The World Baseball Softball Confederation Premier12 tournament started this weekend, with round-robin group play that has Team USA in action down in Mexico.
Representing Team...
The DSL Pirates teams ended their seasons this week, which brings the rookie-level affiliates to an end.
I've been reviewing the best performing hitting and...
A last-ditch effort with two out in the bottom of the 9th came up short as the Indianapolis Indians lost to the Bison at Victory Field this afternoon. �The Indians struggled to produce on the offense, and that hurt starter Ian Snell (photo),�who suffered his second loss in this stint with the Indians.
Snell pitched 5 innings, and gave up 9 hits on the way to 2 runs. �He walked one batter and struck out 4. �The Bisons' first run came in the top of the 1st. �With two outs, Snell gave up three consecutive singles -- a grounder up the middle by CF Jesus Feliciano, a looper into right field by 1B Mike Lamb, and a line drive that just eluded Tribe 2B Shelby Ford's dive by�LF Nick Evans. �Evans' hit brought in Feliciano and the Bison were on the scoreboard.�
Tribe SS Brian Bixler (photo) didn't let the Bison have the lead for long. �He led off the bottom of the inning by taking Tobi Stoner's 2-1 pitch over the right field wall, 375 feet over the "Baseball Up Close" sign. �
LF Lastings Milledge followed Bixler's homer with a double into the right field corner. �Milledge advanced to third base on RF Brian Myrow's ground out to first, but that was as far as he could get. �3B Tagg Bozied grounded out to second base, with the infield in too close for Milledge to try to score from third. �1B Hector Gimenez struck out to end the inning. �
Ian Snell worked around a double by SS Wilson Valdez in the 2nd inning, including a little tapper back in front of the mound, which Snell took himself, tagging out the batter 2B Argenis Reyes (photo). �
Snell got into trouble again in the 3rd inning. �He gave up a lead-off walk to RF Andy Green, and Green moved to second base when Snell committed a balk as he faked a pickoff throw to first base. �Snell struck out Jesus Feliciano for the first out of the inning. �Mike Lamb lined an RBI single into left field, and Green was able to come around from second base to score easily, as the throw in from right field was wide. �Snell got a strikeout and a grounder force out to end the inning, but the Bison had taken a 2-1 lead. �
[Photo: �Chris Barnwell (left) backs up Brian Myrow (right) in the outfield.]
And that was all the scoring there was. �Snell got out of a jam with runners on the corners and one out in the 4th inning, by getting a foul pop up and a little bouncer back to the mound. �He had another jam in the 5th, when he gave up back-to-back singles to Jesus Feliciano and Mike Lamb to open the inning. �Snell's first pitch to Nick Evans popped out of C Erik Kratz's glove, and Feliciano took off for third base. �But, the ball only dropped to Kratz's feet, and he was able to quickly recover and fire down to third base in plenty of time for 3B Tagg Bozied to �tag out Feliciano. �Evans flied out, then 3B Javier Castillo lined a ball over Bozied's head and into left field for a double, moving Lamb to third base. �Snell got out of the inning by getting former Indy Indian (2001) C Robinson Cancel to ground out to second. �
After the first inning, Bisons' Tobi Stoner faced only one batter over the minimum in the next 5 innings. �Brian Bixler was plunked on the shoulder with a pitch in the 3rd inning, but was promptly erased when Lastings Milledge grounded back to the mound and Stoner started a 1-6-3 (Stoner to SS Wilson Valdez to 1B Mike Lamb) double play. �Shelby Ford (photo) slipped a single through the hole and into right field with two outs in the 5th inning, but he was left stranded when pinch-hitter Neil Walker popped out to third base. �
Tagg Bozied opened the bottom of the 7th with a line drive single into left field. �Hector Gimenez sacrifice bunted Bozied over to second base. �Erik Kratz smashed a line drive toward right field, but Bison 1B Mike Lamb robbed him of the hit by sticking out his glove at just the right second. �CF Chris Barnwell grounded to third base, where Javier Castillo was able to tag out Bozied as he tried to advance. �Stoner finished his afternoon by retiring the side in order in the 8th inning. �He gave up only 4 hits and the one run in his 8 innings, with no walks and 7 stirkeouts. �
After Ian Snell sat down, reliever S
teven Jackson pitched 3 innings of hitless and scoreless relief. �He walked Wilson Valdez and Andy Green in the 6th inning, but left both stranded. �Then he put down the next 6 Bison batters in order. �Mike Koplove pitched the top of the 9th for the Indians, and he had to work around an error and a hit. �Argenis Reyes began the inning by grounding to first base. �1B Hector Gimenez made a diving stop to keep the ball from going through to the outfield. �He hopped up and flipped to Koplove, but the flip was off-target. �Koplove made the catch, but it broke his concentration and his foot completely missed the first base bag. �Reyes was safe on the throwing error. �
Andy Green dropped down a sacrifice bunt to move Reyes to second base. �Jesus Feliciano followed with a short fly ball into center field. �Chris Barnwell charged in, but was not able to catch the ball on the fly -- only as a trap. �Reyes stayed on second base, since he could not be sure if Barnwell was going to make the catch or not. �Mike Lamb was next, grounding to second base, in what looked like it would be an inning-ending double play (photo sequence). Shelby Ford made the scoop and threw to Brian Bixler at second base to force out Feliciano. �But Feliciano disrupted Bixler as he slid into the bag, and Bixler's throw to first pulled Hector Gimenez off the bag. �
That left runners on the corners (Reyes on third and Lamb on first) with two outs. �Koplove bore down and got Nick Evans hit the first pitch right to Brian Bixler at short, for a routine ground out to end the inning.
The bottom of the 9th brought the Indians' last chance. �Lastings Milledge led off with a grounder through the hole and into left field for a single. �But he was eliminated moments later �when Brian Myrow grounded into a double play. �With two outs, Tagg Bozied also singled into left field. �Hector Gimenez further raised everyone's hopes with a single into right field, and Bozied advanced to third base. �Erik Kratz worked a walk to load the bases, and the crowd was screaming. �But their hopes ended when Chris Barnwell grounded to third on a 1-1 pitch to end the rally and the game. �
Indians' Hitting Gem of the Game: �Brian Bixler's home run to begin the bottom of the 1st. �It was his 6th of the season, all coming in July. �
Indians' Defensive Gem of the Game: �In the 5th inning, Nick Evans hit a long fly ball down the right field line, heading toward the corner. �RF Brian Myrow made the long run -- and then had to run even further, as the wind pushed the ball further toward the foul line. �Myrow made the catch, in the corner, right near the foul line, preventing a hit.
NOTES:
Indians' broadcaster Scott McCauley says that the Pirates' jerseys the Indians were wearing yesterday will be auctioned off and the money raised will go to the Indians' and the Pirates' charities.
More photos:
Lastings Milledge takes a lead off second base...... Neil Walker coaching at first base
Erik Kratz............... Steven Jackson�
Neil Walker and Daniel McCutchen watch from the dugout........ Mike Koplove
Erik Kratz fields a bunt in the 9th ...... �Frank Kremblas and Tagg Bozied on third in the bottom of the 9th
The Pirates' 9th inning rally produced 2 runs, but still fell 2 runs short of catching up, as pitcher Rinku Singh also became the first Indian native to lose a professional baseball game. �The Pirates scored one run in the 3rd on doubles by CF�Wesley Freeman and LF Rogelio Noris. �The Blue Jays came back with one run in the 4th on a double and a single, after starter Brent Klinger had pitched three scoreless innings. �
Singh took over for Klinger to begin the 5th inning, and with one out, he gave up 4 consecutive singles, for 2 runs. �Two doubles in the 6th brought in another run. �Dinesh Patel pitched the 7th inning, and he gave up an unearned run on a throwing error, two stolen bases, a single, and an RBI ground out. �Papiro Juan struck out the side in the 8th inning for the Pirates. �
In the top of the 9th, the Pirates made one last effort, beginning with a single by 3B Henry Henry, two singles by pinch hitter Edwin Roman and SS Benjamin Gonzalez, and a 2-RBI double by 1B Gerlis Rodriguez. �That left base runners on second and third with no outs. �A new reliever from the Blue Jays' bullpen struck out the next two batters, then ended the game with a ground out.�
The Aeros scored off Curve starter Kyle Bloom on a 3-run homer in the bottom of the 1st inning, but it was all Curve after that. �CF Jose Tabata went 3-for-4 with a double and an RBI, and SS Brian Friday added 2 hits and 3 RBI, and 3B Pedro Alvarez homered and singled.
The Curve scored two run in the 3rd when C Milver Reyes led off with a double, went to third on a fielding error, and scored on 2B Jim Negrych's ground out. �Jose Tabata's single, scored Friday. �Pedro Alvarez added 2 runs in the 5th with a home run after Brian Friday's single, to give the Curve a 4-3 lead.�
The Curve blasted the game open with a 5-run 8th inning. �Jose Tabata led off with a double, and Pedro Alvarez walked. �A wild pitch moved both of them up 90 feet, and DH Jason Delaney walked to load the bases. �A pitching change didn't help the Aeros for long. �RF Jeff Corsaletti grounded into a force out, with Tabata out at the plate, but the bases still loaded. �LF Jonel Pacheco walked, forcing in Alvarez with the first run. �1B Miles Durham brought in Delaney with a sacrifice fly. �Pacheco stole second base, and Milver Reyes walked to again load the bases. �Brian Friday doubled, clearing the bases to bring in three more runs and give the Curve plenty of insurance. �
C Steve Lerud has been placed on the disabled list, due to a concussion he suffered when he was hit by a bat on a backswing in a game earlier this week. �
Game 1 -- �Frederick Keyes 3, �Lynchburg Hillcats 2 �
The Hillcats scored one run in the first inning, when CF Alex Presley reached on a throwing error, went to third on SS Jordy Mercer's single, and scored on 1B Matt Hague's sacrifice fly. �LF Jared Keel added another run in the 2nd inning on a solo homer. �The Keys scored their runs in the bottom of the 1st, on a 3-run homer, following a single and a walk. �
The pitching took over after that. �Starter Jeff Locke was relieved after the homer and another single in the 1st inning. �Moises Robles pitched a scoreless 2nd inning. �Tom Boleska gave up one hit over the next 3 innings, and Paul Mildren retired the side in order in the 6th. �
The Hillcats put at least one runner on base in each inning, including another single by Jordy Mercer, singles by C Eric Fryer and Alex Presley,�2 walks, and a fielding error. �But a double play and timely strikeouts kept Lynchburg from scoring again.
The Hillcats and the Keys took a 3-3 tie into the 8th inning (extras for a double header). �The Hillcats took the lead in the top of the 8th, beginning with a singles by 3B Eddie Prasch and CF Alex Presley. �With Prasch on third, SS Jordy Mercer grounded to third, for a fielder's choice, as Prasch was tagged out at the plate. �Matt Hague came through with a single, scoring Presley from second base, to give Lynchburg a 4-3 lead. �RJ Rodriguez came on to pitch the botto
m of the inning. �He got two strike outs, then gave up a single, before getting a ground out to end the game and earn his league-leading 19th save. �
Brian Morris got the start for the Hillcats, and pitched 6 innings, allowing 3 runs on 8 hits. �The runs came in the 5th, on two doubles and two singles. �Harvey Garcia pitched a scoreless 7th inning, allowing a single amid 3 strikeouts. �He was the pitcher of record when the Hillcats scored in the 8th, so was credited with his first win.
The Hillcats also scored in the 5th inning. �C Kris Watts' hit into right field was misplayed for a 3-base error, and he scored on DH Kent Sakamoto's double. �Jared Keel walked, and a sacrifice bunt by RF Erik Huber moved the runners up one base each. �Eddie Prasch's second of three hits in the game was a double that scored both Sakamoto and Keel. �
LF Quincy Latimore was the hero for the Power, picking up an RBI in each of the last 2 innings, as the Power came from behind for the win. �Latimore went 3-for-3 in the game, with two triples and a double.
Starter Quincy Miller pitched into the 5th inning, and allowed 3 runs on 5 hits and a walk, while striking out 6 batters. �The first two runs came on a 2-run homer in the top of the 1st. �He allowed another run in the 4th on a double and an RBI single. �
The Power scored one run in the 2nd when Latimore led off with a triple and scored on 3B Jeremy Farrell's RBI ground out. �They continued to trail 3-1 until the bottom of the 7th, when three singles, by DH Bobby Spain, 2B Danny Bomback, and SS Greg Picart, loaded the bases. �RF Starling Marte brought in Spain with a sacrifice fly, but the inning ended when Bomback was thrown out at third base. �
Yoffri Martinez finished the 5th inning for Miller, and then pitched a scoreless 6th inning. �Ryan Kelly came on for the 7th, which was also scoreless. �In the 8th, the SandGnats added to their total with a 2-run homer, to take a 5-2 lead. �The Power surged right back in the bottom of the inning, as they batted around to tie the game at 5-5. �C Tony Sanchez walked, and scored on Quincy Latimore's second triple of the game. �Walks to Jeremy Farrell and Bobby Spain loaded the bases. �Latimore was forced in when Danny Bomback was hit by a pitch, and Farrell was forced in when Greg Picart walked. �That set up Latimore for the 9th inning and a Power victory. �
Three Spikes pitchers combined to shutout the Muckdogs -- 7 scoreless innings by starter Maurice Bankston, who earned his second win, allowing 3 hits and one walk, with 3 strikeouts; then one inning each by relievers Brandon Holden and Teddy Fallon. �Fallon allowed a lead-off single, then retired the next 3 batters. �Bankston retired 11 batters in order over the 3rd - 6th innings. �
Meanwhile, the Spikes' batters were having a fine day. �They scored their first 2 runs in the 2nd inning, on a double by RF Edward Garcia, a fielder's choice that didn't work so well, an RBI ground out by C Craig Parry, and a single by 2B Ty Summerlin. �A double by DH Aaron Baker and a single by Garcia added another run in the 3rd inning. �A walk and a triple by Summerlin made the score 4-0 in the 4th. �
Three more runs came in during the 6th inning. �Three consecutive walks, to SS Brock Holt, Summerlin, and CF Evan Chambers, loaded the bases. �Baker swept the bases clean with a triple for 3 RBI. �LF Pat Irvine got in the final blow with a solo home run in the 7th inning. �