Jack and Bob's Everett Aquasox Reports
Sunday, August 8, 2010
August 8, 2010 Everett 15 - Boise 4
The second bi-decadial SLUBA Day at the Ballpark! Frogs win big with 5 home runs! Details to follow!
Saturday, August 7, 2010
August 7, 2010 - Everett 9 - Boise 0 (FORFEIT)
What an evening.
It had rained, or rather misted, all day in Shoreline with surprisingly warm weather and Bob and I were ready with our umbrellas for the game. We had our ceremonial hot dog at Costco and arrived at the ballpark at 6:15 for the 7:00 game. It seemed more comfortable sitting in the car than in the wet bleachers, so we passed a dry 40 minutes relaxing before the game.
The weather seemed to be getting better with the sound of raindrops lessening as we waited in the car. We eventually headed for the entrance, dried off seats 9 and 10, opened the BIG umbrella and heard the announcement that the revised game start time would be 7:30. We watched the grounds crew roll up the big tarp, put diamond dry on the various wet areas, and mark out the baselines. The plethora of ceremonial first pitches took place. National Anthem singer arrived. At around 7:20 the umpires came out and looked around then headed back to their room (apparently).
We waited as the misty rain let up even more and the players stood around the field tossing baseballs and anticipating the start of the game.
Nothing happened. The grounds crew was done. The players were ready. The umpires were no where to be seen.
At about 8:00 the umpires made another appearance, wandered around the field looking here and there, then headed up to the press box. Then back on the field to chat with the managers and then they wandered around again ending up in the Aquasox dugout. Tall Tom announced that the revised game time would be 8:25.
It started to rain harder.
Bob and I, believing that the game would never get underway in just 15 minutes (and very possibly not at all) and seeing that even with an 8:25 start the game would last until at least 11pm (if there were no further rain delays during the game) headed to the car. On the drive home we heard the first pitch and jumped back and forth between the Aquasox and Mariners games.
In the morning I see that in the bottom of the first inning a Boise player slipped when going for a ball in the left field corner and (after a 20 minute delay) the Boise manager Jody Davis chose to forfeit the game rather than risk injuries.
Bob and I made the right choice. And apparently Jody Davis made the wrong choice - he was suspended for 6 games.
It had rained, or rather misted, all day in Shoreline with surprisingly warm weather and Bob and I were ready with our umbrellas for the game. We had our ceremonial hot dog at Costco and arrived at the ballpark at 6:15 for the 7:00 game. It seemed more comfortable sitting in the car than in the wet bleachers, so we passed a dry 40 minutes relaxing before the game.
The weather seemed to be getting better with the sound of raindrops lessening as we waited in the car. We eventually headed for the entrance, dried off seats 9 and 10, opened the BIG umbrella and heard the announcement that the revised game start time would be 7:30. We watched the grounds crew roll up the big tarp, put diamond dry on the various wet areas, and mark out the baselines. The plethora of ceremonial first pitches took place. National Anthem singer arrived. At around 7:20 the umpires came out and looked around then headed back to their room (apparently).
We waited as the misty rain let up even more and the players stood around the field tossing baseballs and anticipating the start of the game.
Nothing happened. The grounds crew was done. The players were ready. The umpires were no where to be seen.
At about 8:00 the umpires made another appearance, wandered around the field looking here and there, then headed up to the press box. Then back on the field to chat with the managers and then they wandered around again ending up in the Aquasox dugout. Tall Tom announced that the revised game time would be 8:25.
It started to rain harder.
Bob and I, believing that the game would never get underway in just 15 minutes (and very possibly not at all) and seeing that even with an 8:25 start the game would last until at least 11pm (if there were no further rain delays during the game) headed to the car. On the drive home we heard the first pitch and jumped back and forth between the Aquasox and Mariners games.
In the morning I see that in the bottom of the first inning a Boise player slipped when going for a ball in the left field corner and (after a 20 minute delay) the Boise manager Jody Davis chose to forfeit the game rather than risk injuries.
Bob and I made the right choice. And apparently Jody Davis made the wrong choice - he was suspended for 6 games.
Thursday, August 5, 2010
August 5, 2010 - Everett 6 - Boise 2
The team with the prettiest uniforms in all of the Northwest League (and Jeff Fassaro as their pitching coach) was in town tonight. Their uniforms didn't help them as the Aquasox won another game...
The weather in Shoreline was hit and sunny - we had the air conditioning on during the trip to Everett. But in Everett clouds had piled in off the Sound and jackets were a comfort right from the first pitch.
The Aquasox got off to a quick start with Terry Serrano opening the game with a solid single to left off of Juan Serrano. Serrano vs. Serrano. Robert Anston then hit a perfect hit and run grounder to where the shortstop should have been, except he was heading to second base as Serrano was running. Then a walk to Kevin Mailloux (after getting behind in the count - he did a good job to get on base) loaded the bases. Kevin Rivers then hit a single to right and Christopher Husby - the rightfielder for Boise - threw the ball back over the general area of the mound and Serrano the pitcher managed to catch it and keep the runners from taking advantage of the poor throw. (It turns out that Christopher Husby is a converted pitcher tying his hand at playing the outfield. He's a big guy - 6'7" - but he also struck out 4 times (all swinging!) tonight, so not sure about his conversion to a hitter...)
Then, with men on first and second and Hawkins Gebbers at bat, a pair of passed balls scored one and move the other to third base where he scored on a sacrifice fly to right (with, you guessed it, a poor throw from the Husby - high this time). That box on my scorecard, was a real mess with all the activity!
A single by Evan Sharpley was erased by a 5-4-3 double play and the first inning was finally over.
Austin Hudson was on the mound for the Aquasox and had an 89mph fastball and generally kept the Hawks in check until the fifth inning when he gave up two runs before being pulled from the game with 2 outs.
The fifth inning was where Hudson walked catcher Micah Gibbs to lead off the inning (after hitting Gibbs with a pitch in the third inning) - Gibbs was batting .094 and hadn't had a hit since June! And he ends up being hit by a pitch and walking twice in this game! YOW!
Not a lot more to report as the Aquasox managed to protect their lead with Jorden Merry getting the win in relief (6 strikeouts and 2 walks in 3 1/3 innings with a top speed of 91mph) and Jarett Atardd pitching the ninth inning. Merry and Atardd are new to the team (four Aquasox pitchers have recently been sent to Clinton (story here) and we got a few replacements).
Various and Sundry: Robbie Anston made a very nice running catch in the 5th inning. Jimmy Jacquot tried to score from second on a single to right and was thrown out by the previously wild-armed Husby in a very close play. But Husby made up for it in the 8th when he missed the cutoff man and allowed Rivers to take second on what should have been a single (the throw did keep Kevin Mailloux from scoring and he was eventually stranded at third with the bases loaded).
Fun game.
Here's the box score.
Here's the Herald story.
The weather in Shoreline was hit and sunny - we had the air conditioning on during the trip to Everett. But in Everett clouds had piled in off the Sound and jackets were a comfort right from the first pitch.
The Aquasox got off to a quick start with Terry Serrano opening the game with a solid single to left off of Juan Serrano. Serrano vs. Serrano. Robert Anston then hit a perfect hit and run grounder to where the shortstop should have been, except he was heading to second base as Serrano was running. Then a walk to Kevin Mailloux (after getting behind in the count - he did a good job to get on base) loaded the bases. Kevin Rivers then hit a single to right and Christopher Husby - the rightfielder for Boise - threw the ball back over the general area of the mound and Serrano the pitcher managed to catch it and keep the runners from taking advantage of the poor throw. (It turns out that Christopher Husby is a converted pitcher tying his hand at playing the outfield. He's a big guy - 6'7" - but he also struck out 4 times (all swinging!) tonight, so not sure about his conversion to a hitter...)
Then, with men on first and second and Hawkins Gebbers at bat, a pair of passed balls scored one and move the other to third base where he scored on a sacrifice fly to right (with, you guessed it, a poor throw from the Husby - high this time). That box on my scorecard, was a real mess with all the activity!
A single by Evan Sharpley was erased by a 5-4-3 double play and the first inning was finally over.
Austin Hudson was on the mound for the Aquasox and had an 89mph fastball and generally kept the Hawks in check until the fifth inning when he gave up two runs before being pulled from the game with 2 outs.
The fifth inning was where Hudson walked catcher Micah Gibbs to lead off the inning (after hitting Gibbs with a pitch in the third inning) - Gibbs was batting .094 and hadn't had a hit since June! And he ends up being hit by a pitch and walking twice in this game! YOW!
Not a lot more to report as the Aquasox managed to protect their lead with Jorden Merry getting the win in relief (6 strikeouts and 2 walks in 3 1/3 innings with a top speed of 91mph) and Jarett Atardd pitching the ninth inning. Merry and Atardd are new to the team (four Aquasox pitchers have recently been sent to Clinton (story here) and we got a few replacements).
Various and Sundry: Robbie Anston made a very nice running catch in the 5th inning. Jimmy Jacquot tried to score from second on a single to right and was thrown out by the previously wild-armed Husby in a very close play. But Husby made up for it in the 8th when he missed the cutoff man and allowed Rivers to take second on what should have been a single (the throw did keep Kevin Mailloux from scoring and he was eventually stranded at third with the bases loaded).
Fun game.
Here's the box score.
Here's the Herald story.
Sunday, July 25, 2010
July 24, 2010 - Everett 2 - Salem Keizer 0
Another nearly (according to Pat Dillon) perfect night for a ballgame - 80 degrees and not a cloud in the sky to get in the way of the mountains in the distance or the full moon in the even further distance. And the game matched the weather - an excellent one!
The Aquasox sent out Edlando Seco to start the game. He's having a very good year and Bob noted that he looks like a left handed Felix Hernandez (in his physical features rather than his pitching skills - they are both from Venezuela). Coming into the game opponents were hitting .154 against him and he had a lot of strikeouts and walks. This game was more of the same. He showed a very nice curveball and his fastball was up to 91mph. But he does throw a lot of pitches between the walks and the strikeouts. He lasted 5 innings and had 6 strikeouts and 2 walks. His stats after this game include 23 walks and 37 strikeouts in 33 1/3 innings and an opponents' batting average of .142 (.82 ground outs for each air out). He had his 22nd birthday the day before this game.
22 year old Willie Kesler started the 6th inning for the Aquasox and pitched very well for 3 1/3 innings. He has a very nice curveball that he used along with a 90mph fastball to keep the Volcanoes off balance. After coming in and giving up a single to 2B Adam Duvall an error by first baseman Evan Sharpley (he's a quarterback, not a first baseman by trade) on a pickoff throw allowed Duvall to get to second. He was bunted over to third and then with the infield playing in a sharp liner that Aquasox shortstop Terry Serrano caught just off his shoe tops doubled Duvall up at third as he was running on contact. Nice play by Serrano. But back to Kesler - after that double play he struck out he next 5 Volcanoes (three of them looking) thanks to his excellent curveball (and a liberal strike zone by the home plate umpire). We've seen Kesler a few times and he has always pitched well. In 11 games he has a 2.29 ERA and opponents are hitting .206 against him (1.57 ground outs for each air out) - 19 2/3 innings pitched with 20 strikeouts and only 5 walks.
Jason Markovitz (a lefty) came in for the final two outs of the game to get the save (his third of the season).
In a 2-0 game it seems the highlights would mostly be about the pitching - and that was the case here. But on to the hitters...
Kevin Rivers continued his hot start to the season going 2 for 4 with a double off the short wall in right center field. He's currently batting .323 with an impressive .996 OPS.
Jimmy Jacquot (one of 3 catchers on the roster) hit a majestic homer to straight away centerfield to add a very appreciated insurance run in the bottom of the 8th inning. He had a line drive single up the middle on his previous at bat and was 2-4 on the night. He's hitting just .232 in limited playing time.
And Terry Serrano was the other Aquasox to get 2 hits. He went 2-3 and scored the first run of the game in the 7th. He hit a single into centerfield in the 4th with Evan Sharpley on second base. Sharpley, the former Notre Dame quarterback, was waved around third but an excellent one hop throw by the Volcano centerfielder Jose Medina was handled nicely by Volcano catcher Jeff Arnold at the plate and Sharpley was out after a minor collision. That throw was very very good by Medina.
There were some nice defensive plays in the game (other than the ones mentioned above).
In the first inning Hawkins Gebbers made an over the shoulder catch deep behind second base just in front of a charging rightfielder (Kevin Rivers). Gebbers tumbled to the ground but held on to the ball. With the sun in Rivers eyes at the start of the game neither of the players would have had an easy time with that ball.
In the 9th inning centerfielder Robbie Anston ran and made a nice diving catch of a ball in the right-centerfield gap.
And the most unusual play of the game came in the top of the first inning. Hawkins Gebbers was at the plate and hit a ball that the Volcano shortstop Carter Jurica caught on the short hop. He held onto the ball and Gebbers was safe at first. The "official" scorekeeper scored it an error. It went into my scorebook as a hit. And Bob said he would score it a fielder's choice. It was an odd play. I thought Jurica might have been shaken by the umpire who had run out halfway to the pitchers mound and shouted "NO CATCH" and waved his arms in a safe sign. Whatever, Jurica held onto the ball and Gebbers was safe at first.
Overall an excellent evening at the ballpark!
The boxscore is here.
The Everett Herald story is here.
The Aquasox sent out Edlando Seco to start the game. He's having a very good year and Bob noted that he looks like a left handed Felix Hernandez (in his physical features rather than his pitching skills - they are both from Venezuela). Coming into the game opponents were hitting .154 against him and he had a lot of strikeouts and walks. This game was more of the same. He showed a very nice curveball and his fastball was up to 91mph. But he does throw a lot of pitches between the walks and the strikeouts. He lasted 5 innings and had 6 strikeouts and 2 walks. His stats after this game include 23 walks and 37 strikeouts in 33 1/3 innings and an opponents' batting average of .142 (.82 ground outs for each air out). He had his 22nd birthday the day before this game.
22 year old Willie Kesler started the 6th inning for the Aquasox and pitched very well for 3 1/3 innings. He has a very nice curveball that he used along with a 90mph fastball to keep the Volcanoes off balance. After coming in and giving up a single to 2B Adam Duvall an error by first baseman Evan Sharpley (he's a quarterback, not a first baseman by trade) on a pickoff throw allowed Duvall to get to second. He was bunted over to third and then with the infield playing in a sharp liner that Aquasox shortstop Terry Serrano caught just off his shoe tops doubled Duvall up at third as he was running on contact. Nice play by Serrano. But back to Kesler - after that double play he struck out he next 5 Volcanoes (three of them looking) thanks to his excellent curveball (and a liberal strike zone by the home plate umpire). We've seen Kesler a few times and he has always pitched well. In 11 games he has a 2.29 ERA and opponents are hitting .206 against him (1.57 ground outs for each air out) - 19 2/3 innings pitched with 20 strikeouts and only 5 walks.
Jason Markovitz (a lefty) came in for the final two outs of the game to get the save (his third of the season).
In a 2-0 game it seems the highlights would mostly be about the pitching - and that was the case here. But on to the hitters...
Kevin Rivers continued his hot start to the season going 2 for 4 with a double off the short wall in right center field. He's currently batting .323 with an impressive .996 OPS.
Jimmy Jacquot (one of 3 catchers on the roster) hit a majestic homer to straight away centerfield to add a very appreciated insurance run in the bottom of the 8th inning. He had a line drive single up the middle on his previous at bat and was 2-4 on the night. He's hitting just .232 in limited playing time.
And Terry Serrano was the other Aquasox to get 2 hits. He went 2-3 and scored the first run of the game in the 7th. He hit a single into centerfield in the 4th with Evan Sharpley on second base. Sharpley, the former Notre Dame quarterback, was waved around third but an excellent one hop throw by the Volcano centerfielder Jose Medina was handled nicely by Volcano catcher Jeff Arnold at the plate and Sharpley was out after a minor collision. That throw was very very good by Medina.
There were some nice defensive plays in the game (other than the ones mentioned above).
In the first inning Hawkins Gebbers made an over the shoulder catch deep behind second base just in front of a charging rightfielder (Kevin Rivers). Gebbers tumbled to the ground but held on to the ball. With the sun in Rivers eyes at the start of the game neither of the players would have had an easy time with that ball.
In the 9th inning centerfielder Robbie Anston ran and made a nice diving catch of a ball in the right-centerfield gap.
And the most unusual play of the game came in the top of the first inning. Hawkins Gebbers was at the plate and hit a ball that the Volcano shortstop Carter Jurica caught on the short hop. He held onto the ball and Gebbers was safe at first. The "official" scorekeeper scored it an error. It went into my scorebook as a hit. And Bob said he would score it a fielder's choice. It was an odd play. I thought Jurica might have been shaken by the umpire who had run out halfway to the pitchers mound and shouted "NO CATCH" and waved his arms in a safe sign. Whatever, Jurica held onto the ball and Gebbers was safe at first.
Overall an excellent evening at the ballpark!
The boxscore is here.
The Everett Herald story is here.
Friday, July 23, 2010
July 23, 2010 - Everett at Salem Keizer
Bob and I didn't attend the game last night (it was a road game in Oregon...) that went 14 innings with the Aquasox finally winning 2-1. But after looking at the game report the 14th inning last night looked pretty unusual…
Everett Top 14th
Then a squeeze bunt to get him home where the runner was safe.
And around and between bunts in the inning we struck out three times.
Everett Top 14th
- Terry Serrano singles on a bunt ground ball to first baseman Carlos Quintana.
- Anthony Phillips singles on a bunt ground ball to third baseman Kyle Mach. Terry Serrano to 3rd.
- Ryan Royster strikes out swinging.
- Robert Anston singles on a bunt ground ball to first baseman Carlos Quintana. Terry Serrano scores. Anthony Phillips to 2nd.
- Kevin Rivers called out on strikes.
- With Evan Sharpley batting, wild pitch by Andrew Romo, Anthony Phillips to 3rd. Robert Anston to 2nd.
- Evan Sharpley strikes out swinging.
Then a squeeze bunt to get him home where the runner was safe.
And around and between bunts in the inning we struck out three times.
So we parlayed three bunts (two of them probably sacrificial but ruled hits) and three strikeouts into a run. Not a single ball hit as far as the edge of the infield grass…
Saturday, July 10, 2010
July 10, 2010 - Spokane 9 - Everett 4
A beautiful night for baseball. Temperature was a balmy 73 degrees on a clear night with the mountains in sharp view over the outfield wall.
We had the reappearance of some familiar faces from last year's team. Ryan Royster was in centerfield and Gebbers was back with the team (though not starting tonight). We also saw a new face at third base - Mickey Wiswall (who was drafted as a first baseman - so his appearance at third made for something to watch).
The game was a tightly played contest until the 5th inning when the Aquasox picked up two runs thanks to an error and a homerun by Wiswall. As the 6th inning started I said to Bob, "This is where we give those runs back..." Unfortunately, I was right...
Our starter Anthony Fernandez had kept the Indians at bay with a variety of off-speed pitches through the first five innings. His fastball reached 89mph but he was throwing an off-speed pitch for every fastball. He had 4 strikeouts and 1 walk through 5 innings while giving up 4 hits - but was also saved by a couple double plays (especially a nifty 1-6-4-3 gem to end the 5th inning with the bases loaded. He seemed in control.
But, as is their pattern this year after getting the lead, the Aquasox suddenly got generous and let the Indians back into the game. Fernandez gave up a double, got an out, and then walked two to load the bases. During those 4 hitters he also gave up a stolen base and uncorked a wild pitch that Steve Baron managed to stop with his throat to keep the runner at third. Bases loaded and 1 out.
Then bad things started to happen. A single to right was misplayed by Kevin Rivers to allow an extra run to score and a runner to advance. Tied game.
A hot ground ball was stopped in a nice diving play by Wiswall at third (to save a sure double down the line) that scored another run. A double steal (with a strong, but poorly aimed, throw by Steve Baron that Wiswall dived to keep from going down the third baseline) and a sacrifice fly scored the Indians 4th run of the inning.
The Aquasox then brought in Ogui Diaz to pitch. Ogui was a shortstop with the Aquasox a few years ago and progressed as far as AA ball before they decided that his bat just wasn't good enough. So he is converting to a pitcher. Ogui had a 12.00 ERA coming into the game and left with a 15.43 ERA - so you get an idea of how things went. He immediately gave up a run (Fernandez is charged with this one) on a single to center and then managed to pick the runner off first to end the inning.
Indians 5 and Aquasox 2.
The Frogs got two runs back in the 6th inning on no hits when they were the beneficiaries of a walk, out, hit batter, another walk, another walk, a ground out to the pitcher and then the inning ended with two runners on when Evan Sharpley struck out swinging. Had Sharpley been a hero like the night before and hit a home run in this spot the Aquasox would have been two runs ahead.
When the Indians came up to bat against Diaz in the top of the 7th more bad things happened. A single, a strike out and a walk followed by a fly out followed by another walk loaded the bases with two outs. Diaz then got two strikes on the Indian's #5 hitter Andrew Clark - one more strike and the Aquasox are out of the inning with no damage. Instead, with the 0-2 count Clark lined a hit into centerfield and the score went to 7-2. A walk lead to the end of Diaz's rough night and when Austin Hudson came in with the bases loaded he promptly gave up a single up the middle to score 2 runs (that counted against Ogui Diaz's total).
Indians 9 - Aquasox 4
Bob and I commented on the swing in fortunes. Had Sharpley gotten the big hit in the 6th and Diaz managed to get the big pitch in the 7th the score could easily have been Aquasox 7 and Indians 4...
Nothing else of note happened and the game ended 9-4.
A few notes on players...
Mickey Wiswall played well at third base and certainly didn't look like a first baseman playing horribly out of position.
Steve Baron did a great job stopping balls in the dirt and saved several wild pitches. His throws were strong, but not especially accurate. At the plate he looked as bad as advertised. He seemed to be lunging at balls and always off balance. He was 0-4 with one strikeout and one hard hit liner that the Indian's shortstop Jurickson Profar caught.
Speaking of Jurickson Profar, he's only 17 years old and looks like an excellent defensive shortstop. He also hit a double down the line (while going 1-4) and is a switch hitter (though the program says he bats right handed). At 17 in this league he's probably one to watch.
Another Spokane Indian to watch is 18 year old Jacob Skole who was a 15th pick overall in the 2010 draft. He hasn't been doing too well in his first 28 at bats hitting just .138.
Saturday, July 3, 2010
July 3, 2010 Aquasox 6 - Volcanos 5 (11 innings)
The great thing about baseball is that you're always seeing the unexpected. Take tonight's game for instance... Last night Fred Bello hit an inside-the-park home run (the first in 11 years for an Aquasox player). So you figure it's going to be 11 more years until you might get a chance to see another one. Wrong. Fred hit an inside-the-park home run in tonight's game again! Two in two consecutive games!
It was a great night for baseball. Sunny and warm when we arrived (eventually dark and cold when we left) and a very entertaining extra inning game against the once powerful Salem-Keizer Volcanos (who the Aquasox are 6-0 against after this game).
Everett again jumped out to an early lead, something they've been doing all year so far, and were ahead 4-1 at the end of the 3rd inning. But like Bob and I noted - no lead is safe in the Northwest League and sure enough by Seventh Inning Stretch the score was 5-5...
The Everett starter, 21 year old Yoervis Medina, pitched 6 innings and left with a 5-4 lead. He had a 92mpg fastball and managed to pitch out of danger after giving up lead off base hits in each of the first 4 innings. He struck out 5, walked 1 and gave up 10 hits in his 6 innings.
He was followed by Austin Hudson who gave up a home run in his 3 innings of pitching and showed an 89 mph fastball.
Fray Martinez finished out the game with a 94 mph fastball and got the win for his 2 innings of shutout pitching.
On the hitting side, the Aquasox were very efficient. After 5 innings they had 3 hits vs. the Volcano's 9 hits but had a 4-3 lead and had only left one runner on base vs. the Volcano's 6 men left on base. Not a way to consistently win, but it was working for the Sox.
Dwight Britton came back from a game and a half off (due to unspecified reasons - not injury related) to have two hits including a home run to center and a walk. He looked solid in centerfield.
Kevin Rivers has come back to earth and was 0-4 tonight with two strikeouts (both looking). The undrafted free agent that was the player of the week last week might be in for a cool stretch.
There were no real hitting stars. The final play of the game was probably the most remarkable from a hitting aspect. Robbie Anston had lead off the 11th with a single through the hole on the left side. When Kevin Mailloux got to a 3-2 count (after failing twice to get the sacrifice bunt down) Robbie was running with the pitch on two fouls and then when Mailloux connected on a hard ground ball to the hole where the shortstop had vacated to cover second. Anston rounded second and was waved home while the two outfielders (who had been playing very deep) headed for the ball. They ended up not getting the ball to the plate in time to catch Anston and the game was over. A strange "double" on a ground ball hit directly at the shortstop position.
And on the Salem Keizer side, they have a pitcher named Jake Dunning that has 17 strikeouts and 3 walks in 10 innings of pitching this year. And he's only given up one fly ball. The amazing thing about him is that last year he was a shortstop and is converting over to pitching. Amazing.
The Herald story is here
The box score is here
It was a great night for baseball. Sunny and warm when we arrived (eventually dark and cold when we left) and a very entertaining extra inning game against the once powerful Salem-Keizer Volcanos (who the Aquasox are 6-0 against after this game).
Everett again jumped out to an early lead, something they've been doing all year so far, and were ahead 4-1 at the end of the 3rd inning. But like Bob and I noted - no lead is safe in the Northwest League and sure enough by Seventh Inning Stretch the score was 5-5...
The Everett starter, 21 year old Yoervis Medina, pitched 6 innings and left with a 5-4 lead. He had a 92mpg fastball and managed to pitch out of danger after giving up lead off base hits in each of the first 4 innings. He struck out 5, walked 1 and gave up 10 hits in his 6 innings.
He was followed by Austin Hudson who gave up a home run in his 3 innings of pitching and showed an 89 mph fastball.
Fray Martinez finished out the game with a 94 mph fastball and got the win for his 2 innings of shutout pitching.
On the hitting side, the Aquasox were very efficient. After 5 innings they had 3 hits vs. the Volcano's 9 hits but had a 4-3 lead and had only left one runner on base vs. the Volcano's 6 men left on base. Not a way to consistently win, but it was working for the Sox.
Dwight Britton came back from a game and a half off (due to unspecified reasons - not injury related) to have two hits including a home run to center and a walk. He looked solid in centerfield.
Kevin Rivers has come back to earth and was 0-4 tonight with two strikeouts (both looking). The undrafted free agent that was the player of the week last week might be in for a cool stretch.
There were no real hitting stars. The final play of the game was probably the most remarkable from a hitting aspect. Robbie Anston had lead off the 11th with a single through the hole on the left side. When Kevin Mailloux got to a 3-2 count (after failing twice to get the sacrifice bunt down) Robbie was running with the pitch on two fouls and then when Mailloux connected on a hard ground ball to the hole where the shortstop had vacated to cover second. Anston rounded second and was waved home while the two outfielders (who had been playing very deep) headed for the ball. They ended up not getting the ball to the plate in time to catch Anston and the game was over. A strange "double" on a ground ball hit directly at the shortstop position.
And on the Salem Keizer side, they have a pitcher named Jake Dunning that has 17 strikeouts and 3 walks in 10 innings of pitching this year. And he's only given up one fly ball. The amazing thing about him is that last year he was a shortstop and is converting over to pitching. Amazing.
The Herald story is here
The box score is here
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