LEWISTON, Idaho – Junior Chris Valencia tied a
season-high with three RBI in a game and Ikaika Lester added
three hit and three RBI to help two-time defending champion
Lewis-Clark State College remain alive in the 52nd annual
Avista NAIA World Series with a 9-4 win over Spring Arbor
University in loser-out play on Wednesday.
Valencia, a right-fielder who hits eighth in the Warrior
lineup, came into the contest with only 19 RBI and three
multi-RBI games this season. He had an RBI single in a
three-run fourth inning when the Warriors broke a scoreless
tie. He then hit a two-run triple in the sixth inning to
make it 6-1 for the Warriors. It was his second triple of
the Series and he’s now 6-of-16 in the Series for a .375
batting average.
Lester, who came up big in the postseason for LCSC a year
ago, went 3-for-5 with three RBI and two runs scored in the
contest, which was a rematch of last year’s title game, won
by LCSC 9-2. Lester had an RBI double in the fourth and a
two-run single in the top of the ninth to help the Warriors
put the game away.
LCSC, the No. 3 seed in the tournament, improved to 56-7
overall, while Spring Arbor, the No. 7 seed, finished the
season at 40-9. LCSC will now meet the winner of Wednesday’s
late game between Lee and Oklahoma City University. Lee is
the only undefeated team remaining from the original 10-team
field in the double-elimination tournament, while Oklahoma
City has one loss. If OCU wins Wednesday night, Lee will get
a bye on Thursday and will play in the championship on
Friday night against the LCSC-OCU winner. If Lee wins
Wednesday night, it will face LCSC for the title on Thursday
night with an if necessary game on Friday night.
The Warriors could have used their ace, Matt Fitts, on
Wednesday but chose to go with their No. 4 starter Nick
Masters, who performed well until late in the sixth inning.
Masters held Spring Arbor scoreless for the first four
innings before giving up a run in the fifth and two in the
sixth. He went 5.2 innings and allowed five hits and three
walks, but struck out four to improve to 6-1 on the season.
He was replaced by Blaine Hardy, who went 1.1 innings, while
Justin Mace went the final two innings and earned his sixth
save.
Spring Arbor starter Jesse Bachman went six innings and
allowed seven hits and six runs – only three earned – with
three walks and five strikeouts. He finishes the season with
a 9-3 mark. Joseph Myers allowed three hits and three run in
his 2.2 innings of work, while Jeff Tervo threw one-third of
an inning.
The Warriors broke on top in the third on Brent Wyatt’s
ground out to short, which scored Josh Ashenbrenner after he
walked. LCSC then added three in the fourth when an error
allowed Sean Halton to reach base. Brian Ward followed with
an RBI single and went to second on an error. Lester
followed with an RBI double and Valencia eventually singled
in Lester.
Spring Arbor got a run back on an RBI single by Bachman in
the fifth, but LCSC countered with two runs in the sixth for
a 6-1 lead. Lester doubled and went on a single by
Ashenbrenner, and both scored on Valencia’s triple down the
left-field line.
Spring Arbor battled back with two runs in the sixth when
Eric Vojtkofsky walked and Jonathan Herbig followed with a
single. Both scored when Lucas Rider singled down the
left-field line.
The Cougars made things interesting in the seventh when they
collected four hits, but could score only once to cut the
margin to 6-4. Bradley Baker had an RBI single in the
inning, but a ground ball double play by the Warrior defense
helped limit the damage.
The Warriors picked up some breathing room with three runs
in the ninth. Ward had a sacrifice fly to right field to
drive in the first run, while Lester added a two-run single.
LCSC collected 10 hits in the game and seven were by Lester
(3), Ashenbrenner (2), and Valencia (2) combined. The three
composed the Nos. 6-8 hitters in the Warrior lineup.
Herbig was the only Spring Arbor player with multiple hits
as he finished with two, while Rider added two RBI.