Ravens pitching fans 17
Camacho recorded a career-high 12 strikeouts at SNHU on Wednesday
night.
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MANCHESTER, N.H. (April 24,
2013) – Two-base miscues in both the ninth and 10th
innings were the difference on Wednesday night, as the No. 20/23
nationally ranked Franklin Pierce University baseball team turned a
3-2 ninth-inning lead into a 4-3, 10-inning road loss to Southern
New Hampshire in Northeast-10 Conference Northeast Division play at
Penmen Field. Franklin Pierce pitching issued 11 walks in the game,
though surprisingly none would come around to score.
With the loss, Franklin Pierce
falls to 27-13 (17-4 Northeast-10, 10-4 Northeast Division), while
SNHU improves to 27-13 (13-10 Northeast-10, 10-6 Northeast
Division). Franklin Pierce is now tied in the loss column with
Bentley (9-4) at the top of the Northeast Division standings, after
the Falcons posted a 3-1 win at home against Stonehill on
Wednesday.
The win clinches the three-game
season series for SNHU, giving the Penmen a tiebreaker should the
two teams wind up tied at the end of regular-season play next
weekend. In addition, head-to-head play is a factor in seeding and
selection to the NCAA Championship East Regional. Unless the two
clubs meet in the Northeast-10 Championship, SNHU will own the
head-to-head matchup come Selection Sunday. The first official NCAA
East Region rankings were published earlier Wednesday, with SNHU
currently second and Franklin Pierce fourth.
With the game tied 3-3 through
nine-and-a-half innings, SNHU would plate the winning run without
recording a hit in the home half of the 10th. Sophomore
right-hander Brendan O'Rourke
(Shrewsbury, Mass.) took over on the mound for Franklin
Pierce to start the inning, but he drilled freshman shortstop Zach
Goldstein in the back with a 2-0 fastball to start the inning and
was lifted in favor of senior right-hander Matt Horan (Boston,
Mass.). Horan issued a six-pitch walk to junior center
fielder Brendan O'Brien, which pushed the winning run into scoring
position with nobody out.
SNHU sent graduate student left
fielder Andrew Pezzuto to the plate to lay down a sacrifice bunt,
though he would bunt it straight back to Horan coming off the
mound. Horan fielded cleanly and spun to attempt to force out the
lead runner Goldstein at third base. The throw was on the bag and
in plenty of time, but sophomore third baseman Matt O'Herron
(Springfield, Mass.) attempted to catch the throw
backhanded at the same time as he arrived at the base. The ball
redirected off his glove and to the fence on the third-base side
for an error which allowed Goldstein to score the winning run.
An inning earlier, working against
junior right-hander Joe Flynn (Plymouth,
Mass.), SNHU erased a 3-2, ninth-inning deficit with just
one hit. With two outs and nobody on, senior shortstop Matt Boulter
singled back up the middle and took second on a wild pitch. Flynn
would follow with another pitch in the dirt for another wild pitch,
which would have moved Boulter up to third and left the Ravens with
one more chance to win the game. However, the ball took an odd hop
off of junior catcher Marty Dunlap
(Dorchester, Mass.) and took a right turn towards the SNHU
dugout on the third-base side. Dunlap appeared to believe he had
blocked the ball and was unable to locate it. Flynn scrambled from
the mound to track down the ball himself, but he was not quick
enough to keep Boulter from scoring from second on the wild
pitch.
The late-innings meltdown wasted a
solid, if imperfect, effort from senior left-hander Vladimir
Camacho (Jamaica Plain, Mass.), who made his second
start of the season. Over six innings and 114 pitches, he was
touched for six hits, issued seven walks and threw a wild pitch,
but allowed only one run as he also piled up a career-best 12
strikeouts. Camacho also picked off two baserunners and recorded
only four outs on balls put in play, all via the groundball. He was
long gone by the time a decision was reached, as O'Rourke suffered
the loss (3-2) out of the bullpen after hitting the only batter he
faced.
Camacho was matched step-for-step
by SNHU junior right-hander Junior Mendez, who went seven innings,
but also did not factor in the decision. He allowed three runs (two
earned) on eight hits, walked one, hit a batter, threw a wild pitch
and struck out 12 while throwing 116 pitches. After a perfect
eighth from junior right-hander Tyler Gauthier, fellow junior
right-hander Alex Powers took over with a runner on third and one
out in the top of the ninth. Over 1.2 innings, he struck out two,
walked one, did not allow a hit, and earned the win (2-0) after
SNHU scored in the bottom of the 10th.
Earlier in the contest, Franklin
Pierce built a 2-0 lead with single runs in the second and third
innings. In the second, Dunlap ripped a two-out double over the
head of Pezzuto in left field and scored when O'Herron followed
with an RBI double into the gap in right-center.
For all the brilliant starting
pitching, the defense played by both teams was anything but, an
issue which first came to light in the third, after senior
shortstop Dan
Kemp (Sturbridge, Mass.) went back up the middle for a
one-out single and stole second. Two batters later, Kemp was being
waved around third on a two-out single to left by senior right
fielder Nick LaCroix
(Grafton, Mass.), but scored easily, as the ball got by
Pezzuto -- who was likely rushing himself anticipating a chance for
a play at the plate -- and all the way to the wall. LaCroix wound
up on third on the play, but was picked off by the catcher to end
the inning.
SNHU got on the board with a run in
the bottom of the fourth to cut the gap to 2-1. Senior first
baseman Andy Lalli led off with a single to center and moved to
second on a single back up the middle by Boulter. The runners would
later move up on a passed ball and Lalli came home to score on a
wild pitch.
The Ravens picked up what seemed
like an important insurance run at the time in the top of the
seventh inning, again courtesy of a miscue by the Penmen defense.
With one out, freshman second baseman Justin Brock (Latham,
N.Y.) was hit by a pitch and stole second. Two batters
later, Brock would score from there after Kemp chopped a ball on
the left side of second base which Boulter boxed around for an
error.
In a sign of what would allow SNHU
to tie and win the game later, the Penmen capitalized on an
eighth-inning Franklin Pierce misplay to cut the lead to one run at
3-2. With one out, Goldstein singled off the end of the bat and
into shallow right field. With O'Brien at the plate, a pickoff
throw in the dirt by sophomore right-hander Doug Willey
(Shelburne, N.H.) got behind junior first baseman
Zach
Mathieu (Derry, N.H.), which allowed Goldstein to
advance all the way to third. O'Brien then lifted a sacrifice fly
to center to drive home the run.
The Ravens return to the field on
Saturday, April 27 and Sunday, April 28, when they travel to
Merrimack for a three-game Northeast-10 Conference Northeast
Division weekend series. The two teams will meet in a single game
Saturday at 3:30 p.m. and in a doubleheader on Sunday at noon at
Warrior Baseball Diamond in North Andover, Mass.
For more information on Franklin
Pierce Athletics, please visit the official website of Franklin
Pierce Athletics (http://athletics.franklinpierce.edu). Also be
sure to follow the Ravens through the Department of Athletics'
official Facebook page
(http://www.facebook.com/FranklinPierceRavens), its YouTube channel
(http://www.youtube.com/franklinpiercesports) and its Twitter feed
(http://twitter.com/FPUathletics). Fans wishing to purchase
Franklin Pierce baseball apparel can do so at the Department of
Athletics' online store
(http://athletics.franklinpierce.edu/store).