
Parkston Rays begin amateur baseball title defense looking to build on 2025 breakthrough
Parkston Rays begin their title defense in 2025 amateur baseball season after last year's championship win.

Northampton scored a record 14 tries and 61 points in the first half, crushing Bristol in a historic Premiership match. Bristol's playoff hopes are now severely diminished after this embarrassing defeat.
All kinds of scoring records were spectacularly broken by a rampant Northampton on a lovely clear night in the East Midlands. Never before have the Saints scored more points in a Premiership fixture and never have Bristol endured such a grisly 80 minutes. To say the Bears finished a horribly distant second is to put it politely.
By the time the carnage finally concluded the home side had scored 14 tries with George Hendy bagging four of them and Archie McParland and Rory Hutchinson collecting two apiece. Saints scored no fewer than 61 points in the first half alone, assisted by a visiting defence who were Âchasing green, black and gold shadows from a very early stage.
Almost lost amid the crazy Âwhirring of the scoreboard was the confirmation that Northamptonâs playoff qualification is assured, with a home semi-final all but Âcertain. Bristolâs prospects of Âmaking the top four, however, now look Âcompletely shot after a night that stripped away much of their dignity. They have a Âgrowing injury list but there can be no excuses for this kind of Âembarrassing blowout.
Admittedly they did rally slightly in the second half and finished with five tries of their own but the damage had long since been done. With Henry Pollock and Tommy Freeman looking in prime touch and ÂMcParland adding further to his growing reputation as a classy playmaker, this was some riposte by Northampton to their bruising loss to their neighbours Leicester at Welford Road last ÂSaturday. It was a much less happy evening for Benhard Janse van ÂRensburg, the Bristol centre who is potentially in line to become available for England in July. Along with the rest of the visiting lineup, he endured a torrid night as Saints repeatedly sliced through them and supplied easy pickings for their quick men out wide. This was the Bearsâ biggest pounding in the pro era, even beating the 81 points they conceded to Worcester in the Championship in 2011.
Given Bristol had topped 30 points on each of their two Âprevious two Âvisits to Franklinâs Gardens and smashed the Saints 46-12 in the reverse fixture, the chances of a dull, low-scoring contest were always slim. This time there were three tries on the board inside the first eight minutes, with a burrowing effort from Harry Thacker sandwiched between two slickly-taken scores by George Hendy, assisted by Pollockâs long pass, and then Hutchinson.
Northampton were only just warming up. Freeman somehow kept the ball infield on the right Âtouchline and the alert Callum Chick was Âquickest to react to score the home sideâs third. The Bears badly needed some kind of response and found one via a quick tap by Harry Randall and a lightning finish in the right corner by Louis Rees-Zammit.
Northampton set a record for the most points scored in a Premiership fixture and achieved their highest score in a match.
George Hendy scored four tries during the match against Bristol.
Bristol's chances of making the top four in the Premiership are now severely diminished after this heavy defeat.
The final score was Northampton 61, Bristol 31.

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Callum Chick added to Bristolâs woe to score Northamptonâs third try. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
The respite was only fleeting. Some of Saints offloading and handling was superlative and, with Kalaveti Ravouvou in the sin-bin, Alex Coles and Archie McParland turned the screw with another quickfire brace. Already it was 33-14 and when Hendy then put George Furbank away for the hostsâ sixth try the game was still not half an hour old.
Not everyone enjoys this kind of try-fest and from Bristolâs Âperspective it was certainly depressing viewing. On the other hand Saintsâ dexterity and ability to create space almost at will was outstanding, particularly when allied to their energetic work at the breakdown. With Hutchinson and Hendy both crossing the whitewash for a second time and Josh Kemeny galloping past a flat-footed defence from 25 metres out, the hosts had a scarcely believable 61 points on the board by half-time.
The rest was largely an anticlimax after Pollock had scored a slashing try barely a minute after the restart. Northampton took off several of their leading lights and the scoring rate slowed appreciably until the end when, with MatĂas Moroni off the field for trying to rough up Pollock, the hosts eased into the 90s through Sam Graham and then Hendy again, even eclipsing the 90 points they stuck on Gloucester two seasons ago.
Bristol will be in no rush to rewatch the highlights but their director of rugby, Pat Lam, will feel this result keenly. This was supposed to be the season that the Bearsâ expansive game really brought home the bacon; instead the foundations of their game have started to melt away.