Last Night In Woodbridge
On a night where hits were plenty but runs weren’t, Ricky Hague’s fourth single of the evening in the bottom of the 9th was the difference in a 5-4 Potomac win.
The two teams combined for 26 hits, but 23 of them were singles. Potomac turned four double plays, Wilmington one, but the difference was two-out hitting. The P-Nats got seven of their 14 hits and three of their five runs with two down; the Blue Rocks had just two-out hits and no runs.
This was Matt Swynenberg’s first start since his Sunday masterpiece, a three-hit, one-run complete game, but he was under the gun of the “GBI curse” — a little-known affliction that seems to affect players once they get recognition here in the weekly edition of “Good, Bad, and Interesting.”
With 11 hits given up over six innings, Swynenberg was not as sharp, but his penchant for the grounder saved him — twice he got the DP to end the inning, another to squelch a rally. Alas, the fourth DP came just one batter too late.
Wilmington opened the 6th with a single, double, and another single and had runners on second and third. The Potomac ‘pen got up, and appeared to be ready after Swynenberg issued a walk to load the bases.
But manager Brian Rupp was either slow on the trigger or was gambling that Swynenberg could get the batter, Jake Kuebler, to ground into another DP — just as he had done the inning before. Swynenberg got the DP, but one batter too late as Kuebler steered one to the 3/4 hole to drive in two and give the Blue Rocks a 4-3 lead.
Potomac would tie it in the 7th after threatening in the 6th as — you guessed it — Hague ripped a single to left to drive in Francisco Soriano.
Like the day before, stellar relief made the comeback possible Neil Holland needed just four pitches to get through his first inning and allowed just one hit over the final three frames. He also struck out three.
Soriano swung from his heels to open the 9th, but Randolph Oduber, who had homered to lead off the 3rd, used his eyes (walk on a 3-2 count) and his legs (stolen base) to get into scoring position for the Hague gamewinner.
The win was Potomac’s 11th of the season, but thanks to the league’s power clubs being clustered in the Southern Division, that 11-14 mark is just 2½ games behind the first-place Lynchburg Hillcats. Kyle Winters (1-3, 5.74) takes the hill tonight to try for the team’s fourth straight “W” with Greg Billo (1-3, 5.32) as his counterpart for Wilmington.
I’m really glad that Hague is finally back. He’s done nothing but destroy pitching in his unfortunately short stint in the minors so far.
Hopefully he’ll climb the affiliate ladder quickly, and give some much needed competition to our big league middle infielders very soon.
Just noticed that Xavier Paul is back in Syracuse. Was there an open spot still there, or did that cause some ripples? Looks like Komatsu definitely would have caused someone to get bumped out (especially since it appears that Tyler Moore may well get sent back when Zim is ready), so maybe best all around that Minnesota gives him a try.
As reported earlier in the week, Syracuse has been down one on their roster since Moore got called up. When Moore gets sent down, someone will get bumped, if not sooner if/when Solano is activated.
Is Adrian Sanchez still switch-hitting? I could have sworn he was only batting RH in spring training. Thanks.
He batted righthanded last night against RHPs, so that would appear to be the case.
Thank you. I guess MiLB.com is behind. I imagine it would be hard to keep that stuff up to date.