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osugrad21

Capo Regime
Staff member
I haven't watched any of the LLWS this year...did anyone see this kid play?

Link w/ picture
6-foot-8 Little Leaguer towers over foes

<!-- END HEADLINE --> <!-- BEGIN STORY BODY --> By GENARO C. ARMAS, Associated Press Writer Mon Aug 21, 1:31 AM ET

SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. - Aaron Durley towers over the competition at the Little League World Series

<script type="text/javascript">if (window.yzq_a == null) document.write("<scr" + "ipt type=text/javascript src=""http://us.js2.yimg.com/us.js.yimg.com/lib/bc/bc_1.7.3.js></scr" + "ipt>"); </script><script type="text/javascript"> if (window.yzq_a) { yzq_a('p', 'P=jYj3Mc6.I3oTumeCRFevuANFz.j5gkTpyfoAC3L1&T=1abvotve9%2fX%3d1156172282%2fE%3d8903589%2fR%3dnews%2fK%3d5%2fV%3d1.1%2fW%3d8%2fY%3dYAHOO%2fF%3d2184409601%2fH%3dY2FjaGVoaW50PSJuZXdzIiBjb250ZW50PSJ2aWRlbztBbWVyaWNhbjtob21lO0NvbHVtYmlhO29pbDtNaWRkbGUgRWFzdDtpdDtyZWZ1cmxfd3d3X3lhaG9vX2NvbSIgcmVmdXJsPSJyZWZ1cmxfd3d3X3lhaG9vX2NvbSIgdG9waWNzPSJyZWZ1cmxfd3d3X3lhaG9vX2NvbSI-%2fS%3d1%2fJ%3d5523BECE'); yzq_a('a', '&U=139f2cblt%2fN%3dT14sFM6.Isw-%2fC%3d508924.8897375.9678965.1442997%2fD%3dLREC%2fB%3d2645439'); } </script><noscript>http://us.bc.yahoo.com/b?P=jYj3Mc6.I3oTumeCRFevuANFz.j5gkTpyfoAC3L1&T=1ag599rq0%2fX%3d1156172282%2fE%3d8903589%2fR%3dnews%2fK%3d5%2fV%3d2.1%2fW%3d8%2fY%3dYAHOO%2fF%3d2354637611%2fH%3dY2FjaGVoaW50PSJuZXdzIiBjb250ZW50PSJ2aWRlbztBbWVyaWNhbjtob21lO0NvbHVtYmlhO29pbDtNaWRkbGUgRWFzdDtpdDtyZWZ1cmxfd3d3X3lhaG9vX2NvbSIgcmVmdXJsPSJyZWZ1cmxfd3d3X3lhaG9vX2NvbSIgdG9waWNzPSJyZWZ1cmxfd3d3X3lhaG9vX2NvbSI-%2fQ%3d-1%2fS%3d1%2fJ%3d5523BECE&U=139f2cblt%2fN%3dT14sFM6.Isw-%2fC%3d508924.8897375.9678965.1442997%2fD%3dLREC%2fB%3d2645439</noscript>The 13-year-old first baseman for Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, stands an imposing 6-foot-8 and weighs 256 pounds.
"I was standing next to him and I was up to his elbows," Scott Kingery, a 12-year-old, 4-foot-9 Phoenix shortstop, said after meeting Durley.
At the secluded dorms where teams stay during the tournament, Durley has become as much of an attraction as the pool, the pingpong table and the video arcade.
The soft-spoken Durley doesn't mind the attention. He even lets opponents snap pictures with him during down time.
But Durley, who played at the series last year, too — when he was a mere 6-foot-4 — is crystal-clear about his top priority in South Williamsport.
"I'm more confident this year, ready to do what I need to do," Durley said after a practice. "Hit the ball out."
Fittingly, his favorite major leaguer is David "Big Papi" Ortiz, the<input name="sourceURL" value="" type="hidden"><input name="fr" value="yq-news" type="hidden"> <input name="context" value="Fittingly, his favorite major leaguer is David &quot;Big Papi&quot; Ortiz, the Boston Red Sox slugger." type="hidden">Boston Red Sox slugger.
Durley, batting fifth, didn't hit a homer, but he walked twice, singled and scored a run Sunday when his Arabian American squad from Dhahran defeated Saipan, 9-1. Saudi Arabia (2-0) stands a good chance of advancing out of pool play after failing to win a game last year.
Also Sunday, two players were hurt during the game between Lemont, Ill., and Staten Island, N.Y., and taken to Williamsport Hospital.
Lemont outfielder Austin Mastela was hit by a pitch in the helmet in the second and had bleeding and swelling near the back of his ear, manager Mike Hall said. Staten Island shortstop Chris Goetz hurt his right leg after being called out at home while trying to score on an attempted squeeze play.
Both players had been treated and released, a nursing supervisor said early Monday.
Lemont won 1-0 after a frantic finish.
In other games, Columbia, Mo., routed Portsmouth, N.H., 14-5; Columbus, Ga., beat Phoenix, 4-1; Beaverton, Ore., defeated Lake Charles, La., 9-1; and Mexico defeated Russia, 11-1 in five innings.
Arabian American is a fixture at the World Series, having qualified the last seven years, and 12 of the last 13. The players' parents primarily work for oil companies in the Middle East.
The team has a peculiar baseball superstition — the players dye their hair blond for the World Series.
As if Durley wasn't easy enough to pick out in a crowd.
Columbia, Mo., manager Jeff Echelmeier watched Durley attract attention while the player was standing on a porch near a path to the cafeteria.
"About four teams came through, and everyone wanted to know how tall he was," Echelmeier said. "He said 'About 6-foot-8' about 40 times in a row."
He's still growing, too. Durley only shared the tallest-player designation last year. Series sponsors who shower players with free equipment didn't have new spikes readily available for Durley, who wears size 19 shoes.
Aaron's mother, Dana Durley, said her son didn't understand how much taller he was than most kids until he stayed at the Little League dorms last year.
"He takes it in stride," she said Sunday night after her son's team won. "He's been reared to say that the only thing you can control is your behavior. You can't control what other people think."
Aaron, who also plays basketball, isn't the only tall guy on his team. Durley nearly stands toe-to-toe with his manager and father, James Durley.
Dhahran pitcher and outfielder Michael Knight is 6-foot-3, 190 pounds. Five-foot-8, 226-pound, third baseman Andrew Holden is a dangerous hitter, having homered twice in the series, including a three-run blast against Saipan.
Team followers said it was just coincidence that there were so many tall players on the squad.
 
Good grief! I saw the kid at-bat when I was flipping through the channels the other day. I knew he was big, but I didn't realize he was THAT big.

Does anyone know what the deal is with the Saudi team? Are these American kids who are living in Saudi Arabia or what? There was a kid playing for them who was about as white as white can be. Not what I expected from a predominantly Arab country.
 
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I found that weird too. They did their player intros and spoke perfect english.

The 6'8" kid played on their team last year too, and has been investigated many times I guess. I laugh when he's at bat because it looks like he uses the same bat as everybody else. Is there a LL rule about the length of bats?
 
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There's no way that I can believe that a 13 years old is 6'8", 256 pounds. That is the size of a pretty damn big grown man. I would think that when he was born there are a lot less regulations on documentations of birth certificates and there would be plenty of ways to record a kid to be alot younger than what he really is.
 
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There's no way that I can believe that a 13 years old is 6'8", 256 pounds. That is the size of a pretty damn big grown man. I would think that when he was born there are a lot less regulations on documentations of birth certificates and there would be plenty of ways to record a kid to be alot younger than what he really is.

We aren't talking about kids born in Cuba or Haiti. These are American kids whose parent(s) works in Saudi Arabia. It would surely be more difficult to skirt the rules for an American kid than one from a Latin American country.

And with HOW big he is, I'm sure there has been extra attention given to making sure he is only 13.
 
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The saudi team is mostly american. their parents work for a company called middle eastern american oil or something like that. they only get one vacation a year (22 days i believe) and they use it for the tournament.

i noticed his bat last night as well. it is so small.
 
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l2076987.jpg
 
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