JOHNSTOWN —
Chris Brown has played baseball in eight countries, including England, Holland and Egypt, but the Rice University player/coach likes what he has found in Johnstown.
His Owls certainly made themselves at home with a 5-2 win over Western State of Colorado Saturday during an elimination game in the National Club Baseball Association’s Division II World Series at Point Stadium.
“I’ll tell you what, this is a great stadium and a neat place to play ball,” Brown said.
“In London most of the fields are like dirt and a snow fence in the outfield. I did play on artificial turf in Brussels, but I am the only guy on the team who has ever played on turf.”
The game was played in a very London-like steady rain that forced a delay with the Owls down 2-1 in the fifth inning.
“I think it changed the momentum of the game,” Western State coach Chris Martinez said. “We just seem to come out tight, without our normal focus, and the one bad inning cost us.”
Rice senior Joseph Cialone made Western State pay with a crushing double to center field that brought in two runs.
Cialone later scored as part of the four-run fifth for the Owls. Cialone credited a loose clubhouse during the delay as well as a personal comfort strategy in turning the game around.
“These guys were playing games in there, laughing it up,” Cialone said. “Everyone was loose and relaxed. I didn’t play any games. I spent most of my time drying my uniform. I wanted to be comfortable when I got to the plate. I guess it worked.”
Brown is happy to stay in Johnstown another day and from his international perspective, the baseball here is world class.
“Well I have played all over,” he said.
“There aren’t many I like more than this place. Believe it or not, Egypt has the most American-style ballparks and they play year-round, but this place and its history are right up there with the best, especially when you win 5-2. As for the rain, yeah it was like being back in the U.K., so yeah, I was right at home.”
Sports
Rain showers bring Rice to life in NCBA
- Sports
-
-
T-D Sports Podcast 2/7/12
Today's podcast focuses briefly on the plight of San Diego Chargers fans, who have watched Drew Brees and Eli Manning combine for three Super Bowl titles since 2007, before sports editor Chris Morelli and staffer Shawn Curtis bring up a few names of Pittsburgh sports lore who have gone on to success elsewhere.
-
High school basketball in brief
A closer look at Monday's boys and girls high school basketball games:
-
Johnstown Generals announce 2012 schedule
The Johnstown Generals will open their second season on the road at Cincinnati on March 3 but will play just three of their 10 remaining games away from Cambria County War Memorial according to a league schedule posted on the United Indoor Football League’s website at uiflfootball.com.
-
Crosby practices with Penguins
Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby practiced Monday but said he is no closer to returning from a concussion and neck injury that have sidelined him for most of the season.
-
Report: Haley will be Steelers’ next O-coordinator
The Steelers will hire former Kansas City Chiefs coach Todd Haley to be their offensive coordinator, according to an ESPN report.
-
Happy Valley readies itself for a new brand of football under Bill O’Brien
White placards with a set of rules were affixed to the glass doors of the players’ entrance at the Penn State football building about the time Bill O’Brien agreed to become the school’s next football coach.
-
Crosby practices with Penguins, no closer to return
Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby practiced today but said he is no closer to returning from a concussion and neck injury that have sidelined him for most of the season.
-
T-D Sports Podcast 2/6/12
Super Bowl XLVI is in the books, but not before sports editor Chris Morelli and staffer Shawn Curtis take one last swing at the big game. What went wrong for the Patriots? What went right for the Giants? Let Morelli and Curtis break that down for you.
-
Manning wins second Super Bowl MVP award
Eli Manning is elite, for sure. A king of comebacks, too. And far, far more than Peyton’s little brother now.
-
Giant Step: New York scores late to beat New England
Eli Manning is the big man in the NFL after one-upping Tom Brady and leading the New York Giants to a 21-17 victory over the New England Patriots in Sunday’s Super Bowl – in older brother Peyton’s house, at that.
- More Sports Headlines
-
T-D Sports Podcast 2/7/12







