La Plata High School | Archive | May, 2011

Clippers snag 3A title in eight

By Andy States

After surrendering a game-tying two runs to the La Plata
Warriors in the bottom of the fourth inning of Saturday night’s 3A baseball
championship game, J.M. Bennett pitcher Zak Sterling had a message for his
teammates as they made their way back to the dugout.

“After they got those two, I came into the huddle and told
the team, ‘Give me one more and we’re going to go home state champs,’” Sterling
said.

It took a few innings, but his teammates did a little bit
better, scoring three in the top of the eighth to lift the Clippers to a 5-2,
extra inning win over La Plata at Ripken Stadium in Aberdeen.

“What a game. What a great game,” Bennett coach Jay
Fenoglietto said after his team won its second state championship and first
since 2006. “Both teams were very scrappy. We just came out and got a couple
timely hits and scored a couple runs. Zak hit his spots, and he’s done that all
year for us.”

Bennett (22-0) scored two runs in the top of the first, but
struggled to get anything else going as La Plata starter Chris Duelley settled
in and proceeded to face the minimum over the next six innings.

Meantime, La Plata (20-4) found enough offense to tie the
game in the fourth. Through three innings, the Warriors failed to produce a
base hit, as Sterling looked dominant and struck out seven of the first 10
batters he faced. But in the bottom of the fourth, Sterling hit Austin Barefoot
with two outs, and Lachlan Whyte followed with an RBI triple to get the Warriors
on the board. Jordan Twiford followed with a single to tie the score and
seemingly put Bennett on the ropes.

La Plata had runners on base in each of the next three
innings, and even had the potential state championship-winning run on third
base in the bottom of the seventh. But faced with that threat, Sterling came
through with a strikeout to save the game and the Clippers’ perfect season and
flip the momentum back in his team’s favor.

“They were pumped up. We couldn’t even make contact with the
ball,” La Plata coach Dan DeVitis said of the situation in the bottom of the
seventh. “You could tell they were fired up. They had the top of their order up,
so sure, they felt good about that.”

Into extra innings, Bennett didn’t waste any time getting
its offense fired back up. The first two batters reached safely, and stood at
second and third by the time Brandon Hayward stepped into the box with one out.

“I struggled previously in my at-bats, and I came up and
told my teammates I’d pick them up,” Hayward said. “I had runners in scoring
position and I knew I had to do what I had to do.”

Hayward drove an outside fastball into the gap in
right-center to score both runners and put the Clippers ahead to stay. Hunter
Greenwood’s two-out double plated Hayward with an additional insurance run to
give Bennett a 5-2 lead heading into the bottom half. Sterling then retired La
Plata in order to seal the Clippers’ perfect, state-championship season.

“That was a lot of adrenaline,” Sterling said. “My arm was
pretty shot, but you get pretty pumped up with just three outs to be state
champs.”

In eight innings of work, Sterling allowed two runs on three
hits, walked three and struck out 12.

“Very nice ballclub, outstanding pitcher, I can’t say one
thing negative about them,” DeVitis said of the Clippers. “They’re a very, very
well-coached team, a nice ballclub and we gave them a run for their money. The only
negative thing I can say is that all year long it’s been a struggle with our
bats. We’re a team that wins with pitching and defense and we’ve been winning
with it all year.

“Tonight we held them, and then they finally opened up on
us. We just didn’t match their hitting.”

Duelley was nearly Sterling’s equal on the bump. The La
Plata hurler went 7 2/3 innings, did not walk a batter and logged 11
strikeouts. But after facing the minimum 18 batters from the second through the
seventh inning, Bennett finally reached Duelley for four hits that led to the
three decisive runs in the eighth.

“We started off great, but we kind of slowed down,” Hayward
said of the game. “We just kept telling each other, ‘We got this. We came here
for a reason.’ We picked it up the last inning and did what we had to do.”

Added Sterling: “We were preaching perfection March 1. We came
to practice every day with a new mentality and stepped on the field every game
and told ourselves we were going to win that game. It worked out for us.”

J.M. Bennett 5, La Plata 2 (8 innings)

JMB     2 0 0  0 0 0
0 3 – 5 9 1

LP     0 0 0  2 0 0
0 0 – 2 3 1

WP: Sterling, LP: Duelley

2B – Greenwood (J); 3B – Whyte (L), Hayward (J)

 

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Warriors outlast Hawks, move to 3A final

By Andy States

Looking out onto the field at Joe Cannon Stadium during the early stages of Tuesday’s 3A baseball semifinal, La Plata coach Dan DeVitis could probably barely recognize his team.

Characteristically a slick-fielding squad, the Warriors committed four errors in the first two innings of their state semifinal showdown with the North Harford Hawks to fall into an early one-run deficit. And while La Plata was able to tie the game in the third inning, the team also struggled to get into any sort of offensive groove against North Harford pitchers Cody Brittain and Kevin Mooney.

“I was really frustrated as a coach” DeVitis said. “I was frustrated with a lot of things today, but as the game went on it turned from frustration to pride. I saw how much it meant to these boys and they just kept fighting and fighting and fighting. I just kept telling them, ‘Don’t quit. We have to find a way. They’re not scoring. We have to find a way to score and win this game.’”

It took all of 15 innings, but La Plata found a way. After outlasting Brittain and Mooney – against whom the Warriors accumulated just six hits through 14 innings – Jayrese Jones scored on Austin Barefoot’s double in the bottom of the 15th to lift La Plata to a 2-1 victory and a spot in Saturday night’s 3A championship game against the J.M. Bennett Clippers at Ripken Stadium in Aberdeen. The state championship game appearance is the first for La Plata since it won the 3A crown in 2008.

“One thing I have to give the kids credit for is they never quit,” DeVitis said. “We were down 1-0, and these are the two best pitchers we’ve faced all year. They were nasty.

“What can you do? We couldn’t get any hits. So finally when we got the guys on we got breaks. We hit the ball hard and that’s what won the game.”

North Harford (16-5) boasted the majority of the opportunities throughout, and loaded the bases in each of the first two innings – innings in which La Plata (20-3) made four errors on routine plays. But through it all, the Hawks were not able to take full advantage, scoring just once when Zach Knotts crossed the plate with two outs in the top of the first on what could have been an inning-ending ground out that ended up the second of La Plata’s miscues.

But after escaping a bases-loaded, no-out jam in the second, La Plata started to tighten up. In his five innings of work, starter Chris Duelley faced at least one runner in scoring position each inning, but refused to surrender another run. Anderson Burgess relieved Duelley to start the sixth and picked up right where Duelley left off. Getting stronger as his outing progressed, Burgess worked eight shutout innings to keep the Warriors in position to win.

“I just tried to throw strikes,” Burgess said. “I tried to challenge the hitters and give my team a chance to make plays.

“Our coaches kept us up. Even the couple times I was frustrated, my coaches kept me in the game, told me to keep throwing strikes.”

Through 14 innings, North Harford’s pitchers dominated the game. La Plata was able to get its run back in the bottom of the third, when a throwing error following Troy Calvert’s double allowed Doug Wherle to score. But otherwise, Brittain and Mooney were in complete command.

Working a total of 7 1/3 innings, Brittain surrendered just four hits and two walks while setting four Warriors down on strikes. Mooney was even better, allowing just two hits and two walks in 6 2/3 while striking out 13. But as both teams’ top pitchers ran out of innings, the advantage shifted to La Plata.

When Burgess departed following the 13th inning, La Plata got one out from freshman Alex Calvert before turning to senior Lachlan Whyte. Whyte went a scoreless inning and two-thirds, and appeared set to continue on in the fashion that Burgess had pitched the previous eight innings. But when Brittain and Mooney had finished for the day on the mound, the Warriors finally struck.

Jones led off the bottom of the 15th with a single, moved to second on a base hit by Zach Snell and scored on Barefoot’s shot over the center fielder’s head to bring the marathon game to a close.

“We were on the ropes almost every inning. It just showed the resiliency of the team,” DeVitis said. “Chris Duelley, Anderson Burgess, they were bulldogs. They just fought and fought and fought.

“It was our pitching that really kept us in this game today. And after we had some errors early on, we played solid, fundamental baseball after that.”

La Plata will face J.M. Bennett (21-0), which defeated Quince Orchard in Tuesday’s other semifinal, at 7 p.m. Saturday night for the 3A championship. The matchup pits two champion programs from the past five years, as Bennett won the 2006 title.

“It’s so important,” Burgess said  of the opportunity to play for the state title. “I’ve never been there. Being a transfer from Westlake, I probably wouldn’t have had the chance, honestly. This opportunity is great and I want to take full advantage of it.”

La Plata 2, North Harford 1 (15 innings)
NH     1 0 0  0 0 0  0 0 0  0 0 0  0 0 0 – 1 9 3
LP     0 0 1  0 0 0  0 0 0  0 0 0  0 0 1 – 2 9 4
WP: Whyte, LP Saylor
2B – Knotts (NH), T. Calvert 2 (LP), Barefoot (LP)

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