Tigers catch UCI off base
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Barry Faulkner
Fans were misplaying foul pops and the unofficial University of the
Pacific fight song “Eye of the Tiger” mysteriously echoed briefly
from the public-address system when the Tigers were at-bat late in
the game.
But the real proof that it was an off night for the locals Friday
night at Anteater Ballpark came from the host UC Irvine baseball
players, who struggled during a startling 2-1 loss to a UOP team that
entered on a nine-game losing streak, including six setbacks to open
the Big West Conference campaign.
UCI’s offensive futility, baserunning blunder and pair of errors,
one of which produced the game-winning unearned run, extended its Big
West losing skein to five and dropped the Anteaters, ranked No. 9 by
Collegiate Baseball and No. 16 by Baseball America, to 24-11-1, 2-5
in conference.
UOP (16-22, 1-6), which had lost 14 of its last 15, rode a
career-best pitching performance by sophomore right-hander Eric
Stolp, who earned his second win in seven decisions by shutting down
the Anteaters into the ninth inning. Stolp, making his fifth start of
the season, had not lasted more than 4 2/3 innings his previous
four. But, after stranding two runners in the first inning, he
allowed only four more hits, struck out three and walked none, before
surrendering the ball to closer Josh Schmidt with one out and a
runner on first in the ninth.
Schmidt had to work extra hard for his sixth save as senior Andy
Willick, a pitcher playing his first game at shortstop this season,
made errors on consecutive routine double-play grounders to give the
‘Eaters extended life.
Willick bobbled a ground ball near the second-base bag to allow
Mark Wagner to reach -- after R.J. Brown was hit by a pitch with one
out -- to put the tying run aboard.
Pinch-hitter Jaime Martinez followed with a hard grounder to
second baseman Octavio Amezquita, who flipped to Willick for the
force. Willick, however, air-mailed the relay throw to first for the
would-be final out, allowing Brown to score from second and Martinez
to reach second.
But Jordan Szabo, who was nailed easily trying to steal third with
two outs in the second, struck out to cap a disappointing evening for
UCI.
“That’s not how you start a series,” said UCI Coach John Savage,
who praised both starting pitchers, including UCI junior ace Brett
Smith, who, despite 12 strikeouts, dropped his second straight
decision, after opening the season 6-0.
“I thought Smith was as good as he has been all year, with 12
strikeouts and no walks,” Savage said. “But you’ve got to give it to
their starter. [Stolp] held us in check the whole night and really
should have had a shutout. He threw strikes, they played defense and
it was a good, clean college game.” Savage, however, admitted his
team was in a funk.
“For whatever reason, since the Long Beach series [a three-game
sweep by the 49ers last weekend at Blair Field], we haven’t swung the
bat real well. But, we’ll bounce back [today]. We have a lot of
experience and a lot of character. Our back is up against the wall
and we need to step up and play well for nine innings and come out
with a sense of urgency, offensively.” Savage said he could not
pinpoint the reason for his team’s lack of sharpness.
“I’m a coach, not a psychologist,” he said. “What do you say in a
2-1 game? I mean both guys pitched well, but when we strike out 14
guys and lose [reliever Steve Schroer fanned two in a perfect ninth],
it’s tough to take.”
Smith, who moved to No. 2 on the school’s career strikeout list
with 230, struck out seven of the first eight batters. But Pacific’s
No. 9 hitter, Nicholas Sekiya lined a home run just over the fence in
left to stun the crowd of 826, as well as Smith and his teammates. It
was Sekiya’s first homer of the season.
Amezquita doubled to open the fifth and scored when Smith fielded
a subsequent sacrifice-bunt attempt and threw wildly to third trying
to catch Amezquita, allowing him to score.
UCI threatened in the eighth when Danny McCarthy and Brett Dalton
singled. But, with two outs, left fielder Jordan Seiber retreated to
the fence and jumped to take Matt Fischer’s fly ball high off the
fence to extricate Stolp, who did not allow a runner to reach third
after the first inning, from the jam.
Matt Anderson went 2 for 4 to lead UCI’s six-hit attack.
“We dropped [Stolp’s] arm angle about two weeks ago and, for some
reason, it freed him up a little bit,” UOP first-year coach Ed
Sprague, a former major leaguer, said. “He has been able to throw
more pitches with less effort and he has been more consistent in the
strike zone. Before, he’d throw 20 pitches and he’d be sucking wind,
sweating all over the place. Tonight, he threw 101 pitches and he was
barely breaking a sweat.
“It’s our first win in a while [since April 1] and to beat a team
that has played really well this season, was a good confidence
booster for our kids,” Sprague added. “They were starting to really
get down on themselves.”
ZOTS -- The UOP series continues today and Sunday with both games
scheduled for 1 p.m. The pitching matchup for today pits UCI junior
Glenn Swanson (6-2, with a 4.32 ERA) against senior right-hander Andy
Willick (4-4, 5.49), while UOP freshman right-hander Mike Mathews
(1-6, 7.43) will face UCI freshman Justin Cassel (3-2, 1.89) Sunday
... UOP ace Alex Graham (4-1, 2.66) misses his normal Saturday start
with elbow tendinitis. UOP No. 3 starter Matthew Pena (1-0, 3.86) had
Tommy John surgery Tuesday and is out for the season.
*--*
Big West Conference
Pacific 2, UC Irvine 1
Score by Innings
UOP 001 010 000 - 2 5 2
UCI 000 000 001 - 1 6 2
Smith, Schroer (9) and Wagner; Stolp,
Schmidt (9) and Gottier. W - Stolp, 2-6. L
- Smith, 6-2. Sv - Schmidt (6). 2B -
Amezquita (UOP). HR - Sekiya (UOP).
*--*
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