Auburn Collapses In Late Innings To Exit Playoffs
Five runs in the 7th and six in the 8th turned a 6-5 ballgame into a 16-7 Tri-City beatdown as Auburn lost Game Three of the New York-Penn League Semifinals and was eliminated 2-1 in the best-of-three series.
If there’s a single number that tells the story, it’s 14 — the number of walks issued by the Doubledays pitchers on the night. Seven of them would eventually score. The Auburn moundsmen would also give up 14 hits, six coming in the final two fateful frames.
Despite the eventual outcome, the Doubledays would take the lead three times, scoring two in the top of the 1st for a 2-0 lead, one in the 3rd for a 3-2 lead, and one in the seventh to take a 6-5 lead. Auburn actually outhit Tri-City 15-14, with every batter in the lineup getting a hit. Tony Renda led the charge with a 4-for-5 night, followed by Wander Ramos at 3-for-5, and Mike McQuillan went 2-for-5 with two doubles.
Six Auburn pitchers threw last night, with each of them issuing at least one walk, hit, and a run. Cody Davis, the only one to set down a batter on strikes, was charged with the loss, giving up four runs on two hits, a walk, and a hit batsman over two and 2/3rds innings.
The loss ends Auburn’s 2012 season while Tri-City advances to the NYPL Finals against Hudson Valley, which eliminated Brooklyn with 2-0 one-hitter.
It was great to have a year during which our hopes weren’t mostly tied up in the minor league system. We can appreciate the successes and failures as secondary, as they should be. Thanks for all your analysis and reporting this year- it makes being a Nationals fan a more robust experience. I am sure that all of us regulars will reserve some attention for the Arizona Fall League, even as we are hoping for the Nats to surge deep into the playoffs.
+1/2St.
+1, many thanks
1/2 St. is right about the big club helpig to mitigate the sad finality of the minor league season.
Look forward to seeing the instructional league roster, and then the AFL.
A minor league seamhead always has something around the corner to anticipate.
Echoing the other comments; Luke, thank you for maintaining this site for another season. Even with big club winning, I come to your site every morning to check on farm.
I’ve been thinking a lot about the broad state of the system; “the plan” seems to have reached its end and we are moving into a new phase. Having never experienced a winning team, I’m not sure how to expect things to change on the farm. Some teams use the farm to re-enforce the big league club at the expense of the farm and future (Thinking Philly and Milwalkee recently), others keep the farm in intact and let things play out (Rangers and Rays). What are the Nats going to do?
Alternatively, the Nats are in an enviable position that the big league club is set for the next few years through the lineup and staff. Will this affect draft strategy? My initial thought is that they are trying to seek ceiling over surer production in the hopes of getting a super star that could unseat the decent/good ML players. Looking over my meandering comment I think I’m asking for a state of the farm post with your thoughts on the future of the Nats.
The offseason is always a bit nebulous to me, especially the period between when the final game is played and the AFL starts. Reminds me a little of March in my small-town newspaper days (basketball was usually done by late February, baseball didn’t start until early April, and there was no hockey). I tend to look back at what I did a year ago and follow my 13Bs when there’s a lull. But this is a good idea. I’ve already chosen the image 😉 so let me see what comes to mind as I stew on this…
Here’s the roster for the Iinstructional League
Pitchers
Dixon Anderson RHP
Aaron Barrett RHP
Joel Barrientos LHP
Robert Benincasa RHP
Michael Boyden RHP
Pedro Encarnacion RHP
Wirkin Estevez RHP
Robert Gilliam RHP
Leonard Hollins RHP
Taylor Jordan RHP
Nick Lee LHP
Brett Mooneyham LHP
Elisaul Gomez LHP
Emmanuel De La Cruz RHP
Ronald Pena RHP
Ivan Pineyro RHP
Brian Rauh RHP
Robbie Ray LHP
Jefry Rodriguez RHP
Blake Schwartz RHP
Derek Self RHP
Casey Selsor LHP
Kylin Turnbull LHP
Deion Williams RHP
Catchers
Spencer Kieboom
Craig Manuel
Adrian Nieto
Raudy Read
Pedro Severino
Infielders
Wilmer Difo
Cutter Dykstra
Rick Hague
Kevin Keyes
Jeff Kobernus
Michael McQuillan
Stephen Perez
Shawn Pleffner
Tony Renda
Adrian Sanchez
Matthew Skole
Zach Walters
Outfielders
Billy Burns
Destin Hood
Hayden Jennings
Estarlin Martinez
Narciso Mesa
Brandon Miller
Randolph Oduber
Caleb Ramsey
Steven Souza
Michael Taylor
Working on a post about the pitchers for tomorrow.
Thanks, you know so much more about some of these guys, I’m trying to think who’s not going.