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Koperniak Hits for Cycle for Double A Cardinals

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AMARILLO, Texas -- Hoosac Valley High School graduate Matt Koperniak Tuesday hit for the cycle and drove in four runs in leading the Springfield Cardinals to an 11-9 win over the Amarillo Sod Poodles in the Double A Texas League.
 
Hitting in the cleanup spot, Koperniak started his night with an RBI single in the top of the first inning.
 
In the third, he doubled with two out and scored one batter later to give Springfield a 5-0 lead.
 
In the fifth, Koperniak hit a two-run home run to left center field with two out to make it a 7-4 game.
 
After Amarillo rallied with five runs in the bottom of the seventh to tie the game, 9-9, Koperniak helped Springfield pull ahead for good in the top of the ninth.
 
After his teammate Nick Dunn hit a two-out homer to center and Jordan Walker singled his way aboard, Koperniak tripled to center field to drive in Walker and give the Cardinals a two-run cushion.
 
"That was my first triple, so I definitely wasn't expecting to have a night like that," Koperniak told Tyler Maun of the website MiLB.com. "I was just trying to get the barrel on the ball, help the teammates out, help get the 'W.' "
 
Koperniak's home run in the fifth was his ninth of the season.
 
Koperniak, a 2016 Hoosac Valley graduate, is hitting .274 with 41 RBIs this season in 81 games with the Cardinals.
 
His summer also included a brief callup to the St. Louis Cardinals' Triple A affiliate, the Memphis Redbirds, where he played two games, going 2-for-3 with a run scored and a stolen base.
 
Springfield is 49-54 this summer and in fourth place in the Texas League North. In the second half of the season, Koperniak's club is 18-16 and in second place in the division.
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Greylock Glen Outdoor Center 90% Complete

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
ADAMS, Mass. — The Greylock Glen Outdoor Center is about 90 percent finished with an anticipated completion date in August. 
 
Matthew Sturz of owner's project manager Colliers International updated the Selectmen on the project's progress via Zoom on Wednesday. 
 
"We'll work with the town to determine exactly the logistics of that," he said in response to questions about the opening. "I think that there's certainly interest in getting the facility open as soon as it can open. But we do need to conclude the construction activities ... it's not federally advisable to have construction activity going on with the public."
 
The completion will depend on getting a certificate of occupancy for the 10,000-square foot facility.
 
The  $8.3 million project is running eight months behind the expected schedule, Sturz said, largely because of permitting with the state Department of Environmental Protection that required an extensive environmental review of endangered species, working with National Grid to determine how solar will be integrated into the project, and the need for a water system for both potable water and fire suppression. 
 
"Transformers and all manner of electrical switchgear is being significantly impacted by supply chain issues throughout the construction industry," said Sturz. "So coordinating those items up front took a little bit longer than anticipated."
 
A 350,000-gallon water tank is being constructed on the grounds to provide water with completion expected by July or August. 
 
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