Baseball

Friday, August 22, 2008

The U.S. baseball team, made up of minor leaguers, was eventually trounced, 10-2, by defending gold medalist Cuba in a semifinal Friday, a close game blown open with two three-run home runs in the eighth inning.

But even in that instance, Phillies catching prospect Lou Marson gave you something to like.

When Cuba’s Alexei Bell stood at home plate for almost five seconds watching his blast soar over the leftfield wall, Marson got up in his face and moved him along.

"I told him to get running," Marson said. "I told him some other things, too."

Marson and another Phillies prospect, Jason Donald, were one and two for on-base percentage among U.S. Olympians. Both hit around .300, both delivered big hits in the crunch. And both ended up playing more than expected because of injuries.

Marson and the Americans have one more game in Beijing for the bronze medal, in the last Olympic baseball tournament, before heading back home.

For Marson, that likely means a trip back to Double A Reading.

Look for more on Lou Marson in Saturday's Daily News.

Posted by Sam Donnellon @ 1:12 PM  Permalink | File Under: Baseball | 7 comments
About Sam Donnellon and Marcus Hayes

SAM DONNELLON's career began in Biddeford, Me., in 1981, and has included stops in Wilkes-Barre, Norfolk, and New York, where he worked as a national writer for the short-lived but highly acclaimed National Sports Daily. He has received state and national awards at each stop and since joining the Daily News in 1992 has been honored by the Associated Press Sports Editors, the National Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association, the National Association of Black Journalists, the Associated Press Managing Editors of Pennsylvania and the Keystone Awards. He and his wife have raised three fine children, none of whom are even the least bit impressed with the above. Sam is veteran of Olympics coverage for the Daily News, including the Games in Sydney and Turin, among others.

MARCUS HAYES grew up on a small farm outside of Hermon, NY., a small town near the Canadian border about the size of Reading Terminal Market. In high school he played three varsity sports and aspired to be faster, or more skilled, or taller. Having failed in those aspirations and seeking a warmer climate, Marcus attended Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and eventually graduated with a degree in Magazine Writing. He also earned a degree in English from the College of Arts and Sciences. To date he has written for no magazines. His English is spotty at best. Upon graduation in 1990, with Jim Boeheim's talent-leaden SU basketball teams having won no titles, Marcus spent 4½ years working for the now-absorbed Syracuse Herald-Journal covering high school sports, local small college sports and non-revenue sports at SU. Marcus joined the Daily News as a feature story writer in 1995. Among other assignments he has covered the Eagles and Phillies beats for most of his tenure. Still, the paper soldiers on. This will be his first Olympics assignment for the Daily News.