Historic Start

Peyton Burdick celebrates one of his three home runs Tuesday.

 

Cotuit’s Peyton Burdick delivered perhaps the best opening night performance in Cape Cod Baseball League history Tuesday night.

The redshirt sophomore at Wright State blasted three home runs and racked up seven RBI in a 10-1 win over Brewster.

Three home runs matches the Cape League single game record, with Burdick becoming the eighth player to do it. Chris Dominguez of Hyannis and Louisville was the most recent to join the club in 2008. Before that, the last to do it was Major League Baseball Hall of Famer Frank Thomas in 1988. You can read about the record in a piece on the Cape League website after Dominguez’ big night.

Most of the three-homer performances came in July games. For Burdick to do it on opening night lends an extra layer to the achievement. The first week of the season usually features low-scoring games as hitters adjust to wood bats. Across the league Tuesday, that was not the case as four teams scored at least 10 runs.

Burdick was the grand marshal of that offensive parade. He started right away. Batting fifth, he stepped in with the bases loaded in the first inning. One runner scored on a wild pitch before Burdick smacked a three-run homer (crazy that, without the wild pitch, his night would have included a grand slam).

He walked in his next at-bat then hit a two-run double in the fourth inning. In the sixth, he hit a two-run homer, and in the eighth, a solo shot. Mercifully for Brewster, he did not bat again, finishing the night 4-for-4. Teammates Thomas Dillard (Ole Miss) and Adam Oviedo (TCU) added one RBI each. Starting pitcher John Baker (Ball State) struck out eight in five shutout innings.

The record night comes off a strong spring for the 6-foot, 210-pound outfielder. Burdick batted .347 with nine home runs and 65 RBI.

That kind of year could predict a good summer.

But nothing could predict the best opening night performance in Cape League history.

Yarmouth-Dennis 10, Bourne 9

Y-D won a wild slugfest over Bourne, with two runs in the bottom of the ninth after the Braves had taken the lead with three in the top of the ninth. Jim Govern (Eastern Illinois) tied the game with an RBI single and Matthew Dyer (Arizona) won it with a walk-off single. Zach Ashford (Fresno State) led the Red Sox with four hits, while Govern and Dyer had three. Adam Kerner (San Diego) had three hits, including a home run. WAC Player of the Year Quin Cotton (Grand Canyon) had a triple and two RBI. Bourne got home runs from Anthony Prato (UConn) and Spencer Brickhouse (East Carolina), with Brickhouse’s ninth-inning blast tying the game.

Wareham 12, Chatham 4

It was a 5-4 game in the ninth inning when the Gatemen exploded for seven runs and coasted to the finish. Andrew Vaughn (California) – the Pac 12 Player of the Year who’s with Wareham before heading to Team USA – led the late surge with a grand slam. Other offensive standouts for the game were Oliver Dunn (Utah), Austin Shenton (Florida International) and Bryson Stott (UNLV) with two RBI each. Joey Matulovich (California) went four scoreless innings and Brendan White (Siena) tossed two scoreless frames of relief. Ben Ramirez (USC) led Chatham with two hits and two RBI.

Falmouth 10, Hyannis 4

The Commodores used a six-run third inning to take control and kept adding on in a blowout win. Hayden Cantrelle (Louisiana-Lafayette) led the charge with two hits and three RBI. C.J. Schaeffer (Western Illinois) had two hits, two runs and two RBI. Davis Sims (Murray State) went 3-for-6. Ian Koch (Western Illinois) got the win with two scoreless innings of relief. Hyannis got a home run from Michael Barefoot (Campbell).

Harwich 3, Orleans 2

In the only low-scoring game of the night, Harwich scored single runs in the fifth, sixth and seventh innings, with the last one breaking a 2-2 tie and setting up a win over Orleans. Gabriel Rivera (Miami) had three hits and scored what proved to be the winning run on a wild pitch. Tanner Morris (Virginia) and Andre Lipcius (Tennessee) each had an RBI for the Mariners. Garrett Stallings (Tennessee) allowed two runs in six innings for Harwich, and the bullpen shined, with Christian Santana (Florida International) going two scoreless frames and Andrew Misiaszek (Northeastern) pitching a scoreless ninth for the save. Returning Firebird Jaxx Groshans (Kansas) went 3-for-4 with a home run to lead Orleans.

What to Watch

One of the top sophomore pitchers in the nation gets the ball for Wareham as it hosts Harwich. Ken Waldichuk (St. Mary’s) had a 2.05 ERA and struck out 118 in 92 innings.

 

 

Fifty-three

It took 53 games for the Brewster Whitecaps to win the Cape Cod Baseball League championship. They played 44 regular season games and the maximum nine in the playoffs, with three-game sets in each round. Since the playoffs expanded to three rounds, no team had gone to three games in each series. And since the playoffs were shorter in the past, the Whitecaps played more games than any team in Cape League history.

That’s fitting for this group.

They were determined to stick around until the finish line.

A few weeks ago, after Brewster scored a late-season win over Orleans, manager Jamie Shevchik told the Cape Cod Times, “They’re playing their best baseball right now towards the end of the year. There’s been a lot of guys that I think were here for the wrong reasons that are no longer with us – guys that were on innings limits or whatever it is. What you’re left with is now guys that want to win championships.”

A Cape League playoff run is often marked by that desire more than anything else. When every team is fairly similar in talent level – and in the tugs of home at the end of a long summer – embracing the goal of winning a title is more than half the battle. Then if you play good baseball and get a little lucky, good things can happen.

The roots for Brewster’s run came in that win over Orleans Aug. 1 and a win the day before over Y-D. The Whitecaps would carry a fresh memory of beating the best teams in the league into the playoffs, to go with a four-game win streak and a steady lineup that had a lot of hot hitters.

Brewster matched up with those two top teams in the East Division playoffs. The Red Sox – with playoff magic in the franchise’s DNA – stunned Brewster in game one of the East semis with a five-run ninth inning rally. That would surely be it for the Whitecaps, you figured. Y-D would be on a roll again.

But Brewster won the next game 6-1 then held off the magic for an 8-7 win in game three.

Against Orleans, the Whitecaps dropped the opener. That would be it, you figured. The Firebirds had the league’s best pitching staff, offense and defense, and they were ready to roll.

But Brewster stayed alive with an 8-3 win then won the decisive third game 2-1.

In the championship series, Brewster edged Bourne 5-4 in the opener. The Braves came back with a vengeance in game two, rallying from an early hole with an emphatic eight-run inning and winning 13-7. That would be . . . well, you get the point.

It wasn’t.

The wind was knocked out of their sails in that game two – the Whitecaps didn’t register a hit after Bourne’s big innings – but game 53 had arrived. Brewster just needed nine more innings of fight.

William Tribucher (Michigan) took the ball for the decisive game, just three days after saving the clinching win over Orleans and seven days after earning the win in game two against Y-D. He played the role of postseason hero perfectly again, tossing 6.2 shutout innings with five strikeouts. For the postseason, he had a 0.55 ERA in 16.1 innings. Every appearance was in a must-win game.

Brewster’s offense backed him in typical postseason fashion. Marty Costes (Maryland) delivered a sacrifice fly for his seventh RBI of the playoffs and Hunter Bishop (Arizona State) hit his third home run in nine postseason games on a sixth-inning blast that made it 2-0.

Tribucher and reliever Joe DeMers (Washington) got into trouble in the seventh. The Braves – a team that had its own share of playoff momentum – loaded the bases with two outs. Lyle Lin (Arizona State) hit a fly ball to deep left field. Costes made a diving catch to end the inning. If the ball had dropped, Bourne likely would have taken the lead.

With that scare averted, Troy Miller (Michigan) set out to preserve the lead for his college teammate and worked through the red-hot middle of the order for a scoreless eighth, with a double play helping the cause. In the ninth, the Braves notched a leadoff single, but Miller induced another double play, this one off the bat of Tyler Fitzgerald (Louisville), Bourne’s hottest playoff hitter. A ground ball to shortstop followed and two-year Brewster mainstay A.J. Graffanino (Washington) fielded it and threw to first for the final out.

The Whitecaps celebrated like you’d expect for a team that battled through 53 games. Fans savored the franchise’s first title since 2000.

Bishop and Nick Dunn shared playoff MVP honors, but it could have gone to any number of games. Tribucher saved a taxed pitching staff. Costes and Kyle Datres (North Carolina) each hit two home runs in the postseason. Mickey Gasper (Bryant) had six RBI. Three relievers didn’t allow a run in the playoffs.

My guess is it didn’t matter much to them.

As they packed their bags for a quick departure – the season went long, after all – the Whitecaps took to social media.

Dispatches from a group of guys who really wanted a championship, just like their manager suspected a few weeks ago.

They played 53 games and didn’t stop until they had it.

Brave Bats

Jared Triolo had another big game Saturday.
Jared Triolo had another big game Saturday.

 

It took until Aug. 2 – the second-to-last day of the regular season – for the Bourne Braves to score double-digit runs in a game. They did it again the next day.

And Saturday night, they did it when they needed it the most.

Bourne rallied from  4-0 and 7-3 deficits and stayed alive in the Cape League championship series with a 13-7 win over Brewster in game two. The win sets up a decisive game three this afternoon in Brewster.

Offensive production was not Bourne’s strong suit for most of the year. The team batting average was near the bottom of the league and there weren’t many extra-base hits to make up for it. But since those late-season blowouts, offense hasn’t really been a problem for the Braves, who own the second-best batting average in playoff action and the second-best slugging percentage. Some of the hottest hitters in the postseason are in their lineup.

Those deficits, then, didn’t mean much, especially against a taxed pitching staff.

The first rally came in the third inning when Jared Triolo (Houston) doubled in a run and Jameson Hannah (Dallas Baptist) hit a two-run homer.

After Brewster restored its four-run lead, the Braves put together a stunning eight-run fifth inning. Hannah and Tyler Fiztgerald (Louisville) had RBI singles and Andy Atwood (Oregon State) drove in two with a base hit. Grant Williams (Kennesaw State) had an RBI double, Lyle Lin (Arizona State) plated a run on a fielder’s choice, then Triolo and Hannah were at it again with RBI singles.

In all, Bourne sent 13 men to the plate and logged eight hits. Brewster didn’t help much, walking two and making no errors. The Braves simply mashed the ball.

Bourne added insurance runs in the sixth and the bullpen made the lead stand up. P.J. Poulin (UConn), Chad Luensmann (Nebraska) and Nick Johnson (Rhode Island) teamed up for four shutout innings of relief.

Now it all comes down to Sunday. It will be the 53rd game of the year for Brewster, which has gone to three games in each of its three playoff series.

Quite a Start

Chandler Taylor was hit by a pitch to win game one.
Chandler Taylor was hit by a pitch to win game one.

 

The first Cape League championship series game ever played at Stony Brook Field was worth the wait. Brewster won a back-and-forth series opener 5-4 over Bourne on a walk-off hit by pitch in the bottom of the 10th inning.

The Whitecaps are now one win away from their first Cape League title since 2000.

Bourne took an early lead in game one before Brewster went ahead 3-1. The Whitecaps then led 4-2 into the ninth, when the Braves scored two runs to tie it up.

In the bottom of the 10th – with darkness looming – the Whitecaps loaded the bases on two walks, a fielder’s choice and an intentional walk. With two outs in a 1-2 count, Chandler Taylor (Alabama) was hit on the foot by a pitch and Brewster celebrated.

Hunter Bishop (Arizona State) hit a three-run homer to give the Whitecaps the lead. It’s now five straight games with a homer for Brewster. Nick Dunn (Maryland) had a hit and scored two runs. Seven players had at least one hit as Brewster continues to get up-and-down the lineup production.

Tony Locey (Georgia) allowed two runs in five innings, but the game came down to bullpens. After Bourne came back in the ninth, Shane McDonald (Southern New Hampshire) and Troy Miller (Michigan) combined for a scoreless 10th, leaving runners on first and third.

Bourne’s postseason standouts continued to hit, with Jameson Hannah (Dallas Baptist) notching three hits and Jared Triolo (Houston) and Tyler Fitzgerald (Louisville) getting two each. Lyle Lin (Arizona State) was the ninth-inning hero with a two-run double.

It’s the first playoff loss for the Braves, who had swept their series with Cotuit and Wareham. Bourne went 7-4 in one-run games this season, but interestingly, Brewster has now won three one-run games against the Braves.

What to Watch

Bourne hosts game two tonight at 6. Eli Kraus (Kent State), who allowed two runs in 5.1 innings in his first playoff start, will get the ball for the Braves. Paul Milto (Indiana), who surrendered five runs in four innings of game three against Y-D, is due to start for Brewster.

Seventeen Years Later

Marty Costes hit the go-ahead home run Thursday.
Marty Costes hit the go-ahead home run Thursday.

 

Marty Costes was 4 years old, Kyle Datres and William Tribucher were 3 and Connor McNamara was about to turn 2 when the Brewster Whitecaps won the 2000 Cape League championship. That was the franchise’s most recent trip to the finals until those toddlers-turned-baseball players took the Whitecaps back Thursday night.

Costes and Datres homered and McNamara and Tribucher combined on a gem as the Whitecaps continued their unlikely playoff run with a 2-1 upset of top-seeded Orleans in game three of the East Division finals. Brewster, the No. 3 seed in the East, will face its third-seeded counterpart from the West, Bourne, in the Cape League championship series.

Brewster lost game one of its series with Orleans, and the top seed – with the best pitching, offense and defense in the league all year – seemed poised for a finals trip. Instead, the Whitecaps stayed alive Wednesday and rode the wave Thursday.

After giving up a run in the first inning, McNamara (Marist) – a late-season addition – settled in for seven strong innings and didn’t allow another run. In the meantime, Datres (North Carolina) homered to tie the game in the fourth.

The game stayed deadlocked until the eighth, with neither side blinking. Nobody made an error and the pitchers shined. But Costes (Maryland) broke the tie with one swing of the bat in the eighth. It was his second home run of the playoffs, with the other coming in the clinching win over Y-D. He hit this one off dominant Orleans closer Josh Hiatt (North Carolina).

Armed with the lead, Tribucher (Michigan) came out of the bullpen four days after starting the team’s game two win over Y-D. He struck out one in the eighth and fanned the side in a dominant ninth inning to send Brewster to the championship.

It was a tough ending for Orleans, the league’s best team. Just as it was for so many other No. 1 seeds over the last few years, the playoffs proved to be a minefield.

The Whitecaps had the longest title series drought of any team in the league. But it’s over now.

What to Watch

Brewster will have home field advantage for the best-of-three title series by virtue of a 3-1 record in head-to-head games. The series opener is set for today at 4 p.m. at Stony Brook Field. It will be the first championship series game in the field’s history, since Brewster only moved there in 2006.

Still Dreaming

BOU17_celebrate

whitneyIt’s been a dream of a summer for Blake Whitney (South Carolina Upstate) and Wednesday night, he had a big hand in sending the Bourne Braves’ summer into dream territory, too.

A late reinforcement who had a dominant season in the NECBL, Whitney tossed six shutout innings to send the third-seeded Braves into the Cape League championship series with 2-0 win that capped a sweep of Wareham.

Whitney, a 6-foot-3, 175-pound junior, had a 5.50 ERA in the spring but did lead his team with 82 strikeouts. He’s continued to pile up the Ks this summer, and everything else has fallen in line. Pitching for the North Adams Steeple Cats, he racked up 80 strikeouts in 52 innings pitched and finished with a 2.07 ERA. The 80 Ks led the league by a wide margin. The next-best total was 51.

Bourne scooped Whitney up when North Adams’ season ended. He pitched 2.1 scoreless innings of relief in his lone regular season outing.

Wednesday, Whitney drew the ball for the potential series clinched and kept doing his thing. He scattered four hits – all singles – and struck out six over six dominant innings. Not only was it exactly what the Braves needed, it was a ground-breaking performance for Bourne’s pitching staff.

Bryan Hoeing (Louisville) and Chad Luensmann (Nebraska) finished off the shutout.

The Braves got all the offense they needed from a Lyle Lin (Arizona State) home run and a Jared Triolo (Houston) RBI. Wareham got two hits from Willie MacIver (Washington) but couldn’t get on the board and saw its surprising run come to an end.

Bourne is in the title series for the first time since winning the 2009 championship.

Brewster 8, Orleans 3

Brewster will not go away. With their pitching staff taxed and Orleans trotting out another all-star hurler, the Whitecaps blasted three home runs and racked up 12 hits in a game two victory. Nick Dunn (Maryland), Chandler Taylor (Alabama) and Julian Infante (Vanderbilt) all went deep, while Mickey Gasper (Bryant) tripled and Darius Hill (West Virginia) doubled. Brewster scored four runs off Orleans starter Joey Murray (Kent State) and continued to add on against the Firebirds bullpen. The game shaped up as a slugfest early, but Brewster reliever Joe DeMers (Washington) put a clamp on Orleans’ part in the back-and-forth with three scoreless innings. Ryan Cyr (Kansas) and Troy Miller (Michigan) finished it off. Orleans got a home run from Ethan Paul (Vanderbilt) but managed just one run over the final seven innings. The top seed has now been pushed to a game three in both of its East Division series.

What to Watch

Brewster and Orleans return to Eldredge Park tonight for game three of the East finals.

Firemen

Momentum doesn’t seem to mean much when you’re facing the Orleans Firebirds pitching staff.

Chatham was feeling good after its game two win in the division semifinals and Ryan Rolison (Ole Miss) stopped the Anglers cold with six one-hit innings. Brewster was riding high after its dramatic upset of three-time defending champ Y-D, but the Whitecaps were shut down, too. Brett Daniels (North Carolina) struck out eight and allowed one run on three hits in six innings as Orleans took a 1-0 series lead in the East Division finals.

Daniels has pitched mostly as a reliever this summer – 10 appearances out of the bullpen and three starts – but he was up to the task against the streaking Whitecaps. He allowed a third inning home run to Hunter Bishop (Arizona State), but it was a solo shot and it would be Brewster’s only extra-base hit of the day. Daniels allowed two other hits – both singles – and didn’t walk a batter.

Cody Deason (Arizona) was even more dominant out of the bullpen, striking out five of the eight batters he faced over two scoreless innings. Josh Hiatt (North Carolina) pitched a scoreless ninth for his second save of the postseason.

Orleans staked its pitchers to an early lead with a run in the first inning and two in the second. Jimmy Herron (Duke) had three hits and scored two runs. Niko Decolati (Loyola Marymount), Stephen Scott (Vanderbilt) and Jeff Houghtby (San Diego) each drove in a run.

Orleans is one win away from its first title series since 2013.

Bourne 3, Wareham 2

Early this summer, Bourne was making a living off winning close games. Why would the West Division finals be any different? Seeking their first championship appearance since 2009, the Braves scored three runs in the fourth inning and held off Wareham for another one-run win. Jared Triolo (Houston) led the big inning with a two-run double and Tyler Fitzgerald (Louisville) had an RBI infield single. From there, four pitchers protected the lead. Starter Daniel Bies (Gonzaga) allowed one run in 4.2 innings and P.J. Poulin (UConn) surrendered an unearned run in two innings of work. Kyle Marman (Florida Atlantic) then worked two scoreless innings. With the tying run on third in the ninth, Jared Skolnicki (Kent State) came on and induced a pop-out to end the game.

What to Watch

Orleans visits Brewster at 4 p.m. and Bourne travels to Wareham for a 7 p.m. first pitch.

 

Holding Off The Magic

A.J. Graffanino had the game-winning hit in Monday's victory.
A.J. Graffanino had the game-winning hit in Monday’s victory.

 

The Y-D Red Sox still had their playoff magic.

Brewster was simply undeterred.

The Whitecaps ended Y-D’s three-year reign in the Cape League with an 8-7 victory in 10 innings Monday night in game three of their East Division semifinal series.

The Red Sox had taken game one Saturday with a stunning five-run ninth inning, capped by a Carlos Cortes walk-off home run that seemed like a sure sign of the magic’s return. But Brewster – on a good streak to end the season and with a strong core in its lineup – came back in impressive fashion Sunday with a 6-1 win.

Then came Monday, with more magic brewing. Brewster led 7-5 in the ninth inning when Y-D scored two runs to tie the game. Cortes was up with the winning run on third base, but there would be no deja vu. Ryan Cyr (Kansas) induced a ground ball to first base, and the Whitecaps escaped.

In the top of the 10th, Brewster got a two-out single from Zack Gahagan (North Carolina), a second-year Whitecap who had come on as a pinch hitter. A.J. Graffanino (Washington) – another second year player in Brewster – cracked an RBI double to score the go-ahead run.

Cyr then worked a 1-2-3 bottom of the 10th and the Whitecaps celebrated.

It’s the first series win for Brewster since its league championship run in 2000. It’ll be a tough road from here, but a hot team can always do damage in the Cape League playoffs.

For Y-D, Red Wilson Field will go quiet early. For perspective on its title run, consider that the playoff MVP the last time someone other than the Red Sox won it all is now playing center field for the Cleveland Indians. Bradley Zimmer led Cotuit to the 2013 title.

It was another strong year for the Red Sox, but there won’t be a four-peat.

Orleans 3, Chatham 1

The top-seeded Firebirds brought the best – and most intact – pitching staff in the league into the playoffs, and it showed when the chips were down Monday. Ryan Rolison (Ole Miss) tossed six innings of one-hit, shutout baseball as the Firebirds edged the Anglers in game three of their East Division semifinal series. Rolison, who had a 1.92 ERA in the regular season, saved his best for the postseason. He struck out seven, walked one and didn’t allow a hit until a fifth-inning double by Fabian Pena (Manhattan). In the meantime, Orleans grabbed a 1-0 lead in the first on a Jaxx Groshans (Kansas) RBI fielder’s choice and made it 3-0 in the fourth on an RBI single by Groshans and an RBI groundout by Lars Nootbaar (USC). Chatham scored a run in the eighth off reliever Jake Wong (Grand Canyon) and threatened for more with top hitter Johnny Aiello (Wake Forest) at the plate and two men on. But Wong struck him out to end the inning. Josh Hiatt (North Carolina) then tossed a scoreless ninth to finish off the win. While Orleans moves on, the Chatham loss marked the end of a legendary career for manager John Schiffner.

What to Watch

Division finals get underway tonight. Orleans – the lone No. 1 or No. 2 seed still alive – hosts Brewster at 7 p.m. Bourne welcomes in Wareham at 6.

Well, Well Wareham

Noah Zavolas struck out nine in Sunday's win
Noah Zavolas struck out nine in Sunday’s win

 

Since the Cape League playoffs expanded to eight teams, the No. 4 seed in the West Division has beaten the No. 1 seed more times than it’s lost. There were bigger upsets in terms of records.

Even still, this one comes as a major surprise.

Wareham lost 10 of its last 12 games in the regular season, the last three by a 37-10 margin. Along the way, significant roster attrition left the Gatemen without their best pitchers, the league batting champ and several other contributors.

But they’re heading to the West Division finals.

After a 10-5 win over Falmouth Saturday, the Gatemen finished off the sweep with a 4-3 triumph Sunday. It’s the sixth time the No. 4 seed has beaten the No. 1 seed in the West division first round over the last eight years.

To close out the sweep, the Gatemen turned to the one dominant pitcher still in the fold. Noah Zavolas (Harvard), who had shined since jumping into the rotation from the bullpen, allowed a first-inning run Sunday but didn’t surrender another over six innings of work. He struck out nine and didn’t walk a batter. The Commodores made a push against the bullpen, but Darrien Raigins (Kaiser University) – a Gateman for all of six days – struck out Trevor Larnach (Oregon State) and Austin Langworthy (Florida) with the tying run on second base to end the game.

Jake Anchia (Nova Southeastern) followed up his two-hit, four RBI performance in game one, with two more hits and three RBI. Willie MacIver (Washington) also drove in a run. Joe Drpich (Siena) scored a pair.

Falmouth out-hit the Gatemen 13-10, but the usual slugging was limited to three doubles. And with that, the league’s most powerful team – which had won four games in a row to end the regular season – was done.

Wareham advances to the West finals for the first time since 2012, when it won the Cape League title.

Bourne 6, Cotuit 3; Bourne 4, Cotuit 2

The Braves also completed an upset sweep, finishing off Saturday’s suspended game with a win and then taking the series in the nightcap. The teams picked up where Saturday’s game left off in the 10th and Bourne grabbed the lead with three runs in the top of the 11th inning. Two of the runs came home on an error and Jared Triolo (Houston) added an RBI single. Jared Skolnicki (Kent State) – making his first Cape League appearance – struck out two in the bottom of the 11th to seal the win. In game two, Cotuit tallied a run in the top of the first, but the Braves answered with three in the bottom half and led the rest of the way. Triolo, Jameson Hannah (Dallas Baptist) and Grant Williams (Kennesaw State) knocked in runs for the Braves. Eli Kraus (Kent State) allowed two runs in 5.1 innings for the win. Sean Leland (Illinois) and Chad Luensmann (Nebraska) finished it off.

Chatham 3, Orleans 1

The upsets were the surprise in the West. In the East, it’s the fact that both series will head to three games. Chatham stayed alive Sunday with a 3-1 win over top-seeded Orleans. Austin Bergner (North Carolina) – certainly an ace in the hole for the Anglers – struck out six and allowed one run in five innings. Adam Wolf (Louisville) then tossed three scoreless innings of relief and Jack DeGroat (Liberty) closed out the win in the ninth. Josh Stowers (Louisville) and Nick Patten (Delaware) drove in one run each for the Anglers, who took the lead in the fifth and held it from there. Orleans had 10 hits but left 10 runners on base.

Brewster 6, Y-D 1

Making just his third start of the summer after spending much of the season in the bullpen, William Tribucher (Michigan) went 7.2 strong innings, striking out six and allowed one run on four hits for the win. Nick Dunn (Maryland) led the Brewster offense with two RBI, while Kyle Datres (North Carolina), Mickey Gasper (Bryant) and AJ Graffanino (Washington) had one each. Y-D was held to four hits on the day.

What to Watch

A pair of game threes are on tap in the East as Brewster visits Y-D at 4 p.m. and Chatham heads to Orleans for a 6 p.m. start.

The West is Won

Hunter Steinmetz had two RBI in the season finale.
Hunter Steinmetz had two RBI in the season finale.

 

It took until the final day of the regular season, but the Cape League’s wild West Division race has finally been settled. Cotuit lost to Y-D Thursday afternoon, which secured the title for Falmouth. The Commodores promptly went out and made it a little more decisive with a 9-7 win over Hyannis.

The Commodores have been my pick for the West’s best in the Right Field Fog Power Rankings for much of the summer, but they had their ups and downs and couldn’t break free in the standings until the last few days. They’ve won four games in a row and seven of their last nine. They’ll be the West’s top seed in the playoffs for the second year in a row.

The offense stayed hot in the win over Hyannis. Trevor Larnach (Oregon State), Adley Rutschman (Oregon State) and Hunter Steinmetz (Missouri State) drove in two runs each. Clayton Daniel (Jacksonville State) and Joshua Breaux (McLennan CC) knocked in a run apiece.

It was a staff day on the mound, with Ian Koch (Western Illinois) – the third of seven pitchers – earning the win. Breaux, who pitched a little for McLennan in the spring and made two short appearances earlier this summer, pitched the ninth and struck out the side around a walk.

Falmouth will enter the playoffs in a tie for the most runs scored in the league and with the highest mark in home runs, doubles and slugging percentage.

Brewster 11, Harwich 10

Brewster won a wild slugfest with Harwich to claim the No. 3 seed in the East Division. The teams combined for 24 hits, but Brewster had a little more, going ahead 9-6 in the fifth and 11-6 in the eighth before holding off a final charge from Harwich for the crucial win. Michael Curry (Georgia) homered, while Mickey Gasper (Bryant) and A.J. Graffanino (Washington) drove in two runs each. Zack Gahagan (North Carolina) had two hits and scored two runs. Late roster addition Conor McNamara (Marist) went 3.1 scoreless innings of relief for the win. Brewster has won five of its last seven games, a stretch that includes a win over Y-D, its first-round playoff opponent. Harwich, who had already been eliminated from playoff contention, got back-to-back home runs in the ninth from Josh Smith (LSU) and Cobie Vance (Alabama) but the comeback ended there. Smith finished 4-for-4 with two home runs and five RBI.

Bourne 12, Wareham 5

Two games against a depleted Wareham pitching staff was just what the doctor ordered for the Braves. After losing five in a row, they ended the season with 25 runs in two wins over the Gatemen. Jared Triolo (Houston) went 2-for-4 with a homer and two RBI in the latest onslaught. Grant Williams had three hits and scored three runs. Jameson Hannah (Dallas Baptist) – red hot the last two weeks – stretched his hitting streak to 13 with a 2-for-4, two RBI day. Richard Palacios (Towson) also drove in two. Wareham, which has had a ton of late roster turnover, got home runs from newcomers Joe Drpich (Siena) and Giovanni Dingcong (St. Thomas Aquinas). Dingcong set the career NECBL home run record earlier this summer. The Gatemen hit the playoffs with a 2-8 record in their last 10 games.

Y-D 12, Cotuit 4

The Red Sox blasted four home runs and rolled past Cotuit, ending a string of three losses in their last four games. Carlos Cortes (South Carolina), Luke Miller (Indiana), Carter Pharis (UAB) and Nicholas Quintana (Arizona) all went deep for Y-D, with Cortes also hitting a triple and finishing 4-for-4 with four RBI. Tommy Henry (Michigan) struck out six in three innings of relief for the win. Cotuit, which settles for second place in the West, got home runs from Terrin Vavra (Minnesota) and Luke Alexander (Mississippi State).

Orleans 6, Chatham 4

With Brewster winning earlier in the day, Chatham locked in to the No. 4 seed, making its finale a playoff preview, as well. The Firebirds won it to finish with a record of 29-15, the best mark in the league. Chatham led 3-0 but Orleans scored three runs in the sixth inning and three more in the seventh to jump in front. Jaxx Groshans (Kansas) and Austin Hale (Stetson) homered to lead the Orleans attack. Joey Murray (Kent State) was credited with the win with two scoreless innings of relief and J.T. Hintzen (Florida Southern) picked up the save.

What to Watch

A day of rest today before the playoffs open Saturday. We’ll have the final edition of the power rankings posted later today.