
After Mount Carmel stages huge rally, St. Laurence's Adrian Perez hits two-run homer. Of course. ‘Stay positive.'
Much like a boxer, St. Laurence's Adrian Perez took the punch and responded in kind.
Perez had just watched Mount Carmel storm back from a seven-run deficit to tie the game in stunning fashion at 10-10. But for some reason, the junior designated hitter didn't even flinch.
'I've always loved the team aspect of the sport,' Perez said of playing baseball. 'I love the chance of being able to pick up my teammates. No matter what happens, I always stay positive.
'I never get down, and I'm always up for whatever happens.'
What happened? Well, Perez hit a two-run homer in the sixth inning Thursday as the Vikings ended up taking a 12-11 Catholic League Blue victory over the host Caravan in Chicago.
Senior catcher Enrique Villanueva came through with three hits and drove in three runs for St. Laurence (23-3, 9-0). Mickey Lotus and Danny Donovan, both juniors, each added two RBIs.
Junior infielder TJ McQuillan delivered a two-run double as Mount Carmel (16-10, 5-4) rallied from a 10-3 deficit. Senior outfielder Kolin Adams added three hits and knocked in pair of runs.
The Vikings' nine-run outburst in the second inning was matched by the Caravan's six-run fifth. That set the stage for Perez after senior outfielder Corey Les reached on a bunt single.
'I was really excited to be in that position after Corey laid down the bunt, sacrificing himself to get on,' said Perez. who finished 2-for-3 with three runs. 'He threw a fastball and I was ready for it.
'I was just trying to take it to the opposite field, knowing the wind was going there.'
Villanueva, for one, wasn't surprised about the roller-coaster nature of a game that saw the teams combine for 31 hits.
'People in the Catholic League know how hard it is to bury a team,' he said. 'Obviously, it was a crazy scoring game and AP just came through when we needed him.
'His personality is a bit of a jokester, but he's hardworking and he always puts the team above himself. The best thing about him is that he can just hit the ball.'
St. Laurence coach Pete Lotus said the hitting prowess was self-apparent after Perez made an appearance late in the season on the varsity as a sophomore last spring.
Perez was called up after senior first baseman Connor Marino suffered a hamstring injury.
'We've always known since he's been at St. Laurence that he's a really good hitter,' Lotus said of Perez. 'When Connor went down, he came up and he had five hits in his first five at-bats.
'He's a tremendous hitter who's never fazed and always hits in big situations.'
Perez started playing baseball in youth leagues at age 4. Although his father played rugby, he felt that baseball best suited his son's personality.
He then rose to the occasion after Marino's injury created the opening.
'I came up for the playoffs and that really helped to see the pitching,' Perez said. 'Now as a junior, I feel like I've seen it all before and I'm even more prepared.'
Perez and Marino toggle between handling the defensive responsibilities at first base. When one plays in the field, the other slots in as the DH.
'He's a really good defensive first baseman and we've tried to get him reps out there,' Lotus said. 'For us to give up a big lead, that swing was huge to put two on the board like that.'
Confidence is key, and Perez knows to take every moment seriously.
'I'm not really a power guy or more of a contact guy,' said Perez, who has hit two home runs this season. 'I like to go through my approach and wait for the chance to take it deep.
'When I'm up there hitting, my approach and ability to hunt the fastball is what I'm best at.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox Sports
12 hours ago
- Fox Sports
Cool Jazz back at Yankee Stadium as Chisholm's homer sparks New York to 3-2 win over Cleveland
Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Yankees had been missing their cool Jazz. Sidelined since April 29 by a strained right oblique, Jazz Chisholm Jr. drove Tanner Bibee's first pitch of the seventh inning toward the right-center stands. He shuffled up the first-base line, holding his bat, convinced it was a tiebreaking home run. And it was, barely, caught by a fan in the first row, 358 feet from home plate. 'Our hitting coach told me a story about Reggie Jackson,' Chisholm said after Tuesday night's 3-2 win over the Cleveland Guardians. 'He hit a homer that barely went over the fence. And he was like, `Hey, Reggie, how did you know that was gone?' And he's like, `Well, I hit 567 (actually 563) of them.' So I told my coach, my story is that I've hit 1,000 homers in my dreams, so I had to know that one was gone, right?' Chisholm went 2 for 3, also blooping a fifth-inning single for the Yankees' first hit and scoring on DJ LeMahieu's single. Anthony Volpe went deep six pitches after Chisholm, giving New York back-to-back homers for the fifth time this season. 'Honestly, I pictured a 3 for 3, but I'd take a 2 for 3,' Chisholm said. He returned to third base, his position with the Yankees last year, after making 29 starts at second through April 29, when he got hurt at Baltimore. New York manager Aaron Boone decided to leave LeMahieu at second, where he's started since coming back from a spring training calf injury on May 13. Chisholm didn't complain about the position switch and gushed: 'This is my favorite organization I've ever been a part of.' 'I just want to win. I want a ring,' Chisholm said. 'You got (Aaron) Judge. You got Volpe, and they come and talk to you and when you have such a good relationship with the manager, I mean, you don't mind doing anything for a guy that you have a good friendship with.' An All-Star with Miami in 2022, the 27-year-old played middle infield for the Marlins from 2020-22, was moved to center field from 2023-24, then inserted at third when the Yankees acquired him in a trade last July 27. 'Everyone's really pumped for him and happy for us that he's back helping us,' Volpe said. 'He's just so smooth and has such a great arm that you can play wherever you want to play with him over there.' Wearing a baby blue, 11 1/2-inch glove from his own company, Absolutely Ridiculous Innovation for Athletes (ARIA), Chisholm grabbed Angel Martinez's grounder down the line in the third and made a strong one-hop throw to first from foul territory for an inning-ending out. The glove is intended to be used for Father's Day on June 15 and Chisholm started to break it in during three rehab games last week at Double-A Somerset. "Sometimes you catch the ball over there at third base and you look at the first baseman and you're like, wow, he's pretty far," Chisholm said. He is batting just .194 with eight homers and 18 RBIs. But in addition to his bat and glove, Chisholm adds a vivacious personality. "Really excited to have him back and good to see him have that kind of impact right away,' Boone said. Devin Williams, back as closer after Luke Weaver strained a hamstring, allowed Carlos Santana's one-out double and pinch-hitter Daniel Schneemann's two-out RBI single in the ninth, then retired Bo Naylor on a flyout for his sixth save as AL East-leading New York won for the 11th time in 14 games. During spring training, Boone and the Yankees talked of Chisholm combining with Volpe, the third-year shortstop, on an exiting double-play combination. 'I really thought I was done at third base,' Chisholm said. 'I thought I left my career over there with a good stamp, but I guess we're back again. We got to shine again. We can't let that reputation go down at third base.' ___ AP MLB: recommended


Chicago Tribune
16 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Angelina Elias breaks tie with double as St. Laurence gets past Evergreen Park. Her strength? ‘That high energy.'
Senoir catcher Angelina Elias has a favorite phrase she likes to use when talking to her pitchers for St. Laurence. It's a mental game. 'With the amount of pressure a pitcher has, we just need it as a check,' Elias said. 'It's like, 'Keep your head up no matter what. You worked hard to get here.' 'We need to hit the spots. Don't overthink it. Have confidence.' She gave that advice to herself Tuesday and it paid off handsomely for the host Vikings, who beat Evergreen Park 7-2 in a Class 3A St. Laurence Sectional semifinal game in Burbank. Elias hit a tiebreaking double in the sixth inning for the Vikings (21-7), who advanced to play Nazareth (16-15) at 4 p.m. Friday for the sectional title. Jordan Ogean added two hits and three RBIs for St. Laurence. Aoibhe Landers had two hits, while Vanessa Kates reached base four times and tripled. Maddie Misch worked 5 2/3 innings in relief. Molly Goyke reached base twice and scored a run for Evergreen Park (18-15). Elias, meanwhile, is stepping up in the clutch for the Vikings during her only season as the starting catcher. As a junior, she sat behind senior Norah Burke. 'At first, it was just a learning experience on the bench, seeing some plays I could do,' Elias saId. 'I also used it to learn from the mistakes I saw from the bench. 'I'm glad that I have the chance to catch this season for St. Laurence. I consider it a blessing.' Elias showed senior moxie in a few ways during Tuesday's victory. First, she put Misch in a good frame of mind. The junior right-hander came on in relief in the second inning with one on, one out and the Vikings trailing 2-0. 'She kept telling me, 'This is just a mental game, this is just a mental game,'' Misch said. 'I totally agreed with her. She calmed the game, helped us play our game. 'Ange is always supporting her teammates. She's always coming up every single pitch to talk to her pitchers. She always has that high energy.' Elias made her first big play on a catch and sweep tag at home plate on a throw from third base by Ogean. It thwarted a scoring chance by Evergreen Park in the top of the fourth. Watching and learning as a junior paid off when St. Laurence coach Teagan Walsh noticed. 'Yes, she's solid behind the plate,' Walsh said. 'She had to wait her turn to get that starting spot, but she worked her heart out. She just does everything the right way. 'Angelina always hypes her pitchers, which is probably one of my favorite things. And she takes charge. She has grown so much this season with her communication and her IQ of the game.' Ogean tied the game at 2-2 for the Vikings with a two-out single in the bottom of the fifth. After Alyssa Cervantes doubled to lead off the sixth, Elias stepped to the plate with redemption in mind. Two innings earlier, Elias came up with runners on second and third with two outs and took a called third strike. Not this time. Elias worked the count to 2-2, then fouled off two more pitches before hitting a rope to the gap in right-center for an RBI double. She wasn't going down looking. 'I was like, 'No, you have to make some adjustments to help my team score this run,'' Elias said. 'It felt so good when I hit the ball.' Indeed, when Elias got to second base, she showed just how good it felt. She jumped and clapped with all of that high energy. 'Yeah, it was just seeing the team excited and pumped up that we can continue this journey,' Elias said. 'It doesn't matter the score. We'll go like it's game on.'

Los Angeles Times
16 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Shigeo Nagashima, Japanese baseball legend with ties to the Dodgers, dies at 89
Former Yomiuri Giants player and manager Shigeo Nagashima, one of the biggest stars of Nippon Professional Baseball, died early Tuesday morning of pneumonia at a Tokyo hospital, his former team said in a statement. He was 89. Nagashima played third base for the Giants from 1958 to 1974. Along with fellow superstar first baseman Sadaharu Oh, Nagashima led the team to 11 Japan Series titles, including nine straight from 1965 to 1973. He retired with a .305 batting average, 2,471 hits, 1,522 RBIs and 444 home runs. He was one of Japan's biggest celebrities, so much so that his 1965 marriage to Akiko Nishimura was nationally televised and was reportedly the country's most-watched program of the year. In 1975, Nagashima became the Giants' manager but was fired in 1980 after not leading the team to a Japan Series title. He returned as manager from 1993 to 2001, however, and led the Giants to championships in 1994 and 2000, with future MLB outfielder Hideki Matsui as his star player. Current Japanese superstar Shohei Ohtani took to Instagram on Tuesday to honor Nagashima. He posted three pictures of the two of them together, including two from the Dodgers' trip to Tokyo in February for two games against the Chicago Cubs. 'May your soul rest in peace,' Ohtani wrote in Japanese. Nagashima could have become the first Japanese MLB player, and he could have done so as a member of the Dodgers. In the spring of 1961, the Yomiuri Giants visited Dodgertown in Vero Beach, Fla., to train and play exhibition games. Then-Dodgers owner Walter O'Malley is said to have been so impressed with Nagashima — who in the previous season had won the second of what would be six straight batting crowns in Nippon's Central League — that he offered to buy Nagashima's contract from Giants owner Matsutaro Shoriki. Shoriki turned O'Malley down, and pitcher Masanori Murakami ended up becoming the first Japanese MLB player when he debuted with the San Francisco Giants in 1965. Chicago White Sox owner Bill Veeck also attempted to purchase Nagashima's contract in 1968 but also was thwarted by Shoriki. Nagashima maintained a close relationship with the Dodgers and the O'Malley family, particularly with Walter's son Peter, according to Walter O'Malley's website. The Dodgers posted a tribute to Nagashima on X, featuring a photo of the 1988 Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame inductee with legendary Dodgers manager Tom Lasorda. 'The Dodgers mourn the passing of Shigeo Nagashima, Japan's 'Mr. Baseball,' who died Tuesday in Tokyo at age 89,' the team wrote. 'Nagashima became a legend for the Yomiuri Giants, who have enjoyed a longstanding relationship with the Dodgers from as far back as the 1960s. We extend our heartfelt condolences to his family and generations of fans.' Nagashima's wife, Akiko, died in 2007. They had four children, including oldest son Kazushige, a former professional baseball player who played for the Yomiuri Giants and Yakult Swallows in Japan, as well as 53 games for the Class A-Advanced Vero Beach Dodgers minor league affiliate in 1992.