Power Rankings: Week 3

Jimmy Herron leads Orleans in hitting.
Jimmy Herron leads Orleans in hitting.

 

For the first time this summer, it’s not the Y-D Red Sox at the top.

1. Orleans Firebirds
Record: 14-7 (5-1 last week)
Previous Rank: 2

The streak ended Wednesday, but it had already cemented the Firebirds’ spot. Orleans won 10 games in a row, the first such streak in the league since Cotuit in 2012. Everything was working as the wins piled up, with the Firebirds out-scoring opponents 72-21 in the streak. They lead the league in team ERA and strikeouts, while ranking first in on-base percentage and first in fielding percentage. The crazy thing is the Firebirds started the season 0-4. That makes them 14-3 since.

2. Cotuit Kettleers
Record: 12-9 (5-2 last week)
Previous Rank: 5

Falmouth looked set to join Orleans in a clear top two when it won six games in a row, but Bourne beat the Commodores Sunday and Cotuit got them twice in a holiday home-and-home set. Those victories were part of a four-game win streak for the Kettleers, who grab the No. 2 spot instead. Cotuit ranks in the middle of the pack in team batting average but is third in slugging. The team ERA was at 4.46 last week but dropped to 4.19 at last check.

3. Falmouth Commodores
Record: 11-10 (3-3 last week)
Previous Rank: 4

Even with the recent skid, Falmouth’s offense remains a force to be reckoned with. The Commodores have 10 more home runs than anyone else in the league and are tops in runs scored. The middle of the order is the toughest in the league- with Alec Bohm on fire and Hunter Steinmetz, Trevor Larnach and Marty Bechina not far off his pace. Pitching is still the issue – the Commodores have the second worst ERA in the league at 4.66. They’re actually top four in opponent batting average, but walks continue to pile up.

4. Y-D Red Sox
Record: 11-9-1 (3-5 last week)
Previous Rank: 1

Knocked from the top spot, the Red Sox tumble a bit further after being on the wrong side of a 32-inning scoreless streak and three consecutive losses. A week after they led the league in batting average and OPS, they’re now fifth in average and fourth in OPS. I would wager it’s a cold stretch for a lot of hitters and not a sign that the Red Sox will struggle at the plate the rest of the way. The pitching will keep them in games either way, with Y-D ranking third in team ERA. Three of the top six on the league’s strikeout leaderboard are Red Sox.

5. Brewster Whitecaps
Record: 10-10-1 (3-4 last week)
Previous Rank: 3

Two wins over scuffling Harwich helped Brewster get back on track after it managed just one run in two losses to Orleans. The Whitecaps remain one of the top pitching teams in the league, with a 3.48 ERA and 173 strikeouts that both rank fourth. An offense that ranks in the middle of the pack should get a boost from the arrival of Vanderbilt’s Julian Infante, but the Whitecaps could really use help on defense. Their fielding percentage is worst in the league.

6. Wareham Gatemen
Record: 10-11 (4-2 last week)
Previous Rank: 7

The Gatemen are behind Bourne in the standings but a good week – and good underlying numbers – get them a step ahead here. Wareham owns the second-best team ERA in the league and is tied for second in team batting average. That looks like a team that should be better than 10-11. The problem? Wareham has racked up the numbers in a handful of games – they have 9-0, 10-2, 11-3, 11-0 and 13-2 wins to their name. If those performances become more regular, look out.

7. Bourne Braves
Record: 11-10 (4-4 last week)
Previous Rank: 6

The Braves were one game over .500 for the first edition of the power rankings and have gone 4-4 in consecutive weeks to stay pretty much where they were. The offense still lacks pop – four home runs and 32 extra-base hits – and the team ERA ballooned to 4.57 due to 13-run games this week, but the Braves are finding ways to win.

8. Hyannis Harbor Hawks
Record: 8-12-1 (2-5 last week)
Previous Rank: 8

The Harbor Hawks rank second in the league in hitting, but they’re having to out-slug people thanks to a struggling pitching staff. Hyannis’ team ERA sits at 5.16. Oddly enough, they’ve had three shutouts, one back of the league lead, but consistency has been the issue.

9. Chatham Anglers
Record: 9-12 (3-4 last week)
Previous Rank: 9

Chatham stopped Orleans’ win streak and has a leg up on Harwich for fourth place in the East. The Anglers rank eighth in the league in team batting average and sixth in team ERA. Apart from a good start to the summer, they haven’t been able to string much together.

10. Harwich Mariners
Record: 7-13-1 (2-4 last week)
Previous Rank: 10

Still not much going right for the Mariners, who rank seventh in team ERA and still can’t get the offense going. They’re batting a league-low .214, .33 points behind the closest team.

Streak to the Top

Griffin Conine celebrates with teammates earlier this year. He hit his third home run Wednesday.
Griffin Conine celebrates with teammates earlier this year. He hit his third home run Wednesday.

 

A 13-3 blowout of Bourne on Sunday was the sixth straight win for Falmouth. With another game coming against second-place Bourne and two against third-place Cotuit, the Commodores headed into Fourth of July festivities with a chance to pull away in the West standings.

Instead, Bourne stopped the win streak Monday. And the last two days, Cotuit turned the chance to pull away into a slip to second place.

With two straight wins over Falmouth – and four straight overall – the Kettleers moved into first place by themselves with a 12-9 record. They beat the Commodores 5-3 on the Fourth of July and 9-3 yesterday.

The Kettleers have been streaky for much of the early part of the season. They started the season with four straight wins then took four straight losses. Now with their latest four-game win streak, they’re back in business.

(Wofford) went six strong innings for the win Wednesday, striking out four and allowing two runs on five hits. After reliever Chase Cohen (Georgia Southern) got into trouble in the seventh, Jayce Vancena (Michigan) came on and stranded a pair of two runners, then pitched two scoreless frames to finish out the win.

Griffin Conine (Duke) went 3-for-5 with his third home run of the summer and three RBI. Michael Toglia (UCLA) went 2-for-4 with two RBI. Miles Lewis (Michigan) had two hits, one RBI and one run scored.

Falmouth got home runs from Marty Bechina (Michigan State) – his league-best seventh in 21 games – and George Janca (Texas A&M), but Cotuit kept the big bats quiet otherwise, and both the homers were solo shots.

Chatham 4, Orleans 2

The Firebirds win streak ends at 10. Chatham scored four runs in the fourth inning and made the burst stand up throughout in a victory at Veterans Field. Josh Shaw (St. John’s), Nick Patten (Delaware), Shea Langeliers (Baylor) and Fabian Pena (Manhattan) each drove in a run in the four-run frame, after a leadoff single by Josh Stowers (Louisville) started the rally. Chatham didn’t have a hit after the fourth inning as the Orleans bullpen cruised, but the Firebirds couldn’t get a comeback off the ground. Chatham starter Adam Hill (South Carolina) went four strong innings and reliever Cameron Bishop (UC Irvine) dominated. In his second appearance of the summer, Bishop struck out eight of the 11 batters he faced over three one-hit innings. Rodney Hutchison Jr. (North Carolina) pitched the final two innings for the save.

Wareham 13, Bourne 2

The Gatemen opened with a three-run first inning and didn’t stop there, pounding out 15 hits en route to an easy win. John Toppa (UConn) – the seventh hitter in the order – went 4-for-5 with four RBI and is now hitting .379, good for second in the league. Steven Kwan (Oregon State) went 3-for-5 with two RBI and is hitting .571 since his late arrival four games ago. Tanner Dodson (California) and Willie MacIver (Washington) had two RBI apiece. Remarkably, Wareham did all its damage without a single extra-base hit. Miller Hogan (St. Louis) made the early lead comfortable with five scoreless innings. He struck out six and allowed two hits and has now turned in back-to-back scoreless outings.

Y-D 3, Hyannis 1

The Red Sox snapped a three-game skid in which they were shut out each time. It took until the fifth to get any offense Wednesday, but Nico Hoerner (Stanford) broke through with a double and came around on a passed ball. Y-D added two runs in the sixth on an RBI fielder’s choice by Connor Kaiser (Vanderbilt) and a sacrifice fly by Alex McKenna (Cal Poly). Josh McMinn (Oral Roberts) went 5.1 shutout innings and Brendan Nail (Western Carolina) went the final 3.2 innings, allowing just an unearned run, for the save.

Brewster 7, Harwich 3

The Whitecaps scored six runs in the first three innings and completed a holiday sweep of the Mariners. All nine players in the lineup had at least one hit, led by A.J. Graffanino (Washington), Hunter Bishop (Arizona State) and Darius Hill (West Virginia) with two each. Hill had two RBI. J.R. McDermott (Colorado Mesa) allowed one earned run in five innings for the win. Four relievers finished the job, with three of them – William Tribucher (Michigan), Ryan Avidano (Georgia) and Sam Bordner (Louisville) tossing a hitless inning each.

What to Watch

After a long march through the holiday, teams get a well-deserved day off today. We’ll have power rankings up later today. And with teams hitting the halfway point of the season Friday, look for Right Field Fog’s midseason awards Saturday.

 

Feels Like Carolina

North Carolina always sends a lot of players to the Cape Cod Baseball League. It’s a true bumper crop this year, with 13 Tar Heels spread across five different Cape teams.

The UNC Baseball twitter account is documenting head coach Mike Fox’s visit to the Cape, where he’s catching up with his guys.

And they are playing well in front of him. Tyler Baum went six strong innings for Harwich Sunday night, Orleans’ Josh Hiatt and Taylor Sugg shined out of the bullpen Monday.

But something had to give Tuesday night. Brewster’s Kyle Datres stepped in against UNC teammate Cole Aker in the top of the eighth in a tie game. Datres won the battle, getting an RBI single for what proved to be the winning run in a 7-6 victory.

The win snapped a four-game losing streak for the Whitecaps, who have managed to stay close to Y-D for second place while Orleans continues to pull away. Chandler Taylor (Alabama) homered for the Whitecaps while Julian Infante (Vanderbilt) drove in two runs. Sam Bordner (Louisville) and Robert Broom (Mercer) delivered a scoreless inning each to close the door on the Mariners.

Datres finished 2-for-3 with two runs scored and the RBI, and is now hitting .289, second-best among the Tar Heel hitters on the Cape. Brandon Riley’s .309 average for Orleans leads the way. The pitching has been even better, with Baum and Austin Bergner looking very good, and Hiatt dominating in the Firebirds pen.

They’re probably all hoping Coach Fox will stick around.

Orleans 4, Chatham 3

Whether they’re winning by a wide margin or prevailing in close games, the Firebirds continue to roll on. The streak hit 10 games with the Fourth of July win over the Anglers. 

Three runs in the third inning gave the Firebirds a 4-0 lead, which they held on to against a hard-charging Chatham club. Stephen Scott (Vanderbilt) had an RBI double and Jaxx Groshans (Kansas) hit a two-run homer in the three-run third. Logan GIlbert (Stetson) went five no-hit innings with three strikeouts. Chatham did some rare damage against the Orleans’ bullpen – led by Jeremy Pena’s (Maine) two-run homer – but Brooks Wilson struck out the side in the ninth to close out the win.

Hyannis 4, Y-D 0

The Red Sox have been shut-out by 4-0 scores in three consecutive games. Hyannis was the latest, getting five strong innings from starter Austin Drury (North Florida) in his first Cape League appearance. The bullpen held up its end of the bargain, with Brooks Crawford (Clemson) tossing three innings of no-hit ball and Ryan Weiss (Wright State) pitching a scoreless ninth. Chris Proctor (Duke) led the Hyannis offense with a three-run homer. Ryan Olenek (Ole Miss) drove in the other run.

Cotuit 5, Falmouth 3

Cotuit topped Falmouth and created a three-way tie with the Commodores and Bourne for first place in the West. All three teams are 11-9. The Kettleers got two hits from Zack Kone (Duke) and RBI from Brett Kinneman (NC State), Luke Alexander (Mississippi State) and Miles Lewis (Michigan). They broke a 1-1 tie with two runs in the sixth and two more in the eighth. Seth Shuman (Georgia Southern) allowed just an unearned run in five innings. Reliever Austin Kitchen (Coastal Carolina) allowed one run in three innings for the win and Clark Cota (UNC Wilmington) finished it off by stranding the tying runs on base in the ninth. Cotuit has won three in a row and Falmouth has lost two straight on the heels of a six-game win streak.

Wareham 4, Bourne 2

Wareham is a little further back in the West standings but did its part in creating the three-way tie at the top with a win over the Braves. Jarren Duran (Long Beach State), Steven Kwan (Oregon State) and Willie MacIver (Washington) drove in one run each in a three-run third inning that proved to be the difference. John Toppa (UConn) finished with two hits and two runs scored. After Griffin Roberts (Wake Forest) allowed two runs in four innings with five strikeouts, three relievers combined to limit Bourne to one hit over the final five frames. Jordan Britton (Oregon State) went three innings for the win, Grant Wolfram (Davenport) went one scoreless inning and Brett Conine (Cal State Fullerton) struck out the side in the ninth for the save.

What to Watch

The holiday home-and-home sets conclude with a full slate of games tonight.

Time for a Change

blackmonOn the Fourth of July in 2005, one Charles Blackmon pitched three shaky innings of relief for the Cotuit Kettleers at Falmouth. He gave up four runs on five hits and walked five.

Perhaps it was a sign.

Charlie Blackmon is one of the Cape’s top big league alumni, but his path was different than guys like Kris Bryant or Buster Posey. Blackmon was a star pitcher at Young Harris College and didn’t have a single at-bat in his summer with the Kettleers. The July 4 blow-up notwithstanding, Blackmon actually had a solid summer on the mound, posting a 3.42 ERA while pitching mostly as a reliever.

But his future was at the plate. Blackmon eventually transferred to Georgia Tech, where he became a star, hitting .396 with eight home runs in his final season. He was a second-round pick of the Rockies in 2008, made his big league debut in 2012 and has since morphed into one of the best players in the game.

No Fireworks Here

Zane Collins tossed the Cape's first nine-inning complete game since 2015.
Zane Collins tossed the Cape’s first nine-inning complete game since 2015.

 

It’s an annual Right Field Fog tradition to use a “Fireworks” headline around the Fourth of July. The league often cooperates, with home runs flying or runs scoring.

Not this year.

Unless you place dominant pitching in the fireworks category.

Three teams logged shutout wins on the eve of Independence Day. Cotuit’s Zane Collins (Wright State) tossed a rare nine-inning, complete game in a 2-0 win over Wareham. Five pitchers teamed up for Orleans’ 3-0 shutout of Brewster. And four pitchers did the job for Chatham in a 4-0 win over Y-D.

Collins’ performance was the Cape League’s first nine-inning complete game since Hyannis’ Devin Smeltzer no-hit Harwich in 2015. There were no nine-inning complete games last summer and just a seven-inning complete game from Tyler Baum so far this summer.

Collins hadn’t gone deeper than 4.1 innings this summer and didn’t have a complete game in the spring with Wright State. But it all came together Monday, as Collins threw 117 pitches and went the distance. He struck out eight and scattered six hits, all singles. Collins now has a 0.96 ERA.

A key error and a passed ball gave Cotuit all the offense it needed to turn Collins’ gem into a win.

Orleans’ shutout was its ninth consecutive win. Daniel Lynch (Virginia) tossed five innings of one-hit baseball for the win, striking out three. Taylor Sugg (North Carolina), Jake Wong (Grand Canyon), J.T. Hintzen (Florida Southern) and Josh Hiatt (North Carolina) closed the deal, with Hiatt picking up his fifth save and maintaining his 0.00 ERA. Two RBI by Niko Decolati (Loyola Marymount) provided the offense.

A night after Chatham announced John Schiffner’s upcoming retirement, the Anglers delivered a blast from his past as a North Carolina starter dominated, like Andrew Miller, Matt Harvey and Zac Gallen before. Austin Bergner, who pitched mostly in relief for the Heels as a freshman, struck out six and allowed three hits over six scoreless innings. And he was dealing.

Adam Wolf (Louisville), Josiah Gray (LeMoyne) and Jack DeGroat (Liberty) finished off the shutout. Nick Patten (Delaware) had two RBI to lead the Chatham offense.

Bourne 6, Falmouth 4

The Braves snapped Falmouth’s six-game winning streak and moved into a tie for first place with the Commodores. Chris Holba (East Carolina), Ray Gaither (Dallas Baptist), Chad Luensmann (Nebraska) and Ryan Feltner (Ohio State) combined to hold the Commodores red-hot offense in check, at relatively speaking. Feltner faced the league’s hottest hitter Alec Bohm (Wichita State) with a runner on base in the ninth and struck him out. Bourne got its six RBI from six different players. Scott Schreiber (Nebraska) had two hits to lead the charge.

Harwich 5, Hyannis 4

Harwich saved its shutout innings for the latter part of its matchup with Hyannis, as Teddy Rodliff (Stony Brook) ended a back-and-forth with 3.1 scoreless innings. He struck out two and allowed two hits. Jake Agnos (East Carolina) allowed one earned run in five innings for the win. Andrew Moritz (UNC Greensboro) had two hits and two RBI to lead the offense.

What to Watch

Holiday home-and-home sets get underway with Fourth of July games in Cotuit, Yarmouth, Harwich, Bourne and Orleans.

 

Power Surging

Alec Bohm went 5-for-6 in Sunday's game.
Alec Bohm went 5-for-6 in Sunday’s game.

 

A night after Orleans streaked on with its most impressive win yet, the league’s other red-hot team did the same.

Falmouth mashed 22 hits and blew past Bourne 13-3 Sunday for its sixth consecutive win and a spot alone atop the West Division. The Commodores and Braves had been tied for first place.

Power has been on full display all summer for the Commodores, who have led the league in home runs and extra-base hits basically since day one. But even for them, this was a crazy night.

Alec Bohm (Wichita State) went 5-for-6 with three RBI. Hunter Steinmetz (Missouri State) homered and went 4-for-5 with four RBI. Ignacious Janca (Texas A&M) went 5-for-5. Joshua Breaux (McLennan) homered and drove in three. Trevor Larnach (Oregon State) delivered his second three-hit game in three games with the team. Marty Bechina (Michigan State) drove in his 20th run of the season.

The Commodores actually fell behind 1-0 but a double by Bohm in the third lit the fuse on the comeback. Bohm is on quite a tear. After a rare hitless night June 25, he’s 15 for his last 27 with two homers. His .458 batting average is the best in the league by a pretty wide margin.

Five pitchers gave up a fair amount of hits to the Braves, but a back-and-forth slugfest never materialized. Cole Sands (Florida State) was credited with the win in relief.

Falmouth is now 11-7, one game back of Orleans for the best record in the league.

Orleans 5, Brewster 1

The Firebirds rolled on as well with their eighth consecutive win. A four-run third inning sparked by a Jaxx Groshans (Kansas) two-run single broke a 1-1 tie and sent Orleans on its way. After giving up a run in the first, Ryan Rolison (Ole Miss) cruised through four scoreless innings and struck out nine for the win. Cody Deason (Arizona), Brett Daniels (North Carolina) and Josh Hiatt (North Carolina) went the last four innings and allowed just one hit. Jimmy Herron (Duke) had two hits to up his average to .411. Ethan Paul (Vanderbilt) had his third multi-hit game in the last four.

Wareham 4, Y-D 0

Justin Montgomery (California Baptist) dominated again, cementing himself as the league’s best starter in the early going. The 6-foot-5 righty struck out five in five scoreless innings. He has yet to allow a run – earned or unearned – in 17 innings pitched, and has struck out 19 while surrendering just 10 hits and four walks. Fitzpatrick Stadler (Arizona State) and Peyton Culbertson (Arkansas State) finished off the shutout. Based on the probable pitchers, the game was supposed to be a matchup of Montgomery versus Hogan Harris, but it was Y-D’s other standout, Kris Bubic (Stanford) who drew the start. Bubic struck out seven in 5.2 scoreless frames, but Wareham took the lead on a two-run homer by Jake Anchia (Nova Southeastern) and never looked back. Oregon State’s Steven Kwan made his debut and went 2-for-3 with an RBI and Tanner Dodson (California) also drove in a run.

Cotuit 11, Hyannis 8

The Kettleers went to 2-0 in the Barnstable Patriot Cup rivalry series with another win over the Harbor Hawks. Three players homered to lead the Cotuit attack. Gian Martellini (Boston College) and Chandler Avant (Alabama) each hit their second while Thomas Dillard (Ole Miss) went deep for the first time. Griffin Conine (Duke) added a hit and three RBI and Luke Alexander (Mississippi State) drove in two. Justin Hooper (UCLA) allowed just an unearned run in five innings for the win. Hyannis made a late push with six runs in the seventh inning but couldn’t overtake the Kettleers. Jake Mangum (Mississippi State) had three hits to lead the Harbor Hawks.

Harwich 7, Chatham 3

The Mariners got a bit of revenge after Saturday’s walk-off loss to the Anglers. A five-run fifth inning broke a 1-1 deadlock. Cameron Simmons (Virginia) had a two-run double and Nick Dalesandro (Purdue) had a two-run single to key the decisive surge. Both Simmons and Dalesandro finished with two hits. Andrew Moritz (UNC Greensboro), Ryne Ogren (Elon) and Jordan Verdon (San Diego State) drove in one run each. Tyler Baum (North Carolina) struck out six and allowed two runs in six innings for his third win in as many starts. Fabian Pena homered for Chatham. There was news for the Anglers after the game, as they announced that legendary manager John Schiffner will step down after the season.

What to Watch

Connor Higgins announced on Twitter yesterday that he’ll return to Arizona State after being selected late in this year’s draft. That also means he’ll be staying with Brewster, and he’ll be next in line to try to slow down the Orleans Firebirds when the teams meet today at Stony Brook Field.

Streaking to a New Level

Stephen Scott hit two home runs in Orlean's blowout win.
Stephen Scott hit two home runs in Orlean’s blowout win.

 

How can you outdo yourself when you’re already on a six-game winning streak?

Making it seven with the league’s highest run total since 2013 will do the trick.

Orleans blasted Hyannis 17-3 Saturday night for its most impressive victory yet, which is saying something. While the start of the streak featured pretty typical margins, the Firebirds won numbers and five and six by 13-2 and 9-1 scores.

Fourteen by Y-D was the highest run total in the league this summer until the Firebirds upped the ante. No team had scored at least 17 since August 2, 2013, when Falmouth beat Bourne 18-3. Orleans also had a 17-run game that season on June 21.

Here’s some of the damage

  • Every Orleans player who batted – including two subs – had at least one hit
  • Orleans racked up 19 hits
  • Every run scored, remarkably, was earned
  • The Firebirds had six extra-base hits and two home runs
  • There were 54 plate appearances by Orleans; Hyannis had a more typical 38
  • The Firebirds scored 13 of their runs off a pitcher – Michael Brettell – who came in with a 3-0 record and a 0.73 ERA
  • Hyannis didn’t even help much, making two errors that didn’t matter much and walking only four batters
  • For good measure, Orleans pitchers didn’t allow a hit after the fifth inning

Orleans started its onslaught with a three-run first inning. Hyannis actually answered back with a run of its own, but the Firebirds scored six in the second and the rout was on. Two more in the third and two in the fifth looked like the finishing touches until Orleans added four more in the top of the ninth, which has to be among the worst cases of “away team that’s winning in the top of the ninth getting unnecessary offense” in history.

Stephen Scott (Vanderbilt) led the parade with two home runs – his first two of the summer – and six RBI. Niko Decolati (Loyola Marymount) had four hits, scored three runs and drove in two. Steve Passatempo (UMass Lowell) went 3-for-5 with two runs and two RBI. Ethan Paul (Vanderbilt) had two hits.

Orleans is hitting .375 as a team in its last three games.

As for the pitching, Hyannis had little chance to make the game a slugfest. Chandler Day (Vanderbilt) scattered six hits and allowed three runs in five innings. Graeme Stinson (Duke) was dominant in relief, striking out seven in three scoreless innings, though he did hit three batters. Parker Kelly (Oregon) struck out the side in the ninth. h

Falmouth 6, Cotuit 3

The Commodores couldn’t quite match Orleans’ big night but stayed hot in their own right with their fifth straight win. Alec Bohm (Wichita State) went 2-for-4 with a pair of home runs and four RBI. His second home run broke a 3-3 tie in the seventh. Bohm on a five-game hitting streak and is batting .424 – best in the league – with three home runs and 12 RBI. Mitchell Miller (Clemson) earned the win with 2.1 scoreless innings of relief. John Cresto (Santa Clara) homered for Cotuit. The Commodores improved to 10-7 and are tied with Bourne for first place in the West.

Bourne 6, Wareham 4

The Braves kept pace with Falmouth thanks to a win over the Gatemen. Andrew Fregia (Sam Houston State) had two hits and two RBI to lead the offense. Scott Schreiber (Nebraska), Richard Palacios (Towson), Jared Triolo (Houston) and Jameson Hannah (Dallas Baptist) drove in one run each. Daniel Bies (Gonzaga) earned the win with five strong innings of relief. Luis Alvarado (Nebraska) picked up the save.

Y-D 7, Brewster 4

As hot as Orleans is, Y-D remained just a point back in the East with a win over Brewster. A four-run seventh inning broke a 3-3 tie and sent the Red Sox on their way. Alex McKenna (Cal Poly) went 3-for-4 with two RBI and Carlos Cortes (South Carolina) went 3-for-4 with two runs scored and an RBI. John Rooney (Hofstra) allowed three runs in six innings for the win. With Brewster threatening in the eighth – the final inning due to darkness – Riley McCauley (Michigan State) recorded the final out for his league leading sixth save.

Chatham 3, Harwich 2

Chatham rallied from a two-run deficit in the bottom of the ninth and won on a walk-off walk to snap a three-game slide. Harwich has lost five straight. Mason Koppens (Northeastern) drew the winning walk to force in Cody Roberts (North Carolina). Before the late rally, Jake Palomaki (Boston College) also drove in a run for the Anglers. Josiah Gray (Le Moyne) was credited with the win in relief. Starter Jeff Belge (St. John’s) struck out eight in 4.1 innings.

What to Watch

Some of the league’s top starters so far will be in action tonight, as Tyler Baum (North Carolina) goes for Harwich and Kyle Bradish (New Mexico State) gets the ball for Falmouth. But the best matchup should be in Wareham, where Justin Montgomery (California Baptist) takes his 0.00 ERA into battle against a talented Y-D team and starter Hogan Harris (Louisiana-Lafayette), who struck out nine in five innings last time out.

Winning Big

wareham

In an odd statistical twist, four of the five teams in the Cape League’s West Division – even the ones with winning records – own negative run differentials for the year. The one that doesn’t? The last place Wareham Gatemen.

Because when the Gatemen win, they win big.

Wareham rolled past Cotuit 11-0 Friday night to improve to 7-9. In their wins, they’ve out-scored the opposition 55-10. They’ve won games 9-0, 10-2, 11-3 and now 11-0. One of their wins was by a 4-3 score. Everything else has been by at least four runs and usually more.

Friday was their most lopsided win yet, as they knocked 16 hits and allowed just three.

Tanner Dodson (California) got in on both those feats with one of the best performances in the league this summer. He went 4-for-4 at the plate with a run scored and two RBI and also pitched 3.2 scoreless innings of relief. Dodson did both for Cal this spring and has now pitched 9.2 innings with the Gatemen while making eight starts in the outfield. He’s hitting .462, which would be good for the league lead if he weren’t a little short of the qualifying number of plate appearances.

Kyle Kasser (Oregon) added three hits while Nick Angelini (Bryant) had two hits – including a home run – and drove in three. Six different players drove in at least one run.

Before Dodson took the mound, starter Miller Hogan (St. Louis) – a 32nd-round pick of the Brewers in this year’s draft – was dominant, allowing just one hit and striking out six in five shutout innings.

Orleans 9, Harwich 1

The Firebirds won their sixth straight game and their second consecutive blowout, after a 13-2 win Thursday. Orleans scored five runs in the first inning and three in the second for a blistering start. Jimmy Herron (Duke), Stephen Scott (Vanderbilt), Niko Decolati (Loyola Marymount) and recent Omaha arrival Devin Mann (Louisville) all had two hits in the onslaught, with Herron bumping his average to .408. Both of Herron’s hits came in the all-important battle of Jimmy Herron versus Harwich pitcher Tim(my) Herrin (Indiana), Armed with the early lead, Joey Murray (Kent State) turned in his second straight dominant start, following up five shutout innings June 21 with five more in his return to the mound. He struck out five and scattered five hits. Orleans owns the league’s best record at 10-6.

Falmouth 8, Chatham 3

The Commodores just keep mashing, and a new slugger fit right in. Oregon State star Trevor Larnach made his Cape debut after the Beavers’ deep College World Series run and went 3-for-4 with a home run and three RBI. The big entrance was part of a 16-hit attack that included six more extra-base hits added to Falmouth’s league-best total. Hunter Steinmetz (Missouri State) hit his second home run and Zeke Dodson (Lipscomb) hit his first. Marty Bechina (Michigan State) had two doubles. Alec Bohm (Wichita State) went 3-for-5 and took over the league lead in hitting with a .419 average. Connor Eason (Seminole State) earned the win in relief.

Y-D 4, Bourne 3

After losing to the Braves in both games of a doubleheader Thursday, the Red Sox avoided a three-game sweep with a narrow victory. Y-D built a 4-1 lead and held off a Bourne rally in the ninth. Nicholas Quintana (Arizona) hit his fourth home run – he has four homers and eight hits on the season – while Connor Kaiser (Vanderbilt) also went deep. Kyle Isbel (UNLV) and Alex McKenna (Cal Poly) drove in one run each. Michael Cassala (Jacksonville) earned the win in relief and Riley McCauley (Michigan State) buckled down after allowing the two ninth-inning runs on Turner Brown’s (East Carolina) homer, finishing the game with two straight strikeouts.

Hyannis 8, Brewster 3

The Harbor Hawks racked up 16 hits and blasted three home runs for a win over the Whitecaps. Hunter Stovall (Mississippi State), Micah Coffey (Minnesota) and Daniel Robinson (Central Michigan) hit the home runs, the first of the summer for all of them. Ford Proctor (Rice) added three hits, an RBI and two runs scored. Reece Hampton (Charlotte), Ryan Olenek (Ole Miss) and Robert Neustrom (Iowa) had two-hit games. After Brewster tied the game in the third, three Harbor Hawk relievers combined for six scoreless innings of relief. Chase Haney (Florida State) was credited with the win.

What to Watch

For a seventh straight victory, the Orleans Firebirds will have to go through the league leader in wins. Michael Brettell (Central Michigan) takes a 3-0 record and a 0.73 ERA to the hill for Hyannis against the Firebirds. Chandler Day (Vanderbilt) will make his first start for Orleans after a scoreless relief outing in his debut last week.

 

New Power

Richard Palacios had an RBI and a run scored in Bourne's sweep.
Richard Palacios had an RBI and a run scored in Bourne’s sweep.

So, about those power rankings.

A few hours after the Y-D Red Sox earned the top spot, they headed to Bourne for a doubleheader, and the Braves were not impressed. With 6-2 and 5-3 victories, the Braves sent Y-D to its first losing skid of the season and matched Orleans for the best record in the league at 9-6. Y-D fell to 8-6-1.

Bourne won the opener thanks to a pair of three-run innings and a strong duo on the mound. Grant Witherspoon (Tulane) had a two-run double to spark the first rally and had an RBI single in the fifth for a 2-for-3, three RBI day. Zac Susi (UConn) had two hits and an RBI, while Lyle Lin (Arizona State) and Richard Palacios (Towson) drove in one run each.

Y-D out-hit the Braves 8-6, but Brian Eichhorn (Georgia Southern) didn’t walk a batter and struck out five while allowing two runs in five innings. Ryan Feltner (Ohio State) struck out two in two scoreless innings to finish it off. Feltner has a 0.00 ERA in six appearances.

The second game followed a similar script, with the Braves grabbing the lead and riding solid pitching. Spencer Brickhouse (East Carolina) went 3-for-3 with a double, a triple and three RBI. Andrew Fregia (Sam Houston State) also drove in a run. Zach Mort (George Mason) gave up one run in four innings for the win. Ray Gaither (Dallas Baptist) followed with a scoreless inning and Chad Luensmann (Nebraska) worked around trouble in the final two innings for the save.

Cotuit 12, Hyannis 6

Rescheduled after a rain-out on the fourth day of the season, the long-awaited first game in the Barnstable Patriot Cup series went to the Kettleers. Cotuit opened with a four-run top of the first and rolled on, finishing with 13 hits. Hyannis had 14 hits, but their pitchers’ nine walks helped Cotuit pile on. Gian Martellini (Boston College) had two hits and four RBI, while Brett Kinneman (NC State) hit his first home run as part of a 3-for-4, four-run night. Greyson Jenista (Wichita State) had two hits and scored three runs, while Chandler Avant (Alabama) drove in two runs. Chase Cohen (Georgia Southern) earned the win in relief. For Hyannis, Micah Coffey (Minnesota) had four hits and two RBI.

Brewster 6, Chatham 4

The Whitecaps rallied from a 4-2 hole with four runs in the sixth inning to beat Chatham and move into a second-place tie with Y-D. Justin Kunz (Gardner-Webb) scored on an RBI groundout to start the sixth-inning scoring, and Mickey Gasper (Bryant) delivered the big blow with a three-run double to give Brewster the lead. Gasper now ranks second in the league in RBI with 16. Connor Smith (Western Michigan) added two hits and two runs scored for the Whitecaps. Relievers Christopher Machamer (Kentucky) and Joe Demers (Washington) combined for 5.1 scoreless innings of relief. Jeremy Pena (Maine) led Chatham with three hits.

What to Watch

Back to a full slate of games tonight, highlighted by another match-up between Bourne and Y-D, this one at Red Wilson Field. Dylan Coleman, who led Super Regional squad Missouri State in strikeouts this spring, will make his first start for the Braves. Spencer Van Scoyoc and his 1.50 ERA go for Y-D.

Power Rankings: Week 2

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The top remains the same, but streaks – both good and bad – have pretty much everybody else on the move.

1. Y-D Red Sox

Record: 8-4-1 (4-3 last week)

Previous Rank: 1

You could make a strong case for Orleans or even Falmouth after both had big weeks – and both beat Y-D – but the overall numbers still favor the defending champs. The Red Sox lead the league in overall runs allowed and rank second in ERA. Starting pitchers Kyle Bubic, Hogan Harris and Tim Brennan all went at least five innings with at least nine strikeouts in the last week. The Red Sox also lead in batting average and OPS. Throw in a league-best 24 steals and the second-fewest strikeouts in the league, and you have an offense that will be difficult to keep down.

2. Orleans Firebirds

Record: 9-6 (6-1 last week)

Previous Rank: 5

The Firebirds have won five straight games, the best streak any team has had this summer. They lead in team ERA by a pretty good margin, with the bullpen looking particularly dominant. The overall offensive numbers are still getting dragged down a bit by a slow start – the Firebirds rank seventh in team average and sixth in runs scored – but Orleans did just put up 13 runs yesterday, so there’s more in the tank.

3. Brewster Whitecaps

Record: 7-6-1 (4-4 last week)

Previous Rank: 4

Pitching had Brewster in the top four last week. Their team ERA went up by about a run this week, but it still ranks third in the league. And all of a sudden, the Whitecaps lead the league in runs scored thanks to 12- and 11-run performances in the last seven days. Mickey Gasper and A.J. Graffanino are both hitting .366.

4. Falmouth Commodores

Record: 8-7 (5-2 last week)

Previous Rank: 9

The Commodores had some good numbers and some ugly numbers after a week. Since then, the good numbers have held pretty steady and the ugly ones have improved. The Commodores still lead the league in home runs and extra-base hits – with Marty Bechina’s league-best six home runs setting the pace – and the pitching staff went from issuing 47 free passes in the first seven days of the season to 17 in the second week. That improvement has allowed their league-best 131 strikeouts to mean a little more.

5. Cotuit Kettleers

Record: 7-7 (3-4 last week)

Previous Rank: 3

The Kettleers haven’t hit their stride again after a 4-0 start but they’ve stayed in the mix, and they beat both Y-D and Brewster in the last week. Griffin Conine has cooled off a bit – he’s forgiven since he basically only had two-hit games for about 10 days – but is still hitting .389. John Cresto has been a big producer in the middle of the order. The pitching has been a little shaky, with the Kettleers sporting a 4.46 ERA and giving up the highest opponent batting average in the league.

6. Bourne Braves

Record: 7-6 (4-4 last week)

Previous Rank: 7

Another week, another hard-to-peg stretch for the Braves. They continued to excel in close games, with Ryan Feltner dominant in the closer’s role. The pitching staff has a 4.28 ERA, right in the middle of the pack, but the offense continues to lack punch. The Braves rank second-to-last in team batting, last in runs scored and second-to-last in extra-base hits.

7. Wareham Gatemen

Record: 6-9 (3-4 last week)

Previous Rank: 6

The Gatemen are the last team to beat Orleans and they did it emphatically with an 11-3 victory. That alone buys them a spot ahead of Hyannis. The Gatemen haven’t hit the ball too well with a .249 average, though they had one of the season’s highlights when Tristan Pompey homered twice in his debut. The team ERA ranks fourth and Justin Montgomery leads in individual ERA.

8. Hyannis Harbor Hawks

Record: 6-7-1 (3-4 last week)

Previous Rank: 10

The Harbor Hawks didn’t have a great week, but a doubleheader sweep of Chatham and a win over Bourne last night are enough to get them out of the basement. Hyannis has tapped into some offense, with Reece Hampton now leading the league in hitting and the team ranking third in batting average. The pitching staff has a 4.66 ERA, which is tied for seventh.

9. Chatham Anglers

Record: 6-8 (2-6 last week)

Previous Rank: 2

The Anglers suffered the biggest drop after a rough, six-loss week. They still have some of the best offensive numbers in the league – even in some of their losses, they’ve been putting up runs – but some of the typical “bad baseball” stats stuck out in the last week. They’ve committed the third-most errors in the league and the pitching staff walked 38 batters over the last eight games. Wednesday, the Anglers out-hit Brewster 9-7 and lost 11-1.

10. Harwich Mariners

Record: 5-9-1 (2-5 last week)

Previous Rank: 8

The Mariners have played great defense (10 errors on the summer) and have pitched OK (a 4.29 team ERA), but they just haven’t hit the ball. Harwich is batting a league-worst .213, .36 points worse than anybody else.