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Former Little League Baseball World Series Player Returns to Williamsport to Play Professional Ball
By John Beauge
For The Harrisburg Patriot-News
WILLIAMSPORT (June 21, 2007) - The first thing that caught the eye
of Adam Sorgi when he got off the plane at the Williamsport Regional
Airport Monday night was a home of Little League Baseball banner.
"It was almost a surreal moment," said Sorgi, who 10 years ago
helped lead Mission Viejo, Calif., into the championship game of the
Little League World Series.
Baseball has brought the 22-year-old infielder back to Williamsport,
this time for his first professional game. He is the first series
participant to play professionally for Williamsport.
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Adam Sorgi played for the West Region
champion South Mission Viejo (Calif.) Little League in
the 1997 Little League Baseball World Series in
Williamsport, Pa.
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South Mission Viejo Little League lost
the World Series championship game, 5-4, to Linda Vista
LL from Guadalupe, Mexico.
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For the World Series, Sorgi hit .308 in
13 at-bats. He scored seven (7) runs on four hits,
including two (2) doubles. He walked six times (6) and
had zero (0) runs batted in.
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Defensively, he had five (5) putouts and
six (6) assists playing pitcher and shortstop. At
pitcher, he posted a 1-1 record with a 1.50 ERA in five
innings. He gave up two (2) runs on one hit (1), struck
out five (5) and walked one (1).
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In the championship game loss, Sorgi
faced two batters, giving up two runs on a walk and a
two-run home run. Latin America came back from a 4-1
deficit with four runs in the bottom of the sixth (and
final regulation) inning to win the game.
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Adam’s father, Ed, was an assistant
coach on the team managed by Jim Gattis
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Sorgi was selected in the 21st round of the recent amateur draft by
the Philadelphia Phillies, who assigned him to the Crosscutters in
the short-season New York-Penn League.
"It's a comforting feeling to be back where I played before," he
said.
Sorgi was late in arriving because he stayed at Stanford to graduate
Sunday with a bachelor's degree in communications.
The infielder, who bats left and throws right, had his physical
yesterday and expects to be on the active roster tonight when State
College visits Bowman Field to resume Tuesday's game, which was
suspended by rain in the second inning with the Crosscutters leading
2-0. A second game will follow.
Sorgi, who batted .375 at Stanford, describes himself as a contact
hitter.
"I'll hit doubles every now and then," he said. "I can pop a few out
but I'm just trying to get on base. I'll work the count a lot.
A college teammate, outfielder Michael Taylor, is also with the
Cutters.
"It's great having him here," Sorgi said. "He's a good friend of
mine."
Sorgi no longer pitches as he did in the Little League World Series.
"I'm not giving up any more home runs," he said with a laugh.
He was referring to the championship game in 1997 against Mexico.
Manager Jim Gattis moved Sorgi from short to the mound with two on
in the sixth with Mission Viejo leading 4-1.
He faced only two batters. The first hit a home run to tie the game
and the second walked. He later scored the winning running making
Sorgi the losing pitcher.
Sorgi recalls crying in the dugout in Lamade Stadium after the game.
"It was tough when I was 12," he said.
"Looking back on it, it was a great experience. Obviously, having
such tough luck at a young age taught me a lot of things."
The series is a "sweet memory" now because "the bitterness of the
loss has worn off," Sorgi said.
At his first opportunity, he said he plans to visit the Little
League complex in South Williamsport.
Since he played there, a second field has been added and other
improvements made.
- reprinted with permission of the Harrisburg, (Pa.) Patriot-News
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Adam Sorgi, pictured first on the left in
the front row, participated in the 1997 Little League
Baseball World Series representing the West Region champions
from South Mission Viejo (Calif.) Little League. That year,
South Mission Viejo Little League won the United States
championship, but lost the World Series championship game,
5-4, to Linda Vista Little League from Guadalupe, Mexico.
Mr. Sorgi, a graduate of Stanford University, was the losing
pitcher in that game. In the 2007 amateur baseball draft,
Mr. Sorgi was selected by the Philadelphia Phillies and
assigned to the organization’s single A short-season
affiliate Williamsport Crosscutters of the New York-Penn
League. He is believed to be the first Little League
Baseball World Series participant to play professional
baseball for a team based in Williamsport. |
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