Durham Leads Doubledays Past Scrappers, 3-1
It was a familiar scenario for the Mahoning Valley Scrappers. The formula this season has been for a starting pitcher to throw well and then hope the bullpen can hold on. The Scrappers starters all have respectable ERA’s. The formula held true as Michael Goodnight (above) pitched five solid innings of scoreless baseball and struck out six Auburn Doubledays before exiting the game with a 1-0 lead. True to the script, the offense struggled and the bullpen could not hold the lead in a 3-1 loss.
The Scrappers got the first run of the game in the second inning when DH Kevin Rucker reached base and scored on a Moises Montero ball that should have been caught. Doubledays LF Yeico Aponte ran too far in on a routine fly ball and Rucker trotted home uncontested to give the Scrappers a 1-0 lead.
JD Goryl started the sixth inning for the Scrappers. Jon Fernandez started the inning with a double. Giovanny Urshela (below) had an uncharacteristic error to put men on first and second with nobody out. Goryl was hit hard but in his defense, could have gotten out of the inning unscathed. As the law of averages would have it, Auburn pushed a run across to tie the game.
The other JD, JD Reichenbach, came out to start the eighth for the Scrappers. The big lefty was pumped up and threw hard, in the eighth. The ninth inning however, was a different story as Lance Durham connected for a monstrous two-run homer to right field to put Auburn up 3-1.
The Scrappers put together a ninth inning rally showing some heart. Rucker and Montero had back-to-back singles for Mahoning Valley. Aaron Fields bunted to move the runners to second and third. Trent Baker struck out to set the stage for Nick Bartolone who walked. Enter Carlos Moncrief with two outs and the bases loaded in the bottom of the ninth. Moncrief was 0-4 in the game with three strikeouts coming into this key at bat. Moncrief fouled a ball inches off of the left field line that would have, at the very least, tied the game. On the next pitch, Moncrief whiffed and the Scrappers lost, 3-1.
Travis Fryman said the game indeed followed a pattern of predictability. “Our lack of run production all year has forced our pitching staff to be perfect. By putting a young pitcher in those types of pressure situations, they are more likely to make mistakes. We are just concentrating on development of the guys and we saw that with the effort from Goodnight tonight.”