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Hawaii says aloha to LLWS crown

Monday, August 25, 2008

SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) — Hawaii’s coaches lay sprawled on the field as their happy players trotted around showing off their new championship banner.

Winning the Little League World Series can be exhausting.

Tanner Tokunaga hit two homers, Iolana Akau added a solo blast and Waipahu, Hawaii, took advantage of several miscues by Matamoros, Mexico, in 12-3 victory Sunday that sealed the fourth straight Little League title for the United States.

“I know I’m tired,” manager Timo Donahue said. “I’ll probably catch up on a lot of sleep the next few days.”

His pint-sized players wore out Mexico, too. It was just the second time in series history that a team scored in each inning in the title game, with the 1974 team from Taiwan the only other squad to accomplish the feat.

Two Hawaii runs Sunday scored on passed balls, and another run came home on a bases-loaded walk. Mexico committed three errors.

Still, Mexico’s lineup is loaded with dangerous hitters, so the lead wasn’t safe until reliever Christian Donahue, the manager’s son, got Fernando Villegas to ground out to Tokunaga at shortstop.

Then the celebration started.

“U-S-A! U-S-A!” the crowd chanted on a warm, sunny afternoon as the players tossed their gloves into the air, then posed near the mound with the banner.

A team from Ewa Beach, Hawaii, started the U.S. winning streak in 2005, with Little Leaguers from Georgia taking the prize the previous two years.

“It felt really good to be the world champions, especially since I made the last out,” the 12-year-old Tokunaga said, a pink lei hanging around his neck.

Eduardo Rodriguez’s two-run single off starter Caleb Duhay in the third closed a four-run gap to 5-3 for Mexico in the third before Hawaii broke out for seven runs over the next two innings.

Duhay struck out seven in 51‚Ñ3 innings for the win.

All three Hawaii runs in the fourth scored with two outs. Akau started the scoring with his homer to center. The next batter, Khade Paris, reached on hit by pitch and scored on a bases-loaded walk.

Then Keelen Obedoza hit a soft liner toward first that fielder Eleazar Rojas thought he caught on the fly. But the ball touched the ground just before it hit his glove, allowing Duhay to scamper home from third for a 7-3 lead.