Balance boosts Dodgers in 5-3 win
Bryce Alderton
The Costa Mesa National Little League Dodgers limped into their
District 62 Tournament of Champions first-round game Thursday against
the Ocean View Yankees an ankle and a foot short of full strength.
The Majors division champions were missing their starting third
baseman and No. 2 pitcher, but it was a mere formality.
Teammates shouldered the added responsibility and the Dodgers
gritted out a 5-3, come-from-behind victory at Huntington Valley,
keyed by a two-run sixth inning surge.
The Dodgers will face the Huntington Valley Braves in a
quarterfinal at noon Saturday at the same site.
“This team is so unpredictable, but in a good way,” Dodgers’
Manager Kirk Stone said. “It’s always someone different.”
The bottom of the order sparked Costa Mesa’s sixth-inning scoring.
Leadoff hitter Matt Carlyle, who finished 3 for 4 with a run scored,
laced a one-out double inches inside the third-base bag to plate Alex
Krohnfeldt and Jake Knapp, who had walked and reached on an error,
respectively.
Derek Andrews, hitting in the eighth spot in the lineup, reached
base on an error to open the inning and Krohnfeldt followed with her
third walk in three at-bats.
The Dodgers (14-3), winners of nine straight, rebounded from 1-0
and 3-2 deficits to the Yankees (16-6), who finished second in their
league during the regular season.
Costa Mesa scored twice in the top of the third to take a 2-1 lead
on A.J. Roth’s two-run home run that cleared the scoreboard in
right-center field.
Ocean View responded with two runs in its half of the third, via a
wild pitch and RBI single.
Roth, who stands close to 6 feet and towered over every player on
the field, added his third RBI of the game on a sharply-hit, one-out
double up the middle in the fifth, plating Carlyle.
Carlyle and Roth each tossed three innings, limiting the Yankees
to four hits. Carlyle started, allowing four hits and three runs,
while striking out five and walking none. He also added strong
defense at third, diving to his left to spear a grounder hit by Tyler
Pagter and threw out the runner.
Roth overpowered Yankee batters in his three innings, displaying
sparkling command of both the fastball and curveball to fan seven of
the nine hitters he faced. He struck out the side in the fourth on
nine pitches and pounced on a high chopper, like a cat reaching to
grab a tennis ball, off the bat of Josh Berry for the final putout in
the fifth inning.
“[Roth] has been our most constant player the entire year,” said
Stone, who estimated Roth is hitting .970 this season.
Roth’s tall, muscular stature rattled the nerves of Yankees, Ocean
View Coach Scott Pagter said.
“To see that kid throwing hard, it would make me nervous to swing
the bat,” Scott Pagter said. “But how many times do you get to face a
kid of that caliber?”
Roth and Carlyle were two of the Dodgers’ three main pitchers
throughout the year. The third, Kevin Carvajal, who tossed a
no-hitter earlier this season, rolled his ankle playing soccer and is
questionable for Saturday. Scott Wagner, the team’s starting third
baseman, broke his foot playing football Wednesday, forcing Stone to
scramble to fill out a roster that requires 12 players for the
tournament.
Stone phoned Jordan Young Wednesday night, informing him he would
be a Dodger for the first time this season. Young reached on a
fielder’s choice in the sixth inning.
Krohnfeldt started at third while Kannon Stone, who scored on
Roth’s home run, and catcher Brody Henshied, added to a staunch
defense that committed only one error.
Stone fielded Pagter’s grounder in the third and fired home to
Henshied, who applied the tag on a sliding runner.
The defense, not the offense, has carried the Dodgers, Kirk Stone
said.
“In five games at the end of the season when we went, 5-0, we
outscored opponents, 38-2,” Kirk Stone said. “We weren’t striking
everyone out. You look at the error column and the team that commits
the least amount of errors wins 90 percent of the time.”
The Yankees committed two errors.
Conner Gilligan added an infield single in the Dodgers’ six-hit
attack.
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