Off to the Races

There’s a whole lot of baseball to be played this summer, but the 2013 Chatham Anglers have already made a little history. Chatham beat Y-D 8-5 on Sunday to improve to 4-0. That start is the franchise’s best since at least 2001, a span that included some pretty good years.

We’ll see what it means for the future. In both 2009 and 2010, Chatham started 3-0 but finished the year under .500.

But for now, the Anglers should feel pretty good.

Win number four came on the strength of the best offensive day any team in the league has had this season. The eight runs came on 11 hits, and three Anglers had multi-hit performances. Three also drove in two runs.

Blake Butera (Boston College), who was 1-for-9 coming in, broke out with a 4-for-5 day. He hit two doubles and knocked in two runs. Richard Prigatano (Long Beach State) also drove in two, and is tied for the early league lead in RBI with five. Brandon Sedell (Nova Southeastern) had two RBI as well.

The eight and nine hitters, A.J. Murray (Georgia Tech) and Dante Flores (USC), had two hits each and scored two runs.

The offense was enough for a quartet of pitchers. After starter Matt Gage (Siena) allowed three runs in 4.2 innings, Chad Sobotka (South Carolina Upstate) – who had blown a save the night before – worked 2.1 scoreless frames and got the win. Joe Goodman (High Point) picked up the save.

Sal Annunziata (Seton Hall) had three hits for Y-D and Auston Bousfield (Ole Miss) hit a home run. The Red Sox dropped to 2-3.

 

Wareham 2, Bourne 1

Defending champ Wareham got into the win column with a 2-1 victory over Bourne, who remained winless at 0-4. The Gatemen fell behind 1-0 but scored a run in the fourth and another in the fifth to jump in front and kept the score there the rest of the way. Cole Stancil (St. Leo) drove in the go-ahead run in the fifth. Kentucky freshman Kyle Cody gave Wareham a quality start, allowing just an unearned run on two hits in six innings. With the Gatemen in front, Tucker Simpson (Florida) and Ryan Riga (Ohio State) worked perfect innings and Christopher Huffman (James Madison) got the save after stranding runners on first and second in the ninth. For Bourne, Clinton Freeman (East Tennessee State) had two hits and Nigel Nootbaar (USC) pitched three perfect innings of relief, for his second scoreless outing.

 

Hyannis 4, Harwich 0

After a win in its delayed season opener, Hyannis made it two in a row with a shutout of Harwich (2-2). Andrew Thome (North Dakota) scattered five hits in seven scoreless innings and Sarkis Ohanian (Duke) sealed the deal with two innings of one-hit ball. The Harbor Hawks were shut-out for six innings by Kentucky’s Chandler Shepherd, who struck out six and allowed just one hit, but they pushed across four runs over the final three innings against the Harwich bullpen. Levi Borders (South Florida) went 2-for-4 with an RBI while Landon Curry (Indiana State) and J.C. Coban (Penn State) knocked in one each. Mark Zagunis (Virginia Tech) and C.J. Hinojosa (Texas) continued hot starts for Harwich with two hits each.

 

Cotuit 7, Falmouth 1

The Kettleers (3-1) posted their second straight win and their most lopsided of the summer so far. It was a 1-0 game most of the way before Cotuit scored six runs in the late innings. Connor Castellano (Sante Fe CC) hit a home run and drove in three, while Mike Ford (Princeton) went 3-for-4 with a pair of doubles. Alex Haines (Seton Hill), the NECBL’s top prospect last year, struck out seven in four scoreless innings. Christian Cecilio (San Francisco) picked up the win with 3.2 scoreless innings of relief. Falmouth starter Craig Schlitter (Bryant) allowed just a run in five innings, but the bullpen gave up six runs.

 

Orleans 4, Brewster 3

Orleans (2-1) rallied past Brewster (0-3) for a 4-3 victory. The Firebirds trailed 3-0 but scored a run in the third, two in the seventh and one in the eighth to grab the lead. Jordan Betts (Duke) scored the eventual winning run on an error in the eighth. Austin Davidson (Pepperdine) had two hits and two RBI to lead the Firebirds and Zach Fish (Oklahoma State) also drove in a run. On the mound, the Firebirds used six pitchers. Garrett Cole (UMass-Lowell) was credited with the win, and Matt Troupe (Arizona) picked up his second save with a second straight dominant outing. Troupe has recorded six outs in his two saves, all by strikeout.

 

What to Watch

Chatham will try to make it five in a row when it hosts Falmouth at 7 p.m. Andrew Chin (Boston College), a fifth-round pick out of high school, is slated to get the start for the Anglers. He pitched three scoreless innings of relief and got the win on opening night. Falmouth counters with John Means, who had a solid season for West Virginia.

Baseball’s Back

The sign pictured above greets drivers on Marion Road in Wareham. It’s a fitting image for day one of the Cape Cod Baseball League season, I think.

Baseball’s back.

The 2013 season got underway with four games (Brewster-Hyannis was postponed due to field conditions at McKeon Park).

In Wareham, it was certainly a new year. The last time the Gatemen were on a baseball field, they were dog-piling in Yarmouth, celebrating the Cape League championship. On Wednesday, a patched-together roster needed some late-innings magic but couldn’t find it. Chatham scored four in the eighth and three pitchers combined on a shutout in a 4-0 victory.

Starter Andrew McGee (Monmouth), the reigning Northeast Conference Pitcher of the Year, was tremendous for Chatham. He struck out seven in the first three innings and finished with nine in five innings. He allowed three hits. Ryan Leach (Franklin Pierce) pitched one inning and Andrew Chin (Boston College), a former fifth-round pick out of high school, finished the job with three perfect frames.

Wareham’s Sean Newcomb (Hartford) was almost as good, striking out six in six scoreless innings, but Chatham got it done against the Gatemen bullpen. Connor Joe (San Diego) and Jimmy Pickens (Michigan State) had back-to-back doubles in the eighth to start a rally. After a bases-loaded walk Wareham nearly got out of the jam with a double play, but Sheehan Planas-Arteaga (Barry) knocked a two-out single up the middle to plate two more runs.

Joe and Pickens each had two hits for Chatham, whose 11 hits were more than any other team on opening night.

Y-D 2, Bourne 0

Erick Fedde (UNLV) delivered the best pitching performance of opening night as Y-D shut out Bourne. Fedde, a solid weekend starter for the Rebels, tossed 6.2 scoreless innings in his Cape debut, allowing just two hits and striking out eight. Dan Altavilla (Mercyhurst) finished off the shutout with four strikeouts in 2.1 innings. Salvatore Anunziata (Seton Hall) and Fedde’s UNLV teammate Taylor White drove in one run apiece. Bourne starter Kyle Kubat (Nebraska) also pitched well, allowing just an earned run. Returning all-star Mason Robbins (Southern Miss) had a hit for the Braves.

Cotuit 4, Orleans 2

In posting the best record in the league last year, Cotuit flashed a tremendous bullpen. On opening night, the Kettleers picked up where they left off. Five pitchers held down Orleans in the 4-2 win, with four relievers allowing just a run on two hits over the final 4.1 innings. Eric Karch (Pepperdine) got the win in relief, while Derrick Caypiak (Mt. Aloysius) picked up the save. Hunter Cole (Georgia) led the offense with two hits and two RBI.

Falmouth 6, Harwich 2

Also a strong pitching performance in Falmouth, where Brandon Finnegan (TCU) struck out eight in five innings on his way to the win. Finnegan, who’s also on the Team USA roster, allowed a run on three hits. Notre Dame’s Pat Connaughton, the pitcher who’s also a basketball player for the Irish, got the start for Harwich and allowed just three unearned runs. Kevin Newman (Arizona) had a league-high three hits to lead the Commodores and also drove in a run. Conner Hale (State College of Florida) knocked in two.

What to Watch

If day two isn’t a wash-out, there should be a good match-up in the East, where perennial contenders Y-D and Harwich get together at Whitehouse Field. Two pitchers coming off solid springs will square off – Seton Hall’s Jose Lopez for Y-D and Nebraska’s Aaron Bummer for Harwich. Both of these teams still have some holes in the lineup, but they both also have returning stand-outs – A.J. Reed for Harwich and Robert Pehl for Y-D.