Pitcher dominates Newport
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Rick Devereux
Mike Borchard, the manager of the Newport Beach American Little
League Majors All-Star baseball team, knew the pitcher his squad was
facing in the opening round of the District 55 tournament was one of
the toughest his players would step in against all year.
“He’s very tough, Borchard said of Lake Forest Blue hurler
Jonathan Kennedy. “In travel ball, we played against him and we knew
coming in that we would face a great pitcher.”
Kennedy dominated the 9-2 Lake Forest victory Monday night at the
Mission Viejo Youth Athletic Park, striking out 11 and allowing only
four hits. During one stretch, he retired 13 of 14 batters.
“He’s as good as they get, as good as we’ve seen in baseball and
travel ball,” Lake Forest Coach Doug Fields said. “We always expect
that out of him.”
Lake Forest provided ample offense to support Kennedy, scoring
nine runs off 13 hits.
The Blue offense began to roll in the third inning. Colin
Zavrsnick hit a dribbler down the third-base line and advanced to
second when the throw sailed into right field. A sacrifice bunt by
Aaron Kasser mover him to third base and Dusty Orrantia’s single to
right field gave Lake forest the lead.
A walk to Kennedy, followed by a single by Garrett Donohoe, loaded
the bases with two outs. Cody Fields smacked a two-run double to
right field to increase the lead to 3-0.
Lake Forest’s hot bats continued in the fourth inning. Newport
Beach pitcher John Doering got the first two batters he faced, but
opportune hits ignited a rally that put the game away.
Zavrsnick, the No. 9 batter in the lineup, singled and advanced to
second on a throwing error. A single by Kasser, past a diving Michael
Borchard at shortstop, moved Zavrsnick to third, and Zavrsnick scored
on Orrantia’s single to right. Kennedy singled and then Donohoe
crushed a ball over the left-field fence for a three-run home run to
make it 8-0.
Lake Forest added a run in the fifth on a passed ball.
Newport Beach had trouble getting any offense started. The four
hits were balanced with two in the first and two in the sixth and
final inning. The locals produced their runs in that sixth, hoping to
take advantage of a tiring Kennedy on the mound. Sean Tokuyama
walked, advanced two bases on a passed ball and scored on Doering’s
chopper up the middle.
Borchard hit into a fielder’s choice that forced Doering out at
second base. Borchard advanced to third on a wild pitch and passed
ball. He eventually scored on a single by Parker Werline.
But the lucky bounces for Lake Forest in the fourth were the big
difference in the game.
“That’s one of those innings where you go and get two outs, they
get what I like to call a ‘seeing-eye hit,’ and [then we’re behind],”
the elder Borchard said. “I walked out of that inning thinking, ‘How
did they get five runs?’ They really didn’t hit the ball until they
got that home run.”
Doering threw 95 pitches, 45 in the fourth inning alone, over five
innings. He struck out six.
Newport Beach continues in the double-elimination tournament,
facing Rancho Niguel Friday at 7:30 p.m.
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