MLN Newswire - www.mlntherawfeed.com – STOCKTON, Calif. - Not
since Ernest Thayer’s poem about Mighty Casey has there been a tale so
worthy of telling on the banks of the Delta as that of the 2008
Stockton Ports. On Sunday night at Clear Channel Stadium in Lancaster, the incredible playoff run of the Boys from Banner Island met
its ending with a champagne shower as the Ports won their 11th
Cal-League title in franchise history, beating the Lancaster JetHawks
by a count of 9-3 and winning the best-of-five championship series 3-1.
The championship is Stockton’s first as an Oakland A’s affiliate, and their first in six years.
Game
4 began as a pitcher’s duel between Ports starter Carlos Hernandez and
JetHawks starter Blake Maxwell. The two had near identical numbers
through the first four innings. It was Lancaster, however,
that would come through with the game’s first run in the bottom of the
fifth. After back-to-back singles from Aaron Reza and Matt Sheely to
start the inning, Kris Negron bunted the baserunners over to second and
third, and Yamaico Navarro hit a sac-fly to right to give the JetHawks
a 1-0 lead. It would be the only run given up by Hernandez, who went
5.1 innings and allowed six hits while walking two and striking out
four.
Stockton would
get the run right back in the top of the sixth. Following a leadoff
double from Archie Gilbert, Josh Horton tied the game with an RBI
single to center off Maxwell. Chris Carter followed with an infield
single to third, and the throw from third baseman Zak Farkes skipped in
the dirt and past first baseman Michael Jones, allowing Horton to go to
third and putting runners at the corners with nobody out. Maxwell would
bear down and get Spencer to fly to shallow center and Josh Donaldson
to strike out. Derrick Loop (0-2) was brought into the game to face
Corey Brown, but Brown wouldn’t get a chance to swing the bat. On a
pitch that got away from catcher Luis Exposito, Horton tried to score
from third. Exposito, however, would recover quick enough to flip the
ball to Loop covering the plate and Horton
would be tagged out to end the frame. Maxwell would go 5.2 innings and
allow just the one run on seven hits while striking out six. He did not
walk a batter on the night.
The
score would remain tied until the top of the seventh, the inning in
which the Ports would wrap up the game and the series. WithLoop still
on the hill, Brown worked a leadoff walk. Two batters later with one
out, Jermaine Mitchell walked and Mike Massaro singled to left to load
the bases with one out. Gilbert, who would later be named the series
MVP, put the Ports ahead to stay with a single to left on a 3-2 pitch,
giving the Ports a 2-1 lead. Horton followed with a bases-loaded walk,
giving the Ports a 3-1 edge. Loopwas then replaced with
right-hander Craig Molldrem who came on to face Carter. On an 0-2
pitch, Carter hit a towering grand slam over the scoreboard in left,
giving the Ports a commanding 7-1 lead. Five of the six runs that
scored in the inning were charged toLoop, who took the loss after just
two-thirds of an inning of work.
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The
Ports would be in cruise control from there on out. Pat Currin (2-1)
would pitch 2.2 scoreless frames starting in the bottom of the sixth to
carry the game into the ninth inning. Currin would get the win,
allowing three hits while striking out two.
Stockton added
two final runs in the top of the ninth. In a fitting twist, Carter
would lead off the inning with a home run in his final at-bat of the
season off Josh Papelbon. Carter, the Ports all-time single-season home
run leader, would finish the playoffs with five home runs and homers in
his final two at-bats. Two batters later, Donaldson tripled down the
line in right, and Brown, who had been 0-for-12 in the series, got his
first hit--an RBI double to right-center to give the Ports a 9-1 lead.
Brown was thrown out at third trying to stretch his hit to a triple.
Sam
Demel would come on for the bottom of the ninth to close out the game.
With two on and two out, the JetHawks got a pair of runs on a two-run
double from Jon Still to make it 9-3. Demel would get Jones to fly out
to Gilbert in left for the game’s final out, and the Ports celebrated
with a dog-pile off to the first base side of the mound.
Following
the game, Gilbert was named MVP of the championship series. Gilbert
drove in eight runs during the series, including the go-ahead run in
Game 4 and six RBI in Game 1.If you like the daily news of the Raw Feed, SUBSCRIBE TODAY to the nation's only alternative professional sports magazine, SZ, with original features and great action photography in baseball, hockey, basketball, and football. Just $11.99 per year for an e-zine like you’ve never seen!
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