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Little Leaguers set for dates with MLB stars

FILE - Former Boston Red Sox player Jason Varitek throws out the ceremonial first pitch before a baseball game between the Red Sox and the Toronto Blue Jays in Boston on July 21, 2012. Varitek was honored for his time with the team in a pregame ceremony.  The 50-year-old is headed back to where he burst through on the national scene when the Red Sox play the Baltimore Orioles on Sunday, Aug.  21, 2022, in the fifth MLB Little League Classic.  (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)

Jason Varitek reveled in 1984 in all the quaint traditions that make the Little League World Series a throwback to the simple days of playing baseball. He traded pins, with kids from other parts of the United States and around the world.

Varitek and his teammates played in ping-pong tournaments and Wiffle Ball tournaments and, of course, there were the cardboard box sled rides down the hill behind Howard J. Lamade Stadium.

“The whole atmosphere Williamsport brings, it’s just phenomenal,” he said. “The excitement, the buzz, it’s all amazing. And that was back when there was only one game on TV.

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“The community, the people who go there to support that series in the final game, and all the games, is what makes it so unique. It’s a high-intensive gathering of baseball fans.”