system. That's why it's understandable that the Timberwolves are unwilling to put him in any trade package. Even if Durant is part of the trade package, Minnesota will want to have McDaniels due to his overall impact. "The Wolves are not including Jaden McDaniels in any KD trade talks, per team sources, which means that one of Randle or Rudy Gobert would have to be the primary salary eater in the deal," The Athletic's Jon Krawczynski said about the potential trade. "It does not appear that Phoenix wants to tear down and rebuild as part of this trade. Randle and Gobert both figured prominently in Minnesota's run to the conference finals last season." Durant's Interest Is Still Up In The Air According To Conflicting Reports Shams Charania's report for ESPN discusses how Houston, Miami, and San Antonio are his only preferred destinations. However, The Athletic's report says that his preference won't factor much into the trade. His contract lacks the no-trade clause that his teammate Bradley Beal has on his, so Durant can't control where he goes. Durant would want to join those three teams based on the contract extension he could get from them. Considering he is going to be 37 when the 2025-26 season rolls around, that will be his final NBA deal. Advertisement With that being said, the Wolves might present an appealing package for the Suns. Phoenix is not ready for a non-post-season campaign, as they will want immediate contributors. That leaves the potential of Randle, Gobert, and Donte DiVincenzo to be part of the trade. McDaniels will be on the Timberwolves, and if Durant joins them, they will have one of the most fearsome starting lineups in the league with the length and offensive firepower to boot. Related: Zach Lowe Admits The Kevin Durant Trade To The Timberwolves Is Challenging This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 15, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store