A game called
TAYLOR ALSTON
It’s 5:30 p.m., 2 1/2 hours after the first pitch of the game, and it
is only the bottom of the fourth inning.
It began as any normal junior varsity baseball game may, Santa Ana
Valley taking the field while Corona del Mar took their shot at
scoring. Little did they know just how much scoring would be
involved.
The first at-bat did not seem to bear witness to a game out of the
ordinary; he just grounded out to the second baseman. The second
hitter got a base on balls, the third a single, the fourth a double,
and then it was 2-0.
Hitter after hitter came up, and hitter after hitter got on base.
At the end of the first half of the inning, it was 8-0, and that
would not change in the bottom half.
In the top of the second, there was a similar result, ending with
the score of 17-0. Pity started creeping into the hearts of the
Corona del Mar boys, but this did not cause them to let their bats be
silenced.
The third inning saw the opening of the floodgates and the torrent
of scoring followed. By this time, Santa Ana Valley had used three
pitchers, and the pickings were growing slim. As Corona del Mar got
more and more runs on the scoreboard, more and more players found
their way to the mound.
The score was 25-0. It was hopeless. Corona del Mar put up nine
more runs in the top of the fourth, with the starters taking a rest.
This brings us back to the beginning, in the bottom of the fourth.
The sun has now waned below the trees surrounding the field, and with
it, the game ended.
The final score: 34-3. How they scored those three would be a
mystery for Corona del Mar.
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