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This One's For You, Bud

Division II: Hart staves off last-inning rally by Righetti to claim first baseball title, 10-9.

VALLEY / VENTURA COUNTY SPORTS

June 06, 1999|MIKE BRESNAHAN, TIMES STAFF WRITER

ANAHEIM — He hugged his players, he kissed his wife.

Then Bud Murray walked off Edison Field with a smile and, at the same time, a sense of sadness.


For the Record
Los Angeles Times Wednesday June 9, 1999 Valley Edition Sports Part D Page 9 Zones Desk 1 inches; 18 words Type of Material: Correction
Baseball--Coach Bud Murray of Hart High has 516 career victories. An incorrect number was reported in Sunday's sports section.


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Murray, retiring coach at Hart High, did what few coaches ever do. He retired as a winner in a championship game.

Hart fended off a seventh-inning rally and defeated Santa Maria Righetti, 10-9, in the Southern Section Division II baseball championship game Saturday at Edison Field, winning its first baseball title in school history.

"I'm happy, but I'm really happy for this bunch of kids," said Murray, who then said something quietly, almost to himself. "We won the championship."

Unlike previous playoff games, this didn't come easily for Hart.

Protecting a 10-7 lead, pitcher Jamie Shields of Hart surrendered a two-run home run to Aaron McKenzie in the bottom of the seventh.

But Shields (11-0) retired the next three batters, ending the game by striking out Andrew Beekman.

"This is the most exciting day of my life," Shields said. "You can't get any better than this."

A trip to the mound by Murray after Shields gave up McKenzie's home run proved to be somewhat prophetic.

"I went out and told the kids, 'We've been up by one run all day and that's what's going to hold us,' " Murray said.

How true.

Surprisingly, the pregame speech by Murray, who has coached high school and college baseball for 39 years, 22 of them at Hart, did not focus on the game's importance.

"I told them this is not the most-important thing that's ever going to happen to them," Murray said. "Your first-born [child] is going to be more important. This is just something that you should go out and enjoy."

Hart wasn't entirely festive during Righetti's comeback in the bottom of the seventh.

"I was scared a little bit," said shortstop Tim Hutting of Hart, who had two singles, walked twice and scored three runs. "But Jamie's going to be in the pros some day, so I knew we were in good hands. I was nervous, but I knew he was going to pull through."

Righetti, making its first appearance in a championship game, proved to be more than resilient.

Second-seeded Hart (27-4) scored twice in the top of the first inning, but the unseeded Warriors (24-7) countered with two runs in the bottom half.

Hart scored another run in the second inning, Righetti tied it, 3-3, in the third.

Hart took an 8-3 lead after a five-run third inning, and, sure enough, Righetti clawed back to within 8-7.

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