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Alive and thriving: County League rises above pandemic, completes successful season

By Rob Burchianti, For The Greene County Messenger 5 min read
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Ryan Encapera may have come up short in his quest for a second Fayette County Baseball League title but he was still a champion in the year of the coronavirus pandemic.

Encapera is manager of MitchĢƵ Bail Bonds and while his squad fell to a youthful, talented first-year Masontown team in the league best-of-three championship series, 2-1, the fact there was a season at all was an overall victory for the FCBL.

When the high school spring sports season was cancelled it seemed doubtful there would be any kind of local baseball played in 2020. The decades long run of the County League looked to be in jeopardy.

Encapera, the league president, worked with Carmichaels manager Dickie Krause and others to come up with a COVID-19 plan so that the season could be played.

“Ryan has done an exemplary job as the president of this league,” said Krause, who watched MitchĢƵ snap the Copperheads’ run of four consecutive league championships with a 2-0 sweep in their best-of-three semifinal series this year.

“We were able to dodge any COVID incidents. ItĢƵ been wonderful to be on the field on the dirt again and, basically, be around the game. If you play enough, the game is in your blood. What happened to those poor high school kids was terrible. I felt so bad.

“I give Ryan a lot of credit. We wrote a COVID plan, put it in place and I thought it worked well. The other thing is RyanĢƵ really put some things together where when you come to games everything is organized and ready.”

Encapera was determined to make the season a reality.

“Baseball has always been an important part of my life and for this summer the goal that the other managers and myself wanted was to set a sense of normalcy by trying to play,” he said.

“Prior to the season we held a number of phone conferences and I appreciate the time and effort all of our managers and Toby McKnight, our umpire assignor, put in to set up a safe environment and competitive schedule.”

The preseason diligence paid off.

“The league was a great success for all involved and we were very fortunate to have great weather, no COVID cases, and total cooperation with players, coaches, fans, and umpires in regard to personal safety,” Encapera said.

Masontown manager John Palmer was just grateful for the opportunity to play, let alone winning the league title.

“It was great. I’ve never been happier to play baseball,” said Palmer. “With the coronavirus, it was a great thing to get out and play the game we all love.”

The five-team league — which also included the Fayette Raiders and stalwart Mill Run, the FCBLĢƵ longest-running current franchise — not only survived, it flourished.

“ItĢƵ a good competitive league,” Krause said. “This year the fifth-place team (Fayette Raiders) went 2-10 and they lost to us twice by one run and were in just about every game.”

Even with his team losing its grip on the title — Carmichaels hadn’t lost a completed playoff series since 2012, although it didn’t participate in the 2015 season — Krause admitted parity is a good.

“Anybody could beat you on any night this year and thatĢƵ what you want, you want balance in the league,” Krause said. “ItĢƵ never good to lose but this was the most competitive this league has been in a while and credit to all the coaches. ItĢƵ been a nice year for the County League.”

Encapera concurred.

“The competition level was as close as it has ever been,” he said.

Emcapera and Krause lauded the new squad for itĢƵ success.

“Masontown has battled all year and has had a great season,” Encapera said before facing them in the final.

“Masontown is athletic and really deep,” Krause said. “John Palmer has done a great job coaching that team. You could tell right from the beginning that they were really organized and a well-run team.”

MitchĢƵ was a strong team as well, as it proved with its series win over Carmichaels before coming within one win of claiming the league crown. An infusion of youth into his roster gave his team a boost, according to Encapera.

“I spent a lot of time with this, really trying to get as many good players as we can and we’re fortunate this year to have a lot of them,” Encapera said after eliminating the Copperheads. “You try to have your best team for every day and we’ve been great from top to bottom with our roster and itĢƵ helped us throughout the year.”

Encapera, like his players did most of the summer, came through under pressure in running the league he loves.

“Moving forward, I hope that our success this year will help grow the league for more players to be involved by adding new teams,” Encapera said.

One group that already is considering entering a franchise is Laurel Highlands’ 2020 senior class, which led the Mustangs to the HARC Teener League title on Monday. Mustangs manager Buddy Marra said his players, after watching MasontownĢƵ triumphant season in the FCBL, were strongly considering starting up a County League team.

Thanks to Encapera, Krause and all the leagueĢƵ managers, when it was faced with one of its greatest challenges, the County League not only rose above the virus mayhem but showed itĢƵ alive and thriving.

NOTE: If interested in entering a team into the FCBL for the 2021 season, contact Encapera at 412-596-3515 or at ryanencapera@aol.com.

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