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Globe North Sports Notebook

Marchesi stands tall for Bentley

Jarrod Marchesi is putting up good numbers for his team. Jarrod Marchesi is putting up good numbers for his team. (Jim Hogue)
Email|Print|Single Page| Text size + By Julian Benbow
May 4, 2008

Jarrod Marchesi hung around his older brother, Joe, long enough while Joe was a pitcher at Bentley College to know that Falcons baseball coach Bob DeFelice was, as Joe put it, "definitely his own little genre."

Jarrod was about 12 or 13 when he first met DeFelice at one of Joe's award banquets, and the first thing DeFelice said to the kid from Peabody was, "Thank God you don't look like your brother."

It was one of those you-had-me-at-hello moments.

"He's a guy where you either love him or you hate him," said the younger Marchesi, who had an idea at that moment that he would probably follow his brother and study business at Bentley while also pitching for DeFelice.

"He's a straight-shooting guy," said Marchesi. "He's going to tell you how it is, and I like that. I don't like people that are going to tell you you throw 95 or whatever. He'll tell you what you throw."

The Everett High product throws a fastball in the low 80s and counters it with a changeup. He is listed at 5 feet 8 inches, but his coach and his brother put him at around 5-6. DeFelice jokes that his "biggest regret is that I'm still not playing, because I'd love to play against him."

But it's how Marchesi uses his stuff that has allowed him to pick up a school-record eight wins this season.

"He hits his spots," DeFelice said. "He moves the ball around. He's living proof that you don't have to have overpowering stuff."

Marchesi made the switch from reliever to starter after wowing DeFelice in the last game of last season. And while DeFelice doubted Marchesi's stamina at first, he can't argue with the numbers the junior right-hander has put up: an 8-2 record with a 2.22 earned-run average and 53 strikeouts.

"He'll break probably every pitching record that's existed here for 40 years, and we've had some pretty good guys here," said DeFelice, the program's only coach since 1968. "So for me, that says a lot."

Going into the weekend, with Bentley fighting to make the Northeast-10 tournament, Jarrod was tied with his brother with 15 career wins.

"Same amount of wins," Joe Marchesi said, "but he's got another year on me. He's definitely the better of the two. . . . He's not a flamethrower by any means, but he's a cocky little kid. He's very confident in his abilities. He battles, he really does. He wants to beat you. He believes that he can beat you and he's going to do whatever he can to do so."

Bentley's record for wins is 21, and next season will be a race between Marchesi and classmate Chris Dupay. But there's a chance the fix is in.

"He'll have a chance," DeFelice said. "I'll make sure he gets there too, because he's Italian and Dupay's French. I'll take care of my fellow countrymen first."

School organizing bone marrow tests
In an effort to help longtime volunteer girls' basketball coach Allen Caproni in his battle against leukemia, Lynnfield High School is looking for a possible bone marrow match. Caproni, who volunteered at Lynnfield and Masconomet, needs a bone marrow transplant. The school is seeking volunteers between the ages of 18 and 60 to take a test to see if they match. Anyone willing to help can come to the school May 15 from 2:30-6:30 p.m. or May 17 from 8 a.m. to noon. For more information, contact Lynnfield athletic director Bill Adams at 781-334-5827.

Giacomini handles tough questioning
Green Bay took Breno Giacomini, the once raw talent from Malden High turned gnarly Louisville offensive lineman, with its fifth-round pick (150th overall) in last weekend's National Football League draft, and from here on he will live life under a microscope.

In one of many post-draft interviews, Giacomini was peppered during a teleconference posted online with questions about his college career, his Brazilian-born parents, and some on- and off-the-field issues (including his making an inappropriate gesture at University of Kentucky fans last season after a loss).

Giacomini dealt with it. "It was just an emotional thing that I really couldn't control at the time," Giacomini said. "But I've learned from that. It was a big mistake."

Jonathan Goff, once an Eagle at St. John's Prep and then an all-Southeastern Conference linebacker at Vanderbilt, went in the same round as Giacomini (165th overall) to the New York Giants. Goff is one of two mechanical engineers in the Giants' draft class.

Race to benefit Buttitta Memorial
A 3-mile road race will be held around Marblehead Neck on Saturday to benefit the Mark Buttitta Memorial Foundation for research, prevention, and treatment of mesothelioma, a cancer that claimed the life of Buttitta in 2002. The registration fee is $15, $20 on race day. The race starts at 10 a.m. Contact Marblehead AD Michael Plansky at 781-639-3100, ext. 4131.

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