Jerry Campany: Numbers show that this Hawaii prep baseball team was best ever

· Yahoo Sports

Officially, two teams will be crowned the baseball champions of the state of Hawaii next week.

Unofficially, the holder of the Cartwright Cup goes to the survivors of a state of anarchy.

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Beginning next Thursday at Hans L’Orange Park, the 65th edition of the Wally Yonamine State Baseball Tournament will begin. The tournaments began before statehood but took two years off during the pandemic. There have been 66 champions crowned, with Baldwin and Maui sharing the title two years ago because there was water falling from the sky.

This isn’t swimming, where schools hit the pool ready to bow down to the Buffanblu. It isn’t football, where neighbor island schools are not invited to compete for the biggest prize. This is baseball, a genteel sport between the lines but chaotic outside of them, with an unseeded group winning as often as the top seed does.

Star power means less than you think it would. Half of our four current Big League Braddahs, Rico Garcia (Saint Louis) of the Orioles and Joey Cantillo (Kailua) of the Guardians, never won a game at states. Legends like Mike Lum of Roosevelt and Shane Victorino of St. Anthony didn’t even get to suit up.

Boston’s Isiah Kiner-Falefa won a state title with Mid-Pacific in 2013, the leadoff man setting up Quintin-John Collier and Marcus Doi with four hits in the first round. I thought he was a masterful shortstop with a nice swing but would be just another guy if he grew up in the Dominican Republic. That’s part of the beauty of it. Scouts can aim their radar guns at Jordan Yamamoto vs. Kodi Medeiros, but even the best prognosticator can only guess at what a teen will grow up to be.

At the highest levels, the best team rarely reveals itself until at least 50 baseball games. But in the prep version it always does. With apologies to Rory Pico’s 2014 Campbell crew and Mark Hirayama’s Mililani squad that same year, George Gusman’s Crusaders were better.

I listen to sports talk radio in the morning, so I just have to make a list. Old timers will hoot and holler about Eric Kadooka’s Punahou dynasty from 2004 to 2010 and Dunn Muramaru’s teams from the early 1990s. Older futs will tell you about a rotation of Derek Tatsuno and Gerald Ako for Aiea, Glenn Oura’s ironman performance for Baldwin and Glenn Goya’s perfect game for Punahou.

Every opinion is valid, but I need numbers. In baseball, all you are trying to do is go home and prevent the other team from touching the plate, which is shaped like a house for a reason. So, the best I can do is measure run differential and divide it by innings played because in ancient times boys were men and played nine innings whereas now we stop after five if someone is being beaten too badly. Oura threw 50 1/3 of Baldwin’s 59 innings in the first two tournaments, but the concept of child abuse didn’t apply to baseball.

What the spreadsheet spit out was that Kadooka’s last champion, the 2010 Punahou Buffanblu, are the most dominant team in state baseball history. They scored 37 runs and gave up only four over 24 innings on Maui despite finishing third in the ILH and suffering five losses and a tie before boarding the plane. So congratulations to Kainoa Crowell, Kaiana Eldredge, Alaka’i Aglipay, sophomore pitcher Zachery Muenster and others, for four days in May you guys were so much better than your peers.

Those Buffanblu beat Mililani 12-0, Pearl City 8-1, Mid-Pacific 4-1 and Baldwin 13-2 for a run differential per inning of 1.38.

Next on the elite list is 1979 Radford (1.30, with the best offense in history at 1.74 runs per inning), 1988 Kamehameha (1.22) and 1975 ‘Iolani tied with 1970 Kalani (1.12). Saint Louis of 2014 is the best team of recent vintage at 1.04. The scrappy team that won with the lowest number was 2024 Baldwin (0.14) with their scheduled opponents, 2024 Maui, at 0.21. Even if the weather did let them play, they might be in the 3,000th inning right now trying to settle it.

Two champions, 1975 ‘Iolani and Farrington in 1963, did not allow a single run in their tournaments.

As you settle into your seat, you might not see a team like Punahou’s 2010 juggernaut, but no matter what happens you will walk away surprised. It’s baseball.

Year

Team

RF

RA

Innings

Diff/Inn

2010

Punahou

37

4

24

1.38

1979

Radford

40

10

23

1.30

1988

Kamehameha

33

5

23

1.22

1970

Kalani

33

5

25

1.12

1975

Iolani

28

0

25

1.12

2007

Punahou

29

7

20

1.10

1990

Mid-Pacific

31

9

21

1.05

2014

Saint Louis

28

1

26

1.04

1997

Iolani

32

11

21

1.00

1962

Leilehua

33

9

25

0.96

1972

Punahou

27

3

25

0.96

1973

Aiea

25

2

25

0.92

1965

Kailua

19

3

18

0.89

1992

Mid-Pacific

27

8

22

0.86

2018

Baldwin

31

15

19

0.84

1966

Punahou

15

2

16

0.81

1999

Molokai

24

7

23

0.74

2017

Maui

32

13

26

0.73

1968

Punahou

17

4

18

0.72

2019

Punahou

21

6

21

0.71

2002

Mid-Pacific

30

11

27

0.70

2005

Punahou

16

3

19

0.68

2000

Molokai

35

21

21

0.67

2008

Punahou

22

8

21

0.67

1991

Mid-Pacific

18

4

21

0.67

1969

Kailua

21

3

27

0.67

1987

Kamehameha

46

24

35

0.63

1995

Baldwin

19

6

21

0.62

1974

Saint Louis

26

10

26

0.62

1977

Iolani

26

9

28

0.61

1996

Iolani

23

6

28

0.61

2025

Saint Louis

21

4

28

0.61

1959

Baldwin

19

4

25

0.60

2016

Baldwin

15

4

21

0.52

1980

Kamehameha

24

10

27

0.52

1963

Farrington

9

0

18

0.50

1982

Maui

22

9

27

0.48

1961

Punahou

18

5

27

0.48

1976

Aiea

17

4

27

0.48

1989

Punahou

31

14

37

0.46

1993

Kaiser

22

12

22

0.45

1964

Punahou

13

5

18

0.44

2006

Punahou

26

13

30

0.43

2001

Kailua

24

15

21

0.43

2004

Punahou

18

6

28

0.43

1981

Kaiser

18

6

28

0.43

2012

Waiakea

12

3

21

0.43

2023

Kamehameha

13

5

21

0.38

1998

Iolani

20

9

29

0.38

1960

Baldwin

18

7

30

0.37

1994

Castle

16

6

28

0.36

2003

Kamehameha

16

9

21

0.33

1978

Campbell

16

7

27

0.33

2015

Campbell

11

4

21

0.33

2013

Mid-Pacific

10

3

21

0.33

1967

Kailua

7

1

18

0.33

2011

Pearl City

23

14

28

0.32

1985

Hilo

22

14

27

0.30

1986

Iolani

21

12

36

0.25

2009

Punahou

10

3

28

0.25

2022

Waiakea

14

9

21

0.24

1984

Baldwin

21

14

31

0.23

1983

Iolani

24

18

27

0.22

1971

Iolani

14

8

27

0.22

2024

Maui

7

4

14

0.21

2024

Baldwin

13

10

21

0.14

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