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New England Collegiate Baseball League Sets 2018 Schedule

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. -- New England Collegiate Baseball League Commissioner Sean McGrath announced league’s 2018 composite schedule on Saturday.
 
The New England League starts its 25th season on Tuesday, June 5, with a marquee matchup of the last two league champions as part of a full six-game Opening Night slate.
 
Highlighting the initial slate of games will be a matchup of the last two hoisters of the Fay Vincent Sr. Cup, as the defending champion Valley Blue Sox visit the 2016 champion Mystic Schooners in a stellar cross-division matchup in Connecticut. The Blue Sox will host their first-ever championship banner on their home opener on June 9 at MacKenzie Stadium.
 
The North Adams SteepleCats will open on the road on Opening Night at Danbury, Conn., before coming back for their home opener two nights later against the Upper Valley Nighthawks.
 
North Adams is scheduled to play two four-game homestands in its 22-game Joe Wolfe Field schedule. The first comes June 10, 11, 13 and 14. The second kicks off with the annual July 4 game and fireworks show and continues July 5, 7 and 8.
 
Most SteepleCats games are scheduled for 6:30 p.m. first pitches, but the team also has seven Sunday evening 4:30 starts on the schedule.
 
The 2018 NECBL season once again features seven teams in the North Division and six teams in the South Division. Both divisional alignments remain the same; the North Division is comprised of the Keene Swamp Bats, the North Adams SteepleCats, the Sanford Mainers, the Upper Valley Nighthawks, the Valley Blue Sox, the Vermont Mountaineers and the Winnepsaukee Muskrats. The six-team South Division contains the Danbury Westerners, the Mystic Schooners, the New Bedford Bay Sox, the Newport Gulls, the Ocean State Waves and the Plymouth Pilgrims.
 
The New England League will employ a balanced/unbalanced schedule format depending on the division, and all teams will play 44 regular season games overall. Teams in the South Division will face each divisional rival six times (three home and three road games), and will play each team from the North Division twice (one home, one road). Each team in the North Division will play two other in-division teams six times, and the remaining four teams five times, for a total of 32 games, plus the two games against each of the six South Division teams (12 games - one home, one road vs. each team) for a total of 44 games.
 
The 2018 NECBL All-Star Game will be hosted by the 2017 champion Valley Blue Sox at MacKenzie Stadium on Sunday, July 29, while players will also receive the following Monday off as part of the All-Star Break. The New England League's version of the Midsummer Classic returns to the the Pioneer Valley for the second time in the last four years; the Blue Sox also hosted back in 2014.
 
After that, each of the league's 13 teams will play two final days of the regular season with hopes of qualifying for the 2018 NECBL Playoffs, of which the format remains the same from last summer.
 
Six teams total will qualify for the postseason, with the winners of both the North and South Divisions each earning first-round byes. The No. 2 and No. 3 seeds from each division will square off in a winner-take-all NECBL Wildcard Game; the victors will take on the No. 1 seeds in the best-of-three NECBL Divisional Finals before the last two teams standing face off in the NECBL Championship Series in another best-of-three format that will determine the winner of the Fay Vincent Cup.
 
The final games of the regular season will be held on Wednesday, Aug. 1, with the following day (Aug. 2) open for makeup games before the postseason begins on Friday, Aug. 3.
 
Last season, the Upper Valley Nighthawks, in only their second season, captured the North Division's regular season title, while the Ocean State Waves finished with 31 wins - one shy of the single-season league record - to earn the South Division title. The Waves would meet the Blue Sox in the NECBL Championship Series, which saw the Blue Sox hoist the Fay Vincent Sr. Cup for the first time ever.
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Optimal Healing in North Adams Expanding Services

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Optimal Healing was opened in 2019 by Ashley Benson, who wanted to help people receive quality mental health care with access to other wellness and healing services.
 
"I realized there was a real need and market for something beyond typical mental health like the sterile environment of going into therapy and working with kids and families," Benson said. "The need for that to me was just an absolute necessary and the environment that I wanted to create for my clients."
 
Benson is a licensed social worker and therapist who works primarily with children. She has more than 20 years experience in therapy and consulting and holds postgraduate degrees in clinical social work and advanced practice with children and adolescents.
 
A few years ago, she purchased the former carriage barn of the Sanford Blackinton Mansion on East Main Street, bringing a number of other wellness practitioners under the Optimal Healing umbrella.
 
Optimal Healing provides different types of mental health support for people, a goal Benson said she wanted to bring to the community so that they could have services easily accessible. That was important to her own healing journey, she said.
 
"That combination of wellness and healing and doing talk therapy but also getting to the yoga class and getting inside my body and learning how to breathe were all imperative to my own journey and healing. So that parallel process, along with my practice, just brought to light that real need for people to be able connect those things, and our communities are difficult due to geography, to different silos in the community, and so bringing that under one roof was important to me just to give people access," Benson said.
 
"Talk therapy is not for everybody but a yoga class might be and so putting that all in one place — you don't have to do all the things, you can just pick one or you can do several, maybe eventually you start with one and it grows into something more."
 
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