2010 Little League World Series

2010 Little League World Series
Dates August 20–
August 29
Teams participating 16
Champion Edogawa Minami Little League
Japan Tokyo, Japan
Runner-up Waipio Little League
United StatesHawaii Waipahu, Hawaii

The 2010 Little League World Series was held in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania. It began on August 20 and ended on August 29. Eight teams from the United States and eight from throughout the world competed in the 64th edition of this tournament. In the championship game, the international champions from Tokyo, Japan defeated the United States champions out of Waipahu, Hawaii. It was the seventh LLWS championship for Japan overall, and the first since 2003.

Activision created a video game for the event. It is for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.

Tournament changes

On April 14, 2010, Little League announced[1] that starting in 2010, round robin play would be replaced by a double-elimination bracket in each pool. The winners of each pool will advance to single elimination US and International Championship games and the winners of those games will advance to the World Championship game. Every team will play a minimum of three games: the four teams that lose their first two games will cross over and play special US vs. International games.

On August 2, 2010, it was announced that instant replay would be expanded. The system, which was first used in 2008, now includes force outs, tags along the base paths, missed bases, and hit batters as plays that are subject to review. Previously, only plays in which a dead ball would have resulted were able to be reviewed. Additionally, team managers are now allowed to challenge plays if the umpires have not already called for a replay. Before losing the right to challenge, managers are allowed only one unsuccessful challenge in the first six innings of a game, as well as one unsuccessful challenge in extra innings. Challenges must be made after the play in question and before the next pitch. A "replay team" located in an office at Howard J. Lamade Stadium will judge all plays under review.[2][3][4] The first challenge in LLWS history that resulted in an original ruling being overturned occurred on August 21, the second day of the tournament.[5] Prior to the championship game, instant replay had been used 16 times with 8 calls being overturned while the other 8 were upheld. The average amount of time needed for all reviews was 52 seconds.[6]

Groups

Pool A Pool B Pool C Pool D
Ohio Hamilton, OH
Great Lakes Region
West Side
Minnesota Plymouth, MN
Midwest Region
Plymouth/New Hope
Puerto Rico Manati, Puerto Rico
Caribbean Region
Jose M. Rodriguez
Chinese Taipei Kaohsiung, Chinese Taipei (Taiwan)
Asia-Pacific Region
Fu-Hsing
New Jersey Toms River, NJ
Mid-Atlantic Region
Toms River National
Connecticut Fairfield, CT
New England Region
Fairfield American
Germany Ramstein AB
Europe Region
KMC American
Canada British Columbia Vancouver, BC
Canada Region
Little Mountain
Georgia (U.S. state) Columbus, GA
Southeast Region
Columbus Northern
Washington (state) Auburn, WA
Northwest Region
Auburn
Japan Tokyo Tokyo
Japan Region
Edogawa Minami
Panama Chitré, Panama
Latin America Region
Chitré
Hawaii Waipahu, HI
West Region
Waipio
Texas Pearland, TX
Southwest Region
Pearland White
Mexico Nuevo Laredo
Mexico Region
Oriente
Saudi Arabia Dhahran
MEA Region
Arabian American

Results

United States

Pool A

  Games 1–3 Games 4–5 Games 6–7
                             
-  Ohio Great Lakes 16  
-  New Jersey Mid-Atlantic 6  
  W1  Ohio Great Lakes 0  
  W2  Georgia (U.S. state) Southeast 6  
-  Georgia (U.S. state) Southeast 6
-  Hawaii West 2  
  W4  Georgia (U.S. state) Southeast 4 5
  W5  Hawaii West 7 12
L1  New Jersey Mid-Atlantic 1  
L2  Hawaii West 3  
  W3  Hawaii West 6
  L4  Ohio Great Lakes 4  

Pool B

  Games 1–3 Games 4–5 Games 6–7
                             
-  Connecticut New England 3  
-  Washington (state) Northwest 1  
  W1  Connecticut New England 1  
  W2  Texas Southwest (F/4) 14  
-  Minnesota Midwest 8
-  Texas Southwest 10  
  W4  Texas Southwest 4 7
  W5  Washington (state) Northwest 7 5
L1  Washington (state) Northwest 5  
L2  Minnesota Midwest 2  
  W3  Washington (state) Northwest 9
  L4  Connecticut New England 5  

International

Pool C

  Games 1–3 Games 4–5 Games 6–7
                             
-  Puerto Rico Caribbean (F/4) 11  
-  Germany Europe 0  
  W1  Puerto Rico Caribbean 2  
  W2  Japan Japan 7  
-  Japan Japan 4
-  Mexico Mexico 2  
  W4  Japan Japan 3
  W5  Mexico Mexico 2
L1  Germany Europe 2  
L2  Mexico Mexico 11  
  W3  Mexico Mexico 4
  L4  Puerto Rico Caribbean 2  

Pool D

  Games 1–3 Games 4–5 Games 6–7
                             
-  Panama Latin America 2  
-  Canada Canada 4  
  W1  Canada Canada 0  
  W2  Chinese Taipei Asia-Pacific (F/4) 23  
-  Chinese Taipei Asia-Pacific (F/4) 18
-  Saudi Arabia MEA 0  
  W4  Chinese Taipei Asia-Pacific 5
  W5  Panama Latin America 1
L1  Panama Latin America (F/4) 13  
L2  Saudi Arabia MEA 0  
  W3  Panama Latin America 4
  L4  Canada Canada 2  

Championship games

Int'l and US championships LLWS championship
August 28 – 1:00 pm EDT - Lamade
 Japan Japan (F/7)  3  
 Chinese Taipei Asia-Pacific  2  
 
August 29 – 3:00 pm EDT - Lamade
     Japan Japan  4
   United StatesHawaii West  1
Consolation game
August 28 – 4:40 pm EDT - Lamade August 29 – 11:00 am EDT - Lamade
 Hawaii West (F/5)  10  Chinese Taipei Asia-Pacific (F/4)  14
 Texas Southwest  0    United States Texas Southwest  2
2010 Little League World Series Champions

Edogawa Manima Little League

Tokyo, Japan

Champions path

The Edogawa Minami LL reached the LLWS with a record of 8 wins, 1 loss, and 1 tie.[7] In total, their record was 13–1–1, their only loss coming against Musashi-Fuchu.

RoundOppositionResult
All-Tokyo Tournament
Opening Round Meguro Higahi LL 10–0
Winner's Bracket Round 2 Tokyo Kitasuna LL 7–3
Winner's Bracket Quarterfinals Tokyo Johoku LL 7–4
Winner's Bracket Semifinals Musashi-Fuchu LL 3–5
Elimination Bracket QuarterfinalsItabashi LL 5–3
Round-Robin PlayoffTokyo Kitasuna LL 7–7
Round-Robin PlayoffMusashi-Fuchu LL6–2
Japan Regional
Opening RoundTokyo Nakanyo LL 9–3
QuarterfinalsIida LL25–4
SemifinalsHamamatsu Minami LL2–0
Japan ChampionshipHirosaki Aomori LL8–4

References

  1. http://www.littleleague.org/media/newsarchive/2010/Jan-Apr/FormatChangeToLLBBWSFor2010.htm
  2. Associated Press (August 2, 2010). "Replay expanded for Little League WS". ESPN. Archived from the original on 5 August 2010. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  3. Communications Division (August 2, 2010). "Video Replay to be Expanded at Little League Baseball World Series". Little League. Archived from the original on 8 August 2010. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  4. "Video Replay at the Little League Baseball World Series – 2010". Little League. August 2, 2010. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  5. "Jacob Jones has 2 HRs, 5 RBIs". ESPN. August 21, 2010. Archived from the original on 24 August 2010. Retrieved August 21, 2010.
  6. Associated Press (August 29, 2010). "LLWS officials happy with instant replay". ESPN. Archived from the original on 4 September 2010. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  7. "Japan Tournament Results". Unpage.com. Retrieved August 29, 2010.