Second baseman Sam Dexter's single to center scored Sam Balzano in the 10th inning to defeat the Keene Swamp Bats, 4-3 at Goodall Field.
Sanford advances to the next round, facing the Vermont Mountaineers in Montpelier Thursday night.
Account of the 2014 Keene Swamp Bats NECBL Season. Marc Ryan is a former producer for such entities as SportsChannel, CNN and West Virginia Public Television. Ryan is covering the 2014 Swamp Bats as a reporter and will keep this blog, eventually writing an e-book. He is not an employee or managed by the Keene Swamp Bats. Descriptions and opinions herein are his, not directed by the Keene Swamp Bats.
Wednesday, August 6, 2014
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
Sanford 3, Keene 0
Severino throws first pitch. |
Keene starting pitcher Dominic Severino and his
Sanford counterpart, Richard Vrana were in a pitcher’s duel through 4 innings
Tuesday.
In the top of
the fifth, 2nd baseman Sam Dexter singled and catcher Kendall
Patrick pushed Dexter to 2nd base while retired on a 6-3 groundout.
Then 1st baseman Matt Harris crashed a two- run home run and the Sanford
Mainers went on to defeat the Swamp Bats 3-0 Tuesday night.
Sanford pitcher Richard Vrana photo by Doc Gordon |
Bret Dennis broke up Richard Vrana’s bid for a
no-hitter in the bottom of the 7th with a strongly-hit single.
Perhaps the most dazzling feat of the night was the
catch made by Swamp Bats pitcher Michael Dunnigan.
Coaching first base, Dunnigan
made a nifty, if not pins-and-needles, sympathy pain- inducing, two-handed grab
of a foul ball.
The deciding game of this three game series takes
place at Sanford’s Goodall Park @ 6:30 pm Wednesday.
Monday, August 4, 2014
Playoffs: Keene 4, Sanford 1
Matt Blandino gave up only one run in five innings
and Matt Clancy and Ben Criscuolo shut down the Sanford Mainers the rest of the
way as the Keene Swamp Bats won the playoff opener on the road.
Brady Sheetz started the game with a double and scored
on catcher Rob Coman’s SAC fly to center.
Zach Lauricella, Dominic Severino and Matt Blandio before the Swamp Bats game v Sanford July 19. |
Zach Lauricella doubled in the 4th
and scored on Ryan Summers’ ground out. Lauricella doubled again in the 5th
to drive in two runs.
The next game is Tuesday at 6:30 at Alumni Field.
Friday, August 1, 2014
I'm Batman
Batmobile prize tonight
C'mon, it's only a buck! |
Every night, people are invited to purchase the right
to throw a tennis ball at the Batmobile. Buy a ball for a buck, the ball has a
number, give your name and number when you buy the ball. Of that dollar, half goes to the team. Of those tennis balls that make it into the
car, one ball gets 25% of that night’s pot. The numbered ball is taken from the
bunch that make it into the Batmobile, cross referenced with who bought it and...We
have a winner!
Some nights,
the winner gets 10 bucks or as much as $50.00.
I wasn't there but Vicki says it looked like this. Photo NOT by Doc Gordon. |
Dan Moylan played on the Memphis Redbirds, one of
his teammates was named Skip Schumaker*.
Skip bought a junker of a car to get around and for
laughs, would sometimes drive it on to the field and encourage fans to throw
numbered tennis balls at the car. If your tennis ball made it, it got put into
the season-long list of winners. From that list, a champion tennis ball was
chosen and the car was awarded to the lucky tennis ball tosser.
After Vicki Bacon, Dan’s Mom, saw this in Memphis
and returned to Keene, she told Kevin Watterson and a promotion was born. KeeneAuto Body helped in a big way with a donated car.
Tonight’s the night for the season draw, the lucky
winner will walk away with about $500.00
The view from inside the Batmobile. |
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Swamp Bats webcasts
The W2XBS camera. Check out the sweet NBC dish antanae. |
The first baseball game to be televised was a match-up of two
college teams, Princeton and Columbia at Columbia’s Baker Field on May 17, 1939.
Two mobile units were used to support the telecast; one filled with the
electronics to transmit the game, the other to haul the camera and gear.
RCA, the corporate owner of NBC, produced the game and carried
on its broadcast station W2XBS (now WNBC) to about 400 televisions in New York
City.
Some of those TV’s were display models at the RCA exhibit at the World’s
Fair and others were located at RCA’s Rockefeller Center
headquarters. The rest of the audience was rich people in Manhattan who owned a
TV.
The account of the telecast in the next day’s New York Times
reported “It was impossible for the
single camera to include both the pitcher’s box and home plate at the same time.
The ‘eye’ was focused on the mound for the wind up and quickly followed the
ball to the batter and catcher.”
The camera. There
was only one and it was as maneuverable as your refrigerator.
How times have changed.
Fans who can’t make it to Alumni Field can watch the Swamp
Bats online. Folks can go to TEAMLINE to watch the game on their laptop or, if
you prefer the big screen treatment, you can connect the feed to your flat
screen television. On most nights, the telecasts from Alumni Field are managed by
Adam Chabot and Joshua Durisseau.
Five cameras capture the action. There are cameras in the press
box pointed at various spots on the field, a camera along the grandstand and one
in center field to provide the classic shot from behind the pitcher.
Adam chooses the shot you see. Unless Josh does. “It’s a team effort,” Adam says. Because
there’s only so much room in the press box, Adam has the bird’s eye view while,
from where he sits, Josh has the image of each camera on computer monitor. By
computer keyboard, Josh feeds the image to the viewer.
Adam Chabot and Joshua Durisseau
|
There’s no immediate way to determine how many people have
dialed up the game. One night, eight people were watching. However, the important
thing to Adam and Josh was that the eight were getting a good webcast, that the
pictures were going out.
Swamp Bats profiles: The Interns
Thursday is Fan Appreciation night. The Bats resume
Monday’s suspended game with North Adams at 2pm and play a make-up game versus
Ocean State at 6:30. Fans will be admitted
at no charge. There will be games and events and raffles and spinning contests
and the Score’s toss and more.
Sarah Pelkey, Ellie Marshall, Erin MacLean, Greg Englehart and Harrison Durfee |
And none of it could happen without the interns, those
young people in the purple shirts who make a Swamp Bats game a community event.
“We could not do this without them. They
are the glue that allows us to put on a great show every night,” says Swamp
Bats president Kevin Watterson. “They do the hard jobs, the dirty jobs that no
one wants to do. They come in early. They set up. They stay late.”
Video scoreboards with fireworks and replays, out of
town highlights and prompts to clap and cheer have been around forty years but,
there is a human element to these games that’s missing on the MLB level. “We get kids active, get fans involved,”
says Sarah Pelkey.
Move It photo by Doc Gordon |
A big part of fan involvement is the Move It dance. It’s called Instant Recess”, explains
operations management intern Ellie Marshall.
“It’s based on Vision 20/20, a program to raise exercise awareness with Cheshire
Medical to make the Monadnock region the healthiest in the country by the year
20/20.”
Sarah often leads the Instant Recess as fellow
interns Ellie and Harrison Durfee join in. But every night, Sarah’s dance
partner is the most famous of the Swamp Bats, Ribby.
“Adults love Ribby, not
just kids,” Sarah says. "Ribby’s known through the region, not just the
ballpark.” With appearances at Pumpkinfest, senior centers, area events and, Reading
with Ribby, Sarah has a good point.
Ribby photo by Doc Gordon |
Harrison Durfee supervises the Bat kids and Greg Englehart coordinates Swamp Bats baseball camps.
The interns also assist sponsors. “The sponsors come
in and the interns set them up. Where should we put our table? Do they need a
power source? Any time you are impressed with what’s going in, it’s because of
our interns,” Watterson says. Supervising the interns is Operations manager Erin MacLean. “She’s
a great leader, great communicator and an ambassador for the organization,” says Watterson.
Even Ribby reports to Erin.
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Swamp Bats profiles: Michael Dunnigan
Michael Dunnigan |
Michael Dunnigan was the winning pitcher for Keene
when the Swamp Bats won the nightcap of a split a doubleheader with Laconia Tuesday
night.
A month ago Dunnigan was 0-2 and looked every bit
the fellow who wasn’t enjoying baseball. One June 24, against Laconia of all
teams, Dunigan gave up 9 hits and 4 earned runs while lasting just 3.1/3
innings. Since then, he’s won his two starts and done well in relief.
Before, I was giving up hits back to back and now, I’m mixing all my stuff well, keeping them off balance,” he said Monday.
That brings us back to the first time we spoke to
Dunnigan, before the July 5 game v the Blue Sox.“Everyone has something to work on. For me, I just started to throw a
slider this season; I’m working on throwing it for a strike and turn it into my
put-away pitch as well,” he said at the time. Including that Laconia game, Dunnigan had
given up 20 hits in 15 1/3 innings, 9 against the Muskrats. “After the season (at Saint Leo University)
I took about two weeks off.” Too
much time, it turns out. “Whenever I stop
throwing, my velocity drops. Once I got back to a routine, it eventually came
back to me.”
He has been throwing harder and in Tuesday’s win,
Dunnigan went 4 innings, surrendered 4 hits and recorded two strikeouts. Says
pitching coach Pascal Paul: “That’s
testament to him working hard and wanting to be better.” Paul also praises
the job Michael has done in relief. “He’s
done whatever we ask him to do. He’s thrown one walk this year, the only
pitcher to have that on our staff.”
With a smile and great amusement, Dunnigan disagrees
with his coach. “No, I don’t have any, I
don’t know where that started,” he protests. “I don’t know where I got that walk from but I don’t have one, I know
I don’t,” he said through a broad smile.
Oh, he also
gave up no walks Tuesday.
A
month from now, he’ll be back at Saint Leo to continue his studies and work on
his pitching.
“I’m just throwing to the best of my ability.
This is a huge year, my junior year. I’ll be draft-eligible,
he says. “I want to play on the next
level and I hope someone gives me that chance.”
Saturday, July 26, 2014
Swamp Bats profiles: Ethan Winter
Ethan Winter |
Ethan Winter is a big contributor to the Swamp Bats
information process and presence. He crunches numbers, quantifies pitching and
batting for the statistical vault where so much baseball is stored. Working with
webcaster Joe Fitzhenry, Ethan helps compile and edit the program for every home
game.
And during those games, Ethan keeps track of every
pitch, every batted ball, fair or foul, and, even the throws to first base, be
those throws be to keep runners close or, pickoff attempts.
From the first pitch, Ethan serves as a second pair
of eyes and ears for the Swamp Bats radiocasts. He assists Fitzhenry. He keeps
Joe up to the moment on pitch counts. And from his seat, Fitzhenry can’t see
the visitor’s bullpen. All Winter has to do is spin in his seat, have a glance
and be able to tell Fitz “Walker, a lefty,
# 26, is warming up,” for the visitor.
Speaking of first pitches, Ethan threw the
ceremonial pitch for the Swamp Bats before a recent game. We won’t dwell.
Rob Coman shakes Ethan's hand after the first pitch ceremony. "You should stay in the booth," Coman did NOT say. |
As the game progresses, Ethan will be making notes
on his laptop for the postgame story that will be sent along to the NECBL, the
Union Leader, the Sentinel and WMUR. At the final out, Ethan will interview players
for quotes to round out his report on the game.
In the case
of Wednesday’s rain-suspended game, his contribution was eventually a two-inch,
one column account of the game in the margin of Thursday’s Keene Sentinel. On
Friday, Ethan’s report of David Sosebee’s two-hit shutout was a big part of the
Sentinel’s Sports section, a 320 wrap-up with quotes at the top of the page.
After David Sosebee’s 1- win over the Newport Gulls,
Ethan Winter asked “What pitches worked
for you?” On the surface, that would
seem like a dumb question. Anyone present could see every pitch was working.
But Ethan knows it is never about the
questions, the interviewer is trying to get good answers. And Ethan got a
great answer. “Fastball for me was a
little iffy at first,” Sosebee said. “So
I figured that out and at the end of the game, my command was working for me.” That
wound up being read by Swamp Bats fans from Alstead to Sosebee fans in Athens,
Georgia, where he pitches for the University of Georgia.
For road games, Ethan does audio for webcasts. He had a summer job lined when the chance to
join the Swamp Bats popped up. A classmate/friend at High Point University
referred him to the Swamp Bats.
“This
is what I want to do for the rest of my life,”
he says. ”Writing game stories several
days a week, doing play by play other days has been invaluable.”
“I
would like to be a broadcaster for a Major League team, I always joke I am
going to take Don Orsillo or Joe Castiglione’s job. This is the first step. The Swamp Bats have
given me a terrific opportunity.”
Thursday, July 24, 2014
What a game!
David Sosebee |
David Sosebee pitched a two-hit complete game and
Brady Sheetz had a 5th inning RBI single to score Jarred Mederos and
the Keene Swamp Bats beat the Newport Gulls 1-0 Thursday night at Alumni Field.
·
Newport’s John Kilichowski held Keene hitless into the 5th. Swamp Bats
shortstop Jared Mederos broke through with a leadoff single and stole 2nd
and 3rd base. Brady Sheetz laced an RBI single to left field,
driving in Mederos to put the Swamp Bats ahead, 1-0.
·
Newport’s first hit was a 2nd
inning double by P.J. Jones. Jones was out
attempting to stretch his hit into a triple with a sweet 9-4-5 relay.
·
In the 2nd
inning, Newport left fielder Anthony Lyons made a nice running catch to deny
Mederos an extra-base hit.
·
In the 4th
inning, infielder Tommy Edman singled to right but was the victim
of a sharp pickoff by Sosebee. First baseman Aubrey McCarty made the tag.
·
Sosebee’s 8th
inning is indicative: Outfielder Ben Roberts popped out to 3rd
baseman Patrick McGrath. Jones was
retired on a 6-3 ground ball. Lyons struck out swinging. 6 pitches.
·
The game was completed in an hour and 46 minutes.
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Suspended due to rain.
I was worried a game interrupted after an inning,
delayed by 90 minutes before it was determined to play another day, would leave
me little chance to get some prime photos.
Well, after all this time, I should know the Swamp
Bats better.
Dominic Severino took the mound and the pace was
indicative of the coming storm. Leadoff hitter Steve Wilgus struck out swinging and when
Connor Fitzsimons dropped the ball, he quickly recovered it and threw to Darick Hall covering
first. Outfielder Evan Ocello slammed a pitch over the left field fence to put
the Waves ahead. Ryan
Blanton flied to left and Taylor Perez made a fine catch
to retire TJ Lynch.
Leadoff hitter Ryan Summers singled and eventually
scored when somebody did something. (I got distracted, sue me.)
And then we got lightning. And thunder. And then it
rained, oh how it rained. The Swamp Bats (literally) rolled out their new tarpaulin.
After an hour or so, one of the Ocean State players took a running start and
body-surfed the tarp.
Ben leaves the field in triumph. |
As an answer, All-Star relief pitcher Benjamin Criscuolo stripped down to his shorts and made a
spectacular slide of his own. A little while later, fellow All-Star reliever Matt
Clancy took his own turn at slip-n-slide. Criscuolo saved his best for last, starting
just shy of the right field fence, Ben sprinted and dove on the tarp with a
wonderful slide, worthy of a gold medal. The only criticism: they took to
these stunts before I could get a decent picture.
Of course, one
wonders if these fellows will wake tomorrow with major tarp abrasions or, how
they would have explained a separated shoulder.
It should be noted
this was going on as lightning split the night sky. We ALMOST had a BIG headline in tomorrows Sentinel.
And Ryan Summers blamed me for the rain.
Swamp Bats profiles: Pitcher Alec Bettinger
Alec Bettinger |
Alec Bettinger is the newest of the Swamp Bats,
joining the team July 2nd after helping the Virginia Cavaliers to the
College World Series. In his first season at Charlottesville, the freshman from
Woodbridge, Virginia, went 6-0 with a 1.23 ERA.
Alec took the loss in last night’s game v the Valley
Blue Sox, giving up two earned runs in 5 innings, three hits, three strikeouts and
3 walks. In three games with Keene, Bettinger is 1-1 with an ERA of 2.19. He’s
faced 54 batters, striking out 13. And he is his own worst critic. “I’m working on my breaking pitches. I
didn’t have too much success with those till the end of the year and I am up
here to work on that,” he says.
When not working on his craft, Alec has done some
exploring. “It’s beautiful; there are a
lot of outdoor things to do. I have been fishing with Connor Jones and Jack
Roberts, we fish for bass and pumpkin seed blue gill. “
He and his Virginia teammate, Rob Coman are the
summer guests of Phil and Debbie Stromgren. The Stromgrens make it a habit of
visiting campus to get acquainted with their guests. “It’s awesome, I love it there,” he says.
Monday, July 21, 2014
Swamp Bats profiles: Jarred Mederos
Jarred Mederos singled with the bases loaded in the
ninth to score North Adams shortstop J.C. Cardenas to give the NECBL North All
Stars a 4-3 win in Holyoke Sunday. For his timely hit, Mederos was bestowed
Most Valuable Player.
Jarred Mederos |
Mederos is in his first season with the Swamp Bats
where he’s stepped in to play shortstop. That’s juggled the infield a bit with
Taylor Perez sometimes playing second, and Bret Dennis or Patrick McGrath at 3rd
base. Mederos is comfortable with whatever the configuration of the Swamp Bats
middle defense. “They are great players, I
feel like we play well together,” he says.
After high school, Mederos, from Hialeah, Florida, attended
the University of Miami. But Miami just wasn’t the right fit for him “I committed at the end of my sophomore
year,” of high school. “I just put
too much stress on myself. “
One can imagine the stories: Local Boy commits.
Local boy makes debut. Maybe even Local boy goes hitless. The scrutiny of
well-wishers and local media coverage, real and imagined can take its toll. “I put a lot of pressure on myself.”
After a stint at Santa Fe College, Mederos wound up
at St. John’s in New York. A sports administration major with a minor in
accounting, Mederos did have to make an adjustment “It’s the first time I’d seen snow,” he relates.
A year ago, he took the summer off to recharge his
batteries. Now, he’s up in Keene with St. John’s teammates Matt Clancy, Bret
Dennis and, Zach Lauricella. But he is
quick to say his ease of coming to Keene is due to his host family, Nicole
Johnson and Andy Newell.
Brooke and Jarred and Allie. Photo from Nicole Johnson. |
“My host family
are great, great people. They treat me like I’m their own.” Talk about
finding a home. When not on the field or working out at the gym, Jarred spends
his time with his hosts and their daughters Brooke and Allie. “I like hanging out with my host family.
They have a backyard pool and today, we went horseback riding,” he said
before Saturday’s game.
The Swamp Bats return Tuesday against the Valley
Blue Sox. Time grows short as the season winds down. “We need to play our game. We have to go out there and follow through,
with looseness AND intensity,” he declares.
Sunday, July 20, 2014
Story for a Sunday
This one is for Ryan Summers.
In 1985, I was working as an assignment producer for ESPN’s SportsCenter. “The Natural” with Robert Redford was a year old so it was getting a lot of play on HBO. Our reporter based in New York, Ed Randall proposed a story idea.
In 1985, I was working as an assignment producer for ESPN’s SportsCenter. “The Natural” with Robert Redford was a year old so it was getting a lot of play on HBO. Our reporter based in New York, Ed Randall proposed a story idea.
Tony Ferrara in 1981 |
On top of which, Ferrara was an actor. When all TV
was in Black and White, he did an ad for Brylcreem and one for shaving cream.
What made this a promising feature idea story was the fact that Ferrara had a non-speaking
role in The Natural as Coach Wilson. If you’ve seen the movie, you know the
spot. The camera pans left to right as the Knights sing the Star Spangled
Banner along with Kate Smith.
Blink and you’ll miss him.
Wilford Brimley as Manager Pop Fisher, Richard Farnsworth as Red and Ferrara as Coach Wilson |
He also served as trainer or, coach for the actors.
So Ed suggests the story and I got to work on our
end. For Ed, all he had to do the next
time he was at Shea or Yankee Stadium is tell Tony “We are going to do an interview with you.” I had to get permission
to use a clip. After calling three or four offices, I was told to use the few
seconds, TriStar/SONY wanted $2500.
Ed did the interview and we got great video of
Ferrara pitching BP to Gary Carter and Keith Hernandez and Don Mattingly. But
we didn’t use any of the movie when ESPN balked at the price. These were of
course, in the day before ESPN was Disneyfied.
Fast forward four years. Now both Ed and I are
working for the late, lamented SportsChannel America’s SportsNightly. Pete Rose
is in hot water for having never ever
bet on baseball and Bart Giamatti is about to kick Rose out of baseball.
Naturally, Ed and I thought of the connection between Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson. After making a few calls, I spoke to Sarah Pillsbury, one of the
producers of Eight Men Out. She was glad to let us use a few seconds of the
movie. Ms. Pillsbury was incredulous that “The Natural” people wanted cash, she
was not about to charge for a free mention.
She sent a copy of the movie and just asked for the on-screen courtesy.
Sometimes, all you have to do is ask. Or pay $2500.00
D.B. Sweeney as Shoeless Joe Jackson |
Friday, July 18, 2014
Swamp Bats profiles: Rob Coman
Rob Coman at batting practice. |
Catcher Rob Coman is one fourth of
the Swamp Bats’ “Cavalier Quartet” (pardon the alliterative attempt at
expressive expertise). Along with Alec Bettinger, Connor Jones and, Jack
Roberts, Rob joined the team after Virginia’s trip to the College World Series.
Taking the summer of wasn’t a consideration and for him and his teammates. “Our goal after playing through the College World Series is to continue playing at a high level and help this team any way we can.”
Taking the summer of wasn’t a consideration and for him and his teammates. “Our goal after playing through the College World Series is to continue playing at a high level and help this team any way we can.”
In his first game for the Swamp
Bats, Coman hit a home run. He doesn’t dwell. “To hit a home run in my first at bat was cool but you just got to move
on, and play the rest of the season”.
A year ago, Coman played summer
ball in the Northwoods League, for the Wisconsin Rafters. His goal is the same,
always. “Consistency, plain and simple.
That’s Virginia baseball, playing the game the right way, that’s what you’re
trying to do out here. Play the game hard, that’s how you get better. I
wholeheartedly believe that.”
He’s been the beneficiary of good coaching
his whole life. Coman was raised in Florida, where his father, Robert, has been
a teaching golf pro for years. ” We live
near Jupiter, where the Cardinals have spring training so the guys have come
out.”
You can make the connection. Ballplayers
play golf; they meet a golf pro with a baseball-loving son. “I was very fortunate to go to spring
training,” a lot, one imagines. From the time he was 12 to his senior year
of high school, Coman was a frequent spring training visitor of the Cardinals. That
includes the 2006 and 2011 World Series champion teams. “Just to meet them and be around them was a wonderful experience; I
knew the entire lineup personally”. But he’s not a name-dropper. The most
important things he learned were not baseball mechanics, but deportment. As he told Mary Thurwatcher of the Palm Beach Post in 2012 “You won’t see
them coming into the dugout throwing helmets.”
Rough Night
- Keene pitching gave up 7 walks in 2 2/3 innings and Vermont cruised to a 7-2 wins over the Swamp Bats Friday night. Circumstances dictated Dominic Severino to be a late scratch.Jack Roberts got the start on short notice and took the loss.· Catcher Connor Fitzsimons slammed the first pitch he saw to left field in the 6th inning for his first home run of the season. He also caught two runners attempting to steal second.· Jarred Mederos made a dazzling over-the-shoulder catch to end the top of the 8th.· Mederos also had two hits.· Brady Sheetz and Rob Coman each had a hit.· Smokey the Bear threw the first pitch.
Thursday, July 17, 2014
Swamp Bats profiles: Connor Jones
Connor Jones |
Connor Jones is scheduled to start Saturday’s game when Keene plays host to the Sanford Mainers.
The 6 foot, 3 inch
right-hander was part of the Virginia team that went to the College World Series
and he led his team with 24 appearances out of the Cavaliers bullpen.
His teammates included Conner
Fitzsimons and Conner Simonetti. One could say the Swamp Bats lead the NECBL in
“Connors” (or, Conner’s). “It’s something
I didn’t know about until I got here,” Jones laughed. “But we call Connor Fitz and pitchers get called by their last name. So
as common as Jones is, I’m the only one on the team.”
That’s one problem solved.
After a year of fall baseball, the
spring season and tournament play, he could hardly be blamed for wanting to
take the rest of the summer off. He was
tempted but “After two days at home, I’d
be itching for something to do.” But Connor Jonesy sees playing in Keene
with the Swamp Bats offers “the chance to
‘work on my game and on my skills and make more friends.”
Thursday night
Pitcher Alex Robinson’s bases loaded walk pushed Matt Byrne
across the plate and the Laconia Muskrats beat the Swamp Bats 2-1 Thursday
night.
·
Alex Liquori had a fifth inning solo home run.
·
Alex Summers had two stolen bases.
Extra-inning agony
The SteepleCats
visited for just the second time this year, but the two teams played just last
Saturday in
North Adams, an extra-inning affair won by North Adams, 8-7.
Teammates at Maryland: Anthony Papio and Alex Robinson |
North Adams
outfielder Anthony Papio is a teammate at Maryland with Swamp Bats pitcher Alex
Robinson. Jarred Mederos visited with a high school teammate. Dominic Severino
played for North Adams a year ago while the SteepleCats’ Zach Lucas played with
the Swamp Bats 2013 NECBL champions.
So, things were
pretty cheerful before the game.
Michael Dunnigan
was pitching well, giving up two runs in 5 2/3 innings and striking out 8. Ryan
Summers hit a solo home run in the fourth and Jarred Mederos did the same in
the 5th inning. Bret Dennis scored on a Connor Fitzsimons single
that ricocheted off third base. Ryan Summers was right behind Dennis and poised to score until he fell/was tripped purposely by 3rd baseman Todd
Juliano, depending on your point of view.
This was when the North
Adams bench jockeys got active and stayed vocal until the final out. Not
satisfied with just serving (pardon the phrase) catcalls, they stomped their
feet and hit their bats on the dugout ceiling/press box floor.
SteepleCats catcher Ramon Valdez had a three run homer in the 10th. |
The SteepleCats
visit Keene Monday.
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