M’s lose control, contest
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Bryce Alderton
The Reds, champions of Robinwood Little League’s Minor A division,
struck it rich Saturday. They found a pot of walks, but the visiting
Mariners, from Costa Mesa American Little League, all but led them
down the path to the treasure.
Mariner pitchers issued eight free passes and with a grand slam
sandwiched in there, the Reds rolled to a 10-0 victory in a District
62 Tournament of Champions quarterfinal game that didn’t get out of
the fourth inning at LeBard Park.
Mitch Huffman lined a bullet over the fence in left-center field
for a grand slam, padding the Reds’ lead to 5-0 in an eight-run third
inning.
“That grand slam took the wind out of our sails,” Mariners Manager
John Stephens said after he gathered his players and told them where
the postgame pizza party would be held. “You can’t make any mistakes
against a team as good as that. Our pitcher challenged [Huffman] and
it didn’t work out.”
Singles by Chris Schaaf and Joey Sterling were the only other
Reds’ hits in the third, but three walks and two errors contributed
to the eight-run outburst.
Four consecutive walks to open the fourth inning gave the Reds
their 10th run to end the game under the 10-run mercy rule.
The Mariners (12-11) went quietly at the plate, getting their only
hit when Matt Langmos, playing his first year of organized baseball,
sent a single into center in the fourth. A walk to Martin Mysinski
provided the Mariners’ only other base runner Saturday as Reds’
pitchers combined for nine strikeouts.
Of seven Mariner strikeouts through three innings, four were
looking.
“That is not good,” Stephens said of the statistic. “We were not
aggressive enough at the plate in the first three innings. You’ve got
to take a chance.”
Tyler Sheffner started on the mound for the Mariners and went
three innings, striking out five.
He was helped in the field by two strong defensive plays in the
second inning. Catcher J.T. McLucky fielded a bunted ball, which
rolled along the chalk along the third-base line, and fired to
shortstop P.J. Maloney covering third for the force. One batter
later, Stephens, playing at third, knocked down a soft liner with his
glove and touched the bag for the final out of the inning.
“We made some good plays and there were some we didn’t make,” John
Stephens said.
James Lewis, Nathan Olson, Matt Mello, Kyle Peterson, Dakota
Gilbert and Matt Logue all saw action at the plate Saturday.
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