In the top of the first, the River Cats missed an opportunity to draw first blood. After Austin Magdaleno and Christian Scott reached to start the game, the Rockhounds’ young ace, Kyle Ducay, responded with a strikeout, but the River Cats would load the bases. Benjamin Pigg then crushed a deep line-drive shot to centerfield for an apparent sacrifice fly, but the River Cats’ runner failed to tag up, leaving the bases loaded and paving the way for Ducay to slip away unscathed.
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Flores' three-run triple in the first provided momentum. |
“That was huge; that gave us momentum,” said Rockhounds’ Coach Rodney Portis of Flores’ shot. “It really got us started. Matt’s been huge, totally clutch all year, but it was big for us right there. ”
The home team would rally again in the second when the bottom half of the order put the pressure on. Ducay and Kevin Brase got things started with one down when they reached on consecutive infield hits in front of a walk to Tanner Morrison. Dixon then struck out Joshua Richmond with the bases loaded to again reach the brink of an escape, but with two outs, the Jacovetta brothers again provided a spark as Kyle was hit-by-pitch to force in one run and James provided the big hit, pulling a two-run single on the first pitch to make the score 6-0.
Flores drove in the Rockhounds’ seventh run with an opposite-field RBI single in the third that plated Portis and made it 7-0.
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Ducay was brilliant on the mound and at shortstop. |
When Ducay exited, James Jacovetta entered on the mound and, after a quick first out, saw the River Cats go on the offensive. Scott singled, Dylan Stewart cracked a long double to left, and then Dixon exacted some revenge on Jacovetta with a sharp two-run single of his own that made it 7-3 and energized the River Cats’ bench. Pigg then reached on an error and Nate Haley was hit-by-pitch to load the bases, the Rockhounds’ 7-3 lead looking suddenly much less commanding. But, after a visit from Coach Portis, Jacovetta settled down, reared back, and slammed the door shut, striking out Pfau and Marini—who had been 2 for 2—to short-circuit the comeback try.
The Rockhounds scratched across a final run of their own against reliever Magdaleno when Lang hit a long sacrifice fly in the fifth that scored Jacovetta and made the score 8-3.
After the major threat in the fifth, Jacovetta cruised in the sixth, striking out the side. In the seventh, though, needing three outs to clinch the championship, he had to contend with the potent top of the River Cats’ order. And, although their offense had been the biggest story early on, it was the defense that stood tall, as Ducay, playing shortstop in the final frame after pitching the first four, flashed impressive leather on back-to-back plays. First, it was an impressive back hand, sliding stop, and throw across the diamond to nail the speedy leadoff man Magdaleno, and then it was a high chopper that Ducay charged for, handled, and threw beautifully on the run to retire Scott, turning two likely hits into outs that secured his team’s grip on the game.
“Ducay’s been lights out at shortstop,” noted Portis. “If he’s not pitching, he’s playing there.”
And, after Stewart kept hopes alive by notching his third hit on a shallow pop-up single just beyond the reach of a diving Portis, Jacovetta sealed the deal with a called strike three to end the game, clinch the championship, and provide Coach Portis with a very sweet Gatorade bath.
“It felt great. It was big relief after a long season,” said Portis. “Everything came at the right time. The kids worked hard during the season. This was just a great finish.”
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Phenix Print & Image Rockhounds - 2011 Babe Ruth Champions |