Surging

J.J. Matijevic and Falmouth have found their way into the playoff race.
J.J. Matijevic and Falmouth have found their way into the playoff race.

 
It was all looking so clear. Division leaders clinched playoff spots a while ago. Second-place teams soon joined them. Third and fourth place couldn’t be far behind.

They are, in fact, very far behind.

With a few losses leaving the door open, and their pursuers getting hot, six teams find themselves alive in the playoff race with one day remaining in the regular season. With four teams already safely in, that’s all 10 Cape League teams alive for postseason play with one game to go.

The race has been driven by the teams who were bringing up the rear. Falmouth and Harwich looked like the odd men out a week ago. The Commodores were in the midst of a losing streak that would stretch to seven games. Harwich was hovering near .500 but not making up much ground.

Just a few days later, they’re in the mix.

Falmouth has won three in a row since stopping the losing streak, including the best win of all last night. The Commodores trailed West division winner Hyannis 3-1 late in the game, but scored six runs in the eighth and two in the ninth in storming to a 9-3 win.

Heath Quinn (Samford) started the rally with a game-tying, two-run homer. A base hit by J.B. Woodman plated another run before J.J. Matijevic (Arizona) and Shane Benes (Missouri) hit run-scoring doubles.

Matijevic finished 3-for-5 with two RBI. He’s been on fire lately, going 13 for his last 25, and that stretch has certainly helped Falmouth make its run.

Ben Ancheff (St. Thomas) got the win in relief for Falmouth. The Commodores are now just one point behind Wareham and Cotuit in the West standings. With Cotuit and Wareham meeting today, the Commodores will have a chance to leapfrog one of them with a win.

As for Harwich, the Mariners won for the second straight night, 7-3 over Brewster. Operating with no margin for error – a loss yesterday would eliminate them and the same is true today – Harwich has kept itself alive.

The bats set the stage Saturday, scoring three runs in the first and one in the second. Brock Deatherage (NC State) and Connor Justus (Georgia Tech) both homered. Matt Gonzalez (Georgia Tech) and Cavan Biggio (Notre Dame) added two hits each.

Scott Tully (Notre Dame) gave up three runs in 5.1 innings and the bullpen allowed just two hits over the final 3.2 innings.

Harwich is now two points back of Chatham and Y-D, who are tied for third. The Mariners will face Brewster again in their finale, needing a win and some help to stay in it.
 

Cotuit 11, Y-D 0

In danger of falling into last place, the Kettleers snapped a three-game skid by blasting Y-D. Tim Susnara (Oregon) went 2-for-5 with five RBI to pace the 14-hit attack. Josh Rojas (Hawaii), playing in just his fourth game, went 3-for-4 and scored two runs. All the offense was more than enough for Daniel Brown (Mississippi State), who worked 6.1 scoreless innings with four strikeouts. Luke Olson (George Washington) finished the job.
 

Bourne 5, Wareham 4

The Gatemen had 14 hits, but Bourne erased a one-run deficit with two in the eighth in a 5-4 victory. C.J. Chatham (Florida Atlantic) was the hero in the eighth with a two-run double, part of a two-hit night. Reid Humphreys (Mississippi State) and Nick Solak (Louisville) also had two hits each. After the rally, Austin Conway (Indiana State) worked a scoreless ninth for his 10th save. He still has a 0.00 ERA. For Wareham, the Andrew Calica .400 watch is moving right along. Calica went 2-for-5 and is hitting .427 with just one game left. Unless something crazy happens – an 0-for-8 day perhaps – Calica will finish over .400. At the rate he’s going, he may even crack the all-time Cape League top five, which all came from the metal bat era.
 

Orleans 4, Chatham 2

The magic number for Chatham has been one for much of the week, but the one has proved elusive. Orleans handed the Anglers’ their third straight loss Saturday. Tanner Tully (Ohio State) went six innings and gave up only two unearned runs. Eder Erives (Arizona State) picked up the save. Jeremy Martinez (USC), Willie Abreu (Miami) and Ronnie Dawson (Ohio State) drove in runs for Orleans. The Firebirds have won three straight and, with a win Sunday, can match the 2007 Y-D Red Sox for the best record since 2000.
 

What to Watch

Everything, pretty much. With so many teams still in the mix, there will again be playoff implications in every game. The match-up between Cotuit and Wareham at Spillane Field is the only one in which neither team has clinched, so that one may be particularly interesting. History could also be made, as Calica’s quest for .400 hits the finish line.
 

Chasing a Title

Andrew Calica is hitting .426 and should soon qualify for the batting title.
Andrew Calica is hitting .426 and should soon qualify for the batting title.

 

Yesterday’s games were the start of a mad dash to the finish in the Cape League, where there won’t be a day off until it’s all over. There’s much to be decided in the standings — and one very interesting race to be decided on league leaderboards.

Wareham’s Andrew Calica (UC Santa Barbara) went 2-for-6 in the Gatemen’s 12-inning, 4-4 tie with Harwich last night. The lefty-swinging outfielder is now batting .426. He has 17 hits in his last seven games. Assuming he stays hot, he looks like the favorite to win the batting title . . . as long as he gets enough plate appearances.

Calica arrived in Wareham two weeks into the season, and though he has been red-hot since the day he stepped foot on the Cape, he has yet to make an official appearance in the race for the league’s batting title. Players need a minimum of 2.7 plate appearances per team game, and Calica has yet to reach that threshold.

But it’s a number he’s steadily catching up to, and if he stays hot over the final week of the season, he could win the batting title and become the first Cape Leaguer to hit .400 since Mark Smith did it for Wareham in 1990.

Calculating plate appearances requires a bit of math (ABs + BBs + HBP + Sacrifices), so feel free to check me on this, but I’ve got Calica for 105 plate appearances as of last night (94 ABs + 6 BBs + 3 HBP + 2 Sacrifices). To qualify right now, through 39 team games, he would need 105.3 plate appearances, so he’s almost there.

If he gets three plate appearances tomorrow – a pretty good bet – he’ll be right on the number of 108 through 40 games. The end-of-season number needs to be 118.8. So Calica needs 14 plate appearances over his final five games to get above that mark.

As for the quest for .400, Calica has as good a chance as anybody I can remember. He’s averaging about 3.6 at-bats per game, which would give him 18 more at-bats this season. If he gets five hits in that span, he’ll finish at .402.

Calica’s performance Tuesday helped Wareham grab a point in the standings with the tie against Harwich. Mark Karaviotis (Oregon) and Connor Beck (TCU) also chipped in two hits, while Andrew Knizner (NC State) homered. The Gatemen trailed 4-3 in the top of the ninth but forced extras on Knizner’s home run.

Harwich got two hits and two RBI from Connor Justus (Georgia Tech). Sheldon Neuse (Oklahoma) pitched 2.1 scoreless innings of relief to keep the game tied in extras. The Mariners are 17-20-2 and the point they picked up with the tie moves them just two points out of a playoff spot.

Wareham is now 15-22-2 and is tied with Cotuit for third place in the West.

The Gatemen have yet to clinch a playoff spot, so they’ll be pushing hard over the season’s final week. Calica will be leading the charge.
 

Bourne 5, Y-D 3 (10 innings)

The Harwich-Wareham game was one of three extra-innings affairs on a wild night around the league. With a 10-inning victory over Y-D, Bourne clinched a playoff spot. The Braves are 19-18-2 and have won four in a row. Y-D tied last night’s game with two runs in the seventh inning, but as darkness closed in at Red Wilson Field, Bourne pushed two runs across in the 10th on consecutive bases-loaded walks to Reid Humphreys (Mississippi State) and Corey Julks (Houston). Austin Conway (Indiana State) then worked a perfect bottom of the 10th for his league-leading ninth save. Conway still hasn’t allowed an earned run all summer. Jacob Robson (Mississippi State) chipped in a home run for Bourne.
 

Orleans 6, Brewster 6 (12 innings)

Orleans was on the brink of clinching the outright East Division title, but second-place Brewster touched up the bullpen for four runs in the eighth and one in the ninth to force extras. The teams went on to play three more innings before the game was called in a tie. Mitchell Jordan (Stetson) allowed one unearned run in five innings, putting his season ERA at 0.21. The Firebirds staked themselves to a lead, as well, scoring all six of their runs in the first four innings. Bobby Dalbec (Arizona) hit his 10th home run and drove in three, while Daniel Pinero (Virginia) had two RBI. Brewster came to life in the eighth with a Nick Senzel (Tennessee) RBI single, a two-run triple by J.C. Escarra (Florida International) and an RBI groundout by Cassidy Brown (Loyola Marymount). Trailing by one in the ninth, Escarra plated the tying run with a base hit. Eder Erives (Arizona State) came out of the bullpen after that and slammed the door, pitching the final 3.1 innings, but the damage had been done. Had Orleans beaten Brewster, the teams would have been 12 points apart in the standings with five games left. As it is, they’re 10 points apart, which means there’s still a slim chance they could finish tied if Brewster wins its last five and Orleans loses all five.
 

Cotuit 6, Falmouth 1

The Kettleers won their third straight and gained a little more distance on the fading Commodores in the West Division race. Cotuit broke a 1-1 tie with four runs in the sixth inning. Spencer Gaa (Bradley) and Jeren Kendall (Vanderbilt) knocked in runs ahead of a two-run single by Will Haynie (Alabama), who finished with three RBI on the day. The rally made a winner out of Nick Lewis (Baylor), who tossed four scoreless innings of relief, striking out three and giving up no hits. Matthew Milburn (Wofford) had given Cotuit a solid start, allowing one run in five innings. Gaa, Kendall, Haynie and Branden Berry (Cal State Northridge) each had two hits to power the Cotuit offense. The Kettleers are now 16-23 and tied with Wareham for third place in the West. Falmouth, which has lost six in a row, is five points back Cotuit and Wareham.
 

Hyannis 4, Chatham 3

Even with Bourne surging, Hyannis still has a three-point edge at the top of the West thanks to a narrow victory over Chatham at Veterans Field last night. Jacob Noll (Florida Gulf Coast) went 3-for-3 with an RBI to lead the way, while Austin Hays (Jacksonville) had two hits and two RBI. Corey Bird (Marshall) scored two runs. Blake Quinn (Cal State Fullerton) allowed one earned run in five innings for the win. Aaron Civale (Northeastern) struck out five of the nine batters he faced in the two-inning save.
 

What to Watch

Orleans and Brewster will meet for the second straight night. League strikeout leader Eric Lauer (Kent State) goes for the Firebirds against Tyson Miller (California Baptist), who has a 2.11 ERA for the Whitecaps.