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Sunday, 22 October 2006
Varvaro Above The Law? Flesheaters Owner Avoids Fine for Disobeying Traffic Laws; What Did He Say to Local Cops?
Jason Varvaro, the owner and general manager of Floral Park Flesheaters, was pulled over by Nassau County police today but mysteriously left without receiving a ticket, sources told the league Web site.
Varvaro was on the phone with Wellwood Avenue Scribes of Lindenhurst owner Jim Baumbach at the time, said to be discussing their past trade history after agreeing to play a series of games October 20 and October 22. Baumbach, when reached for comment, confirmed only that he spoke with Varvaro by phone.
The apparent issue at hand was that Varvaro was talking to Baumbach on his cell phone, which is against New York State law. However, police went lightly on him because he flashed his postal worker identification card, according to police sources. It is unclear if he was given preferrental treatment because of his status in the community as owner the fan favorite Flesheaters.
The league website sent Varvaro mutliple e-mails to his last known e-mail address seeking comment, but shockingly enough, he did not respond. It is not known whether the league website made any attempt to reach out to him via his cell phone or through a text message.

Posted by nylistratleague at 11:44 PM EDT
Monday, 16 October 2006
They're The Real Hitmen! Eyre, Turnbow Tossed For Consecutive Beanballs; St. Jack's Will Appeal

It was an ugly finish to an ugly series.

 

St. Jack’s relievers Scott Eyre and Derrick Turnbow were both ejected for plunking consecutive Lindenhurst hitters in the ninth inning of a devastating 7-6 loss on August 20, the final game of a four-game set that saw the Hitmen take three of four from the Demons.

 

The ejections outraged St. Jack’s owner/general manager Jack Flynn, who (as usual) couldn’t believe his team’s misfortune.

 

“I don’t understand how Lindenhurst players were allowed to continually lean into the ball like that without any repercussions,” Flynn fumed. “I thought I was watching Rudi Stein out there!”

 

Flynn argued that the ejections and subsequent suspensions were all the more ridiculous considering it was a one-run game in the ninth inning of the final game of the series and that there was obviously no intent involved. Eyre had just replaced Hector Carrasco, who had thrown four shutout innings of relief, and promptly plunked the first batter he faced. Because Mark Buehrle had hit batters in each of the first two innings of the game, warnings had already been issued and the umpires felt they had no choice but to run Eyre.

 

Things got even more comical when Turnbow was brought in to face the next batter, who rolled a 2-7 and was subsequently hit by the pitch. He was thrown out immediately and manager Earl Weaver was seen trying to restrain Flynn from running onto the field and getting in the home plate umpire’s face. Both Eyre and Turnbow, by NYLISL rules, will be suspended for three games. St. Jack's will be appealing the suspensions to NYLISL co-commissioner Chris Forster.

 

“Now we have a five-man bullpen – Harden, Carrasco, Fuentes, Francisco Rodriguez and Curt freaking Schilling! He’s a 30/40, for Christ’s sake! How can the league allow a travesty like this to happen?” Flynn raged. When reminded by TV analyst Rex Hudler that Flynn is the co-commissioner of the league and had actually recommended the rule changes concerning ejections at last year’s Winter Meetings, the response was swift and vicious.

 

“Take it out of here, Rex,” Flynn snapped, and the former utility infielder was quickly escorted from the clubhouse by Demons security personnel.

 

Flynn later added that he would be commissioning a blue-ribbon panel to investigate the use of the brawl charts in NYLISL games. “Something tells me that not everyone is playing by the rules here,” he said. “It’s funny how we’re nearly halfway through the season and not one other team has had a player suspended in this fashion. I know the Strat gods hate me, but I still have a sneaking suspicion that not everyone is using these charts.”

 

News and Notes: In all, seven Hitmen were plunked by Demons pitching. Two of those incidents led to injuries, as David Wright and Larry Walker were each forced to go on the disabled list. Not one Demon was hit by a pitch throughout the series ... Curt Schilling and Jack Wilson were recalled from Pearl River to replace Eyre and Turnbow during their suspensions … Flynn planned to scout the league for an additional reliever, as well as a third catcher once Victor Martinez and Michael Barrett are the only backstops on the 40-man roster. Lindenhurst was dangling Toby Hall, but the initial asking price of Jeff Conine was too high. On August 26, the Demons acquired Jason Kendall from New Jersey for David DeJesus.


Posted by nylistratleague at 9:19 PM EDT
Updated: Monday, 16 October 2006 9:26 PM EDT
Sunday, 20 August 2006
El Jefe: Viva Dos Carlos! Zambrano, Delgado Back With St. Jack's; Demons Cut Ties With Ace Starter, Longest-Tenured Player

St. Jack’s and Floral Park came together to make their second trade of the season on August 6 – an eight-player swap that saw the Demons re-acquire two former players while parting ways with the franchise’s longest-tenured position player.

 

Carlos Zambrano and Carlos Delgado are back in the fold for St. Jack’s, who also added Craig Monroe and Greg Maddux in exchange for Roger Clemens, Jorge Posada, Hank Blalock and Brad Thompson. Zambrano was drafted as a rookie by the Demons and spent several years with the club before he was shipped to the Crackheads in 2005.

 

Zambrano will take over Clemens’s spot as the ace in the Demons’ starting rotation, which has been horrible since the beginning of the season. Despite a 25-12 record, no St. Jack’s starter has an ERA under 5.00 or a WHIP under 1.500. Clemens, meanwhile, will pair with Johan Santana to form the most impressive 1-2 punch in the league and will give Floral Park two legitimate aces at the top of their rotation.

 

Delgado, despite an onerous contract that includes two more years and a 2009 option, was brought back to DH against right-handed pitching. He is expected to bat third in the Demons’ lineup, between Miguel Cabrera and Alex Rodriguez. St. Jack’s insisted that Floral Park take on Blalock’s contract, which is of a similar length, as part of the deal. Blalock will likely sit in Floral Park’s minor leagues until the trade deadline and has a chance to be a defensive replacement in 2007.

 

Posada, meanwhile, will be part of the catching picture for the Flesheaters both right now (where he will compete with Ramon Hernandez or Rod Barajas for playing time) and next year (where he will be one of the top catchers in the league). A switch-hitting catcher with one more year on his contract and a .390 OBP (over .400 against righties) is a rare and valuable commodity, which Floral Park was happy to pick up. The trade leaves St. Jack’s with only two catchers on the 40-man roster and it is believed that they will be reaching out to at least two clubs – Lindenhurst and New Jersey – to inquire about the availability of one of their four backstops.

 

The trade leaves St. Jack’s with just one original member on their 40-man roster – starting pitcher Curt Schilling. Posada had over 1,000 plate appearances with the franchise and is the all-team statistical leader in several categories. Before the trade, it looked as though he would platoon with Michael Barrett in 2007, giving St. Jack’s perhaps the best catcher tandem in the NYLISL. Now it appears Barrett will have the job outright next year, with the talented Victor Martinez playing the caddy’s role.

 

Monroe is a versatile outfielder who hits lefties hard, but appears to have no role with St. Jack’s. He is believed to be very available to any team that needs a corner outfielder to supplement the lineup against lefties. Maddux is having one of the worst seasons of his career, but still has a WHIP of only 1.26 and may be rejuvenated after a recent MLB trade to the Los Angeles Dodgers. Both are free agents at the end of the season and, barring a career renaissance from Maddux, neither is likely to be re-signed. Thompson will fill out the back of the bullpen for Floral Park, which had just five relievers on the entire 40-man roster before the trade.


Posted by nylistratleague at 2:00 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 20 August 2006 2:03 PM EDT
Monday, 7 August 2006
Manny on the Move: Scribes, Hitmen Complete Six-Player Swap; Two Of Lindenhurst's Legends Shockingly Sent Packing

It's the end of an era in Lindenhurst.

Looking to shake up a team that's fighting for a division championship despite being mired below the .500 mark for most of the season, GM Jason Boland parted ways with two of his franchise's most familiar faces on July 28 - Manny Ramirez and Randy Johnson. Manny and RJ will now be wearing the uniforms of cross-town rivals Wellwood, who sent David Wright, Ben Sheets and Moises Alou to the Hitmen in exchange. The Scribes also picked up Troy Glaus in the deal.

On the surface, it appears the Hitmen got the better end of the intra-city swap, at least in the short-term. Sheets is an improvement over Johnson and the upgrade of Wright from Glaus is roughly equal to the downgrade of Ramirez to Alou. However, the injury-prone Alou does his best work against lefthanders and swapping Johnson to Wellwood means that Moises will get a chance to feast on the aging southpaw a few more times this season.

However, Wellwood GM Jim Baumbach is incredibly conscious of contract implications, and it's surely no mistake that Johnson reaches free agency one year sooner than Sheets. Of course, Glaus is signed through 2009 and Ramirez has two club options that, although unlikely to be picked up, could theoretically tie Manny to Wellwood until 2010.

That said, Sheets looks like a bust for 2007 and perhaps beyond, as persistent shoulder troubles are threatening his career. Alou, a free agent after this season, has performed well in limited duty and the Hitmen will face a tough off-season decision about whether or not to resign him. Wright is, of course, a budding superstar, but this is the fifth team he's been on in 2006. In the end, the deal will likely to come down to Ramirez vs. Wright and who will be better going forward.

The deal is especially shocking to NYLISL observers, who undoubtedly remember Boland's staunch opposition to a widely-publicized plan to make over 90 percent of the league's players free agents before the 2006 draft. In the winter of 2005, a majority of the league's owners voted in favor of the controversial proposal, which was intended to place each franchise back on a level playing field that was irrevocably tilted by a midseason decision to make the NYLISL a keeper league in the summer of 2000.

The Lindenhurst ownership was especially vocal about their opposition - professing undying loyalty to the core of their team and even threatening not to field a team in 2006. Trading Ramirez and Johnson, two of the "original" Hitmen, would seem to indicate that loyalty was a little more flexible that initially avowed.


Posted by nylistratleague at 11:38 AM EDT
Updated: Monday, 7 August 2006 11:41 AM EDT
Saturday, 29 July 2006
St. Jack's at a Perfect 10: Six-Game Sweep of Lindenhurst Keeps Demons Hot; Stanner Division Outshining Redmen Division
The NYLISL went to a two-division format in January and immediately the whispers began. How can you put the three most experienced owners in the same division and still retain parity? Will the new unbalanced schedule still produce the two best teams at the end of the year, or will the Stanner Division Champion find that just besting their division foes will leave them heavy favorites to win the league title? Those voices will be heard a little louder today, after the standouts of the Stanner Division – St. Jack’s Demons – swept six games from the Lindenhurst Hitmen on Saturday morning. The wins improved the Demons’ record to 23-10 – which includes an astounding 18-4 record in interleague play. St. Jack’s is currently on a 10-game winning streak, all against teams from the Redmen Division. Lindenhurst was missing key players in Jason Varitek and Jose Guillen and their bats were sorely missed – the Hitmen picked up just 14 runs in six games against a pitching staff that “boasted” four starters with an ERA over 6.00. But Roger Clemens had two complete game wins – one a four-hit shutout – and lefties Mark Buehrle and Doug Davis stymied Lindenhurst’s lineup in the three games they pitched between them. Only Bartolo Colon needed to be bailed out by the bullpen, lasting just 4.2 innings in his only start. The Demons’ bullpen pitched 5.1 innings of one-run ball in what turned out to be a 5-4 win in 10 innings. 

St. Jack’s is planning one final road trip to Suffolk before the end of August, to play their remaining games with the Hitmen and the Wellwood Avenue Scribes of Lindenhurst. The final four months of the season will be spent completing the schedule with division foes Floral Park and New Jersey (who the Demons are a combined 5-6 against), as well as the independent West Side Stories. Although the Demons boast a 5.5-game lead at the moment, one has to think that the Bandits and the Flesheaters will start cutting into that lead once they get into the meat of their interleague schedule.


Posted by nylistratleague at 1:55 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 29 July 2006 1:57 PM EDT
Saturday, 15 July 2006
No Slugger Left Behind: Floral Park Adds Delgado and Giles to Already Lefty-Heavy Lineup; Wright Shipped to Scribes

For nearly three months, the phones were silent. The seven general managers of the New York Long Island Strat League went along at a tranquil pace, playing a few games here and there, but not even the hint of a trade rumor was heard. But everything changed on Sunday, June 3, when the first trade of the young season was finally consummated. For Floral Park, it was definitely worth the wait.

The Flesheaters acquired two huge left-handed bats for their lineup, importing Carlos Delgado and Brian Giles from Wellwood/Lindenhurst, and in the process made themselves an extremely dangerous proposition for the right-handed starters in the Molloy Divison. Floral Park also added Melvin Mora and Ryan Freel to the mix, while sending David Wright, Moises Alou, Geoff Jenkins and Chone Figgins to the Scribes.

The trade dramatically alters the look of both teams, but the Flesheaters have to be very excited about the looks of things. With Delgado playing first and Giles taking over in right field, the Crackheads now boast four starters over 54 against righties (with DH Papi Ortiz and LF Adam Dunn also in the mix. Mora is a downgrade from the young phenom Wright, but provides slightly better defense and gets on base almost as often against right-handers. 

The Achilles’ heel for Floral Park will be left-handed pitching. Sunday’s trade means that six of the Fleasheaters’ nine projected starters are worse against lefties. What’s more, the lefty lineup is almost completely punchless, with only three projected starters having more than 10 points of home runs against righties. One of those starters, C Rod Barajas, is only a 35 overall against lefties. 

Still, the trade makes sense for Floral Park when you consider that there’s only one left-handed starter they’ll have to face in division play – St. Jack’s Mark Buehrle. Both the Demons and the New Jersey Bandits are going to have to consider beefing up on left-handed pitching to keep up – expect Barry Zito to be a frequent topic of conversation in the coming weeks, as he languishes in the Lindenhurst farm system. With Ortiz and Delgado now in the mix at first base, Floral Park is now free to shop 1B Ryan Howard to address other needs. Think Owner/GM Jason Varvaro is regretting protecting Darin Erstad now? 

Meanwhile, the Scribes sacrificed in both the power and the on-base department by replacing Giles and Delgado with Jenkins and Alou. The trade of Delgado is particularly surprising, as he was the franchise leader in a number of categories, including games, home runs, RBIs and on-base percentage (although the reported career .463 OBP coming out of Suffolk sounds like a miscalculation of Tim Walsh-ian proportions). 

However, the team is off to a slow start this season and the key to the deal on the Wellwood/Lindenhurst side is obviously Wright, who undoubtedly has a world of potential. Word on the street is that Owner/GM Jim Baumbach is now looking for a corner outfielder who can hit left-handed pitchers. 

Wellwood Avenue team officials have already announced they will retire Delgado's number when the Flesheaters come to town again, similar to what the Chicago White Sox did for Harold Baines aftrer trading him to Texas in 1989. It will be called “Carlos Delgado Night at The Grumman Complex,” and the tickets are already going fast. 

Flesheaters Add Garland and Gomes: The Floral Park makeover continued when Johnny Gomes and Jon Garland were imported from St. Jack's, in exchange for Doug Davis, Adam Dunn and Brian Fuentes. The addition of Gomes adds some sock to the Floral Park lineup against lefties, while Davis and Fuentes add two left-handed arms to the Demons' staff.


Posted by nylistratleague at 3:59 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 15 July 2006 4:06 PM EDT
Sunday, 4 June 2006
Pedro Goes AWOL!! Mop-Ups Ace Hides Out On Luxury Yacht in Queens
Pedro Martinez bolted the Suffolk County-based Mop-Ups this week and has taken up residence on a houseboat in Jamaica Bay, threatening to leave the team for good if various demands aren’t met. Chief on his list of concerns is the team’s nickname, which Pedro called “an insult” to the team’s solid pitching staff.

“I’m not going to pitch for no team that don’t respect me,” Pedro vowed. “I’ve won over 200 games in my career, but you’re going to call me a Mop-Up? No way, Jose!”

Martinez was seen by paparazzi cavorting with various generic white girls on Jamaica Bay this past weekend on a houseboat once owned by former New York Met Derek Bell, who sold the boat to Pedro in an attempt to make bail after a crack cocaine bust earlier this year. Sources say the choice of Jamaica Bay may have deeper meaning, as St. Jack’s GM Jack Flynn spent his formative years there building various powerhouses before leaving in 1998.

As salsa and reggaeton blasted from the speakers, Pedro spoke candidly to one intrepid reporter who swam all the way out to the boat and was hoisted aboard. “Look at this staff. Dontrelle (Willis), Chris Carpenter. Even that kid Leiter and Johnny Franco didn’t like,” Pedro added, referring to Scott Kazmir. “We’re not Mop-Ups. Kelvim Escobar, maybe he a Mop-Up. He’s no good. But the rest of us, we’re superstars and we deserve more respect.”

Mop-Ups Owner/General Manager Kevin Baumbach was stunned by Pedro’s defection. “I like the name,” Baumbach said. “It tested very well in the West Babylon/Lindenhurst markets. But we need our ace back.” However, the current 40-man roster includes 10 other starters, so there is no shortage of candidates to replace Pedro with the big club. There are six starters waiting on the Mop-Ups’ still-unnamed minor league roster that could take Pedro’s next start if necessary.

“We won’t wait forever,” Baumbach promised. “Brandon Backe will be on the next train to Suffolk if Pedro doesn’t come back soon.”



Pedro Martinez poses for pictures on Derek Bell's former houseboat in Jamaica Bay last weekend. Martinez abruptly left the Mop-Ups last week and wants the team to change its name.

Posted by nylistratleague at 5:50 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 4 June 2006 5:52 PM EDT
Monday, 15 May 2006
Changes in New Jersey : Bandits React To Injuries By Demoting Darling And Promoting Sabes; Yoda Concerned With Slow Start
After the worst start in New Jersey Bandits franchise history, Bandits GM Yoda announced on May 1 that the team would undergo a thorough overhaul in an attempt to get back on the winning track.

The first victim of the restructuring was long-time pitching coach Ron Darling, who had been with the team since its inaugural season in 2000. Darling has been the source of much criticism the last few weeks, when several of the Bandits relievers started complaining about their roles in the pen. Darling seemed to have calmed some of the concerns last week when he held a closed-door meeting with his pitching staff after losing three straight to the division-leading Demons. The staff responded by winning the next three from the Demons, including two incredibly fortuitous extra-inning games. But things went from bad to worse when three of the Bandits' starting pitchers were injured early in the game and sources confirmed that the pitchers blamed Darling and the new exercise regimen he introduced during the pre-season.

In response, the Bandits announced that Darling had been reassigned to the team's minor-league affiliate in New Orleans, where he will finish out the season as the pitching coach there. Bret Saberhagen, who played the second half of the 2000 season and helped the team win their first World Series title, has been named the new pitching coach for the Bandits. Details of his contract were not disclosed.

Yoda confirmed that he had no intention of replacing either manager Tom Seaver or hitting coach Lenny Dykstra. He also denied rumors that first appeared last weekend that the team would be holding a fire sale in the near future. "It's way too early to start thinking about next year. We are only four games behind Forest Hills and we feel we have enough pieces to bring home another championship," the dimunitive Jedi master said.

Posted by nylistratleague at 11:32 AM EDT
Monday, 1 May 2006
Don't Mess With Tex! Demons First Baseman Sets League Record By Smacking Homers in Five Straight Games
Mark Teixeira barely made the St. Jack's Demons' roster out of spring training, holding off a late charge from Paul Konerko to start the season with the big club. Now that he's in the NYLISL and manning first base for the Demons, it doesn't look like he'll be leaving any time soon.

Teixeira launched eight home runs in his first five games, setting an NYLISL record and spurring St. Jack's to a 5-1 record against the Wellwood Scribes of Lindenhurst on Monday. The switch-hitting slugger is batting .565 on the young season (13-23), with a ridiculous 1.609 slugging percentage.

The home runs didn't come easy, either - Wellwood's ballpark is 1-8 for home runs and several of Teixeira's shots were ballpark-dependent. Amazingly, a missed ballpark homerun actually kept Teixeira from adding another bomb to his total. Owner/GM/Manager Jack Flynn wasn't complaining, however.

"It was perhaps the most amazing offensive display this league has ever seen," Flynn said. "Although I'm sure (Floral Park Flesheaters GM Jason) Varvaro will claim that he once had someone homer in 14 straight games or something ridiculous like that, I think it's safe to say the NYLISL has never seen such an extended run of power."

St. Jack's played five games on the road Monday, winning four largely on the strength of Teixeira's amazing feats of strength. Ironically, the home run streak was snapped when the series moved to the Forest Hills Coliseum, where the Demons won a 4-3 nailbiter to improve to 5-1 on the young season. Teixeira remained hot, however, rapping two hits in a winning cause.

Posted by nylistratleague at 10:39 PM EDT
Tuesday, 18 April 2006
Cornering the CF Market: Not Enough Room In The Outfield For Sizemore, DeJesus, Wells & Pierre; What Does St. Jack's Do?
Unless baseball is implementing a radical new rule change for the 2006 season, Jack Flynn has a numbers problem – too many center fielders! Less than a month after signing David DeJesus to a five-year contract extension, St. Jack's completed a long-term deal with Grady Sizemore on March 29 that will keep the rising star in a Demons uniform at least through 2011. If you're keeping score at home, that's two center fielders locked up for at least the next five years – and only room for one in the outfield!

As if the DeJesus/Sizemore conundrum wasn't enough, St. Jack's also has Vernon Wells signed through 2007 and Juan Pierre signed through 2006. What does this all mean? "Run the numbers, stupid!" Flynn churlishly snapped at inquiring reporter earlier today. "Someone's got to go!"

Team insiders believe that Pierre is the most likely to be traded, given his flexible contract status. However, a down year at the plate and in the field has left the fleet footed center fielder with a 39/33 and a 3e4 in the field. Pierre will likely be marketed as a pinch runner with no injury who is a prime candidate for a comeback in 2006. It is believed St. Jack's will be so happy to relieve some of the
current center field logjam that they will accept just about anything to be rid of Pierre, even if it's just a mid-round draft pick.

Still, that won't solve the two-headed monster of DeJesus and Sizemore. Both are left-handed singles hitters, although Sizemore is generally considered to have more potential, speed and power than DeJesus. Wells is not likely to be affected, as he is the right-handed and the best defender among the three – making him the perfect platoon partner and defensive replacement. Sizemore will start the season with the big club while DeJesus will be plying his trade in Pearl River, hoping for a call-up or a trade to a team struggling for help in center.

Posted by nylistratleague at 9:19 PM EDT
Wednesday, 29 March 2006
NYLISL Site Launches: Venerable Strat League Set To Expand In Seventh Year; Features Two Divisions, Unbalanced Schedule
The seventh season of the New York Long Island Strat League got underway on Sunday, March 19, as the New Jersey Bandits and the Floral Park Flesheaters squared off in divisional play. The defending champion Bandits face a tough challenge in 2006, as an unbalanced schedule against two of the league's most experienced franchises (the Flesheaters and St. Jack's Demons) will make surviving the Stanner Division a difficult proposition.

It's one of the many changes the NYLISL has undergone in the off-season. The league has added a seventh member, Newark Star Ledger baseball writer Ed Price, while officially saying goodbye to two charter members, Tim Walsh and Joe Falzarano. Expansion came late in the 2006 Draft, so Price will be fielding a team of ineligibles and replacement players as he looks forward to full membership status in 2007. The league will feature two divisions of three teams each: the Stanner Division and the Redmen Division (featuring Jason Boland's Lindenhurst Hitmen, Jim Baumbach's Wellwood Scribes of Lindenhurst and Kevin Baumbach's perpetually unnamed franchise). The six established franchises will play 20 games against divisional foes and 10 against the adversaries from the opposite division. Price will play as an independent, with a 14 game schedule against each of the league's six members.



Jack Flynn, Jason Varvaro and Chris Forster pose for pictures during the Stanner Division Winter Meetings (aka Jay's wedding) in Long Island last month.

Posted by nylistratleague at 9:02 PM EST
Tuesday, 1 January 2002
Jumpin' Josh-osaphat!! Beckett Back in Bethpage as Baumbach Brings Back Hurler in Seven-Man Deal: Floral Park Gets Mussina
Topic: Front Page
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Posted by nylistratleague at 1:00 AM EST
Jumpin' Josh-osaphat!! Beckett Back in Bethpage as Baumbach Brings Back Hurler in Seven-Man Deal: Floral Park Gets Mussina
Topic: Front Page
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Posted by nylistratleague at 1:00 AM EST
Long Island State of Mind: Playoff Matchups Set; Three Teams Will Compete to Succeed New Jersey Bandits as NYLISL Champs
Topic: Front Page
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Posted by nylistratleague at 1:00 AM EST

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