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.
 

Nick of Time

Nick Senzel is hitting .463 in his last 10 games and has taken over the league lead in hitting.
Nick Senzel is hitting .463 in his last 10 games and has taken over the league lead in hitting.

 
Nick Senzel has had two very good spring seasons at Tennessee, but his first taste of summer baseball last year wasn’t quite so good. Senzel hit three home runs but only batted .210 for the Matsu Miners in the Alaska Baseball League.

This year, Senzel is having the kind of summer that matches his springs. With a 4-for-5 night in Brewster’s 2-0 win over Cotuit Sunday, Senzel is now leading the Cape League in hitting, RBI, extra-base hits and slugging percentage.

The 6’1, 205-pound infielder got off to a strong start for the Whitecaps and really turned it on when the calendar flipped to July. Senzel has a hit in eight of his last 10 games and is batting .463 in that span, raising his average from .306 up to the current league leading mark of .369. He has six multi-hit games, two home runs and six extra-base hits in the month of July.

Senzel has set the pace for a Brewster team that has the best batting average in the league. Sunday, his 4-for-5 day included a double and an RBI as the Whitecaps topped Cotuit. For good measure, Senzel stole a pair of bases, giving him 11 on the summer, which is tied for the league lead.

The two runs didn’t represent a typical performance for the Whitecaps, who don’t often win pitchers duels. But with the offense providing just enough, Tyson Miller (California Baptist) went five scoreless innings and the bullpen gave up just one hit over the final four innings to seal the win.

Tyler Ramirez (North Carolina) added an RBI.

The Whitecaps improved to 14-14 good for a third-place tie with Y-D in the East. With Senzel leading the charge, July may get even better.
 

Orleans 5, Hyannis 4 (10 innings)

Kyle Lewis (Mercer) has had some big moments this summer, but few could match Sunday, when Lewis hit a walk-off single in the bottom of the 10th to give the Firebirds a 5-4 victory over Hyannis in a match-up of division leaders. Hyannis had scored two in the ninth to force extra innings, but three walks loaded the bases for Lewis in the 10th. With two outs, he smacked a base hit to plate the winning run. The victory moved Orleans to 20-8, and the Firebirds are now four games better than any team in the league. Jared Carkuff (Austin Peay) picked up the win in relief. Nick Zammarelli (Elon), Ronnie Dawson (Ohio State) and Bobby Dalbec (Arizona) all had two hits for the Firebirds, with Dalbec hitting his fifth home run in just 13 games and his first since returning from a Team USA stint. For Hyannis, Jake Rogers (Tulane) hit a two-run homer that tied the game in the ninth.
 

Y-D 3, Wareham 2 (10 innings)

There was also free baseball at Red Wilson Field, where Y-D rallied from a late 2-0 deficit and won it in the 10th on a walk-off single by Mike Donadio (St. John’s). The Red Sox scored a run in the seventh and one in the ninth to force extras. A single by Donnie Walton (Oklahoma State) and a double by Gio Brusa (Washington) set the table for Donadio, who came through with the two-out base hit to score Walton. The rally made a winner out of Cory Malcolm (Arkansas Little Rock). Tommy Edman (Stanford) had three hits for the Red Sox while Connor Wong (Houston) homered. For Wareham, Andrew Calica (UC Santa Barbara) came through with his fourth consecutive two-hit game.
 

Chatham 2, Harwich 0

Four pitchers combined to surrender just four hits as the Anglers shut out Harwich at Whitehouse Field. Garrett Williams (Oklahoma State), a lefty with big potential, made his first start after four relief appearances and tossed five scoreless innings with six strikeouts. Brandon Miller (Millersville), Cameron Stone (Stony Brook) and Aaron McGarity (Virginia Tech) followed suit, going the final four innings to finish off the shutout. Harwich pitching was also strong, but Chatham broke up the shutout with two runs in the fifth on RBI singles from Garrett Hampson (Long Beach State) – who’s back from Team USA – and Kyle Brooks (North Florida).
 

Falmouth 8, Bourne 6

Because they began the run at the bottom of the West standings, it’s been a little quiet, but Falmouth has won four in a row and is the hottest team in the league. J.J. Matijevic (Arizona) went 3-for-4 with three runs scored and two RBI to lead a 12-hit attack in the win over Bourne. Logan Ice (Oregon State) added two hits and two RBI, while Heath Quinn (Samford) chipped in two hits and two runs scored. Falmouth used six pitchers, with Jack Finnegan (McLennan CC) getting the win. Wyatt Short (Ole Miss) struck out four of the five batters he faced for the save. Falmouth is now just two points out of second place in the West.
 

What to Watch

League-wide off-day today. When action resumes Tuesday, Hyannis will try to slow down red-hot Falmouth when it visits Guv Fuller Field.