Wow! What a night. After the teams traded solo home runs in the
fifth, there were no runs for nine innings. Finally in the bottom of
the 15th, Greeneville walked off without the benefit of a hit. Tanner Mathis walked, and was moved to second on a sac bunt by Jack Mayfield. Darwin Rivera
then hit a ground ball to first which should have just moved over
Mathis to third but the K-Mets first baseman booted the ball. It rolled
to the edge of the grass and Josh Bonifay took a risk and sent Mathis
home. The throw was slightly up the line and the catcher had to stretch
to take Mathis as he zoomed by. The glove appeared to hit Mathis
shoulder and the ball dropped free allowing the winning run to score.
Here are my observations from the game.
On The Mound:
A
great deal went right here. Just one run allowed in 15 innings with a
team record 25 strike outs. Let's take a quick look at each pitcher.
Frederick Tiburcio
had a solid start to the game. He fanned seven and gave up just two
hits and walked one in five innings. The lone damage given up was a
solo home run to left by 17 year old, Ahmed Rosario, whom the Mets
signed for 1.7 million in the 2012 international signing period. It was
his first professional home run.
Tiburcio threw an
unofficial 67 pitches in five innings. To have that low of a pitch
count with that many strike outs is impressive.
Tyler Brunnemann
pitched the next two frames. This was my first time to see Brunnemann
pitch. He has an extreme follow through. When he finishes his pitch his
glove hand (left) and his left foot are both touching the ground as he
falls toward first base. It is a violent motion that I didn't see him
repeating very well. It was effective when repeated as evidenced by the
four strike outs in two innings. But he also gave up two walks, both
on full counts.
Ryan Connelly pitched the eight inning. The submarine pitcher was the only pitcher of the night not to record a strike out.
Gonzalo Sanudo
came in for the next two innings. He pitched out of a jam in the
ninth. After a lead off double and a ground ball to 2nd to move the
runner over, he was faced with a runner at third and one out. He got Michael Bernal to strike out in a seven pitch at bat for the second out of the inning.
That
at bat got circled in my score book as a key out of the game. Bernal
had a rough night at the plate. He accounted for 20% of the teams strike
outs, going 0-5 with 5 Ks. Sanudo ended the night with three Ks in his
two innings.
Gerado Ramirez came in and may have had
the outing of his life time. He pitched a career high four innings
allowing just two hits and one walk while striking out nine K-Mets.
The final pitcher of the night was Christian Garcia.
Garcia pitched the 14th and 15th innings fanning two batters in each
inning. In each inning the lead off runner reached but never made it
past first base.
At The Plate:
Tanner
Mathis reached base in five of his six plate appearances: E1, single,
and three walks. This is exactly what you want out of a lead off
batter. Also my 13 year old son observed he has the best walk up music
this season. He is going old school with some Run DMC - It's Tricky.
Wallace Gonzalez
hit a towering home run in the fifth. They had success pitching him
away but they left that pitch over the inner half of the plate and he
made them pay. Gonzalez appears to be pulling out when he swings so
outside pitches are going to be an issue for him. Gonzalez added a
single later in the game.
Ariel Ovando and Jack Mayfield also had two hits.
In The Field:
Parker Hipp made a great play snagging a soft liner to start the game. I was sure that ball was going to fall for a hit.
Wallace
Gonzalez had a nice outfield assist on a shallow fly ball to left.
The runner was moving on the play and Gonzalez throw beat the runner
back to first for a double play.
Jack Mayfield made
an outstanding diving stop on a ball in the hole at shortstop. He
popped up and made a good throw to first that Angel Ibanez made a nice stretch to complete the put out.
The defensive star of the night was Cristian Moronta.
He was three for three in throwing out runners stealing second. Two of
those were on balls that he blocked and runners broke when he had
trouble locating them. Those three outs were huge in a ballgame this
tight. One ended an inning and two were to nab the hitter who had
reached to start the inning.
Final Thought:
After the 25 game strike out performance, the G-Stros now lead the Appy
League with 104 strikeouts in just nine games. That puts them 16 Ks
above second place Johnson City.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.