Costa Mesa National Giants just miss
Bryce Alderton
The Costa Mesa National Little League Minor A Giants walked off the
field at LeBard Park Saturday with a result as foreign to them as was
the type of game they played against the Fountain Valley Angels.
The Giants rolled into their quarterfinal contest in the District
62 Tournament of Champions on a 20-game winning streak, relying on a
potent lineup and sound defense to leave teams in their wake. The
Angels, however, limited the Giants to one hit and found a few holes
in the defense to stage a come-from-behind 3-2 victory in the
single-elimination tournament.
The Giants (26-2), the designated visiting team, held a 2-1 lead
going into the bottom of the fifth, when the Angels (18-5)
capitalized on an error and a single that found its way into center
field just under the shortstop’s glove to plate two runs.
But the Giants, who went undefeated in winning the Costa Mesa
National title, would not go quietly in the sixth, staging a two-out
rally with three straight walks to load the bases. The uprising
prompted Angel Manager Greg Stephens to use three pitchers in the
inning.
Walks to Brian Burciaga, Matt Carlyle and Kannon Stone forced
Stephens to bring in Eric Belgen.
It was one pitch, one out, as Belgen fielded a comebacker and
threw gently to first to stifle the Giants’ rally.
“That is the most suspenseful game I’ve been in in many years of
baseball,” Stephens said.
The three straight walks in the sixth -- the Giants had five in
the game -- were rare for a team that is usually more aggressive at
the plate, Giants Manager Kirk Stone said.
“I never told them to get a walk. The only time I gave a take sign
was at 3-and-0,” Kirk Stone said. “[Angels’ starting pitcher Michael
Tucker] was tired at the end.”
Tucker struck out eight, allowed one hit and walked four in 5 2/3
innings before Stephens went to Zac Milan, for one batter, then
Belgen. Tucker retired the side in order through the first three
innings.
“We didn’t bring the bats like we did all year and that is a
credit to [the Angels’ pitching].” Kirk Stone said.
“The [Ocean View] team we beat [a 5-2 decision Thursday] had an
extremely hard thrower, but [Tucker] threw just as hard.”
“We win a lot of tight, low-scoring games with key hits at the
end,” Greg Stephens said. “The Giants are a tough defensive team,
though.”
Giants’ starting pitcher Alex Krohnfeldt struck out five, walked
one and allowed one hit in her three shutout innings, before giving
way to Carlyle for the final two innings.
The Giants took a 2-0 lead in the fourth on two unearned runs.
With one out, Patrick Shanklin was hit by a pitch. Burciaga and
Carlyle then drew consecutive walks to load the bases.
Kannon Stone, the No. 2 batter, hit a grounder that caromed off
the third baseman’s glove to plate Shanklin. Hans Anderle drove in
Burciaga when Tucker threw wildly to first for an error after
fielding Anderle’s roller.
The Giants still had the bases loaded with one out, but a
strikeout and groundout made them settle for a 2-0 cushion.
The Angels trimmed the lead to 2-1 in their half of the fourth on
Connor McKenna’s RBI single, but an alert Giants’ defense prevented
any further damage on the play.
With the run in, the Giants caught an Angels base runner heading
back toward second just as McKenna was about to touch the bag.
Carlyle handled center fielder Jake Spielberger’s relay throw and,
with the lead runner heading toward third, threw to third baseman
Trey LeEle, who made the tag for the out.
The Angels made up for their missed chance in the fifth.
Leadoff hitter Tyler Kamisato reached safely on an error and
advanced to second on a wild pitch. Carlyle struck out the next
batter before Gage Banales singled to center field, with Kamisato
moving to third. Banales took second on the throw home.
Devin Vega’s slow-rolling grounder scooted inches under the
shortstop’s glove, bringing in the tying and go-ahead runs.
“If we make one play on [Banales’ or Vega’s] grounder, we go home
as a winner,” Kirk Stone said. “I told the kids there are games like
that. Some balls are hit hard and you make the plays while some balls
are hit soft and they get by you.”
“I still think we have the best defensive team. [The defense] got
us to where we are.”
Jacob Knapp, George DeLatore, Robert Webb and Johnathon Ponce also
contributed for the Giants, who took the loss in stride, their
manager said.
“I’m proud to see not many of them crying,” Kirk Stone said. “They
knew that it was close and there is nothing to be ashamed about
losing a one-run game.”
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