Opening Weekend

Eric Lauer led the Cape League in strikeouts last summer and will be part of a marquee pitching match-up on college baseball's opening day.
Eric Lauer led the Cape League in strikeouts last summer and will be part of a marquee pitching match-up on college baseball’s opening day.

Friday is a major milestone on the march to a Cape League summer – and a great day in its own right.

Division I college baseball opens with 137 games on the schedule. Cape League stars past and future will be on diamonds across America. If you’re in the mood to watch, Watch ESPN has 13 games streaming Friday, beginning at 4 p.m.

Without further ado, some Cape League-centric notes on the opening weekend proceedings . . .

  • Friday’s game between Virginia and Kent State at the Caravelle Resort Tournament in Myrtle Beach could be one of the highlights of the weekend. The Cavaliers are the defending national champs, while the Golden Flashes are a perennial mid-major contender and aren’t far removed from a 2012 trip to Omaha.Friday, the Golden Flashes will send former Orleans Firebird Eric Lauer to the hill, and he figures to give them a chance. Lauer had a terrific sophomore season last year, putting up a 1.98 ERA with 103 strikeouts. He didn’t slow down much on the Cape, leading the league with 50 strikeouts while posting a 2.04 ERA. MLB Pipeline lists Lauer as the 38th-best prospect for the 2016 Major League Baseball draft.His opponent Friday is Virginia’s Connor Jones, MLB Pipeline’s 11th-best prospect. Interestingly, Lauer and Jones were slated to be teammates in Orleans, but Jones sat out the summer after a heavy workload for the CWS champ Cavaliers. (Also an initial member of the Orleans pitching staff? No. 2 draft prospect A.J. Puk of Florida. Just a crazy collection of arms had it panned out).

    Lauer says he’s more confident than ever after his summer on the Cape, and he’ll need to be confident against the Cavaliers.

  • Lauer’s Orleans teammate Mitchell Jordan gets the start for Stetson Friday at 6:30 p.m. against Delaware. In a Stetson uniform last spring, Jordan was solid, with a 3.28 ERA. For the Firebirds, he was transcendent, posting a 0.21 ERA on his way to Cape League Pitcher of the Year honors. It’ll be interesting to see what Jordan’s big summer means for him this season. The Atlantic Sun named him a preseason all-conference pick.
  • The Volunteer State gets a cool baseball showcase when Tennessee and Memphis square off in Chattanooga this weekend. Tennessee will be led by a pair of 2015 Cape League standouts in infielder Nick Senzel and pitcher Kyle Serrano. Senzel earned league MVP and top prospect honors for Brewster and is projected to be one of the top players in the country this year, as well as a first-round pick. Serrano, another Orleans pitcher, will be an anchor for the Vols’ pitching staff.
  • Oklahoma State is ranked as high seventh in national preseason polls, and a guy who won big on the Cape is a major reason why. Donnie Walton, a key part of Y-D’s championship club, is one of seven starters back for the Cowboys. They face UT Arlington and Stephen F. Austin this weekend.
  • Matt Krook’s comeback started in Wareham, and it will continue Saturday when Oregon faces San Diego State. Krook was a supplemental first-round pick in 2013 who had Tommy John surgery. He missed all of the college season last spring before getting back on the mound for the first time with the Gatemen. And it could prove to be the beginning of a great comeback. Krook is MLB Pipeline’s 23rd-ranked prospect for the 2016 draft, and he was reportedly at the top of his game in Oregon’s final preseason scrimmage.
  • Andrew Calica’s season for UC Santa Barbara begins Friday at 5 p.m. against San Francisco, as the former Gatemen tries to build on hitting .400 on the Cape. As with the aforementioned Jordan, it’ll be very interesting what a terrific Cape League season will mean.
  • The series between Arizona and Rice shapes up as a good one. We’ll see if Bobby Dalbec’s ridiculous Cape League home run rate carries over to the spring.
  • Few players on the Cape last summer helped themselves more than Dakota Hudson in Hyannis. The Mississippi State flame-thrower delivered the production to match his projection and will be a big prospect to watch this spring. He’ll start for the Bulldogs Friday against Florida Atlantic.
  • Some future Orleans Firebirds will be on opposite sides when San Diego and Vanderbilt get together this weekend. San Diego catcher Riley Adams and Vandy’s Chandler Day, Donny Everett and Ethan Paul are all set to play in Orleans. Day was recently named the top freshman prospect in America by D-1Baseball.com. With a crowded staff that includes Cape playoff hero Ben Bowden, Day is likely to pitch out of the bullpen for the Commodores. Vanderbilt’s roster also features some future Cotuit Kettleers, including standout pitcher Kyle Wright and freshman infielder Alonzo Jones.
  • Consensus preseason No. 1 Florida is a little light on Cape League flavor after a ton of their rising juniors played for Team USA last summer. As for popular No. 2 pick Louisville, the Cards have plenty of Cape League roots. Brendan McKay and Nick Solak, who played for Bourne last summer, are poised for big years. Kyle Funkhouser, a Chatham Angler in 2013, is back after he was drafted in the first round by the Dodgers but didn’t sign. Louisville faces Southern Illinois-Edwardsville to open its season.

 

Appreciating 2015

Andrew Calica's .425 season was one of the highlights of 2015.
Andrew Calica’s .425 season was one of the highlights of 2015.

 
In making some lists on 2015 Cape League alumni to watch this college season, I was struck by some of the standout performances of last summer. The season goes so fast and ends so abruptly that it’s easy to lose track of the season that was. And postseason top prospect lists tend to focus on the talent level, not on what the players, fans and organizations experience on the Cape’s sandy shores.

For a brief trip down memory lane, start with Andrew Calica. The Wareham outfielder didn’t qualify for the batting title until late in the season, but when he did, history was made. Calica hit .425, becoming the first Cape Leaguer to hit the .400 mark since 1990. Several had come close over the years, but no one finished it off until Calica.

Bobby Dalbec hit four home runs in the first week of the season for Orleans, left for Team USA, came back in July and hit eight more home runs, plus two in the playoffs. Dalbec hit a home run every 8.2 at-bats. And in a two-year career with Orleans, the Arizona slugger hit 19 home runs in 62 games. From that perspective, he’s a Cape League all-timer.

On the mound, Mitchell Jordan finished with a 0.21 ERA for Orleans, matching Eric Milton’s 1996 Cape League record. He allowed two earned runs the entire season. And Y-D’s Ben Bowden had a remarkable run for the Red Sox after his July arrival. In 17.1 regular season innings out of the bullpen, he didn’t allow a single run. The first time anyone scored off him was in game three of the Cape League championship series – and it didn’t much matter. The Red Sox won 8-1 and Bowden finished it off.

There were plenty more great moments, of course, but those performances really stick out. It was a fun year.

Notes

  • Three former Cape Leaguers spent part of their winter in the Australian Baseball League, a relatively new venture that aims to grow the game Down Under and also serve as a winter destination for players in MLB systems. Former Orleans Firebird Maxx Tissenbaum, a Tampa Bay farm-hand, was on the Brisbane team that won the ABL championship. That squad beat Dallas Gallant (Hyannis) and the Adelaide Bite in the title series. Falmouth alum Rhys Hoskins hit eight home runs for the Sydney Blue Sox.
  • One week before the Division I season opens, the D-II ranks will treat baseball fans to a terrific pitching match-up in California this Friday. Former Wareham Gatemen pitcher Ryan Olson of Cal Poly Pomona will square off with Tyler Wells of Cal State San Bernardino. Both hurlers will get some draft buzz. Baseball America projected as the D-II national pitcher of the year.
  • Cool read on Kevin Costner’s connection to Cal State Fullerton baseball.
  • The Southern Conference tabbed 2015 Orleans star Kyle Lewis to repeat as the league’s Player of the Year. Lewis’ Mercer team is also atop the preseason poll.
  • Cape Leaguers Carmen Benedetti, Brett Adcock and Evan Hill lead a Michigan team that’s been picked as the Big Ten favorite.
  • Wareham announced the addition of new assistant coach Don Sneddon, the longtime coach at Santa Ana College and a former manager in the Rockies’ system. He joins a new-look staff that will be headed by first-year manager Gerry Weinstein, who was hired in September.
  • And lastly, the 2016 season begins in 119 days. Plan accordingly.
  •  

    Back to baseball

    baseballs rff crop
     
    Greetings! Why, yes, this is an off-season Right Field Fog post. Hopefully, the first of many.

    This time last year, I was knee-deep in my first season of covering college basketball in Rhode Island, and was hibernating in an igloo, but I’ve got a little more of a handle on it now and it’s warm all of a sudden. So, you can expect some regular stuff here in the next few months — this new hot stove notebook, plus college, draft and alumni talk.

    Happy New Year to you and yours. Let’s talk baseball.

  • It’s a bit quiet on the roster front, with only Cotuit, Harwich, Brewster andOrleans posting rosters at this point. A couple of names that caught my eye — Harwich’s Tyler Wilson was the Atlantic 10 Pitcher of the Year as a freshman at Rhode Island and has big-time potential. Brewster’s Brent Rooker, who had a late cup of coffee with the Whitecaps last year, was the NECBL MVP.
  • Circle June 10 on your 2016 calendar. That’s day one of the Cape Cod Baseball League season. Wareham visits Y-D and Orleans heads to Brewster for 5 p.m. starts, with Hyannis visiting Bourne at 6, Cotuit heading to Harwich at 6:30 and Chatham finishing things off at 7 with a home game against Falmouth. Also of note in the schedule — no more scheduled doubleheaders.
  • The league also announced that Veterans Field in Chatham will host the 2016 All-Star Game July 23. If I remember right, the last one in Chatham was pretty good.
  • Congratulations to Judy Walden-Scarafile on her retirement as Cape League president.
  • Y-D manager Scott Pickler has been inducted into his high school alma mater’s Athletic Hall of Fame. Considering his propensity for CCBL championships, it should come as no surprise that he won a California state baseball championship as a player.
  • The MLB Draft is set for June 9. Much can happen between now and then, but MLB Pipeline likes Orleans outfield-mates Kyle Lewis and Bryan Reynolds as Top 10 picks with former Firebird teammate Bobby Dalbec not far behind. Other CCBL names of note in the top 50 include Nick Senzel, Matt Krook, Jake Fraley and Ben Bowden.
  • Check out some alumni and college notes while you’re here. Yes, that’s 3 offseason posts!
  •  

    The Boys of August

    Y-D players stream onto the field after the final out of Wednesday's championship.
    Y-D players stream onto the field after the final out of Wednesday’s championship.

     
    If you want to win a Cape Cod Baseball League championship, your first objective should be to build a good team.

    Your second objective should be to keep the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox out of the playoffs.

    With an 8-1 win over Hyannis in game three of the title series Wednesday night, the Red Sox won their second consecutive Cape League crown and their fifth in 12 years. They’ve been the East Division’s No. 3 seed each of the last two years, hardly the favorite. They beat the East’s best team in the semifinals in both years. And they beat a sentimental favorite in the title round both times, dashing the dreams of clubs in long championship droughts in favor of more hardware for an already crowded trophy case.

    It’s hard to quantify how they do it. But they keep doing it. Since the Cape League expanded to eight playoff teams in 2010, no first-place team has won the title. It’s always been an upstart, often a No. 3 seed, and nobody has done it better than the Y-D Red Sox.

    Last year, they got off to a slow start in the regular season but were a much different team in the final two-thirds of the year. Though they only rose to third place, they went 24-19-1 and were playing some great baseball. When their pitching took over in the postseason, it was all over.

    This run was more unlikely. The Red Sox started the summer with four consecutive losses. They made their push again but barely cleared the .500 mark and finished 22-22. They ranked third in the league in hitting, fifth in ERA. In a year where parity did not reign – where division winners Orleans and Hyannis led almost wire-to-wire – average marks would not be good enough.

    The Red Sox needed a win or a Harwich loss on the final day of the season just to make the playoffs. The Mariners obliged and lost. That game finished a few minutes before Y-D’s finale ended. Learning that they were safely in the playoffs, the Red Sox took a deep breath — and lost. They hit the playoffs on a two-game slide.

    But they were in. And when they’re in, they know what to do.

    Three pitchers pieced together a strong opener and the Red Sox scored three in the eighth to beat Brewster. Ricky Thomas followed with six shutout innings in a 7-3, sweep-clinching win.

    Top-seeded Orleans needed three games to win its first-round series but was off-and-running against the Red Sox, winning the opener 4-0. Order would be restored.

    But just as it did last year, Y-D’s pitching staff began to flex its muscle.

    Cory Malcolm, Ben Bowden and Chad Hockin never blinked in a 13-inning marathon that resulted in a 2-1 win for the Red Sox. It was an elimination game – with five elimination innings folded in – and the Red Sox stayed alive.

    Dustin Hunt carried the torch in the third game. This wasn’t a Walker Buehler coming to the rescue from the College World Series and Team USA; this was a guy who pitches for Northeastern and started the year in the bullpen stepping up for an enormous performance.

    In both games, the Y-D offense scuffled, but got it done, and the Red Sox moved on.

    Sunday, Hyannis greeted the Red Sox with an 8-1 win. Again, the Red Sox had their backs against the wall. Again, order would be restored.

    But that pitching…

    And, out of nowhere, the offense.

    Thomas stayed perfect on the summer with a dominant performance in game two and the Red Sox smashed 18 hits. They never trailed. After a rain-out Tuesday, it all came down to game three Wednesday night, back at McKeon Park in front of the Harbor Hawk faithful.

    The Red Sox saved their best for last.

    Gonzaga’s Brandon Bailey, the loser in game one of the Orleans series, struck out seven in six innings of one-hit baseball. The one hit? A bunt single. Ben Bowden followed him to the hill. The Vanderbilt lefty’s ability to dominate in long relief outings made him Y-D’s best playoff weapon, and he was on his game Wednesday. He struck out three in three innings of relief.

    Both Bailey and Bowden pitched with a lead, as Y-D’s offense one-upped its 18-hit attack in game two with a 19-hit outburst Wednesday. An error let a run score in the first. Donnie Walton doubled in another in the fifth. Cole Billingsley blew the game open with a three-run homer in the eighth. The Red Sox did a good bit of their damage off Devin Smeltzer, who threw a no-hitter in June, and reliever Aaron Civale, who had a 0.36 ERA in the regular season.

    Hyannis, a perfect 5-0 in the playoffs before Monday’s loss, found itself in an even more unfamiliar position.

    Through an incredible eight innings, Y-D pitchers had faced the minimum. The Harbor Hawks finally made some headway, showing the grit that helped them author a special year, but it happened with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning.

    A run came in, but Bowden got a ground ball, flipped to first for the final out, and waited for the dog pile.

    Somehow, some way, they had done it again.

    I’d like to be able to break it down, pinpoint exactly how these last two Y-D teams have gotten hot at exactly the right time. Pitching is certainly the No. 1 factor. They play good defense, too. And the lineup – with the reinforcements that every team needs – has its mainstays, too, guys like Billingsley and Walton.

    It doesn’t pan out every year, but it has worked to perfection two summers in a row.

    Falmouth felt the sting last year. Hyannis was the victim this year. The franchise was on the cusp of its first title since 1991, back when they were the Mets. They’ve had their own tremendous run in recent years, winning three division titles in the last five years. But the top prize has proved elusive, and Y-D kept it that way.

    They called it the YDynasty back in 2007, when the Red Sox won their second consecutive Cape League championship and their third in four years. Those teams were all No. 1 seeds.

    These teams have been different – No. 3 seeds without the star power that made those ’04, ’06 and ’07 teams so good. But they hit the same finish line.

    If 12 years can count as one dynasty, then dust off the YDynasty label.

    The Boys of August fit right in.
     

    A sweep and a Classic

    Corey Bird, pictured earlier in the playoffs, knocked in the go-ahead runs as Hyannis punched its ticket to the championship.
    Corey Bird, pictured earlier in the playoffs, knocked in the go-ahead runs as Hyannis punched its ticket to the championship.

     
    Hyannis has had some very good teams in the last few years, winning or sharing the regular season division title in 2011, 2013 and this year. But for all that success, playoff runs proved elusive. In 2015, the Harbor Hawks have broken through. They’ll play for the Cape League title for the first time since 2000 thanks to a 4-2 victory last night that clinched a sweep of Bourne.

    The Harbor Hawks’ berth means we’re halfway to another first in a while — two No. 1 seeds meeting in the finals. It hasn’t happened since 2005. But it didn’t happen last night, either. No. 1 Orleans and No. 3 Y-D staged a 13-inning thriller in game two of their East division finals, and the Red Sox prevailed 2-1 to force game three.
     

    Hyannis 4, Bourne 2

    The Harbor Hawks had barely been challenged in starting the playoffs 3-for-3. Friday, that changed. Behind a strong performance from starter Alex Robles (Austin Peay), the Braves carried a 2-1 lead into the top of the ninth inning at Doran Park, three outs from forcing a third game.

    With Austin Conway (Indiana State) on the hill, that seemed a foregone conclusion. The Cape League’s co-relief pitcher of the year saved 10 games this summer and did not allow an earned run. The only unearned run he surrendered came in his first appearance of the summer. Conway has also saved three games against Hyannis.

    Friday, Conway came on in the eighth to protect the slim lead. It was business as usual with a scoreless frame.

    But in the ninth, Hyannis found some magic.

    Blake Tiberi (Louisville) walked, Matt Thaiss (Virginia) singled and Ryne Birk (Texas A&M) continued his red-hot postseason with an RBI single that tied the game. Conway was on the verge of keeping things tied, getting Corey Bird (Marshall) down 0-2 with two outs, but Bird then ripped a triple to score two more runs.

    It’s about as stunning a rally as I can remember in the Cape League playoffs.

    Aaron Civale (Northeastern) made it stand up with a scoreless bottom of the ninth and the Harbor Hawks were on to the championship.

    It’s their first appearance there since 2000, and they lost on that trip. Hyannis hasn’t won the Cape League title since 1991.

    A rally like Friday’s makes you think something special might happen this year.
     

    Y-D 2, Orleans 1

    The Red Sox scored a run on an error in the fourth inning. Kyle Lewis (Mercer) tied it for Orleans with a solo home run in the seventh. The teams would play six more scoreless innings before a wild pitch brought in the winning run in the bottom of the 13th.

    Orleans, with the league’s best record since 2007, is headed to a game three for the second straight series.

    Y-D had lost 4-0 in game one and didn’t have a ton more offense Friday, but capitalized on Firebirds miscues. A double by Dallas Carroll (Utah) set up the run-scoring error in the fourth.

    Orleans starter Tanner Tully (Ohio State) was otherwise dominant, giving up nothing else in six innings. Y-D starter Cory Malcolm (Arkansas Little Rock) was just as good, with Lewis’s home run is only blemish. Interestingly, Tully and Malcolm both attended Elkhart Central High School in Indiana.

    Though the next two pitchers had no such connection, they matched each other, too. Chandler Blanchard (Pepperdine) pitched six innings of no-hit, shutout ball, with six strikeouts. Ben Bowden (Vanderbilt) allowed two hits in five shutout innings for Y-D.

    It all came down to the 13th, when Y-D loaded the bases against reliever Jared Carkuff (Austin Peay) on two singles and a walk. After a force-out at home for the second out, the Red Sox had Mike Donadio (St. John’s) at the plate. He was down in the count 0-2, when the wild pitch allowed Gio Brusa (Pacific) to race home.

    Just like that, the Red Sox were alive.

    The teams will return to Eldredge Park tonight at 7 p.m. for game three.
     

    Back to Normal

    Alex Call waits for a throw at second base against Cotuit earlier this week. The Firebirds clinched the East title Thursday.
    Alex Call waits for a throw at second base against Cotuit earlier this week. The Firebirds clinched the East title Thursday.

     
    It was back to regularly-scheduled programming in the Cape League’s East Division on Thursday night. After two losses and a tie in their previous three games, the Orleans Firebirds looked like their old selves as they clinched the regular-season division title with a 12-8 victory over Hyannis. With Brewster losing, Orleans now cannot be caught.

    The Firebirds were not as sharp as usual on the mound, but their powerful offense was on target. The Firebirds hit two home runs in an eight-run second inning. They finished the night with 18 hits, five of which went for extra bases. Ten different players had at least one hit.

    With All-Star Game West MVP Devin Smeltzer (San Jacinto) on the hill for Hyannis, you wouldn’t have predicted a slugfest. But after getting a run in the first, the Firebirds went wild in the second inning. Bobby Dalbec (Arizona) hit a grand slam and Kyle Lewis (Mercer) followed that with a solo shot.

    Hyannis eventually found some of its offense, making it an 11-8 game in the eighth, but that was as close as it got.

    Dalbec went 2-for-3 and the home run was his league-best 11th. I sound like a broken record, but his pace is incredible. Dalbec has played in 25 games. Eleven of his 26 hits are homers.

    Lewis finished 4-for-5 with four RBI as he broke out of an 0-for-11 slump. Bryan Reynolds (Vanderbilt), Jeremy Martinez (USC), Daniel Pinero (Virginia) and Sean Murphy (Wright State) all chipped in two hits.

    Corbin Burnes (St. Mary’s) was credited with the win in relief.

    Orleans finishes its four-game season series against Hyannis with a 3-1 record. The Harbor Hawks are in line to win the West, but they aren’t there yet. In a season of Orleans success, it was fitting that the Firebirds got there first.

    With three games remaining, the Firebirds could still match the record of the 2007 Y-D Red Sox, who went 31-12-1, the best record in the league in at least the last 15 years.
     

    Y-D 2, Chatham 1

    With fifth-place Harwich losing to Wareham, Y-D had a chance to get some breathing room in the East standings. A seventh-inning rally against Chatham did the trick. The Red Sox won 2-1 and moved four points ahead of Harwich for the final playoff berth and just two points back of Chatham for the third seed. The Anglers broke a scoreless tie with a run in the sixth on a Will Craig (Wake Forest) RBI double. But in the very next half-inning, Y-D pushed the tying run across on a passed ball and plated the go-ahead run on a sacrifice fly by Gio Brusa (Pacific). Ben Bowden (Vanderbilt), who had come on in the sixth, ran with the lead, striking out seven of the 13 batters he faced in 3.2 scoreless innings of relief. Y-D is now 21-20. Chatham is 22-19.
     

    Falmouth 11, Brewster 7

    Falmouth isn’t dead quite yet. The Commodores snapped a seven-game losing streak with a victory over Brewster. Coupled with a Cotuit loss, the Commodores are only three points out of the final playoff spot in the West. J.B. Woodman (Ole Miss) went 2-for-4 with a home run to lead the offensive breakout for Falmouth. Mitch Longo (Ohio), Evan Skoug (TCU) and Tate Blackman (Ole Miss) each drove in two runs. J.J. Matijevic (Arizona) had two doubles. Conor Costello (Oklahoma State) got the win, giving up two runs in five innings. Brewster scored five runs in the seventh against the bullpen but the game was called due to darkness after that.
     

    Wareham 5, Harwich 2

    The Gatemen inched closer to a playoff spot while Andrew Calica (UC Santa Barbara) inched closer to hitting .400 for the year in a win over Harwich. Wareham now has a two-point edge on Cotuit for third place in the West and is five points in front of last-place Falmouth. As for Calica, he went 1-for-2, walked once and was hit by a pitch. It’s hard to raise a .439 average, but that line did it — Calica is now at .440 with just three games remaining. If you assume he gets 12 at-bats over those final three games, he would need just one hit in 12 at-bats to finish over .400. His teammates had a good offensive night Wednesday, as well. Jay Jabs (Franklin Pierce) went 3-for-4 with two RBI. Gavin Stupienski (UNC Wilmington) had two hits and an RBI. Brett Hanewich (Stanford) struck out eight and allowed just one earned run in five innings for the win. Shaun Anderson (Florida) pitched four innings of one-hit relief.
     

    Bourne 10, Cotuit 7

    Bourne rallied from a 5-0 deficit and won 10-7 in a game that was called after the seventh due to rain. Nick Solak (Louisville) went 3-for-5 with four RBI to spark the comeback efforts. Brendan McKay (Louisville) and Reid Humphreys (Mississippi State) knocked in two runs apiece, while Jason Delay (Vanderbilt) and Jacob Robson (Mississippi State) both had two hits and scored three runs. Joseph Christopher (St. John’s) gave up two unearned runs in 2.1 innings of relief to help set the stage for the comeback. Kyle Driscoll (Rutgers) got the win in relief. Bourne is 20-19-2 and still has a shot at the West division title. Cotuit fell to 16-25 with its second straight loss.
     

    What to Watch

    Chatham can clinch a playoff spot and clear up much of the East postseason picture if it wins tonight at Harwich.
     

    Red Hot Return

    Gio Brusa is riding an 11-game hit streak for Y-D, who has won four in a row.
    Gio Brusa is riding an 11-game hit streak for Y-D, who has won four in a row.

     
    Baseball America listed Gio Brusa (Pacific) as the Cape League’s fourth-best prospect last summer. The other players in the top five all were selected among the first 73 picks in the 2015 draft. Brusa was selected with pick number 701, in the 23rd round. The 6’3, 225-pound outfielder was coming off an injury-hampered junior season and he had reportedly indicated to teams before the draft that he was leaning toward a return to Pacific.

    With another year of college ahead, Brusa headed for the Cape and hooked on with the Y-D Red Sox, after spending last summer in Brewster. He got off to a shaky start, going 3-for-23 out of the gates, but since then, he has looked the part of the guy who kept good prospect company last year.

    Brusa is on an 11-game hitting streak and hit his fifth home run in that span last night as Y-D beat Harwich 5-3. Brusa is now hitting .277, is tied for the league lead in home runs with five and ranks sixth in the league in RBI with 14.

    Again, he has done essentially all of this in 11 games.

    Brusa’s hot streak has helped the Red Sox find their footing, too. Tuesday’s win was their fourth in a row. They’re 7-4 in the month of July and have moved one game over .500 at 15-14.

    Tuesday, they were tied with Harwich 1-1 before Brusa’s three-run homer powered a four-run fifth inning.

    Donnie Walton (Oklahoma State) and Tommy Edman (Stanford) added two hits and an RBI each. Edman is on a hot streak of his own, with hits in nine straight games.

    Stater Brett Adcock (Michigan) allowed two runs in 4.2 innings before a strong showing by the Y-D bullpen. Dalton Lehnen (Cincinnati) got the win in relief and Ben Bowden (Vanderbilt) picked up his first save. Bowden, a late arrival after Vandy’s run in Omaha, has struck out 12 in 6.1 scoreless innings this summer.

    Y-D is now tied with Brewster for third place in the East and only one game back of Chatham for second. With Brusa streaking toward a second straight all-star summer, the defending champion Red Sox may be primed for another run.
     

    Brewster 6, Chatham 0

    Alec Rash (Missouri) delivered perhaps the best performance of his college and Cape League career as Brewster shut out Chatham. Rash, a former second-round pick of the Phillies that has struggled at Missouri, tossed six innings of one-hit ball against the Anglers. He struck out five and didn’t walk a batter. Three relievers followed him to the hill and finished off the shutout, as Chatham managed just three hits. Toby Handley (Stony Brook) led the Brewster offense with two hits and two RBI. League batting and RBI leader Nick Senzel (Tennessee) went 1-for-5 and knocked in his 19th run. J.C. Escarra (Florida International) and Ryan Peurifoy (Georgia Tech) also had RBI. Brewster is now just one game back of Chatham for second place in the East.
     

    Hyannis 5, Falmouth 2

    The Harbor Hawks stopped Falmouth’s four-game winning streak and upped their West division lead to four games with a 5-2 victory. Devin Smeltzer (Florida Gulf Coast) delivered his best start since his no-hitter last month, giving up one earned run and striking out five in 6.2 innings of work. Aaron Civale (Northeastern) notched his third save in relief of Smeltzer. Ryne Birk (Texas A&M) went 2-for-4 with three RBI to lead the Hyannis attack. Austin Hays (Jacksonville) homered, while Jacob Noll (Florida Gulf Coast) and Arden Pabst (Georgia Tech) had two hits each.
     

    Orleans 8, Wareham 2

    East-leading Orleans also gained a little more distance, pushing its lead to five games with a win over Wareham and a Chatham loss. Eric Lauer (Kent State), who’s doing his best to keep up with teammate Mitchell Jordan, struck out nine and gave up one run on two hits in five innings of work. Lauer is now second in the league in strikeouts to Jordan with 39 and fifth in ERA with a 1.45 mark. Catcher Sean Murphy (Wright State) went 3-for-5 for the second time in four games, raising his average to .235 and continuing his emergence as another big bat in the powerful Firebirds lineup. Bryson Brigman (San Diego) added two RBI.
     

    Cotuit 3, Bourne 1

    The Kettleers moved within two games of second-place Bourne in the tightly-packed West standings with a 3-1 win over the Braves. Jeren Kendall (Vanderbilt) had two hits, a home run and an RBI, giving him six hits in five games since his late arrival. Brett Stephens (UCLA) added two hits. Matthew Milburn (Wofford) allowed just an unearned run in 5.2 innings for the win. Justin Dunn (Boston College) tallied his fourth save.
     

    What to Watch

    Daulton Jefferies (California), who had a 2.57 ERA with Team USA, makes his return to Wareham as the Gatemen visit Chatham tonight.
     

    Red Sox out to defend title

    YD_15 quick look
     
    The Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox surged to their fourth Cape Cod Baseball League championship in 11 years last summer, completing the run with a sweep of Falmouth in the title series. They made the run after finishing third in the East Division during the regular season and shuffling their roster regularly.

    Another talented group, led by a deep pitching staff and a host of big-name freshmen, is on its way.
     

    FIVE TO WATCH

    1. Mike Shawaryn
    2. J.J. Schwarz
    3. Will Toffey
    4. Cole Billingsley
    5. Brett Adcock
     

    NOTABLE

  • Maryland is headed to a Super Regional and ace Mike Shawaryn has been a big reason why. After setting a school record for wins as a freshman, Shawaryn took the leap into bona fide ace territory this year, going 13-2 with an eye-popping 133 strikeouts. This may be the first preview, but it’s hard to imagine anyone in the Cape League has a better pitching coming to town than Y-D has with Shawaryn.
  • Shawaryn heads a list of starting pitchers with strong track records on the Y-D roster. Brett Adcock, Brandon Bailey and Shane Bieber were workhorses this year, with Adcock and Bailey both striking out more than 90.
  • Y-D had the league’s most fearsome closer last year in Phil Bickford. David Ellingson may not have the same pedigree, but he’s got the numbers. The Georgetown standout saved nine games with an ERA under 1.00 this season.
  • The Cape League always has a few native sons in uniform. Barnstable native Will Toffey could be the best in recent memory. The Vanderbilt freshman already lit up the Futures League last year and has forced his way into the lineup for the defending College World Series champions as a freshman.
  • TCU’s Brian Howard stands 6’9. That is all.
  • Y-D is slated to have three freshman catchers from powerhouse SEC programs. All have big potential, but J.J. Schwarz has made it good on more quickly than the others, with 15 homers for Florida in his debut season.
  • Y-D could have a very athletic outfield, with Stephen Wrenn of Georgia and South Alabama’s Cole Billingsley patrolling. Wrenn had started at center field in every game of his college career and flashed potential for Bourne last summer. Billingsley ranked 16th in the nation in stolen bases this year.
  • St. John’s Mike Donadio didn’t have a great sophomore year, at least compared to his Big East Rookie of the Year campaign in 2014, but he’ll be a valuable presence for the Red Sox this summer. A late addition last year, Donadio hit .367 with two home runs in the playoffs.
  • The Red Sox will likely have one of the youngest teams in the league, with 13 freshman ticketed for Red Wilson Field. That includes nine position players, who often struggle as freshmen on the Cape.
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    PITCHERS

    Brett Adcock – SO – Michigan – Third-team all-Big 10 lefty K’d 95 in 90 IP, with a 3.10 ERA
    Brandon Bailey – SO – Gonzaga – Strong starter for Gonzaga went 8-3 with 3.72 ERA and tied for 3rd in WCC with 91 Ks
    Shane Bieber – SO – UC Santa Barbara – Dominated in West Coast League last summer and earned all-conference nod this year
    Ben Bowden – SO – Vanderbilt – Native of Lynn, Mass., has been valuable bullpen arm, with 45 Ks in 34.2 IP
    Gabe Cramer – JR – Stanford – Saw limited action in first two years, emerged as good reliever this year
    David Ellingson – SO – Georgetown – Dominant closer had 9 saves, .75 ERA this season
    Alex Faedo – FR – Florida – Late-round pick last year has been solid swing guy this spring, with 3.36 ERA
    Mitch Hart – FR – USC – Jumped right into weekend rotation and posted 4.07 ERA; second on team in IP
    Brian Howard – SO – TCU – Six-foot-nine righty struck out 43 in 43 innings this spring, pitching mostly out of bullpen
    Dustin Hunt – SO – Northeastern – ERA ballooned near five, but righty from Andover, Mass., led Huskies in Ks
    Dalton Lehnen – FR – Cincinnati – Freshman lefty led Cincy in starts but went 1-7 with 5.56 ERA
    Mike Shawaryn – SO – Maryland – One of nation’s best pitchers went 13-2, had 1.66 ERA and struck out 133, 4th nationally
    Ricky Thomas – FR – Fresno State – Freshman lefty had solid debut with 3.92 ERA
    Chris Viall – SO – Stanford – Solid swing man on pitching staff had 4.73 ERA this season
     

    CATCHERS

    Mike Papierski – FR – LSU – 16th-rd pick in 2014 draft has hit .214 in limited action for loaded LSU team
    Nathan Rodriguez – FR – Arkansas – Talented catching prospect was declared ineligible this season and did not play
    J.J. Schwarz – FR – Florida – 17th-rd pick last year has had huge freshman season: .320 with 15 HR, 66 RBI
     

    INFIELDERS

    Tommy Edman – SO – Stanford – Started every game this spring, hit .296 with a homer
    Dalton Guthrie – FR – Florida – Late-round pick in 2014 has started every game in debut season, posting .290 average
    Ryan Lillard – FR – Arizona State – Iowa native hit .233 in 26 games as a freshman
    Will Toffey – FR – Vanderbilt – Barnstable native & top prospect in Futures League last year hitting .309 in first year at VU
    Connor Wong – FR – Houston – Hit .248 with six homers in first season with Cougars
     

    OUTFIELDERS

    Cole Billingsley – JR – South Alabama – Had big year after medical redshirt in 2014, batting .345 and swiping 30 bags
    Luke Bonfield – FR – Arkansas – Mets’ 21st-rd pick in ’14 has hit .164 in limited duty for Razorbacks
    Michael Donadio – SO – St. John’s – Big East Rookie of Year in 2014 batted .302 this year
    Ryan Noda – FR – Cincinnati – Hit .230 and was second on UC to former CCBL all-star Ian Happ in HRs with 7
    Stephen Wrenn – SO – Georgia – Has started all 109 games of UGA career in CF; hit .324 with 8 HR this year