Following the 2023 Toronto Maple Leafs baseball season.


Friday, June 29, 2018

Maple Leafs' Mid-Season Leaderboard


The 2018 IBL season is shaping up to be the most competitive in years. At the midway point of the season, four ballclubs are separated at the top of the IBL standings by just two games.

The Toronto Maple Leafs currently sit in 4th place with a 10-8 record.

With a combination of returning stars and new impact players, the Leafs have been playing a high-scoring game, and the stats reflect that. Toronto leads or is near the top of most key offensive stats so far.


                                                                                                                      AS OF JUNE 29, 2018


On the mound, the Leafs are less dominant, sitting mid-table in most key pitching stats.


                                                                                                                      AS OF JUNE 29, 2018


Here is the Leafs' mid-season leaderboard.


BATTING LEADERS


JUSTIN MARRA


BATTING AVG.
.358  D. MARRA
.355  J. MARRA
.354  G. TAKAMATSU
.339  M. REEVES
.333  G. TAMANE

HOME RUNS
6  J. MARRA
4  M. REEVES
3  M. KNECHT
3  J. SOLAZZO
1  SIX PLAYERS TIED

RBIs
21  J. MARRA
18  J. SOLAZZO
15  M. REEVES
11  M. KNECHT
10  D. TOPOLIE

ON BASE PERCENTAGE
.485  D. MARRA
.469  G. TAMANE
.438  M. REEVES
.419  J. MARRA
.404  G. TAKAMATSU

STOLEN BASES
5  M. KNECHT
5  D. MARRA
4  G. CARRINGTON
2  THREE PLAYERS TIED



PITCHING LEADERS


ZACH SLOAN


WINS
5  Z. SLOAN
2  P. DE LOS SANTOS
1  J. CICATELLO
1  M. DESKA
1  R. PAGE

ERA (STARTERS)
0.00  J. CICATELLO
3.55  Z. SLOAN
4.88  P. DE LOS SANTOS

ERA (RELIEVERS)
0.00  N. DASILVA
0.00  D. RICHARDSON
1.93  A. MARRA

STRIKEOUTS
36  Z. SLOAN
27  P. DE LOS SANTOS
16  M. DESKA
11  D. RICHARDSON
  9  R. PAGE
  9  A. SIMONETTI



Lost by a Whisker


Game 22: Toronto Maple Leafs at Barrie Baycats, June 28, 2018

Baycats win 1-0


                                                                                                                                                                               FILE PHOTO



The summer is heating up, but Toronto Maple Leaf bats remained cool last night at Coates Stadium in Barrie.

Baycats pitching limited the Leafs to just three hits. For their part, Leafs pitchers held Barrie hitters to six hits. The difference on the night was just one run that the home side scored in the third inning.

R.J. Page pitched four innings for Toronto and got hung with the loss despite giving up just the one run. He was spelled by Dustin Richardson, Jackson Jones and Adam Marra, who saw out the final four innings of work.

Other than a double by Grant Tamane, the Leafs did not give us much to write home about.


Toronto 0-3-1
Barrie 1-6-0

W - Garces (3-0, 0.00)
L - Page (1-3, 6.40)
S - Arias (1)


BOXSCORE


The 10-8 Leafs remain a couple of games behind Kitchener in the IBL standings.  Their next stop on this road trip will be at the newly-renovated Bernie Arbour Stadium on Saturday, June 30, when they will take on the Hamilton Cardinals.

Thursday, June 28, 2018

Many Hats, One Goal: An Interview with Damon Topolie


The dugout gaze.  London, June 8, 2018.



A recent ESPN column declared that “parts of baseball are disappearing before our very eyes”.

Any grump would happily tell you that every play of the game is becoming dominated -- ruined even! -- by analytics and probabilities, guiding MLB managers towards risk-averse decision-making. Aggression on the basepaths is declining in favour of waiting for the home run. As a result, stolen bases and pitchouts are trending downwards, same with sacrifice bunts and the hit and run. 

All of these features of the game we grew up with are becoming rarities. Another rarity is the player-manager.

The Miami Marlins made Martin Prado their player-manager as a one-off for their final game of the 2016 season. The last full-time player-manager in MLB was Pete Rose from 1984 to 1986.

Player-managers have appeared throughout the game’s history, a list that includes names such as Connie Mack, John McGraw, Ty Cobb, Joe Torre and Frank Robinson. An interesting combination of mind and muscle, this dual role has vanished from the major league game.

With players reduced to data, the modern manager can sit back and let a ballgame play itself out like computer chess. The only on-field participation expected of managers these days is delivering lineup cards and changing pitchers.

In the Intercounty Baseball League, the Toronto Maple Leafs have been bucking this trend for years.

Damon Topolie is a bona fide player-manager of the old school, and he relishes the role. He stepped into the position in 2015, after the Leafs parted ways with manager Perry Mader.

The 42-year-old wears many hats. He works for a tech company based out of Vaughan, but baseball is very much a part of his daily life. He began his IBL playing career with the Stratford Hillers in 1995, and joined the Leafs in 1998. When he is not running the show at Christie Pits, Topolie is the catching coordinator for the Ontario Blue Jays baseball development organization. He also provides a lot of private lessons.

“Most of our current players have been coached by me at one time or another,” he says, and immediately rattles off half of the Leafs' current roster.

Asked if he still feels like “one of the guys”, he doesn’t agree. He prefers to see himself as a manager who is lucky enough to still be able to play.

“I have some baseball equipment that is older than some of the players on the team.”

While his playing time has been reduced, his output remains solid. Batting .263 in 38 plate appearances, he has 10 RBIs, including a home run.


A home run swing.  Burlington, May 26, 2018.


Topolie no longer sees himself as the kind of alpha dog team leader that can rally a club, but believes that the Leafs have found those types of players. A look at the league standings would indicate that this is the case. As mid-season approaches, the Leafs have been off to one of their best starts in years with a 10-7 record, just two games behind the Kitchener Panthers.

“The team chemistry has changed,” he says. “Some of the new players have really helped the team bond quickly.”

The ballclub that has been put together for 2018 reflects the longtime partnership that Topolie has forged with Jack Dominico, who is marking his fiftieth year as team owner.

“It’s a combined effort. Jack has been around for 50 years so I count on his opinion, but we both have a solid network of people that we know in the game.” In that sense, you could add a general manager’s hat to Topolie’s collection.

Despite all the responsibilities of running the team, from building the roster, to coaching, to literally hauling equipment around, Topolie still has the greatest zest for the game itself.

“I love being on the field, especially when I hear the camaraderie in the dugout – guys talking the game and making in-game adjustments. That has become a lost art in the analytics age,” he says, noting that he likes to see the ex-pros helping the younger college guys understand the game. He wants to see more of that.

“I had some awesome veterans who really helped mentor me when I started in this league.”

Topolie is currently fourth all-time in hits in the IBL. He began the season with 750 and would like to break the record of 769 held by Arden Eddie.

At the end of the season, however, it’s all about bringing the Jack and Lynne Dominico Trophy back to its ancestral home, Christie Pits.  Topolie is a veteran of three championship-winning Leafs teams (1999, 2002 and 2007), but winning again would mean the world to him, and stand as the culmination of one man’s unique effort as a player, manager and team-builder.


The zest is still there.  Christie Pits, May 6, 2018

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Another Washout




Tonight's scheduled game between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Barrie Baycats has been called off due to weather.

That makes it three games in a row that will have to be rescheduled. 

Toronto's next scheduled game is tomorrow night, June 28th at Coates Stadium, against the Barrie Baycats.

Mike Reeves Named IBL Batter of the Week




In a week that saw much of the Toronto Maple Leafs' schedule rained out, Mike Reeves' explosive two-game performance earned him the IBL Batter of the Week honour.

Reeves hit a blistering .555 in two games, with a home run, two doubles and four RBIs.

A leader behind the plate, the newcomer is one of the Leafs' hottest hitters. His .356 average on the season, four homers and 15 ribbies put him among the Leafs' top three in each category.

Monday, June 25, 2018

Damp Interlude


Game 18: Toronto Maple Leafs vs Hamilton Cardinals at Welland Stadium, June 22, 2018

Cardinals win 8-4 (in seven innings)





The tarps were out.

A few dozen remaining fans clustered on the spacious, covered concourse of Welland Stadium.

The Hamilton Cardinals huddled in their dugout, awaiting the inevitable.

Outside the visitors' dugout, Dan and Justin Marra worked on pitching motions.

Out in the murk, Marek Deska got in some cardio, running the outfield from foul pole to foul pole. He's the blurry figure above.

Other members of the Toronto Maple Leafs trudged to the clubhouse to get out of the rain. What began as a drizzle in the third inning had become heavier and steadier as Friday night wore on.

As ten o'clock rolled around, everyone waited.

Despite the rain, the field looked like it had been holding up well. No puddles on the basepaths, no pitchers sliding off the mound, no one visibly complaining about conditions. That did not stop the umpires from abruptly pulling the plug at the end of the seventh inning. After a brief examination of the dirt in and around the batter's box, they decided that the game should not continue. Toronto manager Damon Topolie emerged to dispute the hasty termination of the contest. After some discussion, the stadium crew pulled out the tarps and the umps vanished into their dressing room.

During the delay, both clubs' managers paid them visits. Whatever conferences took place were not drawn out. By a quarter after ten, the end of the game was confirmed and Hamilton made off with an 8-4 victory.

The game had started well for the Leafs. 

Shortstop Adam Odd and leftfielder Greg Carrington each drove in a run in the top of the second to hand Deska an early 2-0 lead. Deska opened the game by pitching two perfect innings.

Toronto doubled its lead in the top of the third. First baseman Mike Reeves led off with a double off the right field wall. He moved to third on a single by second baseman Dan Marra, who went on to steal second. Reeves then scored on a groundout by catcher Justin Marra. Centerfielder Marcus Knecht followed with a double that drove in Dan Marra. 4-0 Leafs midway through the third.

The Cardinals powered back to tie the game in the bottom of the third. A leadoff triple by Joel Brophy got them started. Brophy then dashed home after one pitch to the next batter, when Justin Marra made an errant throw back to the mound and it got away from Deska. The Cards went on to rack up four runs off of five hits in the inning, making it a 4-4 game.

As the weather got sloppy, so did the Leafs. Their Achilles heel -- errors -- hit them hard in the bottom of the fifth. They committed three errors, which helped Hamilton put three more runs on the board for a 7-4 lead.

After grinding through six innings, Deska turned the ball over to Jackson Jones, who gave up one more run to the Redbirds. With the score 8-4 through seven innings, the umpires decided that neither the field nor the weather would improve, and the game was called. After some disputes and closed-door discussions, the decision was confirmed and Hamilton awarded the rain-shortened victory.

The game turned out to be the only one that the Leafs would play this past weekend. Games against Burlington on Saturday and Kitchener yesterday were both rained out.


Toronto 4-8-4
Hamilton 8-8-2
(in seven innings)

W - Johnson-Battilana (1-0, 3.85)
L - Deska (1-2, 5.64)
S - Wood (1)


BOXSCORE


Most of the IBL schedule ended up getting washed away this weekend. The Leafs are currently in 4th place in the IBL standings with a 10-7 record, 2 games behind the Kitchener Panthers. Their next scheduled game is this Wednesday night at Christie Pits against the Barrie Baycats.








































Friday, June 22, 2018

Schedule Update: Goin' Down the Road


                                                                                                                                                      PHOTO: @HamCardinalsIBL



Tonight's scheduled game between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Hamilton Cardinals has been relocated to Welland Stadium.

The Cardinals have not yet played a game at Bernie Arbour Stadium this season.  The field was completely resurfaced earlier this year, and as it remains off limits to baseball for a few more sleeps, the Hamiltonians will "host" the Torontonians down the road in Welland this evening. First pitch is at 7:30.

Thursday, June 21, 2018

Return of the Stopper


Game 17: Toronto Maple Leafs at Brantford Red Sox, June 20, 2018

Leafs win 9-0





The stopper is back.

Justin Cicatello (above) made his first appearance for the Toronto Maple Leafs last night at Arnold Anderson Stadium. "Cic" shut down the Brantford Red Sox and helped the Leafs snap a two-game mini-slump with a 9-0 win.

It was Toronto's most dominant performance this season.

Cicatello set the tone, pitching six shutout innings while scattering six hits, walking one, and striking out six. He was backed up by Zach Sloan, who came in to pitch a scoreless seventh after an abbreviated start last Sunday. Newcomer Dustin Richardson finished off the Sox by pitching a pair of scoreless innings to end the game. Toronto's hurlers combined for 11 strikeouts on the night.

As stifling as the Leafs were on the mound, they were irresistibly thunderous at the plate.

Cicatello had not yet thrown a pitch before second baseman Grant Tamane went on an adventure around the bases. He led off the first inning with a grounder that was airmailed to first, putting him nicely on second. Catcher Mike Reeves drove him in with his first of four hits on the night to give the Leafs a 1-0 lead after a half inning of play.

After Brantford starter Matt Martinow loaded the bases in the top of the second, Reeves returned to the plate and blasted a grand slam over the fence in right-center. 5-0 Leafs through two.

It was a beautiful, windless night in Brantford and Cicatello whirled through the middle innings effortlessly. He departed with the five run lead intact after six innings, having thrown 64 pitches in his season debut.

Despite the urgings of the stadium announcers, the local crowd grew more and more quiet as the game went on. The eighth inning prompted most of them to the exits. DH Garrett Takamatsu stepped up to the plate against reliever Matt Betts, and the Leaf rookie absolutely demolished a pitch for his first home run of the season.  Takamatsu smashed the ball over the left field chain-link monster, beyond the house behind it, and possibly into the Grand River. We have no way of knowing where it finally landed.





Betts remained in the game, and put a couple of Leafs runners on base, bringing centerfielder Connor Lewis to the plate. Lewis joined the home run derby, crushing a three-run doorslammer. That was also Lewis' first homer of the season and made it a 9-0 game in favour of the visitors.

The Sox and their fans went gently into that good night, and the Leafs' three-city road trip got off to a booming start.


Toronto 9-14-0
Brantford 0-6-3

W - Cicatello (1-0, 0.00)
L - Martinow (0-2, 5.87)


BOXSCORE


The Leafs' tenth win of the season moves them into a tie for second place in the IBL standings, 2 games behind the Kitchener Panthers. This dirty road trip continues at a new venue on Friday night, June 22nd. With Hamilton still awaiting the go-ahead for their newly planted field, they will play a "home game" against the Leafs at Welland Stadium.