Pitchin Tea rolls past Pitches n Booty Calls 14-5 in Northshore win
Pitchin Tea did not just win at North Shore Park. It separated itself fast and kept widening the gap, rolling past Pitches n Booty Calls 14-5 on Wednesday, June 17, 2026, in a Northshore matchup that never settled into a close finish. The result pushed Pitchin Tea to 7-4-0 and dropped Pitches n Booty Calls to 5-3-0, a scoreline that showed one team sustaining pressure while the other never fully recovered.
The 14-run total mattered as much as the margin. In social kickball, that kind of output usually means the order kept turning over, runners stayed aggressive, and the defense behind the opposing pitcher never found a clean way to slow the game down. Pitchin Tea turned that formula into a statement win, not a one-inning fluke, and the nine-run cushion suggested control rather than survival. Against a team that entered with a winning record, Pitchin Tea proved it could do more than grind out a result. It could build separation and hold it.
That distinction carries weight in the Wednesday Coed Kickball / Northshore Spring 2026 setup, where the league uses seven regular-season games and sends all teams to the playoffs. In a short calendar like that, every big offensive night matters because it shapes seeding, confidence, and the way a team is viewed heading into the bracket. Tampa Bay Club Sport also builds the league around online schedules, scores and standings, team T-shirts, game balls, paid officials, sponsor bar discounts, and championship prizes, with rosters allowed up to 14 players, so the season is designed to reward teams that can sustain a lineup and produce across multiple weeks.

The June 17 matchup also doubled as the opening date for the Wednesday Summer 2026 Northshore league, which runs on nine Wednesday dates through Aug. 12 at North Shore Park in St. Petersburg, Florida. That summer format is listed as coed 10v10, with five male and five female players, and the Northshore division also welcomes teams from Coquina Key. For Pitchin Tea, the win fit the profile of a club that can travel well through Tampa Bay Club Sport’s year-round calendar, where leagues are played in four to five seasons annually and the best teams tend to show the same trait again and again: they score in bunches, avoid giving runs back, and turn ordinary regular-season games into evidence that their ceiling is higher than the standings say.