GAME 2: TITANS 11, LOUISVILLE 2
By Don Hudson
The Cardinals have an aggressive hitting philosophy: "Hit the fastball, no matter which pitch it is." They have had a very successful run using a philosophy that has hitters swinging the bat as soon as they leave the on-deck circle, whether it is the first pitch of an at-bat or the count is 3-0. Live by the sword....die by the sword.
Renken did a great job taking advantage of the Cardinals' aggressive (perhaps "overanxious") hitting style, with the quintessential example being the third inning: three straight hitters swung at the first pitch and each hit an easy flyball or pop-up. Already in a three-run hole, you could just sense the wind leave the Louisville sails after the three-pitch third inning.
His pitch count aided by the first-ball swinging, Renken recorded the first complete game shutout of his career, using just 98 pitches to record ten strikeouts, fourteen fly-outs and just three ground-ball outs. It was a great performance in a much-needed 'statement game.'
The Titans gave Renken the early lead with three first inning runs, started when Christian Colon singled (and stole second) and Gary Brown was hit by a pitch. After Josh Fellhauer bunted both runners along (call it a sacrifice, but only an excellent play by 3B Chris Dominguez prevented a beautiful bunt from being a hit), Clark continued his RBI rampage with a two-run double near the leftfield line. Khris Davis then hit a line-drive that momentarily froze Clark (to see if the leaping shortstop could snare it), but when the centerfielder took his time fielding the ball, Coach Bergeron kept Clark motoring and he scored the third run. The inning could have been much bigger except for an absurd call (as demonstrated by multiple TV replays) by umpire Mark Chapman that Dustin Garneau had interfered during a stolen base attempt by Davis.
While the 3-4-5 hitters for Louisville (Andy Clark, Chris Dominguez and Phil Wunderlich) came into the game with statistics resembling the famous Jim's Steele Sports slow-pitch softball powerhouse, Fullerton's 3-4-5 trio of Fellhauer, Clark and Davis went 9-for-12 with seven RBI, two doubles and a home run (Felly). Overall, the Titans racked up sixteen hits, along with six hit-batsmen and three stolen bases.
Colon led off the game by getting plunked with a pitch and his big leads unsettled Marks, who was called for a balk - which really seemed to get into his head. He is a lefty pitcher without a slide step, which was the Titans' gateway drug to grand larceny. Gary Brown dropped down a bunt and Marks ended up on his keister as he slipped trying to pick it up. After Brown stole second uncontested, Felly ripped a base hit into rightfield to plate the game's first run. Felly continued the aggressive onslaught on the basepaths, but he seemed like a dead duck when Marks threw over to first after an early break on a steal attempt and the first-baseman relayed the ball to SS John Dao well before Felly arrived. But Dao held the ball in his mitt around shoulder-high, perhaps thinking they were playing tag and Felly was "it." But Felly simply slid low and there was no tag: nobody out, a run in already, runners on second and third, Clark coming up - blood in the water!
Unlike his first start last weekend in the Regionals, Noe Ramirez showed no sign of early game jitters, as he retired the Cardinals 1-2-3 in the bottom of the first inning. The Titans added one more run in the second inning, and could have had even more but for a tremendous relay throw to retire Joe Scott after he led off with a double and tried to score on Joey Siddon's single to rightfield. Siddons then stole second AND third and scored on Brown's infield single.
Marks shut the Titans out in the third and fourth innings, but he was not fooling anybody. In the third inning, each out was a scalded line-drive. While Noe dominated the rest of the Louisville batting order, he was touched up again by Dominguez for a long home-run in the fourth inning to cut the lead to 5-2. Fortunately, Noe had induced a 4-6-3 double-play on the hitter prior to Dominguez, elsewise the damage could have been much worse.
The Titans took advantage of sloppy pitching in the fifth inning. Marks hit Fellhauer with a pitch to start the inning, and then walked Clark and Davis. Dustin Garneau hit a sacrifice fly to make it 6-2. After Davis stole second, DH Shevis Shima walked on four pitches from relievr Derek Self. But Self retired the next two hitters and left the bases loaded.
A five-run outburst in the seventh inning put the game out of reach and got the travel agents looking for hotel rooms in Omaha. (By the way, if anybody booked a room in Omaha and can't go, let me know!) Jared Clark led off the inning with another tape measure home run to left-centerfield. One out later, Dustin Garneau dropped a bunt that Dominguez could do nothing but slather with mustard and stick it in his pocket. After Shima followed with another beautiful bunt single, Joe Scott executed a perfect hit-and-run and drilled a base hit through the vacated right ride of the infield, scoring Garneau and sending Shima to third. After an error on an RBI groundball by Siddons allowed him to reach base, Colon punctuated the offense with a two-run double.
Like many lockdown closers when brought into lopsided non-save situations, Nick did not have his usual sharpness. He retired the first batter he faced and elicited a huge dose of euphoria when he struck out the villainous Dominguez, but he then teased the ready-to-celebrate dugout and crowd by allowing the next three hitters to reach on a walk and two singles. But when John Dao lifted a lazy foul pop-up to Jared Clark, the ticket to Omaha had been punched.
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So what did we learn this weekend?
Since the midweek meltdown against USC that resulted in the air-clearing team meeting, the Titans have won all fifteen games played at home since then. It's hard to believe we were actually beginning to wonder how to take advanatge of playing at home when most of the success at that point had been on the road.
The Titans are not going to be getting much credit in national college baseball cyberspace this week because of the favorable draws they received in the Regionals and Super Regionals - a path they worked very hard to earn by attaining the #1 RPI and the #2 seed. But once they reach the big stage at Rosenblatt Stadium, I believe the rest of the country will come to realize just how good this team is. Coach Bergeron's arsenal of offensive weapons includes speed, power, bunting, high averages and an energy that applies pressure to opponents that makes good teams play like bad teams. the defense has been superb and the pitching just great: the Cardinals batted just .129 as a team this weekend. The Titans have stolen 15 bases in the post-season while allowing zero. Don't expect blowout scores like we have enjoyed the past couple weekends, but this team has a very legitimate chance to go all the way.
Let's get ready for some epic battles in Omaha. This is one of the strongest fields I've ever seen. Omaha, here we come!!!
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1 comment:
another brilliant effort D-K. thanks for journaling what is shaping up to be a great season for the program, players and their families. any consideration to printing this and putting them in book form as a keepsake? thanks -RD
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