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词条 2006 Little League World Series
释义

  1. Teams

  2. Results

     Pool play  United States  International  Elimination round 

  3. Notable players

  4. Champion's path

  5. Mid-Island incident

  6. See also

  7. References

  8. External links

{{Infobox Little League World Series
|Year=2006
|image=Little_League_World_Series_official_logo_2006.jpg
|Start_date=August 18
|End_date=August 28
|Teams_participating=16
|Champion=Northern Little League
{{flagicon|USA}}{{flagicon|Georgia (U.S. state)}} Columbus, Georgia
|Runnerup=Kawaguchi City Little League
{{flagicon|JPN}} Kawaguchi, Saitama, Japan
| prevseason_year={{llwsy|2005}}
| nextseason_year={{llwsy|2007}}
}}

The {{Baseball year|2006}} Little League World Series, held in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania, took place between August 18 and August 28, one day later than originally scheduled. Inclement weather forced the cancellation of the third-place game on August 27 and the postponement of the championship game also scheduled for that date. The Northern Little League of Columbus, Georgia, defeated Kawaguchi City Little League of Kawaguchi, Japan, in the championship game of the 60th Little League World Series.

The event was broadcast in the United States on ABC Sports, ESPN and ESPN2 in both analog and high-definition. The U.S. Championship game was the last ABC Sports telecast. Games were held in the two stadiums located at Little League headquarters in South Williamsport:

  • Howard J. Lamade Stadium — the main stadium, opened in 1959, with seating for 10,000 in the stands and hillside terrace seating for up to 30,000 more
  • Little League Volunteer Stadium — a newer facility, opened in 2001, that seats slightly over 5,000, primarily in the stands

Teams

{{Main article|Qualification for the 2006 Little League World Series}}

Between five and twelve teams take part in 16 regional qualification tournaments, which vary in format depending on region. In the United States, the qualification tournaments are in the same format as the Little League World Series itself: a round-robin tournament followed by an elimination round to determine the regional champion.

Pool A Pool B Pool C Pool D
New York}} Staten Island, New York
Mid-Atlantic Region
Mid-Island Little League
New Hampshire}} Portsmouth, New Hampshire
New England Region
Portsmouth Little League
MNP}} Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands
Pacific Region
Saipan Little League
Tamaulipas}} Matamoros, Tamaulipas
{{flagicon|MEX}} Mexico Region
Matamoros Little League
Illinois}} Lemont, Illinois
Great Lakes Region
Lemont Little League
Oregon}} Beaverton, Oregon
Northwest Region
Murrayhill Little League
VEN}} Barquisimeto, Venezuela
Latin America Region
Cardenales Little League
JPN}} {{flagicon|Saitama}} Kawaguchi, Saitama
Asia Region
Kawaguchi City Little League
Arizona}} Phoenix, Arizona
West Region
Ahwatukee American Little League
Missouri}} Columbia, Missouri
Midwest Region
Daniel Boone National Little League
British Columbia}} Surrey, British Columbia
{{flagicon|CAN}} Canada Region
Whalley Little League
RUS}} Moscow, Russia
Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) Region
Brateevo Little League
Georgia (U.S. state)}} Columbus, Georgia
Southeast Region
Northern Little League
Louisiana|2006}} Lake Charles, Louisiana
Southwest Region
South Lake Charles Little League
KSA}} Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
Transatlantic Region
Arabian-American Little League
Curaçao}} Willemstad, Curaçao
Caribbean Region
Pabao Little League

Results

{{Main article|Results of the 2006 Little League World Series}}

Pool play

The top two teams in each pool moved on to their respective semifinals. The winners of each met on August 27 to play for the Little League World Championship. Teams marked in green qualified to the knockout stage. Ties are broken based on records in head-to-head competition among tied teams. If a clear winner cannot be determined from head-to-head results, the tie is broken by calculating the ratio of runs allowed to defensive innings played for all teams involved in the tie. The team with the lowest runs-per-defensive-inning ratio advances.

United States

Pool A
Rank Region Record Runs Allowed Run Ratio
1Illinois}} Great Lakes 2-1 1 0.056
2Georgia (U.S. state)}} Southeast 2–1 5 0.263
3Arizona}} West 2–1 5 0.278
4New York}} Mid-Atlantic 0–3 8 0.421
  • Great Lakes wins pool based on defensive run ratio. Southeast is the runner-up based on win against West.
Pool B
Rank Region Record Runs Allowed Run Ratio
1New Hampshire}} New England 2–1 15 0.833
2Oregon}} Northwest 2–1 8 0.444
3Missouri}} Midwest 1–2 6 0.381
4Louisiana|variant=2006}} Southwest 1–2 14 0.737
  • New England wins Pool B based on head-to-head tiebreaker.

All times US EDT

PoolAwayScoreHomeScoreTime (Venue)
August 18
B{{flagicon|New Hampshire}} New England6{{flagicon|Oregon}} Northwest14:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
B{{flagicon|Louisiana|variant=2006}} Southwest1 (F/9){{flagicon|Missouri}} Midwest08:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
August 19
A{{flagicon|New York}} Mid-Atlantic2{{flagicon|Georgia (U.S. state)}} Southeast3 (F/7)1:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
A{{flagicon|Arizona}} West1{{flagicon|Illinois}} Great Lakes03:00 pm (Volunteer Stadium)
August 20
B{{flagicon|New Hampshire}} New England5{{flagicon|Missouri}} Midwest14Noon (Volunteer Stadium)
A{{flagicon|Georgia (U.S. state)}} Southeast4{{flagicon|Arizona}} West11:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
B{{flagicon|Louisiana|variant=2006}} Southwest1{{flagicon|Oregon}} Northwest93:00 pm (Volunteer Stadium)
A{{flagicon|New York}} Mid-Atlantic0{{flagicon|Illinois}} Great Lakes18:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
August 21
B{{flagicon|Louisiana|variant=2006}} Southwest0{{flagicon|New Hampshire}} New England53:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
B{{flagicon|Oregon}} Northwest2{{flagicon|Missouri}} Midwest18:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
August 22
A{{flagicon|Arizona}} West4{{flagicon|New York}} Mid-Atlantic13:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
A{{flagicon|Georgia (U.S. state)}} Southeast0{{flagicon|Illinois}} Great Lakes28:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
  • The New England vs. Midwest game was postponed due to a rain delay and was played on August 20.

International

Pool C
Rank Region Record Runs Allowed Run Ratio
1VEN}} Latin America 3–0 2 0.136
2SAU}} Transatlantic 2–1 2 0.100
3CAN}} Canada 1–2 9 0.500
4MNP}} Pacific 0–3 12 0.600
Pool D
Rank Region Record Runs Allowed Run Ratio
1JPN}} Asia 3–0 3 0.176
2MEX}} Mexico 2–1 9 0.529
3CUR}} Caribbean 1–2 10 0.556
4RUS}} EMEA 0–3 30 1.875

All times US EDT

PoolAwayScoreHomeScoreTime (Venue)
August 18
C{{flagicon|SAU}} Transatlantic5{{flagicon|CAN}} Canada06:00 pm (Volunteer Stadium)
August 19
D{{flagicon|RUS}} EMEA0{{flagicon|JPN}} Asia*11 (F/5)11:00 am (Lamade Stadium)
D{{flagicon|CUR}} Caribbean2{{flagicon|MEX}} Mexico34:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
C{{flagicon|MNP}} Pacific0{{flagicon|VEN}} Latin America1 (F/8)6:00 pm (Volunteer Stadium)
August 20
C{{flagicon|MNP}} Pacific1{{flagicon|SAU}} Transatlantic95:00 pm (Lamade Stadium)
D{{flagicon|RUS}} EMEA1{{flagicon|MEX}} Mexico11 (F/5)7:00 pm (Volunteer Stadium)
August 21
D{{flagicon|RUS}} EMEA0{{flagicon|CUR}} Caribbean811:00 am (Lamade Stadium)
D{{flagicon|JPN}} Asia6{{flagicon|MEX}} Mexico11:00 pm (Volunteer Stadium)
C{{flagicon|CAN}} Canada2{{flagicon|VEN}} Latin America36:00 pm (Volunteer Stadium)
August 22
D{{flagicon|JPN}} Asia7{{flagicon|CUR}} Caribbean211:00 am (Lamade Stadium)
C{{flagicon|CAN}} Canada2{{flagicon|MNP}} Pacific11:00 pm (Volunteer Stadium)
C{{flagicon|SAU}} Transatlantic0{{flagicon|VEN}} Latin America1 (F/8)6:00 pm (Volunteer Stadium)
  • Asterisk () denotes no-hitter thrown
  • The Pacific vs. Latin America game was suspended in the 8th inning due to a rain delay and was completed on August 21.

Elimination round

{{Round8
|August 24 – 3:00 pm - Lamade
|{{flagicon|Saudi Arabia}} Transatlantic|1
|{{flagicon|JPN}} Asia|4
|August 23 – 3:00 pm - Lamade (F/4)
|{{flagicon|VEN}} Latin America|0
|{{flagicon|Mexico}} Mexico|11
|August 24 – 7:30 pm - Lamade
|{{flagicon|Georgia (U.S. state)}} Southeast|8
|{{flagicon|New Hampshire}} New England|0
|August 23 – 7:30 pm - Lamade
|{{flagicon|Illinois}} Great Lakes|3
|{{flagicon|Oregon}} Northwest|4
|August 26 – 7:30 pm - Lamade
|{{flagicon|Japan}} Asia|3
|{{flagicon|Mexico}} Mexico|0
|August 27 – 3:30 pm - Lamade
|{{flagicon|Georgia (U.S. state)}} Southeast|7|{{flagicon|Oregon}} Northwest|3
|August 28 – 5:00 pm - Lamade|{{flagicon|Japan}} Asia|1
|{{flagicon|United States of America}}{{flagicon|Georgia (U.S. state)}} Southeast |2}}The consolation game between Matamoros, Mexico and Beaverton, Oregon, scheduled for August 27 at Volunteer Stadium, was cancelled due to rain, and both teams share third place. The championship game was originally scheduled for 3:30 pm US EDT on August 27, but was postponed due to rain. The game was originally rescheduled for 8:00 pm on August 28, but changed because of weather concerns.
2006 Little League World Series Champions
 
Northern Little League
Columbus, Georgia

Notable players

  • Gavin Cecchini (Lake Charles, Louisiana) ( New York Mets )
  • Jace Fry (Beaverton, Oregon) ( Chicago White Sox )
  • Scott Kingery (Ahwatukee, Phoenix) ( Philadelphia Phillies )[1]

Josh Lester ( Columbus, Georgia ) 2006 LLWS Champions - (Detroit Tigers)

Champion's path

The Columbus Northern LL went undefeated on their road to the LLWS, winning all eleven of their matches.[2][3] Their total record was 16–1, their only loss coming against Lemont LL (from Illinois).

RoundOppositionResult
Georgia State Tournament
Group StageGeorgia (U.S. state)}} Cartersville LL9–0
Group StageGeorgia (U.S. state)}} Decatur Belvedere LL15–0
Group StageGeorgia (U.S. state)}} Toccoa American LL12–2
Group StageGeorgia (U.S. state)}} Masters City LL17–2
SemifinalsGeorgia (U.S. state)}} Masters City LL15–5
ChampionshipGeorgia (U.S. state)}} Buckhead4–0
Southeast Regional
Group StageWest Virginia}} Bridgeport American LL16–0 (4 inn.)
Group StageTennessee}} Columbia American LL8–0
Group StageFlorida}} Greater Dunedin LL10–6
SemifinalsAlabama}} Cottage Hill LL11–0 (4 inn.)
Southeast Region ChampionshipFlorida}} Greater Dunedin LL5–0

Mid-Island incident

Television coverage aired throughout the United States on ABC Sports and ESPN. At first, there was no delay on its broadcasts, despite the fact that all managers and coaches were equipped with miniature microphones. That changed after two incidents; one in a preliminary game where an unidentified California pitcher told his coach that "[the umpire] ain't giving me shit" in reference to a tight strike zone, but the other, more important incident took place late in a preliminary-round game in which a player for Mid-Island Little League of Staten Island, New York, who was not publicly identified, told his teammates to just score "one fucking run" that was broadcast live on ESPN. In response, the team's manager, Nick Doscher, slapped the player, a violation of a Little League policy against physical contact targeting players. Both the player and manager were reprimanded, and ESPN and ABC imposed a five-second delay on future telecasts. The incident was part of the continuing legacy of the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy.

See also

  • Little League
  • Little League World Series

References

1. ^https://www.milb.com/indy-indians/news/philadelphia-phillies-scott-kingery-enjoyed-early-success/c-268086110
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.unpage.org/georgia/ga-2006.htm|title=Georgia State Tournament Results|publisher=Unpage.com|accessdate=August 29, 2010}}
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.unpage.org/southeast/ser-2006.htm|title=Southeastern Region Tournament|publisher=Unpage.com|accessdate=August 29, 2010}}

External links

  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20180110110926/http://www.littleleague.org/series/2006divisions/llbb/series.htm 2006 official results] via Wayback Machine
{{LLWS}}

4 : 2006 Little League World Series|2006 in baseball|2006 in sports in Pennsylvania|Little League World Series

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