Tuesday, October 30, 2012

2016 Jersey Milestones We Might See

Baseball is about statistics.  There are more statistics in baseball than in any sport combined.  And we here in Jersey are no different, we love tracking our players and their accomplishments.  Here is a list statistics and what we might be in store for the 2016 season.  Some more likely than others.

Let's start on the pitching side of things.  

Pitching:



35 year old Dan Macias has 3 wins in 4 starts.  It's a long shot, but 19 more wins this year (22 wins total) would make him the 3rd ever pitcher to reach 150 wins.  With 2 more wins he passes Ethan Pickup for 5th All-time.

Sticking with Macias, his 19 K's thus far puts him just 105 K's from 1800, which (After Ricky Bolden does it soon) would make him the 5th pitcher to reach this milestone.

Rob Goodship with 1 win this season, needs 12 more this season for 51 career, which would make him the current all time Win leader in D-Bag history.

Jaime Saenz with 2.6 VORP this season needs 17.4 more this season to pass former closer Daniel Morris as the franchise all-time VORP leader.

Hitting:  




Leon Foster, with 17 RBI in 16 games, needs 92 more RBI to join the 800 RBI club which has only been accomplishment thus far by 5 players and 2 soon to be members.  109 RBI might be a stretch for the season though.


Foster also needs to strikeout only 3 more time to join the 1100 club, occupied by 3 players.  With 103 more he would join only John Crowe, and possibly Enrique Jarmillo as the only players on the 1200 list.

Mikey Bryant, 3 HR thus far, needs 5 more to make him the 1st D-Bag ever to hit for 100 career HR.  It would also only make him the 3rd 2B ever to hit 100+ HR behind Luis Pezina and Jeff Cole.

Matt Doyle would need 23 total, already has 5, for the 100 HR plateau as well.  Doyle has average a HR ever 14.23 AB in his career so far.  Career leader John Crowe has a 15.62 average for his career.

There are also a few team records Bryant could set this season.  He needs  to score 111 total runs this season to set the team record in runs, he currently sits 3rd behind Parker Morrow and Mason Bonniface.  He would also need 226 hits (which would break his own team record of 209) to pass Parker Morrow the only man he sits behind at this point.


With the team's last 5-4 win over Austin on 4/22 with 4 total bases, Bryant passed Morrow for 1st on the franchise record for total bases.

With 29 HR this season (which would be a career high) Luis Antonio Duran would become the 8th catcher to hit 100 HR in BSA history. 

With most players being in their mid-20's there isn't a lot for milestones.  But some things to look this season besides the amount of wins the D-Bags rack up!

GO D-BAGS!

Friday, October 26, 2012

Meet Your 2016 Jersey Shore D-Bags

2016 is underway!  Before we get too far into the season we would like to introduce to the roster, a couple new faces, but mostly a recognizable cast!

Starting Pitching - Jersey brings back a strong staff, with Macias the veteran leader and rest ranging from ages 26-30.

Art Ellis - 30 years old. Supplanted Macias as Ace of the staff last season.  Came to Jersey in trade with Madison Bombers.
2015 stats: 13-8  2.94 ERA  1.20 WHIP
Contract: $9.6M. Signed through 2021 with last year being a team option.

Dan Macias - 35 yeras old.  Came to Jersey in trade with Orlando before 2014 season.  Former 20 game winner.
2015 stats: 10-14  4.32 ERA  1.35 WHIP
Contract: $8.81M. Signed through 2017 season.

Jerry Burgess - 29 years old.  Came to Jersey in trade with El Paso during 2015 season.  Control can be his achilles heel.
2015 stats (Jersey only): 7-3  4.76 ERA  1.36 WHIP
Contract: $6.85M. Signed through 2020 with last year being a team option.

Rob Goodship - 29 years old.  Came over from Edison (Now Boston) as a waiver claim before the 2011 season.  Longest team member in the starting rotation.
2015 stats: 11-6  4.03 ERA  1.44 WHIP
Contract: $3.79M. Signed through the 2020 season.

Greg Schaefer - 26 years old.  Came over to Jersey via the Rule V draft in 2011.  Youngest member of the rotation.
2015 stats:  13-11  5.16 ERA  1.44 WHIP
Contract: $2.08M. Signed through the 2017 season.

Worth Noting: Top pitching prospect Jose Ramos sits in AAA and is the closest starter to the Bigs.  At only 20 he needs a strong season to prove he is worth bringing up.

Jose Ramos - 20 years old.  IFA signing 2013.  Huge potential, has yet to post good results in AAA.
2015 stats: AA: 10-8  3.65 ERA  1.10 WHIP     AAA: 2-4  4.41 ERA  1.41 WHIP

The Bullpen: - Jersey brings back another strong pen with some new faces, gone is Daniel Morris who had spent his career on the team.  

Dave Rice - 26 years old.  Came over to Jersey via the Rule V draft his past offseason from Pittsburgh (Now Chicago).  Has never pitched above AA.
2015 stats: AA:  6-4  4 saves  3.61 ERA   1.32 WHIP

Contract:  400K.  Not arbitration eligible through 2019.

Jose Ruiz - 23 years old.  Was drafted in the inaugural draft by Jersey.  Hard throwing right-hander, will be the main middle reliever. 
2015 stats:  4-4 1 save.  4.07 ERA  1.33 WHIP
Contract: 400K.  Arbitration eligible through 2017.

Chris Woodruff - 31 years old.  Was claimed in waivers this offseason from Jacksonville.  Talented right handed who has never seemed to put it together.  
2015 stats:  1-2 1 save.  6.44 ERA  2.01 WHIP
Contract: 600K.  Signed through 2017.

Lucio Tapia - 31 years old.  1st of 3 hard throwers at back end of bullpen.  Claimed off of waivers from Whitewater (St. Louis) during 2010 season.
2015 stats: 6-3  3 saves.  2.44 ERA   1.33 WHIP.
Contract: 3.26M.  Signed through 2018 season.

Jose "Dog Pound" Gomes - 29 years old. Was drafted in the inaugural draft by Jersey.  Hard thrower, will be primary set-up man.
2015 stats: 4-3  7 saves.  3.92 ERA  1.18 WHIP
Contract: 3.47M.  Signed through 2018 season with last year being a player option.

Jaime "Mungo" Saenz - 30 years old.  One of only 2 lefties on the staff.  Joined Jersey during inaugural draft.  Will be the closer with Morris departing for Baffin Island.
2015 stats: 16-0  2 saves.  1.99 ERA   0.95 WHIP

Worth Noting: Jersey's AAA club is filled with young talent whom aren't scheduled to be ready for the Bigs as of the start of the season, but could be called up for a chance at anytime.  They include:

Hyo-Chin Kim - 19 years old.  IFA signing 2013.  Quality lefty who has stamina to possibly spot start.  Called up to AAA late last year.
2015 stats: AA: 4-5  4 saves.  3.44 ERA   1.38 WHIP   AAA:  2-0  4.60 ERA  1.31 WHIP.

Takafumi Ogusuku - 20 years old.  IFA signing 2013.  Can hit 100 MPH with his fastball, Control and giving up the long ball are his faults.  
2015 stats:  BSA:  0-1  5.29 ERA  1.00 WHIP  AAA:  6-3  2 saves.  2.92 ERA   1.46 WHIP

Yin-Zhen Zong - 25 years old.  Drafted by Jersey, 7th round 2013.  Slowly worked his way through the system.  Struggled thus far at 1.5 years in AAA.  Seemed to find his "stuff" last season.
2015 stats:  AAA:  5-9 (25 starts)  6.94 ERA  1.77 WHIP

The Catchers - Jersey made a hard decision to bring back Duran despite high salary, he is far and away the best on the roster, but the back up spot always up for debate.

Luis Antonio Duran - 27 years old.  Claimed off over waivers from Alaska (El Paso) during 2010 season.  3 straight years with 20+ HR, last season being his best with 136 OPS+
2015 stats:  21 HR  67 RBI  .272/.404/.469
Contract: $8.75M.  Free agent after current season.

Albert Lopez - 28 years old.  Signed a MLC during the 2011 season.  Great ability and arm at catcher.  Caught and played excellent during 2015 postseason after Duran injury.  Average hitting talent.
2015 stats: AAA:  14 HR  48 RBI  .272/.349/.491  BSA:  0 HR  3 RBI  .159/.213/.205

Worth Noting: - While Lopez won the backup job, there are 2 candidates in AAA who can step in and catch if he doesn't get the job done.

Tomas Gutierrez - 28 years old.  Came to Jersey in trade with Cleveland before 2013 season.  Primary back up during 2015 season.  Average overall hitting and defense.
2015 stats:  BSA: 2 HR  15 RBI  .237/.329/.360
Contract: 400K.  Eligible for arbitration after 2017 season.

Ramon Garcia - 33 years old.  Many of you might remember Garcia.  He was drafted in the inaugural draft by Jersey, then came back on a MLC before the start of the 2015 season.  Great contact hitter.
2015 stats:  AAA:  5 HR  29 RBI  .299/.367/.392

1st Basemen - Entrenched by Matt Doyle at first, the position should stay filled for years to come.

Matt Doyle - 26 years old.  1st round pick, 2011 draft. Phenom.  Led CL in HR last year with 44, looking to improve on that.  Could see RBI title fall if he stays healthy.
2015 stats: 44 HR  147 RBI.  .302/.386/.572.  
Contract: 4.7M.  Signed through 2021 season.

Manny Romero - 28 years old.  Drafted in the inaugural draft as a 22 year old.  Primary DH, has huge gap power.  Hits lefties very well.
2015 stats:  24 HR  82 RBI.  .261/.313/.461.
Contract:  2.89M  Signed through 2018 season.

Worth Noting: After losing Edgardo Gonzales to waivers, possible candidates are slim in AAA, but many players can be 1st if necessary.

Derrick Wright - 30 years old.  Spent 2015 with Jersey, now is in AAA.  Came to Jersey in the Jose Brito trade with Sacramento in 2012.
2015 stats: 3 HR  14 RBI.  .238/.336/.389.
Contract: 400K.  Arbitration eligible after the 2017 season.

Stephen Allison - 27 years old.  Drafted in the inaugural draft by Jersey. Has power potential but tough time seeing because of limited AB's.  Could be a platoon player against lefties.
2015 stats: AAA:  8 HR  24 RBI  .302/.380/.594 (106 AB)

2nd Basemen:  Much like 1st base, 2nd base is occupied with a super star.  Mikey Bryant is currently the only one listed on the roster.

Mike "Coffin" Bryant - 28 years old.  Drafted in the 1st round in 2010, 21st overall.  Back-to-back seasons of 37 HR and 130 RBI.  Left handed with big power and above average glove and speed.
2015 stats: 37 HR  131 RBI  .323/.379/.563.
Contract: 4.9M.  Signed through 2021 season with the last year being a team option.

Worth noting:  If Bryant were ever need to be replaced, the only full option is Aaron Bailey, even though there are others who play some 2nd base.

Aaron Bailey - 27 years old.  Draft in the 2011 draft, round 4.  While Bailey doesn't play a good 2nd base, he has power and a decent eye.
2015 stats: AAA:  25 HR  86 RBI.  .305/.387/.556

Shortstop: Adam Morrow slides over to SS fulltime this year after playing primarily 3B in his rookie season. 

Adam Morrow - 27 years old.  Morrow is a slick fielding IF who doesn't play SS as well as 3B but he's learning.  Drafted in the 2nd round of the 2010 draft.  Won CL ROY last season, has insane eye.
2015 stats: 4 HR 61 RBI.  100 R  120 BB.  .282/.402/.360
Contract: 400K.  Arbitration eligible after the 2017 season.

Marvin Taylor - 30 years old.  Prototypical utility IF. Plays every IF position at an elite level.  Signed as FA, April 2011.  Good eye and great at limiting K's.
2015 stats:  1 HR  26 RBI.  .240/.344/.299
Contract: 895K.  Signed through 2017 season.

Worth Noting: While Morrow's job is safe, there is another former 1st round pick who hit AAA very well last year and could cause the problem of "too many players" in the IF for Jersey, which is never bad.

Lawrence Schroeder - 24 years old.  1st round pick, 2014 draft.  Young new school prototypical big SS.  Sits at 6'3" 225 pounds.  Has above average contact, great gap power and above average power.
2015 stats: 19 HR  95 RBI.  .287/.338/.457

3rd Basemen: After spending a lot of time ripping AAA, playoff hero, Alberto Perez gets the nod to be the opening day starting 3B, pushing Morrow to SS.

Alberto Perez - 28 years old.  Was drafted in the 47th round of the inaugural draft. Hit .300 at every level, including last year in limited AB's.  Has a decent glove, doesn't K much and an average eye.
2015 stats: AAA:  7 HR 40 RBI.  .398/.486/.536.  BSA:  5 HR 24 RBI   .306/.345/.511
Contract: 400K.  Signed through the 2020 season.

Worth Noting: Perez is on the person on the roster listed at 3B, but his backup is Taylor.  The next person in line for the 3B resides in AA, but could soon be at AAA.

Richard Coker - 22 years old.  1st round pick, 2013.  Coming out of high school, Coker has shown a pattern, struggle in your first year at a level, succeed the next, pointing his way to AAA this year should be soon.
2015 stats: AA:  9 HR  76 RBI.  .301/.350/.419

The Outfield: Now while we could break this up into individual positions, so many can play 2 or more, this was easily.  While no superstars exist, the OF is chalked full of talent.

Sergio Rodriguez - 28 years old.  Draft by Jersey in the inaugural draft. It took him 5 years to move up the minor league system and get regular AB's for Jersey, but paid off. Rangy, speedy OF with average hitting skills across the board.
2015 stats: BSA:  7 HR  26 RBI.  .320/.400/.549.  AAA:  11 HR  40 RBI  .317/.413/.518
Contract: 400K. Arbitration eligible after the 2017 season.

Leon Foster - 30 years old.  Came to Jersey in trade with New York before 2013 season.  Great OF with great power.  Top 10 all time in BSA for HR.  Likes to K....a lot.  Injury troubles as of late.
2015 stats:  11 HR  36  RBI.  .273/.356/.517
Contract: 13.87M.  Free agent after 2016 season.

Tim Duncan - 27 years old.   Came to Jersey in trade with LA during 2014 season.  The long awaited time of Duncan is here after Powers left for FA.  Elite speed and above average defense and contract. Leadoff hitter potential.
2015 stats:  AAA:  16 HR  58 RBI.  38 SB. .317/.382/.483.
Contract: 400K.  Arbitration eligible after the 2018 season.

Peter Larson - 29 years old.  Came to Jersey with Duncan in 2014 trade with LA.  Good contact hitter with elite eye, best in baseball.  Average defense.  Seems to be prone to injury.
2015 stats:  4 HR  44 RBI.  .268/.437/.379
Contract: 4.4M.  Signed through 2019 season, last year being a player option.

Jose Ortiz - 27 years old.  2nd season in Jersey, came over via Rule V draft from Reno, 2015.  Good contract hitter, loves hitting to the gap and rarely strikes out.  Average defender, lacks much speed.
2015 stats: 1 HR 25 RBI  18 2B.  .341/.401/.482 (164 AB)
Contract: 400K.  Arbitration eligible after the 2017 season.

Al Ryan - 27 years old.  Came to Jersey in a trade with Greenville before the 2014 season.  Lefty with big power.  2 straight seasons with 20+ HR.  Average defense and speed.
2015 stats:  21 HR  71 RBI.  .265/.355/.473.

Worth Noting: While Jersey has this group of OF, there are a handful in AAA that should be capable now or at some point this season to step up if need be.

Taro Kino - 28 years old.  Signed a MLC during the 2011 season.  Right handed with good contact and power.  Hasn't taken advantage of MLB Ab's yet, hence why he is in AAA still.
2015 stats: AAA: 24 HR  68 RBI.  .344/.429/.594  BSA:  0 HR  10 RBI  .236/.336/.368 (106 AB)

Ken Taylor - 28 years old.  Came to Jersey in a trade with Vista during the 2014 season.  Left hander with big power, great gap power and average eye.  Above average glove.
2015 stats: AAA: 27 HR  87 RBI.  .290/.407/.645

Fransisco Torres - 20 years old.  IFA signing 2013.  Torres is former #1 overall hitting prospect who seems to have fallen off a little.  Good gap and power, great eye.  Great LF and above average speed.
2015 stats:  AA: 21 HR  62 RBI  28 2B.  .358/.510/.642. Only played 12 games in AAA.

Dave "Diamond" Dodd - 21 years old.  Signed a MLC during the 2013 season, former 2nd round pick of Reno.  Huge potential. Great contact skills, elite power and speed, above average glove.
2015 stats:  AA:  15 HR  58 RBI  20 2B.  .280/.355/.444.

There is your 25 man roster plus a slew of players you might see during the upcoming season.  Can these players lead Jersey to another playoff run, we think so!

GO D-BAGS!

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

2016 Offseason: Jersey Shore

After taking a tough loss in Game 7 of the World Series against the mighty Hendersonville Hitmen, there was a lot of uncertainty when it came to Jersey players.  A lot of star players with contracts set to be up, a player's option and a few holes opening up.  Here's what has happened since that fateful day in Hendersonville.

 The day after the season Leon Foster decided to accept his 13.87 Million dollar option he was given in 2013 as part of his 4 year extension.  After starting out decent last season Foster strained his hip and missed 3 months.  Jersey brass thought it was inevitable he would take the option but I think deep down everyone hoped he would turn it down.  Foster should start in CF, at least against lefties, this up coming season.  Foster sits 8th on the All-time HR list with 205.

The first two weeks of November had to feel like Christmas for many Jersey Shore fans.  On November 4th Jersey announced they bought out 2, possibly 3 years of arbitration and signed superstar 1B Matt Doyle to a 6 year deal worth 39.35 million dollars.  The deal will keep Doyle in Jersey through the age of 32.  Doyle led the CL in HR last year with 44 and only 2 seasons into his Jersey career he sits only behind Mikey Bryant on the Jersey Shore all time HR list with 77.

Three days later on November 7th, Jersey announced they avoided losing their FA deadline pickup Jerry Burgess by agreeing to a 5 year contract worth 45.29 million dollars.  Burgess won 7 starts after coming over from El Paso and was vital in their playoff run winning 3 of his 6 starts and keeping Jersey within striking distance in Game 7.

Five days after the Burgess signing, Jersey announced they had come to an agreement with FA to be and arguable ace of the staff 30 year old Art Ellis to a 6 year contract which will keep him in Jersey for the remainder of his career.  Ellis posted one of the best seasons put up by a Jersey hurler, posting a 2.94 ERA and striking out 210.

On November 21st, the league announced that MR Brian White recieved a new contract worth 600K through arbitration, which was no surprise, and Catcher Luis Antonio Duran won his arbitration hearing and will receive $8.75 million this upcoming season.  With Duran's number being that high, there is probably a slim chance he will be back for 2017.  Regardless he will be starting the season as the team's starting catcher.

Free agency started November 24th and Jersey said good-bye to two players.  The first being one of the longest tenured player closer Daniel Morris.  With the money going to the starters, there was just not enough to go around.  Morris leaves Jersey leading the team in all-time ERA (2.59), Saves (170), appearances (387), BB/9 (2.0), K/BB (4.18), WHIP (1.17), OOPS (.626) and VORP (139.4). 

Also departing through free agency is the speedy OF Scott Powers, who spent 3 years in Jersey after a trade from Niagara Falls. Powers a multi-use speedy OF, never lived up to the potential Jersey thought they would get when they made the trade in 2013.  His spot on the roster will go to one of the money OF Jersey has stashed away in AAA.

The Rule V draft took place on December 1st and with the 22nd pick Jersey selected MR David Rice with the 22nd pick.  Rice of the former Pittsburgh (now Chicago) franchise.  Rice will become the 2nd lefty in the pen after new closer Jaime Saenz.  Last season Rice pitched in AA and a 3.61 ERA and 140 K's in 124.2 IP.

Jersey also lost a player in the Rule V draft as well.  St. Charles selected speedy utility infielder Dave Henson whom Jersey signed to a MLC in 2014 after being released from Vista.  Henson hit .270 with 14 SB in 63 AB with Tuscaloosa last season.

Towards the end of Spring Training Jersey made a couple of waiver moves.  The first being claiming MR Chris Woodruff from the Jacksonville Jackhammers.  Woodruff struggled in Jacksonville last year posting a 6.44 ERA in 50.1 IP, but the Jersey brass must have seen some potential.

On the same day Jersey claimed Woodruff, Boston claimed 1B Edgardo Gonzales.  Gomzales who has been with Jersey since the inaugural draft always has played well in AAA but has had trouble cracking the 25-man roster.  Gonzales got only 29 AB in the last 3 seasons.

On April 2nd, the day before the season was set to begin Jersey announced another contract extension.  One of the best hitters in last year's playoffs 3B Alberto Perez agreed to a 4 year deal buying out his arbitration years worth nearly $8M dollars.  Perez is slated to start at 3B this season with Adam Morrow sliding over to SS.

Losses: CL Daniel Morris, CF Scott Powers, SS Dave Henson, 1B Edgardo Gonzales
Additions: MR Dave Rice, MR Chris Woodruff
Extensions: SP Jerry Burgess, SP Art Ellis, 1B Matt Doyle, 3B Alberto Perez

2016 is here! Look for the roster breakdown, coming soon!

GO D-BAGS







Sunday, September 2, 2012

BSA Championship: Jersey Shore vs Hendersonville

For awhile it's now been, Jersey is the best team never to make the playoffs.  Falling short every year despite having 2 90+ win seasons and never falling below .500.  Obviously this was the year the Bags would make the playoffs, winning 97 games, claiming the Wild Card and getting that proverbial monkey off of their backs.  Happy just to be in the playoffs, they quickly got down 0-2 to Toronto before the "shine" faded and they won 4 games in a row to take out Toronto.  An epic inner-division 7 game series with Greenville could have gone either way and the Bags snuck by on a late 2 run HR by Perez to send fans into a frenzy and into their first ever World Series.   We already knew Hendersonville, who finished off LA in 5 games, would be watching and waiting.  What turned into an entertaining series, the Bags couldn't finish off the Hitmen and fell in 7 games.  Regardless the season was much a success. Here is the BSA Championship breakdown.

Game 1

The first game of this series would pit former teammates and respected aces Art Ellis and Scott Hill against each other on the mound.  Ellis who was Hill's teammate in Hendersonville for 4 seasons before being traded to Madison in October 2013.  Both pitchers on full rest turned out to be quite the pitchers duel, which was to be expected.  Vic Robertson got the crowd into the game as the #2 hitter for Hendersonville blasted a 407 foot HR into the right field bleachers to open the scoring in the bottom of the first inning.  While Hill cruised the 2nd, Ellis was again in trouble when a walk to Jud Younger and a single from Victor Franco led off the inning.  A K of Anastasio Lopez was the first out followed by a single from veteran Gregg Burkholder loaded the bases for Robertson again.  This time Ellis got the best of him striking him out swinging on a full count for the 2nd out.  Ellis would make MVP candidate Jeff Cole look silly striking him out on 3 pitches to end the threat.  The pitchers would both cruise along until the Top of the 4th inning with 1 out, Mike Bryant got out in front of a Hill fastball and knocked it into Souvenir City in right field to tie  the game at 1.  Looking into stats, this was the first HR period Hill had given up since before the All Star break and only the 2nd HR given up to a left handed hitter in the past 2 years.

The Bags would again get to Hill in the 5th when SS Marvin Taylor would slice a double down the left field line with 2 outs.  On a 2-2 count to Scott Powers, Hill would throw wide of Lopez for a wild pitch sending Taylor to 3rd and would score on the next pitch when Powers would fist a ball into right center for a Jersey lead of 2-1.  From here, the pitcher's would take over.  Hendersonville left the bases loaded in the 6th, and runners on first and 2nd in the 7th.  Relievers both entered the game in the 8th relieving the starters and Jersey, with the help of some bad defense, broke the game open in the 9th.  A one out single by CLCS MVP Alberto Perez got the ball rolling.  Manny Romero hit a grounder, that should have been an inning ending double play, that gobbled up Younger at 3rd for an error leaving both runners safe.   The next batter Al Ryan hit a grounder to Jeff Cole that he couldn't handle which loaded the bases for Taylor.  Unlike the Hitmen, Jersey took advantage. Taylor hit a hard liner to the gap in left center that would get to the wall and bring everyone home making it a 5-1 Jersey lead.  Bryant would add an RBI single later in the inning to make it 6-1 and Mungo Saenz would close out the game with a 1-2-3 inning to mark Jersey's first ever WS win and give them a 1-0 advantage in the series.

Game 2
If Jersey had any chance in this series they would have to play Hill tough, and that they did.  Game 2 would get no easier with the Hitmen throwing 2014 Cy Young award winner Walter Bamber to take on the left handed Rob Goodship.  One Cy Young award winner to the next.  Maybe the D-Bags didn't know who Bamber was, because they sure didn't treat him like an elite starter.  3 singles and a walk to the first 4 hitters gave Jersey a 1-0 lead and the bases loaded with 1 out.  A strikeout for Leon Foster would be the first out, followed by a double for Romero that brought in 2 and a single from Perez to bring in another run as Jersey batted around in the first and put up 4 runs on Bamber.  But that by no means would put the Hitmen out of this one.  They got 1 in the 2nd on a Younger single and broke out in the 4th.  A solo HR by Jorge Cruz made it 4-2, back to back doubles by Robertson and Younger made it 4-3 and a single from the catcher Lopez tied the game at 4 as we headed to the 5th inning.  The tie didn't last long as in the bottom half of the inning superstar Shumei Yokoyama would send Goodship to the showers with a tie breaking 399 foot solo HR to give the Hitmen their first lead of the game.

But you had to assume more scoring from these two juggernaut offenses.  The Top of the 7th rolled around  with Sergio Rodriguez and Mike Bryant hitting back to back 1 out singles before Matt Doyle flew out to put Bamber 1 out from getting out of trouble.  But Foster would get revenge from the earlier K and ground a ball down the line past a diving Younger to bring home both runners and give Jersey back the lead at 6-5.  Bamber would be yanked and replaced by Tommy Smith who got Romero to softly ground to the SS Franco who threw wild and allowed Foster to score to pad Jersey's lead and put Romero at 2nd.  Smith couldn't get Perez to end the inning as he singled in the hole to give Jersey an 8-5 lead catcher Albert Lopez struck out.  Relievers would take care of the rest of the game for Jersey as Jose Gomes, Greg Schaefer, Saenz and Daniel Morris combined to go 4 2/3 innings, giving up 1 hit, 1 walk and striking out 5 to slam the door shut on a game 2 win for Jersey.  This win essentially gave the D-bags home field advantage and a commanding 2-0 lead.

Game 3
The third game of the series would be the first in Jersey as 35 year old Dan Macias would take the hill against hard throwing right hander Greg Casey.  Things didn't start well for Macias.  After giving up a single, he got 2 quick outs before Yokoyama singled and, quiet through the first 2 games, Manny Coprivizia lauched a 3 run HR to left to give the Hitmen an early 3-0 lead.  Macias would settle in after that though.  Both pitchers continued with out much trouble until the bottom of the 4th when Jersey would get a 2 out rally going.  Matt Doyle would coax a 2 out walk, which tuned into trouble for Casey.  The next batter Al Ryan would take a 2-1 mistake of a fastball and clobber it into the stands to bring Jersey within 1 run.  Macias and Casey would go toe-to-toe giving up nothing but the occasional walk or single until the bottom of the 7th.  A one out single would send Casey to the showers and was replaced by Smith.  He got Taylor to fly out before walking Peter Larson.  OF Jose Ortiz would single on a 3-1 count to CF to load the bases.  Questions were asked after the game why catcher Lopez was not pinch run for with speedster Sergio Rodriguez on the bench because Smith would get Bryant to weakly ground out ending the inning and Bags last real threat of the game.  The top of the 8th saw Macias get the first 2 outs before he got into trouble as well.  A Cole double followed by back to back walks of Yoko and Cobra loaded the bases for the left handed hitting Cruz.  Team manager Kevin Davis would have no more of this as he brough in left handed specialist Mungo Saenz who threw 2 curveballs and a fastball clocked at 100 MPH to get Cruz on 3 pitches.  

Daniel Morris would come to pitch the 9th and this is when the Hitmen bats would wake up. A single from Franco, walk to Lopez, single from Robertson and a double from Cole would bring in 3 runs.  Schaefer was brought in to stop the bleeding and was met with a Yoko 2-run HR before finally getting Cruz to end the inning, but not before 5 runs pretty much ending the game.  The Bags would go down in order in the 9th, conceding the first game at Jersey to Hendersonville by a final score of 8-2.

Game 4 
In a surprise move by most, Hendersonville would start Marcus Guerra in game 4 instead of going to Hill on short rest.  Jersey would send two-time hero Jerry Burgess to the mound to face his old team.  Teams traded 1st inning runs on a HR from Roman Guzman and an RBI triple for Mike Bryant.  Jersey would wait til the 4th to blow open the game.  A single from Doyle would lead off the inning and a mile high fly from Ryan would land 370 feet away giving him his 2nd HR of the series and the D-Bags a 3-1 lead, but they weren't done there.  After the HR Guerra would Perez to fly out before losing control.  He walked Foster-Lopez and Taylor back to back to back to load the bases for Peter Larson.  The left handed hitting Larson flew a ball deep the right-center gap allowing all 3 runners to come around, extending the lead to 6-1 for the Bags. Guerra would be done before getting out of the 4th and Felipe Rodriguez would come to see and Ortiz groundout bring in Larson and Mikey "Coffin" Bryant hit a first pitch HR into the right field bleachers capping off a 7 run inning, giving the Bags a 8-1 lead. 

The 5th saw the Bags capitalize on a single, hit by pitch and 2 walks to extend the lead to 9-1. Burgess would cruise into the 7th allowing only the 1st inning HR.  The Hitmen lead off the inning with a double, walk and single to load the bases and get Burgess out of the game and get into the Jersey bullpen.  Jose Gomes would come in and immediately get a strikeout before allowing a run scoring single from Cobra.  A walk to Cole forced in the 2nd run and things looked up when he got Yoko to ground back to the mound for a force out at home and the 2nd out of the inning.  That wouldn't happen because Cruz came through with a 2 out single which scored 2 more before Gomes was yanked from the game.  At this point the Hitmen had made it 9-5 and a much more manageable game.  Brian White was brought in and walked Robertson to load the bases once more and Hendersonville scored a 6th run when White couldn't handle a come backer from Younger resulting in an error.  The inning finally ended when Cole Bradley struck out giving us a 3-run game at 9-6.  

The once jovial Jersey crowd was quiet as the 8th inning got underway and a 1 out double from Guzman brought us our 3rd reliever of the night in Jaime Saenz.  Back to back single from Cobra and Cole brought in a run and an RBI ground out from Yoko gave us a 1 run game.  Cruz would ground out ending the Hitmen's 8th inning, but a 9-1 deficit was now 9-8.   Jersey's bats in the 8th went down in order and Daniel Morris came out for the 9th.  He got Robertson to ground out in 1 pitch and struck out younger in 3 pitches.  Burkholder would pinch hit and single to right putting himself on as the tying run.  The catcher Lopez would foul off 2 pitches before striking out swinging giving Jersey the win and a 3-1 series lead and a huge sigh of relief.  Only 1 win from the BSA title, could the Bags do it?  If anyone could win 3 in a row it would be the Hitmen, especially considering Hill-Bamber were going in the next 2 games.

Game 5
Game 5 should have been better.  It was the last game at home for Jersey for the season.  Their ace Ellis was on the mound. A win would give them a title.  The game was not good.  Ellis started out wild walking the first 2 batters, 1 which would come around to sore a fielder's choice.  This in turn would be all Hendersonville would need.  You wouldn't even think it was the same Hill we saw in Game 1, because he was dominate, and so were the Hendersonville bats.  2 runs in the 3rd and 3 more in the 5th made it 6-0.  This would last til the 9th where a HR, a triple, a walk and 3 singles would add 5 more to put a exclamation point on a dominate 11-0 victory.  Hill pitched 7 innings, giving up 5 hits, all singles, walking 1 and striking out 3.  Ellis was charged with 6 ER on 5 hits in 4.1 IP.  The surprise was he walked 7 batters, which in turn was a season high.....by a lot.  Nothing good happened for Jersey.  Bats were non existent and now they had to go back to Hendersonville still holding on to a 3-2 series lead.

Game 6
After an off day we headed back to Hendersonville for the pivotal Game 6.  This game would bring back the Game 2 staters and pit Goodship against Bamber.  Neither pitched very well in Game 2, but this game would see both these starters reverse that trend. Hendersonville, as they had done lately, would get on the board early and no surprise courtesy of their big 3.  Jeff Cole walk, Yoko double and Cobra single attributed to the games first run in the bottom of the 1st inning.  Not a half inning later Jersey would reply when Doyle and Foster would lead off the inning with back to back double to put Jersey in business.  Perez followed up with a single to put runners on the corners with no outs.  Manny Romero would ground into a double play with somehow not scoring Foster from third and a ground-out from Morrow would end the inning with amazingly only one run coming across the score.

After the score in the 2nd, both Goodship and Bamber would bore down matching zeros across the board until Bamber was pulled in the Top of the 7th throwing 104 pitches.  We went to the bottom of the 7th still deadlocked at 1.  A walk from younger, sacrifice bunt from Franco and a strikeout by Lopez put a runner on 2nd with 2 outs.  Guzman came to the plate and belted a ball to deep center that was barely out of the reach of Foster which would have ended the inning.  Instead Guzman ended up with a a triple, plating the go ahead run.  End of 7, Hitmen up 2-1.  Alfredo Gonzalez came in and set down the Bags in order in the 8th while Goodship came out for the 8th.  A monster solo HR from Yoko would put the finishing touches on his day and give Hendersonville an insurance run as Goodship would pitch 8 innings, giving up 3 runs on 5 hits and striking out 6.  Donahue gave up a leadoff single to Doyle to give the Bags some hope, but 3 straight outs would end the game and deadlock the series at 3.  We would go to a game 7 for the BSA Championship for the 2nd year in a row.

Game 7
Being up 2-0 and 3-1 most Jersey fans weren't excited to see game 7, especially on the road away from their park.  GM Josh Swain made the decision to go away from Dan Macias and pitch Jerry Burgess in Game 7.  Would this pay off?  If you like a classic pitchers duel, this game was for you.  Greg Casey would start opposite Burgess who already had a Game 3 win under his belt.  Both pitchers would go 1-2-3 in the first inning breezing through the top part of the orders.  Jersey was the one to strike first in game 7 though.  It started with a lead off walk for the young budding superstar Doyle.  Casey would zone in and get Ryan and Perez both to fly out before a Jose Ortiz single put runners on 1st and 2nd.  Albert Lopez who in this series played great for the injured Duran came through with a single to center which scored a sliding Doyle and put Ortiz at 3rd.  Scott Powers couldn't extend the lead or keep the inning alive as he grounded out to short to end the inning.

Both pitches would avoid trouble for the next inning would the Hitmen would strike back in the bottom half of the 3rd.  Back to back singles to lead off the inning from Franco and Lopez put runners at the corners with no outs and looked like a classic Hendersonville big inning.  Bugess got Guzman swinging for the first out. That brought Vic Robertson to the plate.  On a 0-1 count Burgess lost control of Curveball and sent it to the backstop which allowed Franco to score the tying run before Robertson would hit a screeching liner that Morrow would snag and step on 2nd base for an inning ending double play.  But the damage was done and we had a tie ball game.  From this point forward pitchers dominated the game.  No runner reached past 2nd base through the end of the 8th inning.  Burgess went 6 1/3 giving up the 1 ER while striking out 6, Gomes and Saenz would relieve him and get the Bags into  the 9th inning with no damage done.  Game 7 would come down to the 9th inning.

Tommy Smith would place Casey, who pitched brilliantly.  A lead-off walk to Bryant would get things going.  Smith would get Doyle on a huge strikeout bringing Al Ryan to plate.  On the first pitch, one which Ryan took, Bryant would break for 2nd and get thrown out stealing on a bang-bang play.  No one knows for sure if it was meant to be a hit and run but it erased the runner and Ryan would ground out on the next pitch to end the inning.  Daniel Morris would replace Saenz, in what could be his last appearance as a Bag.  Yoko would single to lead off the inning which would bring up Coprivizia.  Cobra has been known for his big hits in big situations and this would be no different.  He would run the count to a favorable 3-1 before lacing a double to the gap.  Runners on 2nd and 3rd, no outs, tie game, bottom of the 9th, game 7, Championship on the line.  Didn't look good for the Bags. Jorge Cruz was intentionally walked to load the bases setting up the force at home.  It wouldn't matter.  Jud Younger came to the plate to be the hero.  After taking 2 quick strikes and fouling off a pitch, he took a ball high before hitting a grounder to the hole between 1st and 2nd.  With the infield playing in the grounder squirted past the drawn in infield and Yoko would score and be mobbed by teammates as the crowd went wild as Hendersonville notched another walk-off win and send the Bags home empty handed.  

For Hendersonville it was business as usual, winning their 4th title in 6 season and 4th title in 4 tries.  For the Bags it reaching within 1 run of a championship in their first postseason experience, not to mention knocking off the CL's two best teams and coming oh-so-close to knocking off the best team in baseball.  Disappointing but nothing to shake your head at.  

For Hendersonville it was pitching in the last 3 games that clinched it.  They managed to hold down the Jersey powerhouse offense to 2 runs in the last 3 games.  Not to mention the combined Big 3 of Yoko-Cole-Cobra knocked in 18 runs in the 7 game series.  In perspective the Dynamic Duo of Bryant-Doyle knocked in 17 runs between the two of them for the entire post season.  Great series of ups and downs.  Gm Swain denied a press conference so that's it for now.  We will bring to you the season review and off season agenda here soon at the Bag Report.

GO D-BAGS

Monday, August 27, 2012

Jersey Shore vs. Greenville; Winner to WS

These 2 are no strangers to each other.  Playing 17 times per season over the last 5 years does that to teams.  In this matchup, Greenville has the edge. 2 years ago they took the season series 10-7, last year 11-6 and this year a closer but still with the edge 9-8.  This marks the 4th in a row that Greenville has won the CL East.  Jersey has come in 2nd twice and 3rd twice, this year being the first they snuck into the playoffs via the Wild Card spot.  This would mark the 3rd straight year that Greenville has advanced to the CLCS; 2 years ago being beaten in 7 games by Regina and last year beaten by Toronto in 5 games.  The 84's are no strangers to big games.  A 7 game series, winner to the World Series.

Game 1

We expected runs, high scoring, good bullpen pitching and high end drama and this series didn't disappoint.  Game 1 featured two of the better starters in the CL this year as Art Ellis took the mound for Jersey and Tom Crowder for Greenville.  After 2 innings we were knotted at 1 as the big boys knocked in the first runs of the game.  Cooper Newell an RBI double and Matt Doyle his first HR of the postseason, a solo shot in the 2nd.  A Carlos Perez solo HR made it 2-1 in the 3rd but the big break came for Jersey in the 4th.  With Leon Foster coaxing a 2-out walk from Crowder, Manny Romero hit what should have been an inning ending grounder to SS.  The usually soft and sure handed Raul Trejo couldn't field it cleanly allowing everyone to be safe and extend the inning.  And wouldn't you know on the first pitch of the next AB, 3B Alberto Perez would hit his 2nd postseason HR and put Jersey up 4-2.  Jose Alvarez kept the 84's close by hitting a 2 run bomb in the 5th to tie the game back up.  The tie didn't last long.  Bryant led off the 5th with a walk and advanced to 3rd on Matt Doyle's double.  Leon Foster hit a long pop fly that looked routine......until it landed 5 feet over the short 325 foot porch in Right to put the Bags on top 7-4.  Ellis would allow one hit in the last 4 innings going the distance for the CG and the Bags would add 3 more runs oh hits from Doyle and Foster for a convincing and statement making 10-4 opening game win.

Game 2

Before Game 2, John Bosma said in his press conference that the 84's needed to leave Greenville with a 1-1 split.  He was probably right as going down 0-2 at home would have been devastating, while on the other hand Jersey could put an early strangle hold on the series with a Game 2 win.  Dan Macias would face off against Oliver Beaudoin.    It was a see-saw battle that changed leads 4 times and feature 1 tie in the first 6 innings.  HR's by Carlos Perez and Manny Romero mixed in with Dan Macias escaping several jams left Greenville leading 5-4.  Alberto Perez who with 3 hits in Game 1, tied the game at 5 with an 8th inning single, knocking in Mike Bryant.  They failed to capitalize leaves 2 runners on base though.  The bullpens did their join to send the game into extras  and in the bottom of the 10th of of closer Daniel Morris, a Raul Trejo single, Jose Navarro sac bunt and a Greg O'Day grounder that found the OF gave the 84's a much needed walk off win.  In retrospect the game should never have been that close.  Greenville out hit Jersey 14 to 9 and left 23 men on base.  The series would head to Jersey tied at 1 game apiece. 

Game 3

Game 3 would feature a matchup of mid-season pickups from both sides.  Greenville would send Donald Manning whom them acquired from Maui and Jersey would send Game 6 hero Jerry Burgess whom they acquired from El Paso.  This game would get out of hand quickly.  The 84's would knock Burgess out of the game before the 3rd inning ended tagging him for 7 earned runs on 7 hits and 3 walks.  Jersey would fight back and make it a 7-4 game after 6 innings but Greenville was resilient in this one.  They scored 5 runs off of the usually sure fire bullpen, getting 4 off of Lucio Tapia, including a Carlos Perez HR, his 3rd in 3 games for a decisive 12-5 Greenville win.  Greenville had 14 hits and left 24 men on base making a statement with their bats for the 2nd night in a row.

Game 4

After the game Swain skipped his press conference but was heard saying, we have been here, down 2-1 before, we aren't worried. Game 4 would be one of coulda, shoulda, woulda.....so many chances on both sides.  This game is one that might haunt John Bosma in his sleep.  The starters were Ron Eager for the 84's and Rob Goodship going for Jersey.  Both pitchers were sharp through 2 when Greenville got to Goodship in the 3rd.  A double by Perez got the offense going.  The next batter, Brian Cash, knocked in Perez with a single to open the scoring.  After a flyout from the reigning MVP Felix Morales, little used OF Arthur Donahue would blast a 2 run HR out of CF to put Greenville on top 3-0, a score that would stick until the Jersey half of the 5th inning.  

Up until the 5th, Ron Eager had been perfect, retiring all 12 batters he had faced.  That would change on the 2nd pitch of the inning as Matt Doyle lined a ball to the gap in right center and would coast in with a stand up double.  A flustered Eager hit Al Ryan with the next pitch to put two runners aboard with no outs.  O'Day would talk to Eager helping to settle him down and getting the recent hot hitting Alberto Perez to hit into a fielder's choice getting the out at 2nd.  That brought up Leon Foster to the plate with runners on the corners.  Foster took a 1-2 hanging curveball and pounded it to the left-center gap where Doyle scored the 1st run of the day for the D-Bags easy and Perez coasted into 3rd base.  The next batter was the catcher Albert Lopez, playing for the injured Duran, who lined a ball between short and third for a running scoring single setting up runners on the corners again for SS Marvin Taylor.  Taylor walked on 5 pitches to load the bases for Peter Larson, who was making his first appearance in over a month after being on the DL.  After fouling off 4 straight 2-2 pitches Eager would strike out Larson looking for a huge 2nd out.  He still wasn't out of the trouble because Jose Ortiz would hit next with the bases loaded.  Ortiz turned on a ball that barely snuck into the OF.  It was enough to score Foster, but Lopez was held at 3rd.  That tied the score at 3 and brought up MVP candidate Mike Bryant with a chance to bust the game open.  Bryant, struggling thus far through the playoffs, eventually flew out to left to end the inning, but the damage was done and we had ourselves a tie game.  

Both pitchers threw a perfect 6th and Goodship started of the 7th by striking out Stan Hickman.  Cooper Newell hit a ball to the gap that nearly went out for a double and Goodship almost got out of the inning by getting SS Marcos Mesa to groundout, but Game 2 hero Greg O'Day lined a single into left scoring Newell for the go ahead run for the 84's.  Goodship would get out of the inning with no more damage and Eager would set down the Bags in order in the their half of the 7th.  Jersey elected to keep Goodship in the game in the 8th and set Greenville down on 12 pitches witch included a strikeout of Morales.  Jersey's half of the 8th started off with a walk to Peter Larson which chased Eager from the game and entered was Randy Ellison, who was used for one batter, and got Ortiz to ground into a FC getting the force out at second.  Manuel Medina then entered getting Bryant to groundout to first which advanced Ortiz to second with two outs.  Medina's night was done and the 84's brought in Miguel Negrete to face Doyle.  Doyle worked a full count before delivering the clutch single that brought Ortiz in from second and tied the game once again at 4.

Goodship would be pulled after pitching 8 strong innings and Dog Pound Gomes would take over.  After getting Alvarez and Hickman in 6 pitches, again Newell was the instigator doubling down the left field line, setting himself up as the go ahead run at second.  Pinch hitter Jose Navarro would come in and silence the Jersey crowd with a single into RF to put Grenville up 5-4 and 3 outs from a 3-1 series lead.  Closer Jorge Valentin would come in to attempt to close it out for the 84's in the 9th.  Alberto Perez would lead off the inning with a much needed single and add to the hopes for Jersey fans.  Scott Powers would come in and hit for Leon Foster and lay down a beauty of a bunt between the mound and 3rd.  On a very close bang-bang play Powers was called safe and the Bags were in business.  Jersey would send Manny Romero to hit for C Lopez and on an 0-2 count he sat back on a curveball and lined it into LF to load the bases with no one out.  What started out as a sacrifice attempt, turned into the bases loaded with no outs.  Valentin would get Taylor to ground out to the short, where they would go home for the force out and the first out of the inning.  Peter Larson would stroll to the plate next and would do what he does best, be selective.  He walked on 5 pitches which brought home Powers to tie the game and leave the bases juiced.  The next batter Jose Ortiz would fight off 2 pitches before punching a ball between LF and CF for a single that would plate Romero and send the crowd into a frenzy.  The Bags mobbed the field as Romero crossed the plate and what looked like a 3-1 deficit turned into a 2-2 series tie.

Game 5

Game 5 you would think Jersey would have all the momentum.  Coming back at home, maybe they partied a little late coming off their win.  This game saw Art Ellis being unusually off as he walked 4 batters, only lasted 5.1 IP, the bullpen gave up 3 earned runs and Carlos Perez hit his 4th and 5th HR of the series as Greenville coasted to an 8-2 to win and a 3-2 series advantage.  Also in this game Alberto Perez was hit on the hand and had to be taken out of the game.  Derrick Wright came in, who plays very little 3B, to fill in for Perez.  Luckily for the D-Bags nothing was broken but with Morrow being out, the only player who played any 3B was Wright, which forced them to go with Perez at 3B despite the sore and swollen hand.

Game 6

We would get a day off before Game 6, which was a rematch of Game 2, facing Macias against Beaudoin.  This would turn from laugher to classic and another head scratcher for the 84's.  Sore hand and all Perez lauched a 2 run HR in the 2nd and 2 batters later catcher Albert Lopez added another 2 run blast for an early 4-0 Jersey lead, which also chased the starter Beaudoin.  In the 4th with Sugimoto Kuhabara on the mound Al Ryan led off the inning with a solo blast and 3 batters later Lopez hit his 2nd HR of the night and the route was on.  6-0 Jersey just 3.5 innings into the game with Macias on cruise control thus far.  That's when things got interesting.

After striking out Newell to start the inning, Cash singled between walks to Hickman and Trejo which loaded the bases for Jose Navarro.  Navarro took full advantage running the count to full against Macias before depositing a Gland Slam HR 447 feet away.  To make matters worse for Jersey is two batters later O'Day hooked a ball around the left field foul pole for a solo HR which sent Macias to the showers and left us with a 6-5 game.  And the inning wasn't over.  Mungo was called in from the bullpen and has been almost perfect over the last 2 months.  He gave up a single to Alvarez before getting Perez to fly out.  Outs are hard to come by sometimes in a lineup like the 84's.  The next batter was MVP Morales, who showed us why he was the MVP by putting the 84's on top for the first time today with a 2 run HR to make it 7-6 Greenville.  A 6 run lead vanished in the blink of an eye and after a scoreless 5th and 6th, Jersey was 9 outs away from elimination.  

The 7th was no different as left handed specialist got the left handed top of the order in order and Greg Schaefer came in and gave up a harmless single before sending the game to the 8th.   The playoffs are built on heroics.  Greenville used their bullpen effectively using RH Ellison against Doyle, who struck out, and LF Herrera against Ryan, who grounded out.  Who else would start the 2 out rally other than, sore hand and all, Alberto Perez.  A single into left kept the inning going and a wild pitch sent him to second.  Pinch hitter Scott Powers hit a HUGE single into right field which tied the game.  On a 1-0 pitch Lopez, Powers took off for 2nd testing the arm of O'Day.  Usually one of the most accurate throwers in the league, O'Day sailed the ball into center field and Powers raced to 3rd.  The go ahead run 90 feet away.  Lopez, one of the slower runners on the roster, chopped a ball off the plate over the mound and was able to beat it out for an infield hit which scored Powers from 3rd and put the Bags back on top 8-7 and deflating which was once a loud, raucous crowd.  Tapia pitched the 8th for Jersey, walked a batter after two groundouts, then struck out the hot hitting Carlos Perez to send the game to the 9th.  The Bags were set down in order and Daniel Morris was sent out to save the game against the heart of the Greenville order. Morris was all business looking like the Morris of old.  Using his slider he got Morales and Newell looking and quickly got ahead of Hickman 0-2 before lazily flying out to Powers in CF which would send us to a Game 7.

Game 7

Why not 7 games for this series?  9-8 during the season.  Division rivals.  Hendersonville, who took care of the LA Bruins in 5 games, sat awaiting. The matchup, why not, Manning-Burgess, rematch of the mid season pick ups.  The stars aligned to send us this one.  As the game got under way, Donald Manning was business as usual, breezing through the Jersey lineup through the first 4 innings.  Burgess on the other hand was erratic but effective.  In the first 4 innings Greenville stranded 8 runners, 2 per inning, many of those times getting runners on with less than 2 outs.  You can only give a great team so many opportunities before they take advantage.  Manning set down Jersey in order in the 5th and Felix Morales led off the 5th and said....to hell with runners on base and launched a solo HR for the first run of the game.  Manning got into his first jam in the 6th when the Bags put runners on 2nd and 3rd with 1 out, but he K'ed Powers and got Rodriguez to fly out to end the threat.  After 6, Greenville 1, Jersey 0.

If Jersey was going to make noise it was now.  They led off the 7th with the heart of their order.  Bryant continued to struggle and flew out to left.  Matt Doyle on the other hand continued his hot series by singling before pinch hitter Peter Larson struck out.  With 2 outs Manny Romero crushed a ball to the gap in left center.  Even though Doyle was running on the pitch the ball was hit so hard it didn't give Doyle a chance to go home, instead putting runners on 2nd and 3rd with 2 outs.  You can't write stories like this.  Stepping to the plate was who else, but Alberto Perez.  This had been his series so far, injury and all.  Manning ran the count to 3-1 before Perez got a pitch he liked.  A chest high fastball that he turned on and sent the ball sailing into the left field bleachers.  A 3 run HR in 1 run, in the 7th inning of Game 7 of the CLCS.  Heroics.  27 year old rookie who played most of the season in AAA.  Like I said you can't make this stuff up.  But we weren't done yet.

Now with a 3-1 lead to work with Burgess came back out in the 7th.  On his 4th pitch, Brian Cash hit a screaming line drive into the same left field bleachers to get a run back, 3-2 Jersey.  Burgess struck out Morales before being yanked after a gutsy quality start.  Gomes came in, walked Donahue before getting Alvarez and Hickman to ground out.  Onto the 8th.  Manning got the 1st out in the 8th before being pulled and left to an ovation.  He pitched one helleva game.  One mistake to Perez.  Randy Ellison came in and got Powers to ground out for the 2nd out of the inning.  Sergio Rodriguez came up and doubled to left and Bryant finally had a meaningful AB and knocked Rodriguez in for that all important insurance run.  Doyle would single before Larson popped out to end the inning.  Gomes, Saenz and Tapia combined to give up 2 hits, both singles, but escaped the inning when Navarro grounded out to 2nd.  Onto the 9th.  Jersey is 3 outs away from a World Series berth.

After what Greenville's pitching did in the 9th, you would think they were a lock to win this game.  Back-to-back singles by Romero and Perez put Bags on the corners with no outs.  A big Al Ryan strikeout followed by a Taylor ground out to 1st kept Romero and 3rd.  Scott Powers was walked to load the bases and Herrera got Sergio Rodriguez looking on a full count to send Greenville up to the plate just down 2 runs.  Everyone in the stadium including the Greenville dugout was shocked and bewildered when Daniel Morris was not brought in to close the game out.  Tapia was sent back out and immediately gave up a single to Morales which awoke the crowd.  Arthur Donahue stepped to the plate and Tapia quickly jumped in front 0-2.  Tapia through a high fastball that Donahue reached up and got and hit a one hopper back to Tapia who gloved, immediately turned and fired to 2nd where Bryant was waiting and threw to 1st for the easy 1-4-3 double play.  Jersey was one out from the World Series!  Jose Alvarez stepped into the batter's box, took a big swing and a miss for strike 1.  He fouled the 2nd pitch, a 97 MPH fastball straight back to send him in the hole at 0-2.  With the Jersey dugout against the railing and Greenville crowd down to their last hope, Tapia got Alvarez to chase a changeup in the dirt for strike 3!!  The Bags are the CL Champions!  The crowd was quick to file out as Jersey celebrated on the field, which included Gatorade buckets, a mob on the field and even a pie.  They had come back twice from 2-1, and once from 3-2 to knock off the 1 and 2 seeds on the road.  They were making their first trip to the playoffs well worth it.  Jersey will be the first CL East team to represent the division in the World Series.

As usual we will now go live to Josh Swain's press conference.  ::Swain enters along with Jerry Burgess and Alberto Perez, all 3 clad in CL Champions gear, half soaked in champagne:::

Swain: "Give it up to the stars of Game 7 and to your CLCS MVP Alberto Perez!"

Reporter Dan Miles, NY Times: "Jerry, what is going on??  You get lit up in both of your early starts in both series and then come back and pitch great in both deciding games.  Do you just up your game with pressure?"

Jerry Burgess: "If I do, it's not intentional! Haha!  I go out there to pitch my best every time out and I've had some not so good ones recently.  Today, I labored.  I don't think I went through an inning without a base runner on.  I gotta thank my defense and just thank myself for trusting my arm in a lot of situations.  They are a powerful, powerful team.  Just feels great to come through for my team."

Beat Writer Melissa Franklin, Jerseysports.com: "Josh, do these guys make you nervous?  The Bags have not lost one game where they were ahead late in the game.  Every tight game has been a win outside of Game 2, and that's where your boys came back to the tie game, but lost it in extras.  You doing ok?"

Swain: "If anything they excite me!  If you have watched Jersey baseball over the past couple of years you know that the bullpen has been our strong point.  We have had our bumps this year, but for the most part when we get that lead, we rarely give it back.  Clutch hitting is really what it's about.  We could have folded in game 4, 6 and 7 but got the hits we needed.  And really look no further than this guy, Alberto Perez.  The kid was amazing."

Reporter Sally Trumpert, Trenton Free Press: "Alberto, first off, amazing series!  2nd how is your hand? And 3rd what changed from the Toronto series to this one?"

Perez: "Thank you!  My hand is sore, but I will be fine.  I got a good pitch to hit today and took advantage of it.  The Toronto series I think I was trying to hard.  Everyone loves Morrow, those are some big shoes to fill.  After he went down people talked about how we had no chance, and that's hard to swallow for me because I was taking his spot.  I was swinging to hard and that led to my 1-20 in the Toronto series.  I allowed myself to relax these past couple games and got back into my rhythm.  Hopefully I can carry it forward against Hendersonville."

Beat writer Sam Toddenfield, BSAreport.com: "Rumors have it that Adam Morrow might be available for the Hendersonville series and what is the status on Luis Antonio Duran, will he be back?"

Swain: "Sadly for Luis his hand is shattered, it will take 5-6 weeks to heal and if you know Luis he wants to be here so bad.  We are going to place him on the DL and that will free up a roster spot.  The trainer tells us Morrow has about a week til he can play, so if we add him to the roster we could possibly see him in game 5, 6 or 7.  We are undecided if adding him will happen, but it is a possibility."

Reporter Vanessa Antuaco, Morgantown Today: "Jersey is in the World Series, give us a comment on what's that like and early thoughts on Hendersonville."

Swain: "It's one of those things where I still don't think it has hit me.  We have built this team from the inside out and never reached anything like this yet.  This team has the pieces, the role players are coming through and we feel great that we get to represent the CL in the series.  As for Hendersonville, what can I say?  They are the best of the best.  Their stars are the best in the game.  Scott Hill is the most intimidating person in the BSA.  It will be an uphill challenge, but I think this team is good enough to compete and beat them.  We will need some bounces to go our way and players to step up, but it can happen.  Thank you everyone for your support!"

After going 1-20 against Toronto, Perez completely turned his game around to win the CLCS MVP.  Perez hit 12-25, for an average of .480, including at least 1 hit in every game and drove in 9 runs.  After he injured his hand he went 4-6 with 2 HR and RBI.

Jersey plans to start Art Ellis for Game 1 of the World Series which starts Tuesday.  Lineups and a breakdown will be announced later.  Welcome to the Series D-Bags!

GO D-BAGS