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Thursday August 07, 2008
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RBI Brings Baseball To Inner Cities, Players To MLB
By BILL LUBINGER
Image
Jordan Bufford, 13, of the Cleveland RBI 13- to 15-year-old All-Star team, scrambles during a steal attempt Aug. 2. His team is traveling to the RBI World Series in Caifornia. (Photo by Lonnie Timmons III)
c.2008 Newhouse News Service

CLEVELAND — The play was a bit sloppy for a team headed to the World Series.

Batters waved at outside pitches. Bases went uncovered. And when an infielder failed to charge a slow grounder, manager Chris Scott had seen enough.

"I'm glad we're doing this today,'' he mumbled.

The recent Saturday morning practice game at dusty, gusty Brookside Park was just a tune-up for a bunch of carefree teenage boys from the city who are about to embark on the trip of a lifetime.

They're one of eight teams from this side of the globe competing in Major League Baseball's RBI (Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities) Junior Division World Series in Compton, Calif. The boys, ages 13 to 15, qualified by winning all four games in the regional tournament in Pittsburgh last month.

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TOP STORIES
AROUND THE NATION
Newhouse Spotlight

Every day, The Post-Standard, based in Syracuse, N.Y., brings world-class local news to its readers’ doorsteps. Inside its pages are stories and photography that are consistently honored as among the state’s finest.
Featured Correspondent
Richard Ryan, The Staten Island Advance
Rich Ryan has been covering the home video industry since its infancy. Soon after joining the Staten Island Advance in 1989, he was named the paper’s entertainment editor, a position he held for 13 years. Prior to that, he worked at Billboard magazine.
Special Reports
THE OTHER IRAQ: Finding Peace In The Quiet North
DAHUK, Iraq — Along the foothills of a towering mountain range, Ali Sadi Hussein spreads a blanket under a cluster of pines while his family carries containers of rice and lamb and a large flask of tea. The sound of water cascading down a stream accompanies them on the walk from their car.

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