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ATHLETICS


 

 



National Rankings 06-07 07-08
Baseball 1 2
Men's Golf 35 23
Women's Golf 10 17
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Men's Basketball 16 23
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PHOTO


Tribune/Steve Hanks
Oregon Tech's Trevor Mauch loses the handle on the ball while trying to apply the tag on Lewis-Clark STate's Matt Vogel as he slides into second base in the fifth inning.

 

Owls gut out victory over L-C; Jefferson goes distance on mound in 7-1 win; Warriors rip UBC 10-2


By MATT BANEY
OF THE TRIBUNE

The temperature was dropping, it was just the fourth game of the season and Oregon Tech was camped on a six-run lead. In a spot like that, did the Owls really need a heroic wire-to-wire performance from pitcher John Jefferson?

Against any other team on their schedule, maybe not. But it was Lewis-Clark State, the NAIA's most celebrated program, that Oregon Tech had in its crosshairs.

"Hey, I don't have many chances to beat L-C State," Jefferson said. "So it's worth it."

The stout right-handed senior fired 155 pitches -- the sort of total usually not seen until the postseason -- and limited the Warriors to five hits. OIT registered a 7-1 victory in the Guardian Tournament Saturday afternoon at Harris Field.

Prior to the loss, LCSC thumped British Columbia 10-2. In other games, UBC dropped Albertson 5-2 and Albertson dumped Eastern Oregon 16-9.

In today's final session, the Owls, the only club still unbeaten in the tournament, will play British Columbia at 10 a.m. and Albertson at 1 p.m. L-C and Eastern Oregon will then square off at 4 p.m.

From the sixth inning on, OIT (3-1) had pitchers warming up to replace Jefferson. But he was too efficient to be removed: During the last four frames, he faced just six batters over the minimum.

"He threw about 40 pitches more than I wanted to go with him," Owls coach Pete Whisler said. "But he was strong and he wanted to stay in there, so I just went with his gut instinct. Those types of situations, you've got to be honest with your coach."

Jefferson's most serious brush with trouble came in the fifth. After walking Antoine McLeod, he was called for back-to-back balks, which moved McLeod to third. When Jefferson finally got off a pitch, Matt Vogel bopped an RBI single.

But Jefferson struck out the next two batters, then induced a popup to end the inning.

The pitcher got all the support he needed in the Owls' half of the fifth. After Trevor Mauch walked, the next two batters reached on errors by Vogel, L-C's shortstop. OIT outfielder Ryan Wilson then mashed a bases-clearing double to the wall.

"That's what he's in the three-hole for," Whisler said of Wilson, an All-Region I selection last season.

Meanwhile, the Warriors were never able to piece together a rally. Against a steady diet of changeups from Jefferson, LCSC had no more than one hit in any inning.

Shortly after the game, the LCSC hitters and coach Ed Cheff retreated to their indoor batting cages for some practice.

This appears to be Oregon Tech's first win over L-C. The Klamath Falls-based school resurrected its baseball program in 2001 after a long hiatus.

"And we've come a long way in the four years," Whisler said. "Like I said, it was a really good win for us tonight."

The Warriors (5-2) were more successful in their earlier contest with the Thunderbirds. After single tallies in the first, second and fifth, L-C plated four in the sixth. Vogel and Brandon Morris both provided run-scoring singles during that rally.

Freshman pitcher Chris Kissock started for the Warriors and allowed four hits and no runs during his five innings.

Click Here for Box Score of University of British Columbia

Click Here for Box Score of Oregon Tech-LCSC

 

British Columbia 5, Albertson 2

The Thunderbirds scored four times on two hits in the eighth inning, including Chris Ames' go-ahead two-run double.

Coyote starter Matt Bergstrom, who held UBC to four hits through seven innings, was relieved by Andrew Hall to start the eighth.

 

British Columbia 010 000 040--5 7 2

Albertson 000 010 010--2 6 1

Grant, Tobin (7), Pasquali (9) and Bell-Irving. Bergstrom, Hall (8) and Burke.

W -- Tobin (1-0). L -- Hall (0-1). S -- Pasquali (1).

British Columbia hits -- Ames 2 (2-2B), Prescott (2B), Campbell, Capone, Yiu, Wallace.

Albertson hits --Stalling, McGrady, Freese, Strandlund, Arko (2B), Cauffman.

Albertson 16, E. Oregon 9

Nic Florence highlighted his three-hit, five-RBI showing with a grand slam in the eighth, as the outfielder led Albertson in a slugfest with Eastern Oregon.

The Mountaineers swatted seven hits in the first three innings, but managed just four more the rest of the game.

 

Albertson 126 100 240--16 17 2

Eastern Oregon 133 100 100-- 9 11 0

Erickson, Hall (3), Alsager (4), Freese (6), De La Paz (9) and Hamilton, Burke. Beachy, Alverson (4), Evans (7) and Johnston.

W -- Alsager (1-0). L -- Beachy (1-1).

Albertson hits -- Stalling, McGrady 2, Standlund (HR), Burke 2, Florence 3 (HR), Park 2, Kendall 2, Cauffman, Hamilton 3.

Eastern Oregon hits -- Carpenter (2B), Melum, Shaffer 5, Johnston, Kirsch, Bigelow, Kisselburg.

------

Baney may be contacted at mbaney@lmtribune.com

 


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