Daily Fog: Spring to Summer

Samford’s Philip Ervin hit .327 this spring with 10 home runs. Notre Dame’s Eric Jagielo hit .310 with 13 homers.

It’s summer now, but they are not slowing down.

Ervin and Jagielo have been two of the most productive and hottest hitters in the league thus far, and they’re powering Harwich to a really quick start. In a 9-5 victory over Bourne last night — the team’s fourth in a row — Ervin went 4-for-4 and hit his league-leading fourth home run. He drove in two runs to bring his league-leading total to 11, and he’s now hitting .433, good for second in the league.

Jagielo hasn’t been quite as scorching as Ervin, but he’s not far behind. He went 1-for-4 last night with his third home run of the season. He ranks third in the league in RBI with eight and is sixth in batting average.

The Mariners improved to 6-2 with the win. While their lineup is getting stronger by the day with the addition of four high-profile players, it’s Ervin and Jagielo who are just carrying the team right now. Ervin has a hit in seven of eight games, with four multi-hit performances. Seven of his 13 hits have gone for extra-bases.

Batting behind Ervin, Jagielo has a hit in six of eight games and seven of his 12 hits have gone for extra bases.

In short, there isn’t a better duo in the league right now. They’re the biggest reason why the Mariners lead the league in home runs, extra-base hits, slugging percentage and OPS.

And those are pretty good signs of success, which the Mariners have had plenty of.

Elsewhere

  • Bourne’s Mike Ahmed (Holy Cross) has been pretty hot himself and he had another great game in the losing effort against Harwich last night. Ahmed went 2-for-5 with his third home run. He’s now hitting .387, good for third in the league.
  • For all of the Harwich love around here, the Orleans Firebirds are still sitting in first place in the East. The Firebirds improved to 7-1 last night with an 8-3 victory over Hyannis. And it looks like Orleans is actually heating up. The team banged out a season-high 13 hits last night, led by a two home run night for Conrad Gregor (Vanderbilt). Cody Kulp (Shippensburg) added three hits, including a home run, and three RBI. Jimmy Reed (Maryland) got the win for Orleans with five strong innings, and the bullpen allowed just three hits over the final four innings. Hyannis dropped to 0-8 with the loss.
  • Chatham continues to keep pace in the East as well. The Anglers beat Y-D 9-2 last night to improve to 6-2. Aaron Brown (Pepperdine) and Dale Carey (Miami) had a home run and two RBI apiece, while Andrew Knapp (California) also had two RBI. Kurt Schluter (Stetson) allowed two runs in five innings for the win. Y-D actually out-hit Chatham 9-8 but didn’t score again after getting two runs in the first.
  • Wareham won a wild one with Falmouth, 12-10 in 11 innings. Facing John Simms (Rice), who didn’t allow an earned run all last summer, the Gatemen scored two in the top of the 11th and eventually came away with the win. Kyle Schwarber (Indiana) scored the go-ahead run on a suicide squeeze from Mott Hyde (Georgia Tech). Matthew Walsh (Franklin Pierce) knocked in the second run with an RBI groundout. Jonathan Holder (Mississippi State), who had come on in the ninth and given up a game-tying home run to Michael O’Neill (Michigan), stayed in the game after that and worked a scoreless 11th after his team got the lead. Wareham moved within a game of Falmouth for first place.
  • Cotuit had its best offensive night of the season in a 10-5 victory over Brewster. Making his second appearance of the summer, LSU star Raph Rhymes went 1-for-3 with a home run and three RBI. The Kettleers also got home runs from Aramis Garcia (Florida International) and Jacob May (Coastal Carolina). Tony Kemp (Vanderbilt) added two RBI. Adam McCreery (Arizona State) struck out five and gave up four runs — two earned — in three innings after a dominant start in his first Cape appearance. In relief, Jordan Ramsey (UNC-Wilmington) pitched three scoreless innings for the win.
  • Daily Fog: Getting Hotter

    We’re still at an early point in the season where one game can have a big impact on a statistic. A team’s batting average could drop pretty significantly with a bad showing.

    Or it could go up by 41 points.

    That’s just what happened to the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox on Thursday night. Already the league leaders with a .280 team batting average, the Red Sox pushed that mark all the way to .321 with a mammoth 22-hit performance in a 13-2 victory over Brewster. Y-D improved to 4-3 with the blowout.

    Looking at rosters around the league in the preseason, I probably wouldn’t have pegged Y-D as an offensive juggernaut. It looked like the Red Sox would have a lot of guys coming off solid springs, but maybe not that many who were primed for summer stardom.

    But everybody on the roster — even some fill-ins — have done nothing but hit. Tyler Sciacca (Villanova), a late addition to the roster, leads the league with a .588 batting average. Ten players are hitting .300 or better.

    And Thursday was the best day yet. The game was 1-1 after three, but the Red Sox exploded over the final six innings, getting 18 of their 22 hits in that span.

    Sam Travis (Indiana), Wayne Taylor (Stanford) and Alex Blandino (Stanford) each hit home runs for the biggest blows. Robert Pehl (Washington), the team’s most productive hitter thus far, went 4-for-5 with two doubles and an RBI.

    The hitting must have been contagious too. Blandino, who was making his first appearance of the summer, went 2-for-4 with four RBI, while Tanner Mathis (Ole Miss) went 3-for-6 in his season debut. Mason Katz, who’s back with the Red Sox after not getting drafted after his junior year at LSU, also made his season debut, and went 2-for-5 with an RBI.

    With that kind of display, I’m guessing Y-D’s pitchers were smiling all night. Aaron Blair (Marshall), who struck out eight in five shutout innings in his first start, delivered another quality performance. He struck out seven and allowed four hits and an unearned run in six innings. Blair hasn’t an allowed an earned run yet this year.

    Elsewhere

  • Falmouth had a big offensive day as well, breaking through in the late innings for a 10-4 victory over Hyannis. Jared King (Kansas State) and Billy Ferriter (UConn) each hit their first home runs of the year, Mike O’Neill (Michigan) went 3-for-4 and Alex Maldonado (Holy Cross) had two hits and and two RBI. The game shaped up as a pitchers’ duel in the early going, with Falmouth starter Craig Schlitter (Bryant) and Hyannis’ Sean Manaea (Indiana State) allowing a combined six hits in the first six innings. But Falmouth scored three unearned runs off Manaea then broke out against the Hyannis bullpen. Schlitter got the win for the Commodores with nine strikeouts and just two hits allowed in six innings. The Commodores are now 5-2 and are the only team in the West with a winning record.
  • Harwich stretched its win streak to three with a steady 7-1 victory over host Wareham. Eric Jagielo (Notre Dame) hit his second home run of the year in the first inning, and Matt Reida (Kentucky) also hit a home run, giving Harwich a league-best nine home runs on the year. Reida went 4-for-5 overall and Jagielo was 3-for-5. Three newcomers made their much anticipated debuts, with Austin Wilson (Stanford) going 2-for-3, Brian Ragira (Stanford) going 1-for-5 and Brett Austin (North Carolina State) going 2-for-4. On the mound, David Whitehead (Elon) and three relievers limited the Gatemen to just four hits.
  • Chatham trailed 2-1 in the fifth but caught fire late and beat Bourne 9-3. Aaron Brown (Pepperdine), Chatham’s leading hitter, had two more hits to bring his average to .389. Chad Pinder (Virginia Tech) went 2-for-5 with two RBI and is now hitting .346. Leadoff man Adam Engel (Louisville) also had two hits. Scott Frazier (Pepperdine) pitched five solid innings for Chatham, while Tate Parrish (North Carolina) got the win in relief. For Bourne, Mike Ahmed (Holy Cross) hit his second home run of the summer.
  • Orleans ran its league-best record to 6-1 by outlasting Cotuit 8-6. The Firebirds led 7-1 before the Kettleers made a game of it late. As usual, though, Orleans closer Trevor Gott (Kentucky) took the wind out of the comeback sails, this time picking up a six-out save after coming in with two runners on and nobody out in the eighth. After getting out of the jam with only run allowed, Gott slammed the door in the ninth for his fourth save. He still hasn’t allowed a hit. Dylan Covey (San Diego) got the win for the Firebirds with two strong innings of relief. Trevor Williams (Arizona State) made what was expected to be his last start before heading to Team USA, and he went three shutout innings. The Orleans offense was led by Pi’ikea Kitamura (Hawaii), who went 3-for-5 with two RBI.
  • What to Watch

    A couple of pitchers to keep an eye on tonight. Adam McCreery (Arizona State), who struck out nine in 4.1 innings in his first start, will get the ball for Cotuit as it hosts Brewster at 5 p.m. And Gonzaga lefty Marco Gonzales will make his second start for Falmouth in a 6:30 p.m. home game against Wareham. It looks like Gonzales will be headed to Team USA after this so it may be your last chance to see him.

    Side note: Daily Fog won’t be up until the afternoon tomorrow, in case you’re looking for it.

    RFF Power Rankings: Week 1

    It’s early, but we’ve got to start somewhere. Without further adieu, here’s the first installment of the 2012 Right Field Fog Power Rankings.


    RANK TEAM RECORD THE SKINNY
    1 TeamLogo_Harwich2003.jpg Harwich Mariners
    4-2
    This is kind of a gut feeling pick. Statistically speaking, Harwich is in the middle of the pack, ranking fifth in team batting average and sixth in ERA. But in the standout stats, nobody’s been better. Phil Ervin has been the league’s most productive hitter and has powered an offense that leads the league in home runs, on-base percentage, slugging and OPS and is tied for the lead in extra-base hits. On the mound, Harwich leads the league in strikeouts and has the second-lowest opponents’ batting average. The team’s only losses have been to Orleans and Falmouth, the next two teams on this list.
    2 firebird1.jpg Orleans Firebirds
    5-1
    The team that sits atop the actual standings is a pretty close second here, because you just can’t ignore a 5-1 start. The team’s first five games were all decided by one run, so there hasn’t been much separation, but the Firebirds have found a way to win nearly every time. Orleans has the league’s third-best ERA and a dominant closer in Trevor Gott. The team batting average is .198 though the Firebirds have shown a knack for getting the big hit.
    3 falmouthlogo.gif Falmouth Commodores
    4-2
    Falmouth doesn’t have the eye-popping numbers of Harwich but has been more balanced overall thus far. The Commodores rank fourth in the league in batting average and second in ERA. They’ve won three in a row and have beaten three teams that look like contenders in the East.
    4 TeamLogo_YD2003.jpg Y-D Red Sox
    3-3
    The Red Sox lost to Chatham 9-2, but they get the edge in these rankings because they’ve been just as balanced as Falmouth. The Red Sox lead the league with a .280 batting average and they have six players hitting over .300. The pitching staff ranks fourth in the league with a 2.63 ERA and sits second in strikeouts.
    5 Anglers.jpg Chatham Anglers
    4-2
    These last two spots really could have gone either way, and Chatham certainly has a case for fourth with its lopsided victory over the Red Sox. Overall, though, the Anglers are still trying to put everything together. While they rank fifth in ERA at 2.83, they’re hitting only .211. The upside for the Anglers is that there probably won’t be a huge amount of roster shuffling. They’ve got their squad.
    6 cotuit white.jpg Cotuit Kettleers
    3-3
    Cotuit has had an odd first week. The Kettleers lead the league in ERA and rank third in team batting average, yet they’ve been blown out by Wareham and have gotten two of their wins against winless Hyannis. There’s no doubting the pitching, but the offense — despite the high batting average — has only seven extra-base hits and ranks eighth in RBI.
    7 gatemen_logo_opt.jpg Wareham Gatemen
    3-3
    If the Gatemen can get their pitching in order, they may shoot up these rankings. The team ranks second in the league in batting average, first in runs by a wide margin and second in OPS. The pitching has had its struggles, with the Gatemen sporting a league-worst 4.99 ERA.
    8 TeamLogo_Bourne2003.jpg Bourne Braves
    2-4
    Bourne has had a rough go of it, but outside of an 11-3 loss to Falmouth, the Braves have been in every game. Their overall pitching numbers should improve, because right now, the Braves have given up the fewest hits in the league while allowing the third-most runs. That can’t keep up. The offense needs to get going.
    9 TeamLogo_Brewster2003.jpg Brewster Whitecaps
    2-4
    The Whitecaps rank ninth in ERA but they’ve hit the ball fairly well. They out-slugged a slugging Wareham team 13-9 and have also beaten first place Orleans. They’ve gotten three strong starts on the mound but haven’t been consistent there.
    10 HyannisHawks_150.gif Hyannis Harbor Hawks
    0-6
    The best team in last year’s regular season has gotten off to a rough start this year, but I think the Harbor Hawks are better than the first week’s results would indicate. While their offense has struggled to a .188 batting average and 10 runs, both the lowest in the league, their pitching has been good enough to win. It just hasn’t happened yet. The team has lost three one-run games and a pair of two-run games.

    Wednesday Evening Cape League Notes

    First day of summer, it really feels like summer . . . and the Cape League had its first off day of the season. Oh, well. Can’t win ’em all.

  • When people are still hitting over .500, you know it’s too early to really draw conclusions about the leaderboard — these are hot streaks that happen to coincide with the start of the season. That said, there are plenty of standouts so far. Harwich’s Phil Ervin (Samford) leads the league in both home runs (3) and RBI (9). He’s also hitting .381 and five of his eight hits have gone for extra bases. Tyler Sciacca (Villanova) is your leading hitter at .563. He hit .359 this spring.

    On the pitching side, Y-D’s Brian Gilbert (Seton Hall) leads in strikeouts with 14. Fourteen pitchers have 0.00 ERAs. Orleans’ Chase Johnson (Cal Poly) leads with two wins. Trevor Gott (Kentucky) has three saves and hasn’t allowed a hit. I’d say Gott is well on his way to a second consecutive Reliever of the Year award.

  • A couple of guys who have been invited to Team USA are currently on the Cape. Trevor Williams (Arizona State) is scheduled to make one more start for Orleans. D.J. Peterson (New Mexico) is playing for Hyannis and Jordan Hankins (Austin Peay) is in Bourne. Not sure what their plans are.
  • A couple of temporary players have already been signed to full contracts, most notably Bourne’s Mike Ahmed (Holy Cross). Considering the way he started the season, it was no surprise that the Braves locked him up. Ahmed, the brother of former Brave Nick Ahmed, went 6-for-9 in his first two games. Here’s a story from Wicked Local about Ahmed.
  • Youngstown State sophomore Drew Dosch, a late addition to the Falmouth roster, is off to a scorching start. He’s hitting .429 with four multi-hit games. Dosch is coming off a big sophomore season in which he hit .353 with eight home runs.
  • Wareham has the most hits in the league and has scored the most runs. On the flip side, Wareham’s team ERA is the worst in the league. That gap isn’t surprising when you look at the roster. The Gatemen have a veteran lineup but only five of the pitchers on their initial roster are currently with the team. That’s a lot of holes to fill.
  • Harwich is off to a good start and should get an added boost this week with the addition of Stanford stars Austin Wilson and Brian Ragira and LSU standout JaCoby Jones.
  • Orleans is off to a 5-1 start, same as the great start Hyannis got off to last year.
  • Look for the first Weekly Watch in the next couple days, along with the first-ever Right Field Fog Power Rankings.
  • Daily Fog: Leaving a Mark

    Aaron Nola is only scheduled to make three starts in his first summer with Harwich. If Tuesday is any indication, he’s going to make them count.

    The standout LSU freshman — and the brother of former Tiger and Mariner Austin Nola — Aaron made the first start in his abbreviated summer last night and dominated. He struck out 10 — an early-season league high — and allowed just two hits in five shutout innings. The Mariners bullpen followed suit as Harwich shut out Hyannis 2-0.

    It’s a shame Nola won’t be around all summer, but LSU doesn’t want to tax his arm after a long freshman season. And you can understand why you wouldn’t want to mess with this.

    Nola was a 22nd-round pick out of high school last year who might have gone higher if not for his commitment to LSU. He joined his brother in Baton Rouge this year and didn’t disappoint, earning SEC all-freshman honors. He went 7-4 with a 3.61 ERA. He struck out 89 in 89.2 innings and walked just seven, giving him the nation’s best strikeout-to-walk ratio.

    Tuesday, he picked up right where he left off. He struck out the first two batters he faced and then struck out the side around a walk in the second. He struck out the side again in the third before Hyannis’ D.J. Peterson (New Mexico) finally touched him up for a hit in the fourth. He allowed one more hit in the fifth but that was it.

    Out of the bullpen, four pitchers combined to allow just three more hits. Grant Gordon (Missouri State) pitched a scoreless seventh — his third scoreless outing this summer — and Zane Evans (Georgia Tech) got the save with an easy ninth.

    Harwich got all the offense it needed from a Sam Dove (Georgia Tech) double and an ensuing RBI single by Phil Ervin (Samford). Justin Leeson (Georgetown) added a solo homer in the ninth, the league-leading seventh home run for the Mariners.

    Harwich improved to 4-2, while Hyannis fell to 0-6. Harbor Hawks starter Scott Firth (Clemson) allowed one run in 5.2 innings. Peterson was another bright spot. The New Mexico star had struggled out of the gate but had two nights last night.

    Elsewhere

  • Every match-up last night pitted the East against the West, and the East won four of five. The only one that went the other way was an 8-2 Falmouth victory over Chatham. Kaiana Eldredge had a home run and four RBI to lead a nine-hit Falmouth attack. Jack Colton (Harvard) went 2-for-4 with two RBI and Marco Gonzales (Gonzaga) went 1-for-4 with two RBI. Drew Dosch (Youngstown State) kept up his hot start with a 2-for-5 night, his fourth multi-hit game of the summer. Troy Scribner (Sacred Heart) got the win for Falmouth with four innings of one-run ball. Sam Paterson (Montana State) and Kyle Ruchim (Northwestern) each pitched a scoreless frame before giving way to new addition John Simms (Rice). Simms didn’t give up an earned as Falmouth’s closer last year and kept that streak in tact this year with a scoreless ninth in his debut. For Chatham, San Diego closer Mike Wagner got the start and struck out six while allowing two unearned runs in five innings.
  • For the first time all summer, Orleans didn’t play a one-run game, but that was no problem as the Firebirds beat Cotuit 4-1 to run their league-best record to 5-1. Mike Montville (Maryland) went 1-for-4 with his second homer of the year, while Pi’ikea Kitamura (Hawaii) had two hits and an RBI. On the mount, Rice standout Austin Kubitza scattered five hits and allowed one run in four innings. Dylan Clark (Elon) got the win in relief, before Trevor Gott picked up the final two outs for his third save of the year.
  • Brewster had only one win coming into last night but broke out in a big way, scoring seven runs in the first inning on their way to a 13-9 slugfest victory over Wareham. Derek Thomas (Memphis) and Derek Campbell (Cal) each went 4-for-5 to lead the charge. Campbell and Jake Kalish (George Mason) each hit home runs. Trevor Mitsui (Washington) and J.T. Files (South Alabama) had two RBI apiece. Wareham had a pretty big night of its own, getting home runs from Brandon Tessar (Oregon), Tyler Horan (Virginia Tech) and Matt Walsh (Franklin Pierce). Austin Voth (Washington), a standout reliever for Brewster last summer, got the start for the Whitecaps and allowed two runs in four innings while striking out seven.
  • Y-D scored three runs in the third inning and got three solid pitching performances en route to a 4-1 win over Bourne. Jake Schrader (Tampa) and Zak Blair (Mercyhurst) each hit home runs to power the Red Sox. Starter Brian Gilbert (Seton Hall) struck out six and allowed one run in 3.1 innings before the bullpen dominated. Making his second appearance, Brian Verbitsky (Hofstra) struck out eight and didn’t allow a hit in four scoreless innings on his way to the win. Jonny Hoffman (Indiana) pitched 1.2 scoreless innings for the save.
  • What to Watch

    We have a long-awaited league-wide off day today. Take a deep breath.

    Daily Fog: One’s Enough

    I was wondering last night if Orleans closer Trevor Gott (Kentucky) might approach the Cape League’s career saves record, but it isn’t likely. The record is 34, held by three-year Chatham closer and CCBL Hall of Famer Zane Carlson.

    But the way this season is going, I wouldn’t put it past Gott and the Firebirds.

    Orleans played a one-run game last night. That’s the team’s fifth one-run game of the season — in five games.

    And Orleans has won four of them, this time posting a 3-2 victory over Bourne to improve to 4-1 on the summer. It’s kind of incredible. I don’t remember anything like it since I’ve been following the league closely.

    Compared to some of the dramatics of earlier games, I guess last night was a little more ho-hum. The Firebirds rallied in the seventh inning as opposed to the ninth. Trailing 2-1, Orleans got it started with a walk to J.T. Riddle (Kentucky). Michael Montville (Maryland), who’s been at the center of a lot of the Orleans drama, knocked Riddle in with a double to tie the game. Conrad Gregor (Vanderbilt) reached when Montville was caught in a rundown, and Gregor made it to second. He then stole third and raced home when the throw got away.

    That was all the Orleans bullpen needed. Pat Christensen (La Salle) pitched 1.1 scoreless innings for the win. Kyle Crockett (Virginia) worked a scoreless eighth.

    And then Gott did his thing.

    The 2011 CCBL Reliever of the Year, Gott picked up his second save of the year and the 14th of his Cape League career with probably his most dominant performance yet. Gott needed exactly nine pitches to strike out the side and finish off another wild Firebirds win.

    Phil and the Walk-offs

    Could be a good band name, right? It’s made for a pretty good baseball team the past few days, too.

    Phil Ervin (Samford) hit his third home run for Harwich last night, and this one was a grand slam that turned a 4-0 deficit into a 4-4 tie with Wareham. From there, the Mariners found some magic for the second time in three games. In the bottom of the ninth, after a walk to Sam Dove (Georgia Tech) and an intentional walk to Ervin, Eric Jagielo (Notre Dame) hit a walk-off double, his second walk-off hit in three nights. He won Saturday’s game over Hyannis with a walk-off home run.

    Harwich improved to 3-2 with the victory. Both teams had 10 hits, with Jagielo’s three leading the way. Ervin was 2-for-3, Dove was 2-for-2 with an RBI and Matt Reida (Kentucky) was 2-for-3 with three runs scored. For Wareham, Mott Hyde (Georgia Tech) went 2-for-4 with three RBI.

    As for Ervin, I did a little research last night and found that nobody in 2009, 2010 or 2011 hit three home runs faster. In 2008, Brewster’s Nate Lape hit three in his first four games with the Whitecaps. Those were not the first four games of the season, though, so Ervin’s feat still really sticks out.

    Elsewhere

  • Chatham kept pace with Orleans thanks to a 4-0 victory over Brewster. Four Anglers pitchers allowed one hit each on their way to the shutout. Eric Stevens (Boston College) turned in an impressive start, striking out seven and walking nobody in six innings. Louie Lechich (San Diego), Joe Dye (Stetson) and Jaime Schultz (High Point) finished it off with an inning each. Offensively, Chatham got an RBI each from Adam Engel (Louisville), Chad Morgan (Virginia Tech) and Mike Fransoso (Maine).
  • Cotuit had scored seven runs coming into Monday, but out-did that total in a 9-1 victory over Hyannis. The Kettleers had 14 hits and blew the game open with a four-run fourth. Jacob Valdez (San Jose State) went 3-for-5 to lead the way. Jacob May (Coastal Carolina), Aramis Garcia (Florida International), Patrick Biondi (Michigan) and Angel Rosa (Alcorn State) all had two hits. Cotuit starter Kevin Ziomek (Vanderbilt) picked up the win, as he opened his second summer on the Cape with eight strikeouts in 5.1 innings. Dan Slania (Notre Dame) worked a scoreless ninth, his third scoreless appearance in as many tries.
  • Falmouth moved to 3-2 with a 6-4 victory over Y-D. Jared King (Kansas State) went 3-for-5, his fourth multi-hit game of the summer, to lead the Commodore charge. He’s now hitting .550. Drew Dosch (Youngstown State) had two hits for the third time this season, while Jon McGibbon (Clemson) went 2-for-3 with a home run and two RBI. Alex Maldonado (Holy Cross) and Coty Blanchard (Jacksonville State) also had two hits. On the mound, Trey Masek (Texas Tech) was very impressive, striking out nine and allowing just one hit in six innings of work. Cale Elam (Wichita State) picked up his second save.
  • What to Watch

    Lots of good pitching match-ups to choose from tonight. Standout LSU freshman Aaron Nola is slated to take the hill for Harwich as it visits Hyannis at 7 p.m. Scott Firth, an all-star with Hyannis last year and a 32nd-round pick this year, is scheduled to go for the Harbor Hawks.

    San Diego closer Michael Wagner is scheduled to get a start for Chatham in a 7 p.m. home game. In Orleans at 7 p.m., Rice star Austin Kubitza will make his first start of the summer

    Daily Fog: Swingin’

    Pitching is usually ahead of hitting at this point in the Cape Cod Baseball League season, and that’s been true this year too. For three teams, though, offense caught up on Sunday.

    Wareham rolled over Cotuit 12-3, Falmouth beat Bourne 11-4 and Y-D topped Brewster 9-3 on the fourth day of the 2012 CCBL season. Those first two scores were the first double-digit run totals of the season.

    The Gatemen have now won three games in a row and this was the biggest one yet. They scored two runs in the second inning and then adding at least one run in each of the next six innings. Cole Sturgeon (Louisville), Tyler Horan (Virginia Tech) and Mott Hyde (Georgia Tech) each hit home runs for Wareham, the team’s first homers of the year. Sturgeon, Kyle Schwarber (Indiana) and Ethan Gross (Memphis) had two RBI each, with Gross also scoring four runs.

    Wareham finished with 13 hits. Pitching was also solid for the Gatemen. Fred Shepard (Amherst) struck out six and allowed just two unearned runs in five innings.

    Falmouth also had a big day with the bats, scoring six runs in the first inning on its way to the 11-4 win over Bourne. Kyle Ruchim (Northwestern) went 2-for-4 with three RBI and Jared King (Kansas State), who’s hit in every game so far, continued his hot start with a 2-for-3 night. He scored two runs and is now hitting .533. The Commodores also got one RBI from six different players. For Bourne, John Murphy (Sacred Heart) went 4-for-5.

    On the mound for the Commodores, Kevin Pohle (Clemson) allowed two earned runs in five innings for the win.

    Finally, Y-D set a new league-wide season high for hits with 14 in its 9-3 victory over Brewster. The top three hitters in the order — Carlos Asuaje (Nova Southeastern), Tyler Sciacca (Villanova) and Robert Pehl (Washington) — each had three hits, with Pehl also driving in three runs. Sam Travis (Indiana) continued his hot start, going 2-for-5 with two RBI.

    Chris O’Hare (Yale) got the win with four scoreless innings of relief for Y-D.

    Elsewhere

  • Orleans beat Harwich 5-4, and the Firebirds have now played a one-run game in each of their four games so far. The Firebirds trailed 4-2 going into the bottom of the ninth but broke through with three runs to again win in dramatic fashion. After an RBI single by Mike Montville (Maryland) made it 4-3, Cody Kulp (Shippensburg) hit a walk-off two-run single to give the Firebirds their third victory of the year. Pi’ikea Kitamura (Hawaii) had two hits to lead the Orleans offense. Chase Johnson (Cal Poly) got the win with a scoreless inning of relief. In a battle of Kentucky teammates, Harwich starter Corey Littrell struck out eight in four shutout innings while Orleans’ Jerad Grundy allowed three runs in five innings.
  • Chatham also won a one-run game with a three-run rally in the ninth. The Anglers’ came in the top half of the inning, which they entered trailing 3-1. They were down to their last out before John Martinez (Michigan State) singled. Mike Fransoso (Maine) followed with a walk before Chad Pinder (Virginia Tech) smacked a three-run home run to give Chatham the lead. Pinder’s college teammate Jake Joyce (Virginia Tech) then worked a scoreless bottom of the ninth to give Chatham the win. Hyannis dropped to 0-4.
  • What to Watch

    Y-D has the highest team batting average in the league thus far, and the Red Sox will face the team with the lowest ERA, Falmouth, tonight at 6:30 p.m. in Falmouth. Trey Masek (Texas Tech), who made four appearances for Hyannis last summer, will make his first start for Falmouth. Michael Johnson (Dartmouth) is scheduled to go for the Red Sox.

    A reminder that the Game Day link below the banner at the top of the page is your one-stop shop for links to live Cape League coverage.

    Facebook, Twitter and Prizes – Oh My

    We are off and running in the Cape Cod Baseball League season, and as anyone who’s followed the league knows, it never really slows down. It’s just baseball, baseball, baseball — and that’s a good thing.

    With that in mind, I’ve got a few notes about Right Field Fog to pass along.

    1. Do me a solid and follow Right Field Fog on Facebook and Twitter. It’ll be good for both of us. I’m turning myself into a social media maven. I’ll be posting lots of links so you can keep tabs on what’s on the site and a lot of other notes that you won’t find anywhere else. I may even give away a shirt or two to a randomly-selected Facebook follower (stay tuned!). And if you’re a big Cape League fan, you should hop on Twitter anyway. The teams provide a lot of good info and it’s a good way to keep tabs on things. To like Right Field Fog on Facebook or follow on Twitter, just click the links above or the logos on the right and go to town.

    2. Just under the banner at the top, there’s a link to a Game Day page, where you can find quick links to every Cape League team’s live game coverage and Twitter feeds.

    3. I’ll be trotting out a couple of new regular features here at Right Field Fog. I’m most excited about the Weekly Watch, which will be linked up top and will be your guide for players to watch all summer. It’ll be updated weekly, hence the name.

    4. If you feel the need to own a Right Field Fog shirt, bumper sticker or coffee mug (and I don’t know why you wouldn’t feel that need) you can visit the Right Field Fog store at Cafe Press.

    5. All the links to the 2012 Early Looks are in the right sidebar if you’re looking for a little more information on a player you’ve seen. Some will be a little out-dated at this point, but most of the likely stars are in there. Also on the sidebar are links to a lot of great sites. The Cape League is covered from all angles these days.

    6. Finally, don’t hesitate to comment here at rightfieldfog.com. I don’t see as much Cape League baseball as I’d like, so if you want to pass along any observations, please be my guest.

    Thanks for reading. Here’s to a great summer.

    Daily Fog: Nobody’s Perfect

    We begin with an interesting fact. In the last six years, only one Cape Cod Baseball League team has won more than three consecutive games to start a season. That was, not surprisingly, the 2007 Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox, who had four future first-round picks and won 31 games en route to the championship.

    Other than that, three was it. Many teams pulled off that feat, but four in a row was an impossible task.

    This year, three in a row proved impossible.

    Orleans and Cotuit both came into Saturday’s slate with 2-0 records but both took their first losses of the season. Previously winless Brewster beat Orleans 2-1 on an odd walk-off, while Bourne shut down Cotuit for a 5-1 victory.

    Orleans has had a flair for the dramatic so far, winning in the eighth inning on opening night and walking off with a win on Friday. It was more of the same Saturday, but Brewster came out on the positive side. With one out and the bases loaded in the ninth inning of a 1-1 game, Derek Campbell (Cal) hit a ground ball to shortstop. Orleans tried to start a 6-4-3 double play but the throw to first wasn’t in time, Campbell was safe and Brewster had itself a victory on the old walk-off fielder’s choice.

    Before the ninth-inning fireworks, the game was a pitcher’s duel all night. Brady Kirkpatrick (Maryland) allowed one unearned on four hits in five innings for the Whitecaps while Jarrett Arakawa (Hawaii) surrendered a run on six hits in five innings for Orleans. The Brewster bullpen proved to be a little stronger, with Jake McCasland (New Mexico) and Niko Spezial (Wake Forest) combining to allow just one hit in four shutout innings.

    Over in Bourne, the Braves picked up their second win of the season with a steady performance against the Kettleers. Starter Jeff Thompson (Louisville), the New England Collegiate Baseball League’s top prospect a year ago, picked up where he left off, going five shutout innings and allowing two hits. Ryan Donahue (La Salle) struck out five in three scoreless innings of relief, while Hawtin Buchanan (Ole Miss) gave up a run in one inning, and that tally was all Cotuit got.

    Cotuit had six pitchers take the mound, and the Braves delivered plenty of offense. North Carolina star Colin Moran went 2-for-4 with two RBI and John Murphy (Sacred Heart) scored two runs and also stole three bases. Mason Robbins (Southern Miss) had a triple and scored a run.

    Elsewhere

  • In the most exciting game of the night, Harwich got a walk-off home run from Eric Jagielo (Notre Dame) to beat Hyannis 4-2 in the 10th inning. Jagielo’s blast came with one on and two out in a 2-2 game. It was his second hit of the game and his first homer of the year. Phil Ervin (Samford) also had a home run for the Mariners, his second of the year. C.K. Irby (Samford) got the win in relief for Harwich with two shutout innings. Starter Eddie Campbell (Virginia Tech) struck out seven in five innings. Hyannis starter Scott Silverstein (Virginia) was also good, scattering seven hits and allowing one run in seven innings. Zach Alvord (Auburn) led the Hyannis offense with two hits and an RBI.
  • After getting shut out the night before, Chatham scored early and often on its way to a 9-2 victory over Y-D. Chad Pinder (Virginia Tech) went 2-for-4 with three RBI and Aaron Brown (Pepperdine) went 2-for-3 with three RBI to pace a 10-hit attack. Andrew Knapp (Cal) added a home run and finished 2-for-5. John Soldinger (Manhattan) worked five shutout innings before five Chatham relievers finished it off. Michael Wagner (San Diego), a standout closer this spring, made his first appearance and struck out two in a scoreless ninth. Jake Schrader (Tampa) led the Y-D offense with a hit and an RBI.
  • Wareham scored three runs in the first inning and made that lead stand up in a 3-1 victory over Falmouth, the second straight win for the Gatemen. Cole Sturgeon (Louisville) and Tyler McFarland (James Madison) had singles to start the first, before Kyle Schwarber (Indiana) doubled home a run. Daniel Palka (Georgia Tech) knocked in a run with a groundout — for his third RBI in as many games — and Tyler Horan (Virginia Tech) did the same to make it 3-0. Gatemen pitchers did the rest. While they allowed nine hits, they surrendered just a run. Dan Tobik (Tennessee Martin) struck out eight in five innings for the win. Jonathan Holder (Mississippi State) picked up the save. For Falmouth, Billy Ferriter (UConn) had three hits while Drew Dosch (Youngstown State) had two for the second night in a row. Benjamin Ballantine (Michigan) buckled down after the first inning and allowed just three more hits while going the distance.
  • What to Watch

    Harwich and Orleans get together at 7 p.m. in Orleans for an early battle of 2-1 teams in the East. Corey Littrell, who had a strong sophomore campaign at Kentucky, is scheduled to go for the Mariners and he’ll be facing his Kentucky teammate Jerad Grundy, who also was very good this spring.

    Daily Fog: Strong Start

    IMG_9229.JPG

     

    Ms. Right Field Fog and I made the trip over to Falmouth last night to see the rematch of last year’s championship between Harwich and Falmouth. I picked the game in large part because Marco Gonzales was pitching for the Commodores.

    He didn’t disappoint.

    The Gonzaga sophomore was one of the top two-way players in the country this year. After batting fifth on opening night, he took to the mound on Friday and pitched five strong innings. He allowed one run on four hits and struck out five on his way to the win as Falmouth won 3-1.

    Gonzales was very much in control in the early going, striking out two in each of the first two innings. The Mariners got to him a little more after that, but only one of the four hits — a double by Sam Dove (Georgia Tech) — in the fifth was hard-hit. And Gonzales got out of that inning with minimal damage as Dove scored on a sacrifice fly.

    And by then, the Commodores were in control too. Drew Dosch (Youngstown State) had an RBI single in the first inning and an RBI double in the third to help stake Falmouth to a 4-0 lead.

    Harwich got a little closer in the late innings, but the Falmouth bullpen buckled down. John Colella (Holy Cross) and Sam Paterson (Montana State) combined for 1.2 innings, before closer Cale Elam (Wichita State) worked a scoreless ninth. Falmouth finished the game with a 6-4-3 double play.

    A few notes:

    – Gonzales was really smooth. He pounded the strike zone (73 pitches – 52 strikes) and looked in control the whole way.

    – I was also impressed with Sam Paterson, a lefty who comes to the Cape from Montana State. He struck out two of the three batters he faced, and made them look pretty bad doing it.

    – Drew Dosch was not on the initial Falmouth roster, but he’s a guy who might stick around. The lefty swinger hit .353 with eight home runs for Youngstown State this spring. He was 2-for-3 last night.

    – We did not win the 50-50. This is news because Ms. Right Field Fog has won the 50-50 twice in the last two years. We were angry.

    – In the battle of the Jared Kings, the Falmouth Jared King (Kansas State) went 3-for-4 with two runs scored, while Harwich’s Jared King (Virginia) went 1-for-2 with an RBI.

    – Falmouth stole six bases, getting two each from King, Billy Ferriter (UConn) and Alex Maldonado (Holy Cross).

    – For more pictures from the game, visit Right Field Fog on Facebook.

    Elsewhere

    • Right Field Fog commenter Joe Cavanaugh told us earlier in the week that Cotuit’s Adam McCreery, a 6’8 lefty from Arizona State, was throwing 96 in a scrimmage. Last night, he had the results you’d expect. McCreery got the start for the Kettleers and struck out nine in 4.1 scoreless innings. He allowed just two hits and walked only one. That start was part of an overall strong day on the mound for the Kettleers, as four pitchers combined on a 3-0 shutout of the Anglers. Ryan Connolly (Coastal Carolina) got the win with three innings of two-hit ball. James Mannara (Florida Tech) and Dan Slania (Notre Dame) finished it off. Slania, a standout closer with Notre Dame, pitched for the second night in a row and worked 1.2 hitless innings for the save. Offensively, Patrick Biondi (Michigan) had two hits and an RBI to lead Cotuit.

     

    • Orleans got late heroics for the second night in a row and this time they were even later in a 6-5 victory over Y-D. J.T. Riddle tied the game with an RBI single in the bottom of the ninth before Conrad Gregor (Vanderbilt) won it with a single. Mike Montville (Maryland), the hero from opening night, had two more RBI in this one, while Jay Gonzalez (Auburn) went 3-for-5 with two runs scored. The Firebirds also got strong work from their bullpen. After Y-D scored five runs in the first two innings, the tandem of Pat Christensen (La Salle) and Chase Johnson (Cal Poly) didn’t allow another run.

     

    • After an opening night loss to Chatham, Wareham got into the win column with a 6-4 victory over Brewster. Clay Chapman (Florida Southern) got the win after allowing two runs in five innings. The Wareham offense got one RBI from five different players. Dustin DeMuth (Indiana) led the way with three hits and an RBI while Daniel Palka (Georgia Tech) hit his second double of the year and had an RBI. Jake Kalish (George Mason) hit a home run for the Whitecaps.

     

    • Bourne and Hyannis traded single runs in five consecutive half innings, but the Braves had the last laugh with a run in the bottom of the seventh. Mike Ahmed (Holy Cross), the brother of former Bourne and UConn star Nick Ahmed, continued a torrid start with an RBI triple to score what proved to be the winning run in the seventh. Ahmed went 4-for-4 after going 2-for-5 on Thursday. Josh Dezse (Ohio State) and Mason Robbins (Southern Miss) had the other RBI for Bourne. Jon Keller (Nebraska) was tremendous on the mound for the Braves, striking out nine, walking nobody and allowing just one hit in five shutout innings. Keller had an ERA over five this spring, so that’s a great start to the summer for him. For Hyannis, Steve Wilkerson (Clemson) went 3-for-4 after a 2-for-3 night on Thursday. He is your current league leader in batting average, along with Falmouth’s Jared King. Also for the Harbor Hawks, Jimmy Hodgskin (Troy) pitched two perfect innings of relief with three strikeouts.

     

    What to Watch

    Cotuit will try to stay perfect as it visits Bourne (1-1) at 6 p.m. Mike Ford (Princeton) is slated to go for the Kettleers against Jeff Thompson (Louisville), who was the NECBL’s top prospect last summer.