Persistence
Pays Off for Trinity Catholic
(05/05/2009) HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL
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Persistence paying off for Trinity Catholic
By Evan MacDonald, Globe Correspondent | May 4, 2009
Trailing South Shore Christian, 8-1, after two innings
Friday, things looked bleak for Trinity Catholic. For a team
that has missed the postseason in each of the last two
seasons, making the game respectable could have been a moral
victory. But senior captain Marc Leger, two days after
pitching a complete game, approached coach Craig Genualdo
and took charge.
"He told me to give him the ball," Genualdo said. "He came
in and shut them down for three innings, allowing one hit.
We came back and won, 13-12."
It's been that sort of year for Trinity Catholic, which has
blazed to an 8-2 start and is one win away from qualifying
for the state tournament for the first time in Genualdo's
three seasons at the helm.
"In the past, those same kids might've been dead on the
bench and not come back," Genualdo said. "Even at our lowest
moment, it wasn't a matter of if we were going to come back.
It was just a matter of how, when, and who was going to do
it."
The Falcons finished 8-10 last season (5-7 in the Catholic
Central League), but the seeds of success were evident.
Trinity Catholic won four of its final five games, and
Genualdo said that strong finish increased the Falcons'
confidence heading into the offseason.
Leger and junior Mike Marchionda have anchored the pitching
staff, the strength of the team. The Falcons posted a 2.43
ERA through the season's first nine games, recording 111
strikeouts against only 37 walks.
Marchionda has posted a 4-2 record, and has struck out 51 in
31 innings. He also sports a 2.93 ERA.
Genualdo said his pitchers' success comes from the lumps
they took over the previous two seasons. Now, instead of
trying to be too careful, the Falcons' hurlers are
challenging opponents and aren't afraid to let the defense
make plays behind them.
"They have trust in their teammates to make the play if the
ball is hit," Genualdo said. "They can worry about throwing
strikes, and the defense can worry about everything
else."
Part of the improvement in defense comes from a change in
the Falcons' practice routine. Genualdo and his coaching
staff track fielding performance in practice, which has
given players an extra incentive to remain alert, instead of
going through the motions.
"We were charting batting practice and base running, and
realized we weren't tracking defense," Genualdo said. "Now,
instead of just throwing the ball back in to the pitcher,
they're competing."
Also key has been the leadership the two senior captains,
Leger and catcher Bobby Greenwood, who is batting .469 with
a .575 on-base percentage.
"They've taken the bull by horns," Genualdo said. "From
leadership standpoint, it's huge what they do for the
team."
Genualdo said the Falcons' only goal is to make the
playoffs.
"I have a poster on my wall from 'Apollo 13' with Tom
Hanks's quote, 'We live in a world where man has walked on
the moon. And it's not a miracle, we just decided to go,' "
Genualdo said. "That's the way we feel about [making the
playoffs]. It's not a miracle. We just decided to
go."