Although Mark Sarver rarely played in 2024 he had fun moments. The Tools were leading 3-0 when Ben Peden headed for the restroom. We loaded the bases with two outs and it was Ben's turn but he hadn't returned. A surprised Sarv pinch hit and after working the count full, lined a single to right for a run. As he reached first base, there was Ben, now in the coaching box, a sheepish grin on his face.
Sarv had just five hits on the year, with three RBI and five runs scored, but slightly advanced his impressive career stats. He has 552 hits (9th), 41 triples (tied11th), 457 singles (8th), 214 walks (1st), 1,009 total bases (7th), 338 RBI (11th), 493 runs (7th) and 777 games (1st). With playoffs and tourneys, Sarv has appeared in 907 games with more than 2,200 plate appearances.
Having coached the Tools for 39 years, 1,490 games, Sarv has a record of 882 - 564- 44. Since 2001, an era in which the Tools have been one of the county's dominant teams, he is 563 - 254 - 24.
Ben excelled when he took over the lead-off spot starting midway through spring and boasted a .636 batting average, with 10 multi-hit games and 28 in all. He had a four hit game vs. Super Feet Sluggers and a pair of three hit games, drove in 12 runs and scored 18.
With 31 hits in the fall, Ben batted .564, knocking in 20 runs and scoring 32. Hitting streaks extended to 17 regular season and 21 overall. The last game of the year was one of Ben's greatest, as he crushed a triple and four doubles for eight RBI, his second most ever. Ben is about to make a run for the most career hits. He's in third place with 971, just 45 short of Jay Braun's 1,016.
Consistency is one of the marks of a great player and Jeff Hart is remarkably consistent. He had hits in 23 of 24 games and since 2017, Jeff has hit safely in 176 of 179 regular season games and 201 of 207 overall. "Hit Streak Guy" is at it again as he stands at 59 regular season and 65 games overall heading into 2025.
In the spring Jeff batted .553 with 16 RBI and 124 runs in 12 games. His seven multi-hit games included a four hit dousing of Wet Bandits. He was on fire in the playoffs, with 10 hits for a .714 batting average, two triples and three RBI. In the fall he played only eight games yet had 19 hits, batted .633 with a .688 on base average, five doubles, 10 RBI and 14 runs.
Jeff passed Mark Sarver twice on our all-time career chart, now standing 10th with 358 RBI and 7th with 479 singles. He has been a top performer in a bunch of categories -- 614 hits (8th), .616 batting average (3rd), 29 home runs (tied 10th), 42 triples (10th), .660 on base average (5th), 455 runs (8th) and 271 games (15th). Jeff's record hitting streaks are 100 regular season games and 72 games counting playoffs and tournaments.
Sam smacked a bases clearing double to drive in three runs against Jager Bombers to begin the fall and never looked back. He batted .627 with 32 hits, two triples and five doubles. Sam had five hits against Badabing and three hits on four occasions. He had 16 RBI and scored 21 runs. Sam has ongoing hitting streaks, 37 regular season and 16 games overall.
Our third sacker is lifetime leader in on base average (.696) and is second in batting average (.618). After eight years as a Tool, Sam is climbing the career lists with 520 hits (11th), 88 doubles (5th), 772 total bases (12th), 259 RBI (14th) and 413 runs (10th).
Ryan Krepp 35 Outfielder
It is a pleasure to observe the evolving Tools career of Ryan Krepp. Once simply a "speedster", he now is a well-rounded ball player having worked his way into the outfield rotation and become a more productive hitter. This has converted Ryan's speed into a potent weapon, whether he's chasing down an outfield fly ball or racing around the bases for an extra base hit.
Ryan had a good spring season with 20 hits, .543 on base average, 13 RBI and 13 runs plus seven multi-hit games. He emerged at a new level during the playoffs, with eight hits in 11 at bats, a .727 batting average and eight RBI. There was an eye-opening career high six RBI in our win over Wet Bandits.
Ryan had a terrific fall, with 26 hits, a career high batting average of .542, 21 RBI and 22 runs. He leveled his swing and hit the ball harder for a personal best eight extra base hits. Ryan had his first five for five game vs. Badabing, hit his first career home run, a three run inside-the-parker against Jay's Saloon, and added three triples and four doubles. Even fly balls were productive -- six sacrifice flies.
