Sports Blog

Live From Long Beach

By Ryan Gorcey May 30, 2008 | 11:27 am
Posted in: Baseball

4:39: And that’s the game. Other than a David Cooper single to right (an encouraging sign for the struggling slugger), the Bears went in order in the top of the 9th.  They’ll play again tomorrow, same bat-time, same bat-channel, at 2 p.m. at Blair Field against the loser of tonight’s 6 p.m. contest between Fresno State and host Long Beach State. It will be an elimination game, as the regional round is in the double-elimination format.

4:30: Rollin pitched a solid top of the ninth, allowing only one single. Now is Cal’s last chance here in the top of the ninth, with Cutler, Cooper, and Satin coming up.  If they’re going to score, it will start with these three. It would be a helluva time for Cooper to come out of his slump.

4:21: Despite a great at-bat by Jeff Kobernus, the Bears were unable to do anything of consequence against Matusz.  Going into the bottom of the eighth, it’s still 5-0 USD.  Not that Cal should be ashamed; Matusz is considered one of the premier prospects in this year’s draft. But considering that the Bears have two high-draft-potential hitters in Satin and Cooper, they should have at least done better than two hits.

4:12:  Ross’s final line: 6 2/3 innings pitched, 9 hits, 5 runs, two of them earned, three walks and four strikeouts.  Rough go of it for the Bears’ ace. Rollin did come in and force Gelbrich to pop out, so Cal gets out of the bases-loaded jam. Coming up are the 8-9-1 hitters for the Bears, trying to get something started in the top of the eighth.

4:09: Can’t say I saw this coming. Ross absolutely imploded here in the bottom of the seventh. After the first hitter reached second on an error by left fielder Cutler (he misplayed a ball in deep left), Ross was unable to recover and has allowed four runs to score, three of them earned. He loaded the bases and then hit Kevin Hansen to force in a run. He will be pulled in favor of senior Alex Rollin, who will face Logan Gelbrich, the Torreros’  DH.

3:43: The spell was finally broken in the bottom of the sixth.  With two away, Ross walked Josh Romanski on four straight pitches, perhaps trying to work the corners a bit too much instead of pitching so Romanski would swing. On the first pitch to the next hitter, Sean Nicol, Ross gave up a huge drive to left center that only stayed in the park because Jackson was able to leap and get some leater on it. The ball fell back into the field of play as Romanski scored and Nicol pulled into second with a double.  Going into the top of the seventh, Jackson is leading off and USD leads, 1-0.

3:32: Ross is looking very, very comfortable, and has struck out four. Matusz is looking like he’s finally settling in, setting Cal down 1-2-3 on only 10 pitches in the top of the sixth. Both pitchers are looking dominant, and Ross looks to have regained his form of last season. He’s really popping the mitt, using both sides of the plate and changing speeds and eye-level very well.  He’ll get to work again in just a few moments here in the bottom of the sixth.

3:17: Canha hit one off the end of his bat right to the second baseman, who in turn threw home to erase Smith on an ill-advised base-running move by third-base coach Zuber. The infield was drawn in, and in any other situation, sending Smith would have been a good idea, but not with a game as close as this where the infield knows how valuable a single run is.  Still 0-0 going into the bottom of the fifth.

3:13: Blake Smith led off the top of the fifth with the first extra-base hit of the game, slamming a screamer down the right field line for a double.  The way David Esquer has his lineup, with Brady hitting eighth, it allowed for the weak-hitting shortstop to sacrifice Smith over to third for Canha, who is hitting .283, and Kobernus, who is hitting .308. given that Matusz has now thrown over 70 pitches, there was a very lengthy pitching conference before the junior lefty started pitching to Canha.

3:07: Toss allowed two hits in the bottom of the fourth, but one, a bouncing single by Sean Nicol, was negated by a solid throw from Tonneson, who erased Nicol on a stolen base attempt. Going into the top of the fifth inning, we’re still scoreless here at Blair Field.

2:58: The Bears go down 1-2-3 in the top of the fourth inning, but Matusz had to use 18 pitches to do it.  He’s now thrown 61 and it’s only the fourth, so chances are the Bears will get to the Torreros’ bullpen soon - one which they have already seen and hit hard. Ross on the other hand has only thrown 31.

2:49: Ross walked his first hitter of the day, catcher Nick McCoy, but a well-timed hit-and-run play by the Torreros turned out to be their undoing. Kevin Muno grounded one up the middle, but as shortstop Michael Brady was ranging over to cover a throw from Tonneson on the running half of the hit-and-run, he was perfectly positioned to take the ball to the bag and then make the throw for the 6-3 double play.  Still 0-0, Josh Satin leading off the top of the fourth.

2:43: Cooper struck out swining on three pitches to end the minimal Cal threat.  Both aces have now set down two hitters apiece. Ross now starts his third inning of work against Jose Valerio.

2:35: Ross is looking like his old self, striking out two in the bottom of the second. But, Matusz is also finding his groove, striking out Kobernus on four pitches. Matusz though has since hit Charlie Cutler, with David Cooper coming to the plate in the top of the third inning.

2:28: Ross was very efficient in his half inning, using only 10 pitches to four USD hitters. Matusz settled down in the top of the second, being far more economical in the bottom half of the Bears lineup, himself only throwing ten pitches. Ross now goes out for his second inning of work, and he has that feeling.  He looks very comfortable and relaxed out there and his fastball is really popping.

2:13: Matusz is plain nasty.  His curve and his cutter are breaking ankles all over the place.  That being said, Cal really put the pressure on the junior lefty in the top of the first. On the first pitch of the game, Kobernus singled hard on the ground up the middle. While the only other Bears hitter to reach base was Satin (on an intentional walk), Cal hitters made Matusz throw 22 pitches, most of those coming on Charlie Cutler’s at-bat.

1:49: OK, not cool: the Torreros brought their mascot. Why can’t Cal shill out some cash to bring down Oski?  For the first time in six years, the Bears are in the playoffs, and they don’t even get Oski. For shame.

1:43: The field is being watered and dragged, the families are all here and the stands are slowly filling up here at Blair Field as both sides prepare for the 2 p.m. start time.  In the stands also are the players left off the 25-man postseason roster, including senior designated hitter Jordan Karnofsky, who just had elbow surgery this past week.  His arm is wrapped up in surgical tape, but the big fella won’t let that slow him down or prevent him from being there when his team finally participates in the postseason.

1:11: Josh Satin is hitting now, and he looks like a world-beater.  Hitting everything on the screws and is taking a lot of pitches to right field.  Good approach against a tough lefty. David Cooper is just trying to work on a few little things, so he’s not swinging for much power.  The reason for his recent struggles is that he has not been seeing the ball well, but he has fixed that over the week of practice, according to sources close to the team.

Jeff Kobernus just popped one over the fence in left, so it is possible. And now Cooper is starting to swing with a little more authority. This is a deep park folks, with the distances down the lines at 348 feet both ways.  The power alleys are 387 (Evans Diamond’s alleys are only 365), though center is still a pedestrian 400.  It’s a very wide and shallow outfield with a lot of room in the corners, so if speedsters like Kobernus and Jackson can put it there, they’ll have some room to run.

1:02: OK, here we have the starting lineups for both teams.

A little bit of a different look for the Bears, leading off with third baseman Jeff Kobernus (.308, 3 HR, 27 RBI, 11-for-16 in stolen bases). Two through seven are just what you’d expect, with Cutler in the two-hole, David Cooper in the three slot, Josh Satin hitting fourth, center fielder Brett Jackson hitting fifth, catcher Tonneson hitting six, and Smith in right hitting seventh. Moving up from the nine-slot to hit eighth is shortstop Michael Brady, and the designated hitter will be Canha (.283, 6 RBI).

For San Diego, the lineup goes something like this:

LF Kevin Muno (.332, 4 HR, 27 RBI, 21-for-30 in stolen base attempts )
CF Josh Romanski (.316, 6, 47)
SS Sean Nicol (.308, 0, 21)
RF James Meador (.385, 6, 51)
2B Kevin Hansen (.347, 1, 36)
DH Logan Gelbrich (.279, 7, 32)
3B Victor Sanchez (.281, 12, 47)
1B Jose Valerio (.344, 5, 24)
C  Nick McCoy (.228, 0, 11)

12:56: Lots of solid hits for this group up, with Hanlon and freshman Mark Canha being added to the mix, along with Dylan Tonneson.  But the ones that look like they should be carrying just aren’t.  Maybe the cross breeze is catching them, but balls do seem to be dying in the outfield.  This next group has Charlie Cutler (whose father I met just a few minutes ago getting some hot dogs), Blake Smith, Rich Gorman, and Brett Jackson, so maybe a little more pop to really get an accurate bead on the power potential here.

12:50: Fourth outfielder and team captain, Michael Capbarat, is absolutely killing the ball in BP.  Not distance wise, as he’s not really a power hitter, but he is really making solid contact every time.  I wouldn’t be surprised if he gets some playing time this weekend at the DH slot or if sophomore Blake Smith comes in to pitch out of right field. Capbarat hasn’t mishit a ball yet.  Every swing is dead on.

Reserve outfielder Ryan Hanlon is also making some solid contact, so I wouldn’t be surprised to see him get some action either if the situation calls for a right-handed pinch-hitting bat.

Off the field, the hot dogs here at Blair Field are pretty solid, good texture, nice spice, but they’re five bucks.  As a recent graduate (read: unemployed), this is killing my wallet.

12:41: Cal batting practice has started with the first round being BJ Guinn, Austin Booker, and Brett Thomas. Pitcher Alex Rollin is hitting grounders to the infield along with pitching coach Dan Hubbs. The real action, though, is on the mound, where hitting coach John Zuber is throwing left-handed to Cal hitters to prepare for the Torreros’ Brian Matusz, predicted by one scout I spoke to before the game to go in the first round of the draft. Matusz, who will oppose the Bears’ right-handed ace Tyson Ross, is 11-2 with a 1.88 ERA on the season in 96 innings pitched.  He has struck out 131 hitters and walked only 20, so Cal hitters will see a lot of strikes.  He also has the stamina to go the distance, tossing two complete games this season, his junior campaign.

12:27 PM: Hey there folks, I’m here at Long Beach State’s Blair Field for the first layoff action the Cal baseball team has seen since 2001.  We’re just starting to get under way here, as San Diego (41-15) takes its batting practice as the home team. The Bears (33-19-2) is just starting to warm up in the wings, practicing bunting in the bullpen and playing flip in front of their third base dugout. The weather down here in Southern California is perfect for baseball. There’s just a steady subtle brease swirling abound the stands, but it doesn’t look to be doing anything to the flags atop the scoreboard in right field. It’s sunny with narry a cloud in the sky and is in the high-60s to low-70s. More updates to come as the game gets underway.

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