Game slips past ‘Eaters
Barry Faulkner
It was a breaking ball that slipped through the grasp and between the
legs of UC Irvine catcher Mark Wagner that allowed the game’s only
run to score in the Anteaters’ 1-0 Big West Conference baseball loss
to visiting UC Riverside Saturday.
Now, the Anteaters (33-18-1, 9-11 in the Big West), who
surrendered any chance of finishing in the top three in the
conference with the loss, must hope the ball that trickled away is
not an accurate metaphor for their NCAA postseason aspirations.
“I think [Wagner] thought the ball was going to bounce and he went
down to block it and it scooted underneath him,” UC Irvine Coach John
Savage said of the run-scoring passed ball, Wagner’s 12th of the
season, on a 2-1 pitch by reliever Steve Schroer with one out and a
runner on third in the eighth.
“I told the team [afterward] that it’s never about one play. And
it’s not about one pitch. Come on, we’re out here for 2 1/2 hours
and there were opportunities for both teams to score some runs, so,
it was just unfortunate that a run came across that way.”
Riverside’s opportunistic score was about the only misfortune that
befell either pitching staff, as UCI junior starter Glenn Swanson
returned to the form that had eluded him for 43 days since his last
win, April 9 in the Big West-opening series against UC Santa Barbara.
Swanson, who had yielded 22 earned runs and 26 hits in his
previous 16 innings coming in (a 12.37 ERA) -- spanning four starts
and a relief appearance -- worked into the eighth and left with only
zeroes on the scoreboard. The left-hander, whose sunny disposition
and extreme competitive nature made it all the more difficult for UCI
coaches, teammates and UCI supporters to watch him endure his recent
struggles, struck out the first two Highlander hitters, retired the
first 11 he faced and gave up just two hits before Kyle Barratt lined
a leadoff double into the left-center field gap to open the eighth.
“[Swanson] was impressive, very confident,” Savage said. “We call
it that Swanson swagger and he had it back, and it was fun to watch
again.”
But Swanson, who took the tough-luck loss to fall to 6-3, was not
the most impressive pitcher in the game. That was Riverside senior
right-hander John Martinez, who threw a complete-game three-hitter to
improve to 9-2.
“Swanson pitched outstanding and we had to have somebody come up
huge for us and [Martinez] did that,” said Riverside Coach Jack
Smitheran, who called the game, only Martinez’s second complete game
of the spring, the pitcher’s best outing of the year.
“That’s about as good as it can get. [Martinez] is about as good a
competitor I’ve had in 35 years.” Martinez and Savage fully agreed.
“I think that might be one of the best feelings I’ve ever had in
my whole life,” said Martinez, who struck out seven, walked two,
allowed only one runner to reach second (none reached third) and
faced just four more than the minimum.
“That was as well-pitched a game as I’ve seen all year by both
starting pitchers,” Savage said. “They both dominated the game.”
The game came down to the eighth, when Barratt, whose double
knocked Swanson from the game -- to a thunderous and largely standing
ovation from the home crowd as he strode to the dugout -- moved to
third on a sacrifice bunt.
“Somebody had to blink and, fortunately for us, we were in a
position to score when somebody did.” Smitheran said.
After the passed ball, which did not appear to hit the ground
until it slipped through Wagner, Schroer retired the next two
hitters.
Jordan Szabo, whose double with two outs in the third was the
‘Eaters most impressive offensive feat, reached to lead off the UCI
eighth when Barratt, playing first base, booted Szabo’s ground ball
near the bag.
Designated hitter Cody Cipriano whacked a comebacker that
deflected off Martinez’s glove, to shortstop Brian Steinmayer, who
stepped on second for the force. Had Martinez not gotten a his glove
on the hard-hit grounder, it would have gone into center field.
Matt Anderson singled with one out in the ninth, but was left on
first when Martinez, grunting on every pitch and topping only about
85 mph with his mix of cut fastballs, fastballs, changeups and
curves, induced a fly to right and struck out the final Anteater
hitter.
Matt Fisher’s swinging bunt to lead off the UCI first was the only
other Anteater hit.
Riverside (33-23, 10-9) is one game ahead of UC Santa Barbara,
while UCI drops into a fifth-place tie with Cal Poly San Luis Obispo.
Savage, however, believes the Anteaters can still make the
postseason.
“We’ve played well for most of the entire season,” Savage said.
“For the Big West to get three teams [into an NCAA regional] and not
four would be really an injustice, in terms of the league’s power
ratings, the league’s RPI. I truly believe this conference deserves
four teams and anybody that has played this conference, would have to
agree, I would think.”
*--*
Big West Conference
UC Riverside 1, UCI 0
Score by Innings
UCR 000 000 010 - 1 6 1
UCI 000 000 000 - 0 3 0
Martinez and Collette; Swanson, Schroer
(8), Erickson (9) and Wagner. W -
Martinez, 8-2. L - Swanson, 6-3. 2B -
Barratt (UCR), Szabo (UCI).
*--*
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