CALDWELL,
Idaho -- Kyle Greene drew a
bases-loaded walk and Jesse
Roehl followed with an RBI
single to help the Lewis-Clark
State College baseball team end
a scoreless duel with Albertson
College and claim a 2-0 victory
in 11 innings in the
championship game of the Region
I Tournament at Simplot Stadium
on Saturday.
With the win, the Warriors,
51-4, will now travel to Azusa,
Calif., to take on Region II
winner Azusa Pacific in the West
Coast Super Regional. The
best-of-three series begins on
Wednesday night at 7:05 p.m. The
second game is Thursday, and the
if necessary game will be
Friday, both also at 7:05 p.m.
LCSC and Azusa Pacific, 49-6,
are the top two ranked teams in
the NAIA. LCSC, the defending
national champion, has been
ranked No. 1 all season, while
the Cougars have held down the
No. 2 spot for most of the year.
Other than deciding supremacy,
the three-game series means
little because both teams are
already assured berths into the
51st annual Avista NAIA World
Series, which will be held May
25-June 1 at LCSC's Harris
Field. The Warriors will go
either as the West Coast
champions if they defeat APU, or
as the host team if they should
lose. APU will either go as the
West Coast champions or will
receive one of the three
at-large berths, which are
awarded to the top-ranked teams
that lose in the Super Regional
round.
If LCSC wins the West Coast
Super Regional, there will be
three at-large berths available.
APU will be making its first
Series appearance since 1984
when it lost to the Warriors in
the championship game. That was
the first of 14 national titles
LCSC has won since then.
Saturday's contest belonged to
the pitchers as the two teams
combined for just 10 hits, all
singles. The game marked the
first time since at least 1974
where LCSC failed to score in
the first 10 innings of a
ballgame. The Warriors have been
shut out 30 times in coach Ed
Cheff's 31-year tenure, but none
went longer than nine innings.
Albertson, which finishes the
year at 31-17, certainly gave
the Warriors all they could
handle despite finishing 0-10
against LCSC this season.
Starting pitcher Joey
Zubizarreta pitched 10 innings,
the longest outing by a Coyote
pitcher in nearly a decade and
allowed only four hits and one
walk, while striking out five.
He gave way to Jason Roach in
the 11th, who allowed two hits
and two walks, but was hurt by a
costly error.
LCSC pitchers Brad Schwarzenbach
and Brian Parker answered the
call by combining on an
four-hitter. The two retired 18
straight hitters between the
fourth and 10th innings and
allowed only two baserunners
after the fourth inning.
Schwarzenbach allowed three hits
and two walks in his seven
innings, and struck out five.
Parker, who has emerged as
LCSC's closer, pitched four
innings of one-hit ball and
struck out six.
Neither team mounted much of a
scoring threat in the early
innings.In the fifth Albertson
had the first base runner reach
third when Camron Hammon walked
and then advanced to third with
one out on an errant pickoff
attempt by Schwarzenbach. But a
ground out and a fly out ended
the threat.
The Warriors best scoring
opportunity came in the eighth
inning when Kyle Melton bunted
for a single with one out and
went to second on a wild throw
to first by Albertson catcher
Dane McGrady, and advanced to
third on a wild pitch. However,
Zubizarreta got out of the jam
by striking out pinch-hitter
Ryan Wholey and getting Mark
Thompson to ground out.
The Warriors managed to put
runners on second and third with
two outs in the 10th, but Zach
Evangelho flew out to end the
threat.
In the top of the 11th, Brent
Wyatt walked, and after Beau
Mills popped out, Paul Martin
singled, and Jessie Mier reached
on a fielding error by the
Albertson shortstop on a
potential double play ball.
Ikaika Lester struck out for the
second out, but Greene worked
the count full before drawing a
walk to bring in the first run.
Roehl followed with an infield
single to deep in the hole at
shortstop to make it 2-0.
In the obttom of the 11th, Bryan
Champ singled for Albertson's
first hit since the fourth
inning. After a line out, Parker
(4-0) struck out the final two
batters to preserve the win.
No player had more than one hit
in the game as LCSC left 11
stranded on base, while
Albertson had six.
Thompson stole his 36th base of
the season, which is third on
the single-season list. Mike
Lester stole a program best 42
bases in 1975.