On Pepper and the Eagles

pittsburgh NABA, South Oakland Ducks Baseball

The Ducks (3-4-1) have a road game against the Eagles (4-3) Thursday at 9pm, at Moore Park in Brookline. A win vaults the Ducks into a tie for third place in the division and gives them a 2-0 record against the Eagles, assuring South Oakland of the first tie-breaker against a tough division opponent.

The Ducks beat the Eagles 4-3 on Garrett Moore’s walk-off single, for their first win of the season. That win is the Ducks only division win thus far, South oakland is 1-3 in division play.

It’s been a long night, and I hate the fucking Eagles, man
-J.L.

Ted Williams, the greatest hitter of all-time, coached the Washington Senators after his playing days were over.

Pepper is a great warmup game for any hitter, and as a coach I’m going to insist the Senators do more of it
-Ted Williams

Also, Barry Pepper played Roger Maris in the film 61*

In an unrelated note; there is no excuse for the “Owlz” using a “z” in their name. take a peek at their team page, try not to vomit.

Inspiration.

Game eight: It’s all right now, Ducks come from seven down to win in last at-bat.

pittsburgh NABA, South Oakland Ducks Baseball

Ducks 8, Matadors 7

This is the kind of win that can change the course of a season.

The Matadors scored seven runs in the first two innings. Ducks’ starter Nick Homa (2-1) was struggling with his command, and the South Oakland infield looked shaky, committing key errors, forcing Homa to throw too many pitches to work out of bases-loaded jams in the first and second.
Entering the bottom of the sixth inning, South Oakland trailed 7-0 and had recorded only one hit, an infield single. Going back to the bottom of the first inning of Sunday’s loss to the Owls, the Ducks had been outscored 24-0 over the last nine innings, and at 2-4-1, they were swimming on the fringe of the playoff picture.
For five innings, it seemed as though everything the Ducks hit went to the Matadors’ shortstop, who played like Troy Tulowitzki. Homa had settled down, and was lights-out after the second inning. No more than 3 of the Matadors’ runs were earned. The Ducks were poised to waste another solid performance, but this time there were no excuses, we had almost all of our regulars in the starting lineup, and we were getting handled by a finesse pitcher and an NL rookie of the year shortstop.
Then it started, it started slowly when Coby was hit by a pitch, then Wojoton was beaned, and Guthrie singled. Ryan Novak drew a bases loaded walk to drive in the first Ducks run, and that was it for the Matadors’ starting pitcher.
Just when the Ducks were liking their chops at the chance to face the Matadors starter for the third time, Tulowitzki came into pitch and the infield was shuffled. Troy was throwing noticeably faster than the starter. Jesse Smith welcomed him with a marathon at-bat, fouling off twelve pitches and working the count full before drawing another bases loaded walk, cutting the lead to 7-2, bases still loaded.

Ben Gwin was 1-13 with 2 RBI heading into the game; the worst slump of his baseball existence, earlier in the game he’s made an error at first which lead to two unearned runs, he had grounded out weakly in two earlier at-bats, five innings and nothing more than a broken bat for his efforts.

Redemption came in a three-run double to right center. 7-5. Tulowitzki would load the bases on a walk and a hit-batsman, but worked out of the jam by getting CF, Eric Lee to pop-up, and striking out two Ducks. He hadn’t seen the last of Eric Lee.

The top of the seventh came and went with a walk, a double play, and a strike-out.
Chris Wojoton lead off the Ducks’ half of the inning with an infield hit to deep short, Tulowitzki maybe makes that play, but Chris booked to first, barely beating the throw. Guthrie was hit by a pitch, bringing the winning run to the plate. After a fly-out, and a questionable called third strike, the Ducks were down to their final out.
Gwin came through again, singling to center, driving in Wojoton. Eric Tans drew a walk to load the bases, and Eric Lee came to the plate.
Down by one bases loaded, two outs, Eric Lee was a super hero.
The Play of the Game:
Lee smashed one to the right side the ball hit off the Matadors’ first baseman and dribbled into shallow right field, Guthrie scored to tie the Game and Gwin raced around from second to score the winning run.

Comeback complete.

WOOOO-HOOOOOO!!!


Bullet Points:

  • I’ve never been so happy to be hitting .250
  • Gutsy performance by Homa, who was rightfully upset at how we played the first five innings of this game, he hung in there and he bailed us out when a lesser pitcher would have quit. That is leadership.
  • This is the second game that we’ve won on our last at-bat.
  • The Matadors hit seven batters, Garrett almost charged the mound, that would have forced TC to pinch run, no one wants that.
  • This is our highest run total of the season
  • The Ducks are undefeated in June
  • 3-4-1 and we’re right in the thick of things
  • We beat a good team, the Matadors are no joke, they play the game the right way
  • Jim, the pitcher from CMU, does exist. Go Pens.
  • I don’t think they had more than four hits to the outfield.
  • Ducks vs. Matadors tonight at 9pm, Spring View Field

    pittsburgh NABA, South Oakland Ducks Baseball


    The Ducks are eager to get the foul taste out of their mouths after a historically bad 15-run loss to the Owls on Sunday. With almost 1/3 of the season in the books, and a scarcity of rain dates, every game has playoff implications in the highly contested Monongahela Division. South Oakland will look to fire-baller Nick Homa, and the infusion of Ducks starters who were unable to compete in Sunday’s game, to stop the losing streak before it starts.

    Last season the Matadors beat the Ducks on a seventh inning home run to eliminate South Oakland from playoff contention. That might mean something to the five returning players from last year.

    Either way, it’s gonna be bad news for the Matadors.

    Game seven: Ducks 2 Owls 17

    Uncategorized

    My American Legion coach once called my team a “disgrace to veterans”, that’s about how it feels after this loss. The Ducks (2-4-1) have been blown out before, but never in this fashion. The game was called with one out in the bottom of the third, and the Owls won by the seldom enforced, 15-run mercy rule.
    The Ducks lead 2-0 in the top of the first, after Mark Guthrie Doubled in Gwin, advanced to third on a ground out, and then scored on a wild pitch. The Ducks proceeded to surrender 17 unanswered runs, maybe five or six of which were earned.
    The Owls like to bunt, there were at least six bunts in the first two innings.
    They squeezed with an eight run lead.

    If I saw our team take infield practice before the game, I would have bunted all day as well.
    The Ducks played without five starters.
    The next Ducks, Owls game will be different.

    South Oakland plays the Matadors tomorrow at 9pm, at Spring View Field.

    Game six: Ducks 7, Phantoms 3

    pittsburgh NABA, South Oakland Ducks Baseball

    The Ducks have finally started hitting. All but two South Oakland players recorded base hits, and the Ducks overwhelmed the undermanned Phantoms at Pie Traynor field, 7-3, to raise their record to 2-3-1.

    For the second consecutive game, South Oakland’s slow-starting offense has posted seven runs. Coach Jones knocked in his first RBI of the season, and Garrett Moore, Mark Guthrie, and Andrew McCray added extra base hits, to back up Guthrie’s solid performance on the mound.
    Guthrie (1-0-1)scattered six hits and surrendered two earned runs over five innings.
    Nick Homa pitched two scoreless innings in relief for his first save of the season.

    The Ducks travel to the Findlay Sports Complex. To play the expansion Owls today, at 3pm. A win would put the Ducks at .500 and move the team into 3rd place in the Monongahela division.
    I know little about the Owls and nothing about the Findlay field.

    The Owls (2-2) screeched past the Rebels 14-9, yesterday. Knowing the Rebels, I bet they set their rotation to have their ace going against the BlackSox today, still the Owls had 18 hits.
    I found this on America’s most reputable news source

    Supposedly wise, Owls live in barns, and eat rodents.
    Number 13 might be coming down from the rafters today, either way, it’s gonna be bad news for the Owls.

    Bullet points

    • Momentum, keep it going, build on it.
    • McCray hit a Gibsonian shot off the wall in center, 418 feet away
    • This was the most complete effort of the season
    • showing up is 80% of Pittsburgh NABA baseball
    • We still haven’t had all our starters at a ganme at the same time, this has allowed coach Jones to get a look at everyone, and get everyone playing time.
    • Last game marked the end of Gwin’s 108 consecutive games played streak.
    • the Monongahela Division is Log Jammin’ right now, it’s going to be a battle all season.

    Pretty tied up: Ducks comeback, even the score vs. Phantoms

    pittsburgh NABA, South Oakland Ducks Baseball



    ___7_______________7____________

    Chris Wojoton went 3-4 including a double, a home run, a single and a walk against his former team, and Eric Tans hit the game tying single in the bottom of the seventh to cap a frantic comeback by the South Oakland Ducks(1-3-1).
    The Ducks played the game without their starting center fielder, right fielder, DH, second baseman, third baseman, shortstop, and catcher. Rick’s biceps didn’t show up, which moved South Oakland’s starting first baseman behind the plate.

    Faced with a depleted roster, Coach Jones had his work cut out for him.

    As painful as it was, the reality is the glass is half full for the Ducks after the tie. South Oakland erased Phantom leads of 2-0, 3-2, and 7-3. The Ducks equaled the offensive output of the prior three games by scoring seven last night.
    Smith (0-2) pitched six strong innings, allowing three earned runs. Mark, “Last thoughts on Woody” Guthrie pitched two shutout inning in relief.
    The Ducks trailed 2-0 in the bottom of the first when Ryan Novak (lower left) hit a 2-run home run to tie the game, driving in Chris Wojoton.
    After the Phantoms scored in the top of the third, Wojoton hit a solo HR in the bottom half of the inning to make the score 3-3. Gwin threw out a guy stealing third by ten feet thanks to the tag by Wojoton, who played a strong game at third where he was filling in for Guthrie, who was filling in for Eric Lee in center field.
    In the top of the fourth, the Phantoms scored four runs on two hits, two walks and two errors, they would score again.
    It was 7-3 going into the bottom of the fourth. South Oakland scored one in the bottom of the fourth, two in the bottom of the fifth, and one in the bottom of the seventh to scratch out a 7-7 tie.

    Bullet points

    • Garrett Moore played a solid right field, he was 2-4, with an RBI, reached on an error, stole a base and was generally disruptive on the base paths. Speed kills.
    • Eric Tans had a great night at the plate, he doubled and singled in the tying run.
    • The Ducks are undefeated since KT switched to gray pants.
    • This is the kind of game we lost last year.
    • Novak and Wojo were huge last night.
    • Most of the runs we gave up were a result of guys playing out of position. Thank you, to everyone who showed up. Even Coby and Kirk Gibson, who arrived in the 5th after they spent the evening ice-sculpting for under-privileged children in Slippery Rock, came out to support their teammates.
    • Ben Gwin needs to start hitting like Ben Gwin can hit; he is 1-12 so far this season. Since we went to wood bats, he’s hit .485 and .493 in the past two seasons. Even taking into consideration favorable bookkeeping, he is doing poorly by his own standards. Ben Gwin will start hitting.
    • On Sunday I was reading my 9-month old daughter Tolstoy, she just kept saying “Da-Da-Da-Da, Baaaaa-WEEEE”, and then turned her attention to her book, “Animal Babies” which is a small 12 page cardboard book with pictures of baby animals. The hitting analogy is in there somewhere; instead of trying to write ten-line sentences about a wisp of smoke blowing over the Russian countryside, I should simplify things ie, “I have a bill, feathers and webbed feet, what animal am I?” At least I showed up and caught. I catch a good game for an outfielder.
    • If anyone is weary of my voice, and the inevitable Ben-centric semi-rants that pop up in this blog let me know and I will send you the admin. information and you can post stuff as well.
    • I’ll buy a drink for the first person to “edit” the Blacksox wikipedia page.
    • Smith and Guthrie both pitched well, do they both get a “no decision”?
    • that field umpire is hilarious, his presence and entertainment value just barely compensate for the missed calls. Rumor has it, he studied under this guy…
    • I wonder if we’ll finish this game on Saturday before we play the Phantoms again.
    • It’s nice that the Pens’ game won’t interfere with our game on Saturday, or vice-versa.
    • Our first rundown went horribly wrong.
    • We’re entering a stretch of five games in nine days including two important division games against the Eagles and Owls respectively. During this stretch we will discover the true fabric of our pitching depth.

    Ducks-Phantoms home and home series starts tonight

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    The Phantoms (0-1) were originally the Rangers. When Pittsburgh NABA great, Justin Newman, left the team to pursue employment opportunities elsewhere, he took the “Rangers” name and team colors with him. Now they are named after the Philadelphia Flyers’ AHL affiliate, thanks to head coach Don Stetzer. I give that a sarcastic, “way to go, Donny”.
    Although the Phantoms are now able to wear Pirates hats as part of their uniform.
    I’m curios how the Penguins’ Stanley Cup Finals game will impact player attendance at the game this evening. The Penguins will win whether we watch them or not. it’s not like it’s game seven. I’m as upset about the scheduling as anyone.–The proof is in my ridiculous playoff beard.
    The Ducks play the Phantoms tonight at 9pm and again this Saturday at 5pm. We will see their ace at least once in these next two games, although I’m not sure who that is. That Malone kid is now on the Warriors, they have Don and their catcher, whose name escapes me, also pitches– he is the Pittsburgh NABA’s all-time leader in fighting ejections (2). My best game against Stetzer was a in 2006, 3-4 2B, HR, 4RBI. He throws strikes.

    Monongahela Division Update
    The Owls beat the Oilers 10-0 on Saturday, after losing to the Eagles 13-8 on Thursday.
    Standings
    W L GB
    Blacksox 4-0 —
    Rebels 1-0 1.5
    Eagles 2-3 2.5
    Rakers 1-2 2.5
    Owls 1-2 2.5
    Ducks 1-3 3.0

    The Ducks are due to break out offensively.
    Smith is starting for South Oakland tonight.

    Quack, Quack

    Help from the Warriors tightens Monongahela Division race

    pittsburgh NABA, South Oakland Ducks Baseball


    Craig Boley and Doug Ryba (above) led the Warriors to a 3-2 victory over the Rakers last night. With the loss the Rakers are now 1-2, just 1/2 game ahead of the Ducks for the third and final playoff spot in the Monongahela Division.
    It’s probably too early to start looking at the standings, but I have a feeling each team may only get 20 games in this season due to League President, Joe Graff’s inability to control the weather.

    The Blacksox have stormed to a 4-0 start
    The Rebels have called off all or their games except for one, a 5-1 victory over the Rakers, they will probably finish the season 1-0, maybe 1-1.
    The Rakers are 1-2
    The Ducks are about to hit their stride after a so-so 1-3 start, a 21-3 finish is, theoretically, not out of the question.
    the Eagles (1-3) beat up on the Hurricanes 14-0 for their first win of the season
    the expansion Owls are 0-1

    • It would be great to record a nice lopsided 14 run victory to balance out the opening day game that never happened.
    • I hope our starting second baseman and three-hitter doesn’t have band practice this Monday.
    we need his athleticism on display in the infield.

    • Rumor has it Coach Jones is courting a top-tier free agent.

    That’s bad news for the rest of the league.
    leave comments

    Oilers win 3-2, Ducks’ bats on life support

    pittsburgh NABA, South Oakland Ducks Baseball


    In flurry of broken bats, and 1-3 putouts South Oakland lost a heart-breaker, 3-2 to Hebrew, Monday night at Spring View Field.
    After allowing 2 first inning runs to the Ducks, the Oilers’ pitcher settled in and was lights out the rest of the night.
    The game winning run came in the top of the seventh courtesy of pinch hitter Soji (sp.) who singled in the winning run with an eyes-closed-dying quail into right field.
    The Ducks wasted a fine performance by Nick Homa (1-1) who suffered a complete game loss after allowing one earned run, off of three or four hits. The Oilers’ strategy was to reach on an error then take second on a past ball, and advance to third on a swinging third strike in the dirt, and score on a fielders choice, or bloop single.
    All things being equal there were a few plays which could have been made that could have preserved a 2-1 victory or perhaps sent the game into extra innings. We didn’t kick the ball around too much but there were a couple errors. There were two double plays I could have turned at first, but didn’t, one came on a grounder to third with a runner on third. Guthrie threw the batter out at first, and I couldn’t get the ball out of my glove in time to throw out the runner at home. The other came late in the game with a runner on first and no outs, the batter hit me a hard ground ball and all I was thinking was “get the lead runner” which I did, but I could have stepped on first base first then thrown the runner out at second. The runner eventually scored. I have to make one of those plays, neither of which are an error but could have changed the game. Regardless, the Ducks haven’t hit at all this season, we should win game in which we allow only 3 runs. Our team is averaging 2 runs per game.
    Two runs per game.
    I’d blame it on poor attendance at pre-game batting practice, but I’ve hit before every game and I’m 1-8 on the season. I struck out to end the 6th inning of last night’s game.
    We managed to get runners on first and second with one out in the bottom of the seventh, but the last two Ducks struck out, leaving the winning run on first.
    Play of the Game
    The play didn’t count but it was sweet.
    Oilers’ catcher Kenji Johjima hit a slow roller to Guthrie at third, Guthrie charged it, barehanded the ball and whipped it over to first where I made a sweet Mike Richter pick on the short hop to get Johjima by a step. The ump called it foul, and Homa struck him out on the next pitch, due in part to the sweet play on the foul ball.
    Guthrie also had a two-run double in the first to drive in the Ducks’ only runs.


    Bullet POints

    • Guthrie is our best player right now. He’s batting .400, all of his hits have been either doubles or triples. He leads the team in avg., RBI, hits, slugging, basically everything except stolen bases. He and I are tied at 1 for the Bob Faust hit-by-pitch award, which goes to the player who records the most hbp in a season
    • Instead of losing games 15-8, we’re losing 3-2 and 4-1. I suppose that’s better and it’s encouraging that we’re competing every night, but it shouldn’t be our goal to simply “stay in every game”
    • We need to have a sense of urgency every at-bat and every pitch.
    • If/when our hitting comes around, we will win a lot of games this season.
    • Go Penguins
    • We wasted a second consecutive solid pitching performance. Nick was killing those guys and we didn’t help him.

    We have a week off before we play the Phantoms Monday night at Spring View Field.
    Bad news for the Phantoms.