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Only eight schools can lay
claim to a Banana Belt
Tournament championship,
including two that no longer
have a baseball program.
Considering two teams have
combined to win
three-fourths of those
titles, it should come as no
surprise that the event's
50th edition has boiled down
to this.
Today at 1 p.m., aged
rivals Washington State and
Lewis-Clark State will
square off at Harris Field
in a game that will almost
assuredly determine the
champion of what is believed
to be college baseball's
longest-running
regular-season tournament.
Both, remarkably enough, are
pursuing their 19th Banana
Belt crown.
Junior right-hander Kyle
Wright (1-0, 1.23 ERA) is
expected pitch for the
Warriors while WSU, the
defending BBT champ, will
counter with sophomore
right-hander Wayne Daman Jr.
(2-0, 1.23 ERA).
The Cougars are 2-1 in
the tournament after
Friday's 15-8 victory over
Portland. Since today's game
will be their BBT finale, a
win would guarantee them the
title.
Things are less certain
for L-C, which moved to 2-0
with Friday's 7-1 win over
Gonzaga. The Warriors have
another tournament game
remaining, Sunday against
Portland, so their title
designs may not be decided
until then.
That, however, depends on
how the Pilots, 1-1, fare
today, when they face
Gonzaga, 0-2, at 10 a.m.
Gonzaga and Utah Valley
State, 1-2, both close out
their BBT experience this
afternoon at 4.
L-C 7, Gonzaga 1
In his previous two
outings this season, Carlos
Fisher was a victim of
early-season circumstance.
He was relatively effective
in those appearances, but
not to the point where the
scorer awarded him the
victory (that's how wins are
figured when predetermined
pitching splits are used).
On Friday, Fisher removed
subjectivity from the
equation. The senior
right-hander worked seven
tidy though not trouble-free
innings, yielding seven hits
while striking out seven and
walking none.
"Carlos was OK -- nothing
special, but he got a rush
(of adrenaline) when he
needed them," said L-C coach
Ed Cheff, whose team goes to
8-2. "He worked his way out
of a couple tough spots."
The Bulldogs (6-5) had
baserunners in each of the
first five innings, and
stranded three in the fifth
behind two Fisher
strikeouts.
The Warriors did the bulk
of their damage in the
third, scoring six times on
seven hits, including a
two-run homer by Josh
Celigoy and RBI singles by
D.J. Kooken, Joey Dyche, Dan
Morrow and Matt Vogel.
Kooken also had an RBI
double in the seventh.
Gonzaga, which had 10
hits to L-C's 11, got its
first run of the tournament
-- it lost 9-0 to WSU on
Thursday -- when Aaron
McGuinness dropped a bloop
RBI single into shallow
right field with two down in
the ninth. That came off Jon
McCaslin, who relieved
Fisher to start the eighth.
Junior infielder Justin
Fuller, who made his first
start of the season -- he
sat out the first two weeks
with a broken hand -- gave
the Warriors another injury
scare when he fouled a pitch
off his leg in the third
inning. Fuller had to be
removed from the game --
Jose Castenon took over at
the plate with two strikes
and struck out -- but is
expected to play today.
Click
here for GONZAGA LEWIS-CLARK
ST. Box Score
WSU 15, Portland 8
Jeff Miller's go-ahead
RBI double in the sixth
inning may well have been
the biggest hit of his
Cougar career. But the
resulting thrill was
short-lived -- and not just
because Portland retook the
lead in the bottom of the
frame.
The sophomore second
baseman would dramatically
one-up himself in the
seventh, belting his first
collegiate home run to key
the definitive surge of
Friday's final game.
The Cougars (9-8) scored
five times in the seventh,
three on Miller's drive into
the left-field bleachers, en
route to their biggest
offensive outburst of the
season.
"One thing you can say
about our hitters -- they
stick with it," said WSU
coach Donnie Marbut, whose
ballclub had 14 hits and
scored runs in every inning
other than the second and
fourth, yet still had to
come from behind twice.
"And Jeff Miller had a
great game. You're going to
see better and better
offensive contributions from
him in the future."
Miller finished with five
RBI. Brady Everett, Zach
Kosturos and Jim Murphy
drove in two runs apiece,
with Murphy's coming on a
ninth-inning home run, his
second in as many games.
Eric Dingwall (1-0), who
came on in relief in the
sixth inning after Nik
Kosach's two-run homer had
given Portland (5-7) an 8-7
lead, finished the game in
shutout fashion. The junior
right-hander gave up three
hits and a walk while
striking out six.
WASHINGTON ST. PORTLAND
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Rubin rf 4 2 1 0 Little
2b 5 0 0 0
Kimbrel rf 0 0 0 0 Krohn
3b 4 3 2 2
Freeman cf 6 2 2 1 Kosach
dh 4 1 3 3
JaMiller lf 5 1 2 1
Peters 1b 5 0 0 0
Everett c 2 2 1 2 Pierce
lf 5 1 2 0
McAngus 3b 4 2 1 1
Wiltshre rf 2 1 0 0
Kosturos dh 2 2 2 2
Krause cf 4 1 1 1
Hall dh 1 1 1 0 Ehlers ph
1 0 0 0
Alexander 1b 2 0 0 0
Snell c 2 0 0 0
Franklin ph 0 0 0 0
Watson c 2 0 0 0
Suttmeier pr 0 1 0 0
Rodgrs ss 5 1 2 2
Murphy 1b 1 1 1 2
JeMiller 2b 5 1 2 5
McClure ss 5 0 1 0
Totals 37 15 14 14 Totals
39 8 10 8
Washington State 201 103
512--15 14 4
Portland 001 502 000-- 8
10 4
Washington State ip h r
er bb so
Oye 3.2 5 6 3 3 3
Kost 2 2 2 2 2 3
Dingwall (W, 1-0) 3.1 3 0
0 1 6
Gonzaga ip h r er bb so
Kutz (L, 2-2) 6.1 8 10 5
1 2
Siegfried 2.2 6 5 5 2 2
Portland 8, Utah Valley
St. 2
In a game featuring 10
errors equally divided
between the two teams, the
Pilots took better
advantage, scoring four
unearned runs.
Gustaf Little had five of
Portland's 13 hits.
Portland 012 130 010--8
13 5
Utah Valley State 010 010
000-- 2 5 5
Sargent, Ball (7), Ehlers
(9) and Watson. Tash, Giles
(8) and Newton.
W -- Sargent (2-1). L --
Tash (1-3).
Portland hits -- Little 5
(2-2B), Krohn 2 (2B), Peters
2, Pierce 2, Watson (2B),
Rodgers.
Utah Valley State hits --
Drew 3 (2B), Vance, Connor.
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Browitt may be
contacted at jbrowitt@lmtribune.com
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