Newport Harbor Baseball Association: One for the ages
Bryce Alderton
NEWPORT BEACH - Boy, Roy Campanella, Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra,
Jackie Robinson, Sandy Koufax, Billy Martin would have been proud of the
baseball they saw Saturday.
Even though Saturday’s game between the Yankees and Dodgers wasn’t for
the World Series championship, these 11 and 12-year-olds put on a show
reminiscent of past World Series matchups.
The Yankees and Dodgers of Newport Harbor Baseball Association’s
Bronco Division needed three extra innings to decide the outcome when the
Dodgers capitalized on three walks in the ninth inning to score two and
eventually hold on to defeat the Yankees, 3-1.
Three consecutive walks to Matt Waller, Christian Hoagland (1 for 2
with a single, RBI) and R.J. D’Cruz (three innings, five strikeouts, two
walks, one hit) to open the ninth set the stage for Danny Moskovits, who
hit a groundball to the Yankees’ shortstop who threw home, but too late
to tag Waller, who scored the Dodgers second run. Next up came catcher
Brandon Davis, who caught all nine innings. Davis (1 for 3, RBI, four
stolen bases) hit a 3-2 pitch right back at Yankees’ pitcher Cameron
Chase, who got a glove on the ball, but the ball trickled just past him
and his only play was to first, allowing Hoagland to score the Dodgers
third and final run.
Hoagland came on to pitch the ninth, allowing a leadoff single to
Dusty Campbell (2 for 4, three stolen bases) before retiring the next
three Yankee batters on groundball outs, ending the pitcher’s duel nearly
three hours after the first pitch left Yankee starter Jerry Whitney’s
hand.
The Yankees scored a run in the first as Cameron Chase, who had been
hit by a pitch to lead-off the game and stole two bases in the inning,
scored on an RBI groundout by Jackson Massingill.
The Dodgers got their first run in the third, on a single by Hoagland
to plate John Swift, (three innings pitched, nine strikeouts (struck out
side in the third, one run).
Both teams combined for five hits, all singles.
Zack Gagnon singled in the second and stole two bases before being
stranded at third.
Pitching kept both teams in the game.
For the Yankees, Campbell struck out six, walked three and allowed no
runs in three innings; Chase had three strikeouts in three innings, his
most important coming in the seventh when he struck out two to end the
inning with Dodgers on second and third, and Whitney had two strikeouts
in three innings.
R.J. D’Cruz struck out the side on nine pitches in the seventh, and
pitched out of a bases-loaded jam in the sixth for the Dodgers.
Close games like Saturday’s aren’t new according to Dodger Manager Ron
D’ Cruz.
“Nine innings isn’t typical, but we’ve been in tight games most of the
year,” D’Cruz said.
After an opening game loss to the Reds the Dodgers have reeled off
five straight wins and getting contributions from many facets.
“Everybody is contributing hits, walks and really our pitching is the
key,” D’Cruz said.
Yankee Manager Chris Hone described the emotional roller-coaster of a
game.
“That game was one of the most intense I’ve ever been in, wow,” Hone
said. “You have to tip your hat to them because they won. Both teams
played really well, didn’t want to give it up.”
Even though Hone said he really didn’t see “a difference” in the game,
he mentioned his hitters’ patience at the plate.
“Their hitters were more patient than ours,” Hone said. “They made our
pitchers work and we were swinging at the first pitch. But other than
that, both teams played pretty solid.”
The Dodgers, 15-9, 5-1 in playoffs, have defeated the Yankees, 13-8-2,
3-1, three times, twice during the regular season and once during the
playoffs.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.