2011 Little League World Series

Summary

The 2011 Little League World Series took place in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania, between August 18 and 28.[1] Eight teams from the United States and eight from elsewhere in the world competed in the 65th edition of this tournament. Ocean View Little League of Huntington Beach, California, defeated Hamamatsu Minami Little League of Hamamatsu City, Japan, in the championship game. Nick Pratto hit an RBI single to clinch the title for Ocean View.

2011 Little League World Series
Tournament details
DatesAugust 18–August 28
Teams16
Final positions
ChampionsOcean View Little League
United States Huntington Beach, California
Runner-upHamamatsu Minami Little League
Shizuoka Prefecture Hamamatsu City, Shizuoka, Japan
← 2010
2012 →

Tournament changes edit

On June 16, 2011, Little League announced that it was modifying the double-elimination format that was first used in the previous year's tournament. The format of four pools consisting of four teams in each pool, a format that had been used since the tournament expanded to 16 teams in 2001, was eliminated. Instead, the eight teams from the United States were placed into one bracket, and the eight International teams into another bracket. The tournament remained double-elimination until the United States and International championship games, where it became single-elimination.[2]

Little League International renewed deals with uniform suppliers Russell Athletic and New Era Caps. As part of the deal, regions had new color schemes this year.[3][4]

Teams edit

United States International
  Bowling Green, Kentucky
Great Lakes Region
Warren Little League
  Seoul, South Korea
Asia-Pacific Region
South Seoul Little League
  Clinton County, Pennsylvania
Mid-Atlantic Region
Keystone Little League
  Vancouver, British Columbia
  Canada Region
Little Mountain Little League
  Kearney, Nebraska
Midwest Region
Kearney Little League
  Manati, Puerto Rico
Caribbean Region
Jose E. Rodriguez Little League
  Cumberland, Rhode Island
New England Region
Cumberland American Little League
  Amsterdam, Netherlands
Europe Region
Amsterdam Little League
  Billings, Montana
Northwest Region
Big Sky Little League
  Kawaguchi, Saitama
  Japan Region
Kawaguchi Little League
  Peachtree City, Georgia
Southeast Region
Peachtree City Little League
  Maracaibo, Venezuela
Latin America Region
Coquivacoa Little League
  Lake Charles, Louisiana
Southwest Region
Lake Charles Little League
  Tijuana, Baja California
  Mexico Region
Munciapal De Tijuana Little League
  Huntington Beach, California
West Region
Ocean View Little League
  Dhahran, Saudi Arabia[a]
Middle East-Africa Region
Arabian American Little League
  • Due to complicated relations with the People's Republic of Korea, the Republic of Korea—commonly known as South Korea—is recognized by the name South Korea by a majority of international organizations, including Little League Baseball. For more information, see Cross-Strait relations. LLWS records and news accounts may use Republic of Korea, South Korea, or South Korea to refer to the same entity.
  • Of the 16 teams, 11 made their first LLWS appearance. Most notable among these was the Keystone Little League, based less than 30 miles (48 km) from Little League headquarters. The last LLWS to feature a team from the immediate Williamsport area was the 1969 edition.[5] Keystone's game on August 19 against the North Oldham Little League set an attendance record for Howard J. Lamade Stadium, at 41,848.[6] The record stood until it was broken during the 2015 event.
  • The Big Sky Little League team from Billings was the first team from Montana to win a regional and advance to the Little League World Series. They compiled a 3–1 record at the tournament before falling to the eventual tournament champions from Huntington Beach, California. Montana was scheduled to play the team from Tijuana, Mexico in the third place game but it was canceled due to the threat of Hurricane Irene[7] in the latter stages of the tournament.

Results edit

United States bracket edit

Upper round 1Upper round 2Upper finalFinal
August 18 – Game 2
  Montana6
August 21 – Game 14
  South Dakota4
  Montana3
August 18 – Game 4
  Louisiana1
  Georgia0
August 24 – Game 24 (F/7)
  Louisiana2
  Montana1
August 19 – Game 6
  California0
  Rhode Island0
August 21 – Game 15 (F/4)
  California11
  California10
August 19 – Game 7
  Kentucky0
  Kentucky1August 27 – U.S. championship
  Pennsylvania0  Montana2
  California11
Lower round 1Lower round 2Lower round 3Lower final
August 22 – Game 18 (F/9)
August 20 – Game 10  Kentucky5August 25 – Game 26
  South Dakota3  Georgia8August 23 – Game 22  California2
  Georgia6  Georgia5  Pennsylvania0
August 22 – Game 20 (F/4)  Pennsylvania7
August 20 – Game 12  Pennsylvania10
  Rhode Island0  Louisiana0
  Pennsylvania2

International bracket edit

Upper round 1Upper round 2Upper finalFinal
August 18 – Game 1
  Chinese Taipei0
August 21 – Game 13 (F/7)
  Mexico3
  Mexico3
August 18 – Game 3 (F/4)
  Japan2
  Aruba1
August 24 – Game 23 (F/9)
  Japan12
  Mexico2
August 19 – Game 5
  Venezuela1
  Saudi Arabia5
August 21 – Game 16
  Canada6
  Canada0
August 19 – Game 8
  Venezuela8
  Netherlands1August 27 – Intl. Championship
  Venezuela6  Mexico2
  Japan5
Lower round 1Lower round 2Lower round 3Lower final
August 22 – Game 17
August 20 – Game 9 (F/4)  Canada5August 25 – Game 25
  Chinese Taipei20  Chinese Taipei3August 23 – Game 21  Venezuela6
  Aruba3  Canada0  Japan9
August 22 – Game 19  Japan4
August 20 – Game 11  Japan13
  Saudi Arabia4  Saudi Arabia4
  Netherlands2

Crossover games edit

Teams that lost their first two games played a crossover game against a team from the other side of the bracket that also lost its first two games. These games were labeled Game A and Game B. This provided teams who were already eliminated the opportunity to play a third game.

 
Game A
 
  
 
August 22 – Lamade Stadium
 
 
  Aruba5
 
 
  South Dakota0
 
 
Game B
 
  
 
August 23 – Lamade Stadium
 
 
  Netherlands7
 
 
  Rhode Island8
 

World Championship edit

 
Little League World Championship
 
  
 
August 28 – Lamade Stadium
 
 
  California2
 
 
  Japan1
 
2011 Little League World Series Champions
   
Ocean View Little League
Huntington Beach, California

The consolation game between Montana and Mexico was cancelled due to the expected arrival of Hurricane Irene.[8]

Middle East-Africa qualification edit

Kampala, Uganda defeated Dhahran, Saudi Arabia in the Middle East-Africa Region Final but the Ugandan team was denied visas by the State Department.[9] Reportedly, the visas were denied because some players provided false information, specifically related to their ages.[10][11] The runner-up, Saudi Arabia, was invited to the Little League World Series in their spot.[12]

Champions path edit

The Ocean View Little League won 20 games and lost 1 game to reach the Little League World Series. Overall, their record was 25–2. Their two losses came against Rancho Mission Viejo LL (from California),[13] and Billings Big Sky LL (from Montana).[14]

Round Opposition Result
District 62
Winner's Bracket Quarterfinals   Costa Mesa National LL 6-0
Winner's Bracket Semifinals   Costa Mesa American LL 19-0
Winner's Bracket Final   Huntington Valley LL 7-1
District 62 Championship   Huntington Valley LL 13-3
Section 10
Game 1   Aliso Viejo LL 5–4
Game 2   Rancho Mission Viejo LL 2–1
Game 3   Rancho Mission Viejo LL 5–6 (8 inn.)
Section 10 Championship   Rancho Mission Viejo LL 3–1
South California Divisional
Winner's Bracket Semifinals   Fontana Community LL 13-2 (4 inn.)
Winner's Bracket Finals   Canyon Springs LL 5–1
South Sub-Divisional Championship   Park View LL 5–4
South Championship   Encino LL 12–1 (4 inn.)
South Championship   Encino LL 11–1
West Regional
Group Stage   Red Bluff LL 10–2
Group Stage   Central East Maui LL 3–0
Group Stage   Rio Rico LL 10–0 (4 inn.)
Group Stage   Silverado LL 11–3
Semifinals   Washington LL 5–0
West Region Championship   Red Bluff LL 2–1

Notable players edit

Major League Baseball edit

Nick Pratto (Huntington Beach, California) - Kansas City Royals - Infielder

Hagen Danner (Huntington Beach, California) - Toronto Blue Jays - Pitcher

Yonny Hernández (Maracaibo, Venezuela) - Los Angeles Dodgers - Infielder

National Football League edit

Jake Fromm (Warner Robins, Georgia) - Washington Commanders - Quarterback

References edit

  1. ^ Communications Division (November 12, 2010). "Dates and Sites for 2011 Little League World Series Tournaments Announced". Littleleagueonline.org. Archived from the original on March 5, 2011. Retrieved February 20, 2011.
  2. ^ Communications Division (June 16, 2011). "2011 Little League Baseball World Series Schedule Announced". Little League. Archived from the original on June 20, 2011. Retrieved June 27, 2011.
  3. ^ "Russell Athletic Renews Agreement with Little League Baseball and Softball". Archived from the original on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2011-07-03.
  4. ^ "Little League Baseball and Softball Extends Partnership with New Era Cap". Archived from the original on 2011-09-18. Retrieved 2011-07-03.
  5. ^ "Keystone Little League Earns Berth in Little League Baseball World Series as Mid-Atlantic Region Champion" (Press release). Little League Baseball. August 15, 2011. Archived from the original on October 12, 2012. Retrieved August 19, 2011.
  6. ^ "Central Pa. team shut down by Kentucky". The Philadelphia Inquirer. AP. August 20, 2011. p. E05. Retrieved August 21, 2018 – via newspapers.com.
  7. ^ Communications Division (August 26, 2011). "Little League Baseball World Series Championship Game Moved Up to Noon on Sunday". Little League. Retrieved August 27, 2011.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ Communications Division (August 26, 2011). "Little League Baseball World Series Championship Game Moved Up to Noon on Sunday". Little League. Retrieved August 27, 2011.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ Communications Division (July 22, 2011). "Visa Applications Denied for Little League Team from Uganda". Little League. Archived from the original on 2012-10-12. Retrieved July 30, 2011.
  10. ^ "Uganda investigating age of youth baseball team denied US visas for Little League". The Washington Post. Associated Press. July 30, 2011. Retrieved July 30, 2011.[dead link] Dead link as of August 15, 2011
  11. ^ Zinser, Lynn (July 29, 2011). "No Little League World Series for Ugandan Team". The New York Times. Retrieved July 31, 2011.
  12. ^ Communications Division. "Arabian-American Little League of Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, to Receive Berth in Little League Baseball World Series". Little League. Archived from the original on October 12, 2012. Retrieved August 2, 2011.
  13. ^ "Southern California Divisional Tournament". Unpage.com. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved August 28, 2011.
  14. ^ "West Region Tournament". Unpage.com. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved August 28, 2011.

External links edit

  • 2011 official results via Wayback Machine
  • 2011 tournament bracket via Wayback Machine