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Bears News

August 15, 2017 – 12:00 PM

News:  Thank you to all the fans who helped make the 2017 season another memorable one.  Please continue to check back throughout the off season as stat updates and news for the upcoming season will be available.  Chevy Tollefson will be the new Bears manager for 2018.

 

Bears have run roughshod through CRBL this summer

posted July 26, 2015 12:00 a.m. (CDT)
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Midway through the 2014 season, the Eau Claire Bears found their mojo. And they haven’t lost it since.

After a sluggish 5-6 start to Chippewa River Baseball League play, the Bears ripped off an 11-game win streak to close out league play and springboard into the playoffs, in which they upended No. 1 seed Whitehall and No. 3 Osseo to claim the league title and a Wisconsin Baseball Association playoff berth.

This year, the Bears picked up right where they left off, compiling a 20-2 league record, with both losses coming to Whitehall. The 20 wins are a program record, as are the 206 runs they’ve scored this summer. Eau Claire has been clicking on all cylinders, winning 34 of its last 36 league games dating back to the start of last season’s run, and it doesn’t appear to be slowing down with the playoffs starting on Wednesday.

“The better you play, the more confident you are, and when you get on a roll, it’s easier to stay on a roll than it is to falter,” Bears utility player Brian Menard said.

Part of Eau Claire’s success has to be attributed to the laid back attitude of the squad. Most of the players returned from last year’s team, breeding a sense of familiarity among the Bears. Even the fresh faces added to the roster have gelled right away, and Eau Claire is playing some of the CRBL’s most cohesive baseball.

“You can’t start anywhere if you don’t have talent to begin with, and we’ve got a really talented group of young guys,” manager Reed Pecha said. “We’ve kind of been rebuilding our franchise, and I think we have a really good, young core group that’s just kind of coming together.”

The Bears don’t have any one particular star heading the charge but rather a well-balanced lineup — 10 Bears were named All-Stars — that further supports their team-first mentality.

Eau Claire has been especially deadly at the plate, boasting a lineup that can score runs at any time. Three batters have 30-plus hits, and Palmer Buss especially has been dangerous at the plate, knocking in a franchise-high 28 runs this season.

“I think our offense is better than it’s ever been,” Menard said. “We’ve got some young guys who are just killing the ball and three or four guys who have over 20 RBIs, and that’s unheard of in this league.”

In addition to their potent offense, the Bears also rely on a strong stable of pitchers. Pecha estimates the rotation is bolstered by about six or seven capable arms, along with several players on the roster who pitched in high school but haven’t been called upon to serve on the mound because their rotation is so deep.

The Bears also benefit from playing an ample nonleague slate, squeezing in an extra 12 games during the CRBL’s 22-game schedule. Eau Claire is 7-5 in nonleague games, but more important to the Bears than their nonleague record is using the extra games as a chance to work out the kinks.

“That’s a way for everyone to kind of figure out your swing, if you’re hot you can stay hot and keep going through the motions,” Pecha said.

Eau Claire’s path to its second straight CRBL championship may very well go through Whitehall, where the Bears will hope for a different outcome than the first two games they’ve played this season — and, incidentally, for a repeat of last year, when the Bears fell to the Wolves twice in the regular season before getting revenge in the playoffs.

But as far as the Bears are concerned, there’s no reason to stress. After all, they haven’t done that all season long.

2014
Eau Claire Bears 9, Osseo Merchants 3 CRBL: Bears continue hot streak, roll to league title

From the Leader Telegram - August, 2nd 2014 By Ben Peterson

OSSEO - Like a runaway train, there was nothing the Osseo Merchants could do to slow down the Eau Claire Bears.

The Bears had won 12 straight games heading into Saturday's Chippewa River Baseball League Championship Game.  They made it lucky No. 13 with a 9-3 win over the Merchants at Jon Soiney Field to give Eau Claire it's sixth CRBL title.

Eau Claire pitcher Hayden Bowe came in relief of starter Matt Lunde, who exited after three innings due to shoulder soreness. The Memorial graduate finished the game, allowing just one run and four hits in six innings to earn the win and game MVP honors.

“My defense played great behind me and the bats were hot the whole game,” Bowe said.

It’s the first title for Eau Claire since it won five in six years (2004-06, 08-09).

Lunde, third baseman Jim Thill, right fielder Brian Menard, designated hitter/manager Reed Pecha and coach Dave Strauch have been part of every league title for the Bears.

“To see this come full circle and to be a part of our sixth championship with essentially a whole new group of guys is really satisfying for us older guys,” Pecha said.

The Bears got a quick run in the first inning as Tom Mewhorter singled to drive in Mitch DeGrasse.

Osseo tied it in the second on a Joe Zawacki double, but defensive lapses in the third led to three Eau Claire runs to make it 4-1.

The Merchants would claw back to make it 4-3, but Eau Claire never relinquished the lead and pulled away late as DeGrasse lifted a two-run home run over the left-field wall in the ninth.

DeGrasse finished 2-for-3 with three runs, two RBIs and two stolen bases. Mewhorter was 1-for-4 with a pair of sac flies and three RBIs.

Nathan Kent also went 2-for-4 with a run and an RBI.

“Even when it got to be 4-3, it didn’t seem like we panicked or started to force anything,” Pecha said. “We just played ball like we have all year.”

Staying calm has been the theme for Eau Claire as it finished the first half of the season with a 5-6 record. It hasn’t lost a league game since.

“You see it happen all the time in sports where a team in the second half of the year gets into a groove and they’re able to keep that running,” Pecha said. “I knew that this group was talented enough to have more success than we were having. I just knew that if we could put it together that we were as good as any team in the CRBL.”

Second baseman Sam Waters went 3-for-5, third baseman/catcher Josh Anderson went 2-for-4 and shortstop Jesse Brockman was 1-for-2 with a triple, run and an RBI to lead the  Merchants at the plate.

Starting pitcher Logan Boettcher was solid through 6q innings despite surrendering six walks. The southpaw allowed just two earned runs and struck out seven.

It was the first championship game appearance for Osseo, which finished with the best record in franchise history at 17-5.

“If the wild card format stays where two South Division teams can contend for the title, I don’t think that this is going to be the last time we see those guys,” Pecha said of the Merchants. “They’re a classy group and an excellent ball team, and it wouldn’t surprise me to see them take this team far into the WBA playoffs.”

The Bears had an unprecedented streak of playing in the championship game every season from 2004-2010.

With a young and talented core returning, could a similar streak be on the horizon?

“We’ll just try to enjoy this one, but we can’t help but think that if we keep a group together that we’re going to be competitive for a while to come here,” Pecha said.

City graduates key Bears' success

Eau Claire Bears

posted Dec. 2, 2014 2:47 p.m. (CDT)
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by / Ben Peterson Leader-Telegram staff
 

 

  • Reed Pecha, center, talks to players prior the Eau Claire Bears' game against the Hallie Eagles on Wednesday.
 

To sum up the history of the Eau Claire Bears requires the understanding of a few simple statistics.

Eight South Division titles, seven league titles and three Wisconsin Baseball Association state championships certainly stand out, but the most important number is 14. All of that success has come in just 14 years in the Chippewa River Baseball League.

In a city surrounded by baseball, the Bears have been a constant since they replaced the Eau Claire Red Sox in 1998.

Using players primarily from city schools, Eau Claire won its three state titles in 2005, 2008 and 2009.

Since then there's been some rebuilding, but the Bears are off to a 15-2 run, including a clean sweep of the North Division, in what could be the  franchise's most successful season ever.

"The last couple of years we've been bringing in a young group of guys and now I think a big part of our success is those younger guys are a year, two or three years in now to playing with the team," manager Reed Pecha said. "They know the team, they know the league and there's a huge learning curve when you go from playing against kids to playing against grown men with wooden bats. Now the guys are starting to put it together."

Recent city graduates such as Sam Janni, Greg Button and Jeremy Nicolai have teamed with veterans Pecha, Jon Huth, Matt Lunde and Brian Menard to form one of the deepest rosters in the league.

For some of the young players, there's been a bit of a learning curve, but so far it hasn't been an issue.

"I don't think people realize how many good players are in this league," Janni said. "I certainly didn't until I played against these guys."

Having younger players join the team in recent years has helped Pecha, who used to be an area high school coach, grow in his role as Bears manager.

"I coached a lot of these guys," Pecha said. "We're lucky, fortunate here in Eau Claire to have two really good public high schools and Regis as well. There's a lot of guys who went to North and Memorial who are playing with other teams in the league as well. So it's a really good talent pool that we have around this area."

Regardless of when players graduated or what high school they came from, the Bears are all about camaraderie.

"Just going through North and Memorial, whether you like someone or not, you gain respect for how well they can play baseball," said Nicolai, an All-Star in his second year. "When you get a little bit older and you get into these leagues, you learn that we're on the same team now and can really make something great happen."

The season has been beyond great for the Bears as several team records have already fallen.

And while it's the younger players who have been key to this team's success, many of the veterans are already among the best to play in the league.

Matt Lunde is the league's career leader in ERA. He entered the All-Star break at 2.17.

Huth is one of four players in league history to record two no-hitters. His next one will make him the lone player with three.

Earlier in the season, Pecha became just the 13th player to have a six-hit performance in a league game.

Having a veteran presence around has been crucial to developing many of the young players who have at most a season of college ball under their belts.

"The veteran players, they keep us younger guys in line and they keep us on track," Nicolai said. "They keep us focused and because of them we're having the success that we are."

Add in a few players from North's state title team in 2011 and you've got a recipe for success.

"A lot of these kids know how to win," Pecha said. "Sometimes it takes time, you have to build up that confidence. A lot of it has to do with playing in big games as high schoolers and understanding what it takes to win."

With all the winning Eau Claire is doing in 2012, it's no surprise the team is hoping to regain its foothold atop the WBA.

"The ultimate goal is to win a state title," Pecha said. "No matter what happens during the season, the goal is to get back to state and hopefully make a run."

 


 

Eau Claire Bears

Manager: Reed Pecha.

Home field: Stein Field.

Colors: Black, white.

Franchise W-L: 165-87 entering 2012.

Former teams: Eau Claire Badgers, 1908-09 (10-20); Eau Claire Cubs, 1934 (3-11); Eau Claire Giants, 1909 (2-4); Eau Claire Lakers, 1952 (n/a); Eau Claire Nationals, 1930 (0-14); Eau Claire Oilers, 1949 (n/a); Eau Claire Pioneers, 1986-91 (63-40); Eau Claire Red Sox, 1996-97 (5-27); Eau Claire Silhouettes, 1930 (9-6); Eau Claire Skelly Oilers, 1938 (12-2); Eau Claire Tommy Millers, 1960 (12-1); Eau Claire Union, 1928-29 (7-10); Gillette Rubbermen, 1929 (5-5); Leif's Conoco Oilers, 1950, 52-53 (30-6); Twin City Sports, 1966-68 (21-12).

Hall of Famers: Vic Johnson, P, 1938-39, 53 — Threw 93 innings between the EC Skelly Oilers, Girard's Hillbillies and Leif's Conoco Oilers. Posted 1.94 ERA with 9-2 record, 101 strikeouts.

Notable former players: Scott Wolfe, P/3B 2000-08 — Posted 2.71 ERA, 3-1 record in 69.2 innings for the Bears. Recorded nine saves. Also batted .342 in 190 games. ... Shane Bobb, P, 2001-07 — Had 3.59 ERA in 125.1 innings. Struck out 121. ... Mike Curtis, P, 1928 — Struck out 100 batters in 98 innings. Went 10-1 with 2.85 ERA in only season. Justin Kunferman, P, 2004, 06-08 — Struck out 105 batters in 72 innings. Finished with 7-1 record, 1.63 ERA. ... Matt Olson, P, 2004-09 — Went perfect 9-0 with 1.66 ERA in 65 career innings. ... Collin Boone, OF, 2008-10 — Played in 48 games for Bears. Hit .290 with 13 doubles and 33 RBI. ... Shawn Coyle, 1B/P, 1997-2000 — Played 46 games between Red Sox and Bears. Batted .380 and drove in 21 runs. ... Nate Stafford, OF, 2003-10 — Career .298 hitter. Played 117 games. Scored 68 runs, drove in 42. ... Scott  Biederman, manager, 1999-07 — Led Bears to 103-59 record, five division titles, three league titles in nine seasons at helm. Won first of Eau Claire's three WBA titles.

Professionals: Jon Huth, 2005-present — Played  Rookie ball for the 1988 Texas Rangers and Single A for the Kansas City  Royals from 1989-90. ... Kelly Werner, 2008-present — Played two seasons of Rookie ball for the Milwaukee Brewers in 2000 and 2001.

WBA History: Bears have qualified for WBA tournament 12 times. Reached finals in 2002 and from 2004-09. Eau Claire has most WBA titles of any CRBL team with three (2005, 08, 09) and has 14-4 record in finals.

Records/league leaders: Jon Huth is one of four players in league history with two no-hitters, having done so in 2007 and 2008. ... Shane Bobb has also thrown a no-hitter for the Bears. Bobb did it in 2004. ... Matt Olson holds single-season record for ERA. Allowed no earned runs in 21 innings in 2006. ...  Justin Kunferman's 83 strikeouts led league in 2004. ... C.J. Martin led league in ERA in 1989 and 1991 while leading the league in wins and strikeouts in 1990. Tied for lead in RBIs with 24 in 1990. Shawn Coyle was league's batting champion in 1999. Hit .489. ... Nate Larson was league batting champion in 2011 at .463.

 

— Compiled by Ben Peterson from statistics and records provided by Andy Niese, CRBL Secretary

Bears win fifth CRBL championship in six years

By John Casper Jr.
Leader-Telegram staff
CHIPPEWA FALLS - The Eau Claire Bears powered their way to a sixth consecutive Chippewa River Baseball League South Division title with pitching and defense.

Sunday in the CRBL championship game at Casper Park, the offense decided to join the party.

The Bears Nos. 3, 4, and 5 hitters - Colin Boone, Brian Menard and Jim Thill - went a combined 7-for-15 with three home runs and six RBIs as the Bears won their fifth league title in the past six seasons with a 10-0 victory over the Hallie Eagles.

"We knew that if we could get a couple runs early and as long as we kept getting solid defense and solid pitching there was a good chance we'd come out on top at the end," Eau Claire manager/right fielder Reed Pecha said. "We've been a little bit silent all year with the bats, and finally today we made some noise."

Eau Claire grabbed an early lead on an RBI double by Menard in the third, then broke open the game in the fifth.

Boone hit a two-run home run over the scoreboard in right field and Menard followed with a home run to the same area on the very next pitch, giving the Bears a four-run cushion.

Eau Claire added two runs in each of the next two innings, which included a towering two-run home run by Thill that disappeared into the brush way beyond the right-field fence in the seventh.

The blast chased Hallie starter Adam Ferrell, who led the CRBL with nine victories and was pitching for the third time in eight days.

Hallie needed to beat Chippewa Falls in a one-game playoff for the North Division title Wednesday night for a spot in the championship.

"He's never tired," said Hallie manager Luke Walker, who was given the Jan Krueger Manager of the Year Award. "He can throw all day, all week.

"They're just good hitters all around. You have to make the plays and not make the errors."

Hallie committed six errors, but the Bears big boppers would have done their damage anyway.

"I don't know if (Ferrell) had his best stuff," said Menard, who went 3-for-5 and was named the game's most valuable player. "He's had our number before in the past. We all swung it really well."

Scott Wolfe, the MVP of last year's championship game, added three hits, while the Bears Nos. 8 and 9 hitters - Nate Larson and Chris Flater - each drove in a run.

"You see guys hitting the ball hard and getting some confidence going, that spreads," Pecha said. "It was nice to see that. Even the guys that made outs were hitting the ball hard. Everyone was seeing the ball really well and we were putting some good strokes on the ball."

Matt Lunde threw six solid innings, giving up six hits and working his way out of a couple of early jams.

Jon Huth, the CRBL ERA leader, threw the final three innings to pick up the save, striking out six.

Both teams begin play in the Wisconsin Baseball Association tournament next weekend. The Eagles, who were playing in their first CRBL championship game since 2000, play in a regional at Carson Park while the Bears, who won the WBA tournament last year, begin regional play in Abbotsford.

Pecha hopes Sunday's offensive outburst is a sign of things to come.

"That's a big momentum boost for us," he said. "I think we needed that to get our confidence a little bit and hoepfully, we can carry that into next weekend."

EAU CLAIRE BEARS 10, HALLIE EAGLES 0

EAU CLAIRE (10)

AB-R-H-RBI: Reed Pecha, rf, 4-1-0-1; Colin Boone, cf, 5-3-2-2; Brian Menard, lf, 5-1-3-2; Jim Thill, 2b, 5-1-2-2; Luke Stelter, cf, 4-0-0-0; Matt Prosek, ph, 1-1-1-0; Scott Wolfe, ss, 4-1-3-0; Tim Thill, 1b, 4-1-0-0; Kelly Werner, 1b, 1-0-0-0; Nate Larson, 3b, 4-1-1-0; Jared Wirth, ph, 1-0-0-1; Chris Flater, dh, 4-0-0-1; Matt Lunde, p, 0-0-0-0; Jon Huth, p, 0-0-0-0. Totals 42-10-12-9.

HALLIE (0)

Trevor Madson, cf, 4-0-0-0; Luke Merritt, lf, 3-0-0-0; Eric Strobel, lf, 1-0-0-0; Adam DeWolf, rf/p, 4-0-1-0; Brett Olson, c, 4-0-0-0; Zach Merritt, 3b, 3-0-2-0; August, 3b, 1-0-0-0; Brandon Elliot, ss, 3-0-2-0; Link Walker, ph, 1-0-0-0; Adam Ferrell, p/rf, 4-0-0-0; Ben DeWolf, 2b, 3-0-0-0; Ray Krause, dh, 3-0-1-0; Benji Myers, 1b, 0-0-0-0. Totals 33-0-6-0.

Eau Claire 001 032 211 - 10 12 2

Hallie 000 000 000 - 0 6 6

E - Wolfe 2; B. DeWolf 2, Myers, L. Merritt, Elliott, August. DP - Eau Claire, Hallie. LOB - Eau Claire 8, Hallie 8. 2B - Menard. 3B - J. Thill. HR - Boone, Menard, J. Thill. SB - Madson. SAC - Flater.

Eau Claire IP H R ER BB SO

Lunde, W 6 6 0 0 2 2

Huth, S 3 0 0 0 0 6

Hallie

Ferrell 63 8 8 5 1 7

A. DeWolf 2q 4 2 2 1 2

WP - Huth.

Bears will rely on experience

Eau Claire Bears season preview

posted Nov. 27, 2014 11:39 a.m. (CDT)
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by / Ben Peterson Leader-Telegram staff

The Bears are fresh off their fifth Chippewa River Baseball League title in six years and their second consecutive Wisconsin Baseball Association title.With the bulk of last year's roster returning, manager Reed Pecha hopes that 2010 is just more of the same.

"We look to continue our tradition of winning," Pecha said. "Right now we're off to a slow start but it's a long season and we hope to be there in the end."

The Bears are 3-2 overall in 2010 but Pecha has faith in a strong pitching staff and a veteran lineup.

"We have gotten off to a slow start with our bats but we did that last year too and we rebounded from it," Pecha said. "Anytime you have a good pitching staff you'll have some success."

And the Bears have a good one.

Nate Larson, Kelly Werner, Jon Huth and Matt Lunde headline a seasoned staff of accomplished pitchers. The staff also will see returners in 2008 Eau Claire Memorial graduates Brady Sand and Chevy Tollefson, as well as newcomer and 2009 Eau Claire North graduate Matt Prosek.

"We have a few young guys and it's important for us as a group who is starting to age to add guys who are younger," Pecha said.

Tollefson will join the team late as he is competing with Madison Area Technical College in the Junior College World Series.

With such an experienced core of pitchers, Pecha said he wants to prepare and groom his pitchers for the "marathon" of a season they have ahead of them.

"We do a really good job of pacing our pitchers," Pecha said. "Some other pitchers are throwing a lot of innings early in the year and that provides us with an advantage. We can keep our pitch counts low so they're fresh at the end of the year."

One of the key factors in the Bears' recent and historical success comes from a very simple concept — familiarity.

Every member of the 2010 Bears graduated from either North or Memorial high school, giving the players plenty to talk about on and off the field.

"The fun thing is that most of the guys either played with or against each other at some point in their careers," Pecha said. "Everyone understands the game real well and it makes it a lot of fun. You constantly learn when you're around people who know the game."

Pecha and the rest of the Bears hope that a local feel to the team will give both the players and fans an exciting experience in 2010.

"Most importantly if you go to a Bears game, you will recognize a name on the roster," Pecha said. "If you pay attention to any local baseball in the past 20 years, you will know people on our team. We truly do not have any players outside of North or Memorial on our roster. If you're an Eau Claire person you'll recognize some of these guys."

Though the Bears' accolades have been impressive of late, Pecha says that it's not all about being the best. Despite the fact that the Bears are now the first CRBL team to win three WBA titles and the first to win two straight, that isn't the reason that the same players return to the ballpark year after year.

"We just can't get enough of playing baseball," Pecha said. "That's why we do it."

Bears Win 4th CRBL Title in 5 Years

Bears Win 4th CRBL Title in 5 Years
By Justin Harings

Leader-Telegram staff
Scott Wolfe wasn't named the most valuable player in the Chippewa River Baseball League championship game.
It wasn't because he didn't have a convincing argument.
Wolfe hit nearly identical home runs in back-to-back innings and had five RBIs as the Eau Claire Bears piled on 19 hits and won their fourth league title in five years with an 11-3 victory over the Chippewa Falls Lumberjacks on Sunday afternoon at Stein Field in a game that wasn't exactly a defensive clinic.
"It's nice to get the CRBL championship again," said Wolfe, who finished 4-for-6 with a double and three runs to go along with his pair of homers and handful of RBIs. "We felt like we had to come out and play hard today because, last year, Tilden really kind of stuck it to us."
The Bears (17-2 CRBL) entered the league title game last summer as the three-time defending champions but were one-hit in a 4-0 loss to Tilden - the same team they defeated for the championship trophy each of the previous three years.
Every starter for the South Division champions did his part to welcome back the Lumberjacks (15-4) - who won the North Division for the first time since 2001 - with at least one hit.
His team up by two runs in the fourth inning, Wolfe wheeled on a hanging breaking ball from Lumberjacks ace Tyler Gray and dropped a two-run homer beyond the left-field fence. Wolfe did almost the exact same thing to Lumberjacks reliever Jeff Moessner in the fifth - only this time the breaking ball he bombed over the left-field fence was a three-run shot.
"I didn't see a lot of fastballs today," said Wolfe, who was the title game MVP when the Bears beat Tilden in 2006. "He was throwing a lot of sliders, so I was kind of sitting back, waiting for it."
Bears designated hitter Matt Olson was named the game's MVP after going 5-for-5 with five singles, two RBIs and a run scored, and left fielder Brian Menard went 4-for-6, scored three times and stole a base.
"We were able to get on Gray early and kind of keep some pressure on - made him throw a lot of pitches, and we were able to crack him for some runs," Bears manager/right fielder Reed Pecha said. "Once we got those first couple, it seemed like it got easier and easier. It felt really good to get some momentum going, and we just kind of went from there."
Gray, who entered Sunday with a 9-2 record and 2.46 ERA, was chased out to left field after allowing six runs on nine hits and striking out five in four innings.
"They have a really good hitting team," Lumberjacks manager/catcher Andy Niese said. "I think it's fair to say Tyler didn't have his best stuff, but, that said, I felt like it was good enough to keep us in the game if we had fielded the ball better."
The Lumberjacks committed fewer errors than the Bears on Sunday - and the Lumberjacks committed five. The Bears had six of their own.
Despite some sloppy fielding behind him, Bears starter Jon Huth barreled through six strong innings, getting the victory after allowing one run on three hits and fanning six with no walks. Except for the final one in the top of the sixth, every out Huth recorded came by way of strikeout or groundout. He gave way to Matt Lunde, who polished off the final three frames.
Offensively, the Bears were rolling right along behind their hurlers, scoring four runs in the fourth and three more in the fifth to lead by as many as nine runs. Because the Bears landed so may runners on base, they still stranded 17 despite scoring 11 of them on 19 hits.
"It was nice to come out and swing the bat well today - the whole team," Wolfe said.
EAU CLAIRE 11, CHIPPEWA FALLS 3
CHIPPEWA FALLS (3)
AB-R-H-RBI: Andy Niese, c, 4-1-1-0; Andy Aumann, ph, 1-0-0-0; Chad Zutter, 3b, 3-1-1-1; Han Soukup, dh, 3-0-0-1; Jordan Hedrington, 1b, 3-0-1-1; Garret Prince, 1b, 0-0-0-0; Josh Briggs, 2b, 4-0-0-0; Sam Schretenthaler, cf, 4-0-1-0; Kurt Roubal, ss, 4-0-0-0; Terry McCann, rf, 4-0-0-0; Tyler Gray, p/lf, 3-1-1-0; Jon Krejchi, lf, 0-0-0-0; Jake Thelen, lf, 0-0-0-0; Jeff Moessner, p, 0-0-0-0. Totals 33-3-5-3.
EAU CLAIRE (11)
Reed Pecha, rf, 6-1-1-0; Brian Menard, lf, 6-3-4-0; Scott Wolfe, ss, 6-3-4-5; Jim Thill, 2b, 4-1-1-1; Nate Larson, 3b, 3-1-1-0; Brian Sommer, ph, 1-0-0-0; Colin Boone, cf, 5-1-1-2; Tim Thill, 1b, 6-0-1-0; Matt Olson 5-1-5-2; Chris Flater, c, 2-0-1-0; Luke Stelter, c, 1-0-0-0; Jon Huth, p, 0-0-0-0; Matt Lunde, p, 0-0-0-0. Totals 45-11-19-10.
CF 000 001 020 - 3 5 5
Eau Claire 002 431 01x - 11 19 6
E - Briggs 2, Thelen, Zutter, Niese; J. Thill 2, T. Thill, Wolfe 2, Stelter. DP - Eau Claire 2. LOB - Chippewa Falls 7, Eau Claire 17. 2B - Wolfe, Boone. HR - Wolfe 2. SB - Menard. SH - Zutter; Larson. SF - Soukup; J. Thill.
Chippewa Falls IP H R ER BB SO
Gray, L 4 9 6 3 2 5
Moessner 4 10 5 5 2 1
Eau Claire
Huth, W 6 3 1 1 0 6
Lunde 3 2 2 2 1 1
WP - Lunde. HB - by Gray (Flater).

News Article for 2006 CRBL Title Game

Tigers get Third CRBL rematch with Bears
By ROSS EVAVOLD ross.evavold@lee.net
If there is one thing the CRBL can count on, it is that Tilden will be playing in the league’s championship game.

The Tigers won their fifth consecutive North Division crown this season, and earned a spot in Sunday’s title game.

Their opponent is the Eau Claire Bears, the defending champions who will by vying for their third title in a row.

First pitch is at noon Sunday in Eau Claire’s Carson Park.

Tilden won its 26th division title this season, and is making its 32nd appearance in a league championship, which is easily a record.

“It never gets old,” said pitcher Todd Bresina, who has been with the club since 1989. His squad has been in the title game all but two years since 1991.

“That’s what you’re playing for all year, and it sets the stage for the WBA state tournament,” Bresina said. “We shoot for it every year.”

The Tigers have a storied history, having won the Wisconsin Baseball Association championship in 1995 and 2004. And they have won 14 CRBL championships.

But Tilden has won only one league title in the past eight years, and that was in 2002, with a 4-2 decision over Eau Claire who was competing for the league championship for the first time as the Eau Claire Bears (est. 1998).

The Tigers lost 14-8 to Beef River in the championship game the next year, and fell to Eau Claire the past two seasons, 11-6 and 17-2.
Reed Pecha was the CRBL Championship game MVP in 2004 as the Bears won their first CRBL title. Pecha was 2 for 3 with a Homerun and 4 RBIs. In last year’s game at Bloomer, Huth shut down the Tigers, holding them to one unearned run in seven innings in winning the games MVP award.

Evening the series with the Bears at two games apiece will be a tall order, considering the Bears are also the defending WBA champions.

Then there is the South Division’s domination of late. South teams have won seven of the past nine All-Star games.

And when it comes to championship games, the South has won six out of eight, and 10 of the past 14.

Eau Claire posted the best regular-season record in 19 years, matching the 17-1 record the Chippewa Falls Lumberjacks posted in 1987.

The Bears’ strength lies on the mound, where three pitchers assembled three of the most dominating seasons in the league.

Jon Huth was unbeaten in five decisions this season, owning a 1.25 earned run average. Teammate Matt Lunde went 7-1 with a 1.62 ERA, while Matt Olson did not allow a single earned run in 21 innings work.
The Eau Claire Bears’ Matt Lunde threw five scoreless innings to earn MVP honors at the CRBL all-star game earlier this summer.

Lunde, who also was the all-star co-MVP in 1998, became the third player to win multiple CRBL all-star game MVPs.

Cadott Red Sox third baseman Gary Rykal was the co-MVP of the 1970 all-star game and the MVP in 1971.

Augusta’s Scott Hughes won three all-star MVP awards at three different positions — pitcher, third base and utility.

Hughes was the MVP in 1994, 1996 and 2003.

As for Tilden this year, Bresina led the Tigers on the mound, going 5-1 with a 1.29 ERA, with 41 strikeouts in 42 innings.

Mitch Steinmetz led the league in runs scored with 24 in 18 games, and in walks with 23.

Chris Scheidler was Tilden’s top batter in league play, hitting .396 which ranked seventh in the league. The Bears’ Reed Pecha finished 8th in the league with an average of .391 and is the Bears’ leading hitter.