Details, Directions and more on Williams-Amherst baseball at Wahconah Park Saturday

Directions
to Wahconah Park
Free fan bus for Williams students leaves from in
front of Chapin Hall at 11:45 and returns to campus immediately
following the game.
Admission: $5 for adults; Williams students free
with ID
Schedule of
Events:
Wahconah Park Opens at 9AM
Clinic Registration Begins at 10 AM
Youth Clinic Sponsored by College Baseball Hall of Fame
and Duquette Sports Academy 10:30 AM till 12PM
Home Infield Practice 12:05 to 12:20PM
Visitor Infield Practice 12:25 to
1240PM
Field Maintenance 12:40 to 12:55PM
On Field Ceremony Commemorating 149th Anniversary of
1st College Game Plaque to Mayor Ruberto 12:56 to 1:04PM
Lineup Cards Exchanged 1:05PM
Game Time 1:10PM
149th year of Williams-Amherst baseball to be celebrated
in Pittsfield's Wahconah Park
On Saturday, April 12th at 1:10 pm the Williams and Amherst
baseball teams will square off in Wahconah Park in Pittsfield,
Mass. to celebrate the 149th year of college baseball in America.
Williams and Amherst met in the first intercollegiate contest back
on July 1, 1859 in Pittsfield in a game won by Amherst 73-32 in 25
innings.
Williams currently boasts a record of 13-7, 3-0 NESCAC, while
Amherst is 12-6-1, 4-2 in NESCAC.
The 289th meeting between the archrivals is setting the stage for
what is expected to be an even larger celebration in 2009 when the
150th year of college baseball will noted.
Former Eph baseball player Mike Barbera '89 got the ball rolling
on this project and was assisted by Amherst graduate Dan Duquette
who grew up in nearby Dalton, Mass. Barbera and Duquette worked
with Williams head coach Bill Barrale and Amherst head coach Bill
Thurston to move the game from the Williams campus to Pittsfield.
Barbera and Duquette also enlisted the support of the Mayor of
Pittsfield James. M. Ruberto and secured the use of historic
Wahconah Park.
This year's contest will be preceded by a youth baseball clinic
provided by the Dan Duquette Sports Academy.
The College Baseball Hall of Fame, based in Lubbock, Texas, will
be on hand to officially recognize the game as the birth of
intercollegiate baseball in America. Brad Walker and former major
leaguer Neal Heaton will represent the Hall of Fame.
You can see and read more about the celebration of the 149th year
of college baseball and Pittsfield being the birthplace of college
baseball by visiting the Capital News 9 and Berkshire Eagle links
below.
Capital
News 9 (includes text and video)
Berkshire
Eagle





