Authors Posts by Steven Zaitz

Steven Zaitz

145 POSTS 0 COMMENTS

By Steven Zaitz

The Suffolk chapter of the National Football Foundation held a countywide press conference at Ward Melville High School on Aug. 23. Coaches and players from more than 50 schools attended and introduced themselves to the media.

Len Genova, president of the James C. Metzger chapter of the NFF, hosted the event in partnership with the Suffolk County Coaches Association to help promote Section XI high school football.

There were two sessions, with players and coaches from Suffolk Conferences I and III participating in the morning and Conferences II and IV in the afternoon.

First-year Smithtown East coach Dave Bennardo spoke to TBR News Media exclusively before the formal press conference began.

“We want our kids to be sharp and crisp in everything they do,” said Bennardo, who has served as principal of Harborfields High School, superintendent of the South Huntington School District as well as a Huntington Town councilman before coming to Smithtown East. “My passion is teaching and coaching, and I want to make these kids believe in themselves. We have a climb, but I think we’re all pulling in the right direction.”

Bennardo opened his practice schedule one minute after midnight on Aug. 19 at the Sports Arena in St. James in the hopes of instilling a hardworking and winning culture at Smithtown East. That happened to be the night of the unexpected torrential storm.

“Everybody was okay,” said Bennardo. “We had already arrived at the place and were doing drills. I drove a few of the kids home because the conditions were such that I didn’t want to make the parents come back out, but all in all, it was a fun experience and helped us bond.”

Smithtown East is looking to improve upon its 2023 record of 3-5. Across town, Smithtown West was 4-4 and in 2024 moved up to Conference II. In the first round of 2023, they played in the second-highest scoring game in Suffolk County history, losing 70-68.

Nick DeVito will be taking over for the graduated Brayden Stahl at quarterback for the Bulls West.

“Brayden’s are big shoes to fill, but we are excited to get it going,” DeVito said.

Other area schools that participated in the press conference for Conference II include Northport, Newfield, Centereach and Huntington. North Babylon is also in Conference II, and led by rushing sensation Jawara Keahey, the Bulldogs were Suffolk County champions last year. Keahey ran for 2,609 yards and 37 touchdowns last year.

In a very fraternal and friendly setting, each coach took the podium and gave a briefing on the state of his team. They wished all the other teams in the room good luck and good health for the 2024 football season. Len Genova then put a cap on the event, addressing roughly 20 coaches and 125 players in the Ward Melville High School cafeteria.

“Cherish these moments with your teammates, and cherish the feeling that you get when you walk out on that football field together on Friday night or Saturday afternoon,” Genova told the crowd. “I played through high school and college, and I would give anything to experience that feeling one more time. Time goes by very quickly. Our memories of those games take on more importance each passing year.”

With that, Genova wished each team a successful and healthy season and helped organize a group photo of all the Conference II coaches.

In all likelihood, the next time these guys see each other, the setting will not be as friendly.

By Steven Zaitz

Townspeople know that crossing Main Street in historic Northport Village means stepping back and forth over history.

The trolley tracks tattooed into the pavement no longer serve to carry Northporters through town for a day of shopping or a night bounding between speakeasies. They are only a reminder of how things were – not much remains from that time.

But some things do.

As nouveau restaurants, tap rooms, art galleries and boutiques dot the path from Church Street to the water, one particular edifice has stood at 46 Main St. since 1924 – the Shipwreck Diner.

The luncheonette-style eatery, originally called the Northport Diner and carved out of an early 20th century trolley car, celebrated its 100th birthday last Thursday, Aug. 15, with a gala buffet dinner in the outdoor space behind the restaurant. About 200 of its regular customers along with past and present staff ate, drank, laughed and reminisced as new owner Denis Beyersdorf accepted the rare and prestigious Century Award from Northport Historical Society board member Teri Reid.

“On this spot tonight with family, friends and neighbors, we gather together just like the people of Northport did decades ago, feeling as comfortable as we do when we are at home,” said Reid, addressing the celebrants. “The Shipwreck is a special place and yes just like Cheers, when you’re here, everybody knows your name.”

Beyersdorf was choking back tears as he accepted the award.

“I’m so thankful for the Century Award and it will be in the diner forever,” said Beyersdorf, who like many of his guests and staff, sported a brightly colored 100th anniversary Shipwreck T-shirt. “I have to thank our customers and the town of Northport because without your love and support, none of this could ever happen.”

Beyersdorf, who was born in Huntington but has lived in Northport for close to two decades, worked in the financial services industry until 2021 and had no experience in the restaurant business until purchasing the diner with partners Ed McCallister and Jeffrey Wang from Tim Hess. Hess’s father Otto purchased it in 1972 and named the place Otto’s Shipwreck Diner. Tim took it over in 1996 and it became Tim’s Shipwreck Diner.

Beyersdorf, who exudes a neighborly humble charm especially for a guy who worked on Wall Street for decades, does not feel he has yet earned his stripes as a restaurateur to put his name in neon. Thus, the place is now simply called Shipwreck Diner.

“This place would not be the place it is today without the work of Timmy Hess,” Beyersdorf said. “He passed the torch and all I’m doing is following his lead and carrying that torch. I’m blessed because there’s a line at that door every Saturday and Sunday and the place is a staple. There is a group of people that really like this place and as long as I don’t mess that up and give them the Shipwreck experience they’ve come to expect, then I’ve done my job.”

As a boy, he dreamed of going to cooking school after high school but instead chose to pursue a degree in economics. After a long career in finance, he was laid off from his job in 2021. After a conversation – or three – with golfing buddies McCallister and Wang, they collectively decided to help Denis realize his dream.

Ever since the trio purchased the establishment from Hess on Dec. 20, 2022, Beyersdorf has gone all-in as the face of the operation. He has studied the time-honored techniques of the Shipwreck chefs so when it was time to tie on his own apron, he could replicate the dishes seamlessly. His longtime customers appreciate that.

“This place means so much to me and the town of Northport,” said Barbara Blair of East Northport who has been coming to the diner nearly every day for some 30 years. “Denis has done a great job making friends with the regular customers and keeping the atmosphere and the food the same.”

Blair has the same dish every time she comes in.

“Oatmeal with fresh fruit and two cups of coffee. I don’t even have to order it. They ask me if I’m ready, I say yes and it appears,” she said.

Virginia Sheehan, a lifelong Northporter, was a waitress at Shipwreck from the mid-’70s to 1999 when she had to retire due to health issues. She was sitting with Blair and playfully corrected her former client.

“You used to have the French toast occasionally,” Sheehan reminded her friend Blair, as the two ladies laughed and enjoyed a cocktail. Blair conceded that Sheehan was correct.

“And that French toast was the best I’ve ever had,” she said.

“I wanted to give the place back to Northport and I didn’t know anything about the food business so I didn’t feel right putting my name on it,” Beyersdorf said, as he flipped over a giant mound of home fries with his shovel-sized spatula. “For the past 22 months, I have lived and breathed this place, slept here and sacrificed time with my family trying to learn everything I could.”

The celebration on Thursday night was a metaphor for the support for Denis, the diner and the residents and customers who as Northporters fiercely protect and value their storied town’s history.

As the party rolled on into the evening, Beyersdorf was presented with yet another gift. Local artists Bob and Nancy Hendrick, who run the Trinity Community Art Center a few doors down from the Shipwreck, unveiled a 24-by-30 inch rendering of the interior of the former train car turned restaurant. The Edward Hopper-inspired painting depicted Denis cleaning the counter on one side, afternoon sun streaks peeking through the middle front windows and a lonely coffee-drinking patron dressed in early 20th century garb hunched over in a booth.

“We wanted to capture both eras in this painting and show that Denis represents the present and future of this very important place,” said Bob Hendrick. “Nancy and I, representing Trinity Community Art Center, warmly embrace our community and we celebrate the vibrant spirit Denis and the diner have kindled within us. It was destiny for this painting to be created and shared at that precise moment and it fills our hearts with humility and gratitude for both Denis and the community’s outpouring of appreciation toward it.”

As the evening wore on and shrimp cocktail and mussels became scarce, Beyersdorf along with his guests and staff posed for pictures, shook hands and embraced. They knew that Thursday’s party would eventually become Friday’s rush – a rush that would usher in the next 100 years of Shipwreck serving its customers, acting as their kitchen and dining room away from home and providing a living breathing part of their proud town’s history.

By Steven Zaitz

It took over 48 hours to play and endured a torrential downpour, but the Larkfield-Northport 9 and Under Little League baseball team finally got a chance to celebrate this past Monday — for a game that had started two days earlier.

The baby Tigers scored a 13-6 victory over the Babylon nine-year-olds at Ostego Park in Commack in a game that started Saturday night, Aug 3. After Northport took a 3-0 lead in the first inning, the heavens opened and the game resumed on Monday, Aug. 5.

Starting pitcher Jordan Ellis went three innings and gave up four runs on three hits and he struck out six Babylon batters. Kellyn Repetti, who started the game as the Tiger third baseman, pitched an inning and two-thirds, allowing two earned runs, and Jack Sheedy closed out the game, working the final inning and a third.

Northport pitchers issued 13 total walks, which  was the cause of much of the Babylon traffic on the basepaths and extended the lenght of the game to almost three hours. But they got big out when needed and allowed no more than two runs in any inning.

On offense, Northport jumped out to a 9-2 lead after two and a half innings, scoring at least a run in every inning but the fourth and exploding for five runs in the third. Sheedy and Repetti both had RBI triples in the  third inning off of Babylon starter Thaddeus Skarulis. The number two through six in the Larkfield-Northport batting order were an astounding  nine for nine, with eight runs scored, and seven runs batted in.

Ellis, Sheedy and first baseman Jackson Spoto were all 2 for 2 and Repetti was 3 for 3. Right fielder Dominic Elliot smacked a two-RBI single in the fifth inning, as the 9U Tigers just kept adding on. They led 11-4 after four and half innings, as the afternoon began to darken to dusk.

Wayne Kaifler, Reilly Cheffo and James Domanick also registered hits for Larkfield-Northport in the final game.

To make it here, the Tigers won an 8-7 nail-biter against West Islip in the semifinal game, which took eight innings to decide. Spoto, who led the pitching staff all season, threw 75 pitches in that game and was ineligible to pitch in the championship game, so Larkfield head coach John Sheedy turned to his three-headed monster of pitchers to  piece together the victory.

“Each of our pitchers did really well in this game and I am extremely proud of them and every member of this team,” said Sheedy, whose son Jack finished the game with a strikeout. “This championship is so well deserved for these kids. Every one of them put in a lot of hours of practice and they, as well as their families, were so dedicated during this season. To see everything to come to fruition is just a wonderful thing.”

Repetti, who for every game wears a shiny, multicolored necklace that his mom made for him, was ecstatic on his his team winning the championship jewels.

“It feels great to win,” Repetti said. “We are a good team, but I think the necklace brought us the good luck we needed.”

And with that, the entire team and their families were off to Coach Sheedy’s house for a  little pizza celebration.

Said the coach — “It was the best tasting pizza we’ve ever had.”

By Steven Zaitz

Stony Brook village became Strawberry Fields for a few magical, musical hours on Sunday, July 28, as four lads who call themselves The Liverpool Shuffle pleased the crowd of Beatlemaniacs.

A ticket to ride was unnecessary for this show, as the boys played for free on the balcony of the Long Island Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame (LIMEHOF).

Formed in 2003 by singer, bassist and guitarist Joe Refano, who played with Herman’s Hermits as well as with Micky Dolenz of the Monkees, the band delighted the crowd for close to two hours with hits such as “All My Loving,” “In My Life,” “Day Tripper” and “Back In The U.S.S.R.”

The concert was a nod to the famous Beatles on the rooftop concert in January of 1969 on top of their Apple Corps headquarters in central London. That was the last time they performed together in front of a live audience. After playing “Get Back” for the third time that rainy afternoon, John Lennon famously and playfully asked the crowd if the most influential band in the history of music had “passed the audition.”

Refano, who lives in Centerport, saw the Beatles live at Shea Stadium in 1966, and like pretty much everyone else, was hooked.

“We are very excited to play on the balcony and pay tribute to the Beatles for the people of Stony Brook,” said Refano as he tuned his guitar at sound check.

Jamie Bateman, a distant cousin to Ringo Starr and is originally from Liverpool, sings and plays the guitar and harmonica; Andrew Lubman plays bass, guitar, keyboard and sings many of Paul McCartney’s parts; and Brian James is behind the drum kit.

Ernie Canadeo, chairman of LIMEHOF, introduced the band and was thrilled to showcase the museum and facility in its first-ever outdoor concert.

“We decided to do the first outdoor concert as a ‘Beatles on the Balcony’ tribute, as the Beatles mean so much to everyone and they have a lot of connection to Long Island,” Canadeo said. “They played Shea Stadium and Forest Hills. Paul McCartney lives here, Ringo still plays out here and John spent a few summers here so we thought this would be a great idea.”

After “Hey Jude” and the encore of “I Saw Her Standing There,” the show was over and there was no doubt that The Liverpool Shuffle had passed the audition.

The Town of Smithtown hosted their vibrant Friday evening concert series, at Long Beach, featuring local oldies band The Dedications.

This highly anticipated event was highlighted by the Smithtown Sunrise Rotary Club’s Christmas in July fundraising event, which brought the community together for a noble cause.

The Rotary Club of Smithtown Sunrise organized a 50/50 raffle to benefit the Smithtown Emergency Food Pantry. The event raised $900 for the Smithtown Emergency Food Pantry which will celebrate its 40th anniversary celebration.

The evening was a spectacular display of community spirit, with hundreds of people in attendance and boats dotting the water, creating a picturesque backdrop. The Rotary Club Smithtown Sunrise expressed their joy and gratitude for the overwhelming support, and participation from the community.

The students of Smithtown High School West’s Interact Club volunteered at the event, and Dedications lead singer and fellow Rotarian, John Zollo, was the unofficial host of the evening, which saw Smithtown residents flock to the beach and concession stand, for a sunset-lit concert.

Find out more about the Smithtown Sunrise Rotary Club at smithtownsunriserotary.com, or email them at  [email protected].

By Steven Zaitz

Northport High School lacrosse stars took the field on July 6  in a friendly battle between Tigers past and present in a jovial but competitive alumni game.

Spanning five decades of Tiger grads, the White team held on for an 8-7 victory over the Blue team in front of an enthusiastic crowd of about 100 fans. But on this salty, sticky afternoon, it was more about the camaraderie than the game result.

“It’s important to have guys who have played here at different times to make connections, have some fun and bond with each other,” said head coach Billy Cordts, Class of 2003, who organized the event with help from the Northport Boys Lacrosse Booster Club.

“We tried to plan this well in advance so guys who are scattered all over the country can plan their annual Northport trip around the alumni game, and the turnout was great. I think that speaks to our program, a program that prides itself on the brotherhood that is Northport lacrosse,” Cordts added.

Brotherhood was the order of the day as Quinn Napolitano, who just graduated from Northport High School and was the team’s starting goalkeeper, was in the nets for the Blue team. His brother Shaun, Class of 2016, was on his team as a defender, and his other brother Ryan, Class of 2012, playing for the White team, scored two goals against his younger brother early on, as the White team jumped out to a 5-0 lead.

“I should have stopped those two against Ryan,” said Quinn, who led the Tigers to the Suffolk County finals this past June. “But it was special sharing the field with my brothers. They started peppering me with tennis balls in the backyard since I was little, so they really helped me get to where I am today. Playing with them and some of the older guys was great, and I’m excited to play in this game next year.” 

Nick, Anthony and Vin DeCeglia (2013, 2015 and 2017) were another trio of brothers who suited up, and Cordts’ own brother Tommy, Class of 2011, started in goal for White.

But the one family tie that got perhaps the most attention was that of Dylan and Dan McNaughton. Dylan, Class of 2022, a bruising linebacker, power forward, lacrosse midfielder and nine-time varsity letterman, is going into his junior year at Indiana University. He took the field with his father, Dan, Class of 1982, who coached Dylan in his youth in basketball, baseball, football and lacrosse.

“I never thought I’d be able to play with my dad in an actual game,” said Dylan, who won the Suffolk County basketball title in 2021 over heavily favored Brentwood and was a member of the Tiger lacrosse team that beat Syosset a few months later to win the Long Island championship. “This was an amazing experience, and I hope we can do it again next year,” he added.

Dan McNaughton started the game as an attackman for Blue with Billy Cordts watching his every move. The father played the first 10 minutes or so and watched from the sidelines the rest of the way.

“I had a good scoring chance, so I’m happy,” Dan said. “I played in the first-ever alumni game in 1986 or ’87, and I also remember playing in it when Dylan was just a baby, and my mother was rolling him around in a stroller on the sidelines. Those were fun times when I could move around better. These guys out here today are fast.”

For the record, Dylan McNaughton, a finance and accounting major at Indiana University, is now 6 feet, 3 inches tall and 225 pounds of muscle.

So much fun

Another impressive and muscular specimen who was marauding all over the field for the Blue team was Class of 2015’s Austin Henningsen. The faceoff ace played for the 2017 Maryland Terrapins team that won the NCAA championship and is one in a long line of fabulous Northport faceoff men. He is currently serving in the U.S. Coast Guard and, as ferocious a player as he is on the field, he was as gracious off of it.

“This game was so much fun to play in,” Henningsen said. “It gives us a chance to play with the great players that recently graduated and the guys that I grew up playing with. In Northport, we’ve had so much support from the parents and the community on both boys and girls sides. I’m proud to be a part of it.”

Aside from goalkeeper Napolitano, 2024 grads Ryan Cash, Luca Elmaleh, Jack Maisch, Tim McLam and long-stick All-American Giancarlo Valenti also played. Late in the game, Valenti marched through a tired Blue defense to score a goal in the fourth quarter. Recently graduated stars like Nick Tzimas, Tyler Kuprianchik, Jonathan Alfiero and Jack Helrigel suited up for White. Tim Kirchner, Matt Webb, Michael Meyer and Luke Lamendola played for Blue.

Lamendola, Class of 2022, who attends the Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia, is still involved with lacrosse not only as a player but as an ambassador of its safety.

“I’m studying industrial design, and one of the things I’m interested in doing is designing a safer helmet,” said Lamendola, who was in goal for the Tigers most recent Long Island championship in 2022. “Reducing head injuries in lacrosse has always been a passion of mine.”

The team that won the New York State championship 21 years earlier in 2001 was well-represented on Saturday. Seniors on that team in attendance were Jimmy Taylor, Brian Amen and Jeremy Kahn. One of their teammates that magical year was a sophomore named Billy Cordts.

“I really looked up those guys and tried to emulate them back then,” Cordts said. “Playing with them again almost 25 years later, along with the guys who are just starting out in the world, is really a full-circle kind of thing for me.”

Despite blowing its big lead, White held on for the one-goal win, and the players and their families shared a sweaty group hug near the middle of the field. Selfies and laughs were shared as the group retired to Napper Tandy’s for a post-game celebration to reminisce about old times, revel about the game and look forward to next year when they can take the field with each other once again.

by -
0 717

By Steven Zaitz

Two Smithtown baseball icons were honored Saturday at Gaynor Park in St. James. One was recognized for his achievements on the diamond decades ago, and the other for his behind-the-scenes work over the past decade to elevate the league.

Rich Tomitz, outgoing president of the St. James-Smithtown Little League after a seven-year term, presided over the league’s Closing Day ceremonies. In doing so, he welcomed former major leaguer Frank Catalanotto, a star player in the league who ended his career with the New York Mets in 2010. Catalanotto’s Little League jersey number 27 was retired, and he was presented with a framed replica of it as his wife, parents, and children watched from the ring of honor around the pitcher’s mound.

Tomitz, dressed in a dark blue tuxedo, welcomed Smithtown High School East alum Catalanotto and his family, including his father, who coached him from 1979-86 while he was a player in the Little League.

“It’s such a great honor to have my number retired by the St. James-Smithtown Little League,” said Catalanotto. “This is where I dreamed about being a major league baseball player and pretended I was Dave Winfield, Don Mattingly and Willie Randolph.”

Catalanotto is currently the head baseball coach at Hofstra University and still lives in Smithtown.

“I pass by this field almost every single day, and the memories come rushing back each and every time,” he said. “I think about the awesome wins, the tough losses, the joy, the tears, and going for ice cream after every game. But I also think about what I learned on this field – teamwork, perseverance, and discipline – and today, I still use these principles as a coach.”

On a warm and sunny day with only a few cottony clouds floating by, Tomitz told a tale about Catalanotto, who hit .330 in 2001 for the Texas Rangers and had a 14-year Major League career. The league had to raise the right field fence along St. James Avenue because Catalanotto’s home run balls would dent cars and break windows of neighboring homes. The new barrier was dubbed Frankie’s Fence.

Years later, Tomitz, in his time at the SJSLL helm, has brought many more renovations to the league than just a protective fence. He has worked with Smithtown Supervisor Ed Wehrheim (R) and Parks Department brass to bring the New York State softball championship to Smithtown. In doing so, the ballfields at both Gaynor and Veterans Memorial Park were upgraded to artificial turf, and the park facilities at both locations were improved for the entire community to enjoy.

Tomitz also turned Little League baseball and softball in Smithtown into can’t-miss events twice a year in the spring. Both Opening and Closing Day have become town-wide events that include a parade down Woodlawn Avenue in April, free hot dogs and cotton candy for all, bouncy houses, face-painters, all-star games – all wrapped in a fun carnival atmosphere buzzing with kids, ballgames, and music; a twice-yearly extravaganza that most towns on Long Island can only envy.

In addition to his administrative role with the league, Tomitz has coached his son Derek in baseball and his daughter Nadia in softball for many years and in the Williamsport national tournaments. Tomitz was on the coaching staff of Nadia’s New York State-winning championship team in 2022.

Tomitz also spearheaded a baseball league for 13 to 15-year-olds who age out of traditional Little League and want to continue playing. He forged relationships with numerous sponsors and created philanthropic partnerships with the likes of former NFL star and New York Jet Marty Lyons, who built a foundation that grants wishes to terminally ill children.

“I’m extremely proud of what we have accomplished over the better part of the decade,” said Tomitz. “I’ve forged so many relationships over the years of doing this and I thank everyone – there are too many to name – but I want to mention my two favorite players: my baby girl Nadia and my best buddy Derek. I love you both and I love St. James-Smithtown. Bulls Nation forever.”

By Steven Zaitz

Start the buses!

The Commack Cougars captured their second straight Class AAA Long Island championship on Saturday, getting another brilliant pitching performance from senior right-hander Evan Kay.

Kay, who will pitch for Stony Brook next spring, allowed no earned runs, three hits, no walks, and struck out 11 against Nassau champion Farmingdale to earn a 2-1 victory. This win sends Commack back to Binghamton, where they lost in the final round last year, to play in the New York State championship tournament this weekend.

It was the second time this week Kay was at the bottom of a celebratory pile of teammates at the Middle Country Athletic Complex in Selden, as he pitched a similarly spectacular game on May 26 against Sachem North to bag a fourth consecutive Suffolk County crown for the Commack varsity baseball program.

“Being on the bottom of that pile is rough, I gotta admit, but there is no place I’d rather be,” Kay said after handcuffing the mighty Dalers, who had averaged six runs a game in their Section VIII playoff march.

But it was Kay who had the recipe to serve up a giant bowl of goose egg soup to Farmingdale, mixing mostly off-speed and breaking pitches in the first few frames and then blowing fastballs by them in the middle and later innings. Kay struck out the side on only 12 pitches in the first inning and although it got a little dicey later on in the game, it was a harbinger of how the night would unfold for him and the Cougars.

Kay worked quickly, threw strikes, and had Daler hitters muttering under their breath as they walked back to the dugout. Kay faced only 24 batters in seven innings – only three over the minimum.

“It might have been the best I’ve ever thrown in a high school game,” said Kay. “I live for big moments like this.”

Commack head coach Matthew Salmon has now presided over two straight Long Island Championships. He has watched Kay evolve from a kid who just a few years ago couldn’t crack 60 mph on a radar gun into the equivalent of the Long Island Cy Young.

“The bigger the situation is, Evan gets a little bit stronger and a little bit tougher and that’s just the way he is built,” Salmon said. “He’s pitched in big spots his whole career and has been successful in every one of those spots, and I think a case can be made for Evan as being one of the best pitchers in the history of Long Island High School baseball.”

A bold statement, and that list might include major leaguers like Frank Viola, Marcus Stroman, Steven Matz, and Commack alum Pete Harnisch – all of whom pitched, or are still pitching, in the major leagues. But the numbers back Salmon’s case.

Kay holds the Long Island record for consecutive scoreless innings with 60. Twenty-eight of those innings were pitched in the 2023 postseason against stiff competition such as Pat-Med and Massapequa. He has won two Suffolk County championship-clinching games, two Long Island championship-clinching games, and he beat Shenendehowa in the New York State semifinals last year. 

All five of these wins were complete games and three of them were shutouts.

His lifetime record is 16-2, has 147 strikeouts and his WHIP, walks and hits per inning, is a microscopic 0.59.

“His résumé speaks for itself,” Salmon said.

Another bullet point on Kay’s résumé is his ability to snuff out rallies before they become multi-run innings.

In last week’s win against Sachem North, he got a huge strikeout with the tying run on third with one out in the seventh inning and stranded the potential tying and winning runs on base to win Suffolk County. Against the Dalers, he pinned a two-out base runner at second with a strikeout in the fifth to maintain a 1-0 lead. After Commack added a run in the fifth for a 2-0 lead, Kay worked around an error in the sixth and retired the heart of Farmingdale’s lineup, surrendering only an unearned run on a foul ball sacrifice fly by starting pitcher Jordan Welsh. Commack kept its lead.

The Cougars scored in the first inning on a two-out RBI single by right fielder Dean Vincent and added another in the fifth when pinch hitter Matt Shovelson singled and came around to score on catcher Robbie Mascia’s single to center.

It was in Kay’s capable hands entering the final frame. As is his wont, Kay looked out to centerfield and took a deep breath before stepping on the rubber to begin the inning. In this case, he took two deep breaths.

“Before that last inning I took an extra second to think about how big the moment was and I really wanted to lock in to get those last three outs,” Kay said.

In fine style, Kay struck out the side in order in the seventh on only 11 pitches. Upon strike three to his final victim, Farmingdale left fielder Patrick Sebber, Kay thrust both of his arms into the air, did a half-pirouette on the mound, and threw his glove into the dusty, orange Selden sky before being snowed under by his raucous teammates. The trophy party in left field with friends and family lasted well past dark.

Now the Cougars return to Mirabito Stadium to face Fairport, a suburb of Rochester, on Saturday in the New York State semifinal game. The pitching rotation has not been set and it will be either Kay or Ryan Krzemienski to pitch that game. If the Cougars win, they will face the winner of Shenendehowa [Section II] and reigning state champs Ketchum [Section I], who beat Commack 2-1 last year in the finals despite three Cougar pitchers other than Kay, who pitched the previous game, combining for a no-hitter.

With all the gaudy stats, accomplishments, and accolades that Kay has accumulated in his Commack career, he still has a gaping space for one more.

“I want to win the New York State championship. Then I’m good.”

By Steven Zaitz

Think of your favorite baseball movie. Everybody has one. If it’s Bull Durham, Field of Dreams, or even Bingo Long and the Traveling All-Stars, it won’t have as dramatic an ending as the deciding game of the Suffolk County Class AAA title between Commack and Sachem North this past Sunday.

The tying and championship-winning runs were on base in the bottom of the seventh for Sachem North against Commack ace right-hander and reigning Suffolk County Pitcher of the Year, Evan Kay.

Entering the final frame, Commack built what seemed like an impregnable 2-0 lead with Kay having thrown six scoreless innings and looking as dominant as ever. He had scattered four hits, struck out seven, and walked no one entering the seventh.

But after two infield hits and a clean RBI single by Sachem third baseman John Ferrante, not only was the shutout gone, but the game – and the championship – was in serious jeopardy for the Cats. The tying run was 90 feet away, and the potential winning run at first with only one out.

Kay, known for his fiery demeanor and over-the-top competitiveness, was in quite a sticky situation – somewhat uncharted waters for him. Kay pitched in four games last year in the postseason and allowed exactly zero runs in 28 innings on the way to the Cougars’ third straight county title and the 2023 Long Island championship. Sachem North was looking to put an end to Commack’s burgeoning dynasty.

But first a meeting at the mound.

Kay had thrown close to 90 pitches in the 80-degree heat. Could the unthinkable be happening, and Cougar head coach Matt Salmon be coming out to take Kay out of the game?

“No,” Kay said. “This was my game to win or lose.”

After about 45 seconds, Salmon patted Kay on the backside and told him to get the next two guys out.

 “Evan wasn’t coming out,” Salmon said. “He is the best competitor I’ve ever coached and was gonna finish the inning if they tied it up, or we were gonna lose the game right there. I just told him that getting this done was what he was born to do – to get these next two outs.”

After the meeting broke up, Kay walked to the back of the mound, his back to home plate, and played patty-cake with his resin bag before slamming it down to the turf. He was ready to face this challenge.

A safety squeeze attempt to get the runner in from third by Flaming Arrow catcher Matt Podesta went foul, and Kay fanned Podesta on the next pitch. It was Kay’s ninth strikeout of the day, and the Cougars were one out away from a Suffolk County four-peat.

Sachem second baseman and leadoff hitter Jack Pitman, who had a single off of Kay to start the game, was now in the batter’s box.

Pitman, a lefty, hit a bouncer to Cougar first baseman Brady Cascone, who bobbled it momentarily. Cascone managed to shovel the ball over to Kay, who scrambled to cover the bag, in time to nip Pitman at first. Kay and Commack had done it again. They were Suffolk County champions for the fourth straight year; and for Kay, this 2-1 nail-biter might have bested them all.

“When I stepped on first base and saw the umpire give the out signal, it might have been the best feeling after a win that I’ve ever had,” said Kay, who holds the record in Suffolk County for consecutive scoreless innings with a remarkable 60. “The past few years, we were just better than everybody else. But we lost a lot of guys this year, and we had to fight for almost everything we got, and I think we’re the better team for that.”

One of the new guys in the lineup in 2024 is catcher Robbie Mascia, who is in only eighth grade. Mascia was struck by a bat in Saturday’s loss to Sachem North, and after a postgame visit to Urgent Care, there was some doubt as to his availability for the deciding game. But come Sunday, Mascia was behind the plate.

“It’s not broken, so I wanted to be out there,” said Mascia, who, until the swelling subsided, had a golf ball-sized lump on his wrist the night before. “I love catching Evan, and today his stuff was as good as it’s ever been. His change-up was dialed in, and it was falling off and moving late. That’s his out pitch.”

Both starters were getting outs, as the game was scoreless through five. Anthony Vino, the Sachem North starter, showed signs of fatigue in the sixth and lost command of the strike zone. He gave up a hit and two walks, the second of which to pinch hitter Matt Shovelson with the bases loaded, As he came in to score on Shovelson’s walk, Commack right fielder Dean Vincent demonstratively jumped on home plate with his arms flapping in the air like a giant crane, much to the delight of the always-boisterous Commack bleacher cats. Commack had finally broken through.

Cougar fans would get even louder when Kay doubled down the line in the seventh to drive in center fielder Ryan Krzemienski for a 2-0 Commack lead. Krzemienski reached on a walk, one of seven that Vino allowed, in addition to five hits over seven innings. Commack had itself a vital insurance run that would end up being the difference in the game.

“I wish we would have been up 15-0 nothing because I would have sweated a lot less,” said Salmon, who has been the head coach of the Cougars for three years and has won the county championship in every one of them. “It was a great game, and this win means so much to the Commack community that supports us and each other and rallies around in times like this. It’s a great thing to be a part of.”

Next week, Salmon and his team will try to give the people of Commack something even greater when they take on Nassau champ Farmingdale. Kay will be on the mound as the Cougars seek their second Long Island championship in three years and despite this game’s exciting climax, the drama of the 2024 Commack varsity baseball team still has not played its final act.

The Smithtown Fire Department hosted its 100th annual  Memorial Day Parade down Main Street in Smithtown on May 27. The parade was followed by a wreath laying ceremony at Smithtown Town Hall.

— Photos by Steven Zaitz