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Tournaments  | Story  | 9/3/2009

16U National Champs

Jeff Petty likes his pitching staff. No, strike that. Jeff Petty absolutely loves his pitching staff.

 

“I think our pitchers are professional prospects and could pitch in college right now,” Petty told Perfect Game USA.

 

That’s saying quite a bit, because most of the pitchers on his Canes North 16U team are just entering their junior year in high school. One of them is just a sophomore, but Petty has evidence that confirms his pitchers are pretty special.

 

The Canes North rode the depth of their pitching staff to the title at the WWBA 16U National Championships in July, convincing the staff at Perfect Game to name the Canes the top 16-&-under team in the country this year.

 

“All the kids are happy with it,” Petty said. “With that honor comes a lot of responsibility. Everyone is going to be coming after you. That’s the thing we’ll be telling our kids. With that comes responsibility. That’s the challenge.”

 

Dillon Maples, a right-hander from Aberdeen, N.C., pitched a no-hitter against the Florida Mustangs in the championship game of the WWBA tournament in Georgia. Ronald Womack, a lefty from Raeford, N.C. with a 92 mph fastball, tossed a complete game against the Carolina Cyclones in the semifinals of that tournament, going all eight innings before the Canes prevailed on a tiebreaker. They are two of the top pitchers on the staff, but they were not alone.

 

Jake Cave, a left-hander from Hampton, Va., has committed to play at LSU after he graduates from high school in 2011. There’s also Tyler Beede (Auburn, Mass.), Michael Gilroy (Columbia, S.C.), Jordan Ramsey (Lexington, N.C.), Ryan Mayhew (Clemmons, N.C.) and Curt Britt (Laurinburg, Va.).

 

Petty, 27, lives in northern Virginia, and he has players from Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Massachusetts and Texas on his roster. Petty was a high school baseball coach at the tender age of 22 and started the Hurricanes program in 2006. He currently has eight teams, ranging in age from 15U through 18U.

 

“I just wanted to get high school all-star players who were college or professional prospects. That was the starting point,” he said. “I didn’t know it would turn into this.”