Posted on 08/20/2006 10:31:34 PM PDT by Marius3188
Aaron Durley towers over the competition at the Little League World Series. 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 Boston Red Sox slugger.
Durley scored a run in his 2006 series debut last week. His next shot to belt a homer came Sunday, when his Arabian American squad from Dhahran was scheduled to face Saipan.
In early games Sunday, Columbia, Mo., routed Portsmouth, N.H., 14-5; Columbus, Ga., beat Phoenix, 4-1; and Beaverton, Ore., defeated Lake Charles, La., 9-1.
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.
Dhahran might have had the longest road to Pennsylvania, qualifying for the series by winning the Transatlantic region tournament in Kutno, Poland, in late July.
The team has a peculiar baseball superstition the players dye their hair blonde 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.
Dhahran coach Tom Timoney said Durley takes the attention in stride.
"He's just a great kid," Timoney said while watching an infield practice. "Very good-natured."
A little out of breath after running sprints with his teammates, the mild-mannered Durley didn't say much after the practice.
Baseball isn't necessarily his favorite sport.
"It's kind of hard, because I like basketball," he said. "When it's offseason for baseball, it's basketball. When it's offseason for basketball, it's baseball."
Columbia, Mo., 14, Portsmouth, N.H., 5
Beau Burkett scored three runs, Landon Clapp had three RBIs and Columbia rallied from an early 2-0 deficit in an error-filled game. The teams combined for nine errors, two by Columbia (1-1) and seven for Portsmouth (1-1). Matthew Feeney had three RBIs for Portsmouth.
Columbus, Ga., 4, Phoenix 1
Kyle Carter tossed a one-hitter and hit a solo homer to lead Columbus (2-0), strengthening the Southeast region winners' chances to advance to next round. The left-handed Carter struck out nine. Shaun Chase had the lone hit, a single, off Carter for Phoenix (1-1).
Beaverton, Ore., 9, Lake Charles, La., 1
Jace Fry led off the bottom of the first with a deep homer to right, Derek Keller hit a three-run blast and Devon Dejardin threw a three-hitter as Beaverton (1-1) controlled the game from the start. Dejardin retired his last nine batters. Starter Paul Beglis surrendered all nine Oregon runs but also homered for the only score for Lake Charles (1-1).
Wow. He's 13? If so, he has every right to play little league. Looking at the picture, it's sure hard to believe. But I've seen stranger things.
Holy Moley. He's bigger than Richie Sexson. Stick him on the mound, let him throw nothing but gas until he "fills out", then teach him a changeup and a slider.
His strikezone will be too big as a hitter, and you don't shorten a stroke of a guy that size.
Wow. 13 years old.
He looks like a professional baseball player.
Wow. My cousin's son was in a similar situation except that he was really, really skinny. This other kid is big all around. Wow
We were also trying to figure out why the Middle Eastern team looked so, well, American. We wondered if they were the kids of Americans working in the Middle East, and, lo and behold, that is the case:
The players' parents primarily work for oil companies in the Middle East.
We were wondering about the bleach blond hair, too:
The team has a peculiar baseball superstition the players dye their hair blonde for the World Series.
Was the kid any good? I know it takes a while for some kids to 'catch' up with their own size. I mean when it comes to their hand eye coordination and such.
Thats why some really big kids seem goofy. They just haven't adapted to their body due to their growth rates.
A basketball contract looks to be in this kids future. Baseball will have to be put aside once he reaches high school. Way too much potential to not focus on basketball.
Until we find out, I would recommend not parking your car behind center field at the little league ballparks he plays at.
Paging Dale Brown, paging Dale Brown.
That is no thirteen year old.
My husband would know if he played well. Not I. But I did watch him at bat once, and he was walked. My husband kept saying, "Look, he's towering over the ump!" I think he may have to be careful to watch his weight, though. Then I think he was playing first base, but I didn't see him make any plays.
Btw, a pitcher on the same team was 6'3" and he had a goatee. (I'm not suggesting their ages are questionable, just pointing out how vastly different boys can be from each other at that age).
Adding: I'm sure he made some plays. I myself didn't see them. I didn't watch the whole game.
It does look very weird, but so many young preteen girls these days look 20. Stands to reason that some preteen boys are being affected by whatever's making those girls grow up...
FYI...gigantism? Or genetics? I'd like to see his parents.
It would be interesting, to say the least.
Who was the kid who played in little league years ago, talked to the press and then got in a car and drove himself?
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