Diplomats, Badlands win thrillers in the first round

Day one of the 2024 Sunset League Playoffs occurred on Sunday, July 21st. The first game was at 11 AM at Mt. Sac between the four-seed Diplomats and the five-seed IE Pirates. The second game was at Citrus at 1 PM featuring the six-seed Badlands and the three-seed Jays.  

At Mt. Sac, the Pirates took an early lead by taking advantage of a Diplomats error to score one run in the first. 

After this, the game became a pitchers’ duel. Both starting pitchers were excellent, each going seven innings in a game that flew by. 

The Diplomats’ defense was also excellent, turning three double plays to end three consecutive innings. The first double play was a strikeout-throwout from the catcher, and the next two were routine double plays up the middle. 

The Pirates added another run to their lead in the seventh and looked poised to hold on to it until their pitching faltered in the eighth. After their starting pitcher was removed, the Pirates struggled to find outs, leading to a five-run eighth inning for the Diplomats. 

The Diplomats pitching held up and they were able to win the game 5-2 and qualify for the second round. 

The game between Badlands and the Jays was certainly not a pitcher duel. In the top of the first, Badlands loaded the bases and dropped a few bloopers into the outfield for a four-run first inning. 

The second inning was even worse for the Jays, as Badlands hit multiple RBI doubles to extend their lead to 9-0. Over the next four innings, Badlands would run the score up to 16-0. 

Offensively the Jays struggled mightily, getting no hit through the first five innings. 

The highlight of the game through the first six innings was the trash-talking between the two sides, resulting in warnings being issued and one Jays player being thrown out. 

The Jays finally scored in the sixth inning, but it did not affect the attitude of the dugout much. 

It wasn’t until their teammate got thrown out that a flip was switched. In the bottom of the seventh, the Jays went up to the plate with newfound passion and drive. 

The Jays loaded the bases and sprayed the ball all over the field. Within moments, the Jays had scored four runs, but they were still down 11. 

Then, with the bases loaded, Flynn Barnes came to the plate and crushed a ball way over the 20-foot tall wall in left. After the improbable ninth inning, the score was 16-9. 

What happened next felt like a fever dream. The Jays quickly shut down Badlands and then came up to the plate and rallied again. 

Once again, the Jays loaded the bases. Badlands hit a batter, making the score 16-10 and bringing Barnes back to the plate. 

In one of the wildest moments ever seen on a baseball diamond, Barnes once again demolished a home run, this time even further over the left field wall. 

The Jays dugout and their fans erupted and their Badlands counterparts sat with their jaws on the floor in pure shock. 

Badlands was finally able to get out of the inning, but they appeared humiliated. 

After another quick inning on defense, it appeared that the Jays had all the momentum to finish off the unbelievable comeback. 

Unfortunately for the Jays, Badlands was finally able to lock back in with the pitching holding together long enough to get three relieving outs. 

Badlands will have another tough test on Tuesday as they will have to face the No. 1 Mavericks at APU at 2 PM. 

The Diplomats will also play at APU but at 5 PM against the South Bay Saints.

Waves beat Legends to clinch playoff berth

The most consequential CPCL game of the year took place on Wednesday at Scolinos Field in a winner-take-all matchup between the Inland Valley Legends and the San Diego Waves. 

Both teams had their aces on the mound, with the Legends starting Gavin Reeve and the Wave starting Peter Knorr. 

San Diego came ready to play, scoring two runs in the first inning behind four singles and a double. 

The Wave matched their first-inning success in the next frame, scoring another two due to a rough defensive error from Inland Valley. 

On offense, the Legends couldn’t get anything going. Despite boasting one of the more impressive lineups in the CPCL, Inland Valley struggled to figure out Knorr. 

The Legends did have a chance in the first inning after getting two runners on with no outs, but they ran into an out at home after a passed ball bounced straight off the backstop back to the catcher. There was still a runner in scoring position, but the next two batters struck out. 

After the first inning, Knorr made quick work of Inland Valley and faced the minimum five times in his next six innings. 

The Wave defense was excellent, turning two textbook double plays behind their starting pitcher. The infielders were very active as Knorr only struck out three batters out of the 21 outs he made. 

Knorr’s final line was seven scoreless innings with two hits and one walk. Knorr lowered his season ERA to a team-best 1.45 and got his WHIP down to an incredible 0.78. 

After the first two innings, Inland Valley’s pitching and defense settled in and put up five consecutive scoreless frames. The Legends turnaround kept Inland in the game, but the offense still needed to wake up.

San Diego added a fifth unanswered run in the eighth as insurance. Inland Valley finally responded with a rally, but they were only able to get one run before stranding runners on second and third. 

After their squandered comeback attempt, it became clear that the Wave would go on to win and clinch a berth in the CPCL playoff. 

The Legends finish the CPCL regular season in third place, a great improvement after coming in last place in 2023. The Legends are followed by the Bucs in fourth and the Pirates in fifth. 

San Diego will take on Palm Springs, who lost their first game of the year late on Wednesday night against the Bucs. 

The Wave and the Power will play game one on Saturday in Palm Springs at 7 PM.

Rios comes up clutch twice for the Pirates

The Inland Valley’s Pirates and Legends met on a beautiful summer day at Cal Poly Pomona’s Scolinos Field for their last matchup of the year. 

Tuesday’s game was the last league contest for the Pirates, while the Legends have one more on Wednesday before potentially qualifying to meet the Power in the playoffs. 

The Legends have played well against the Pirates throughout the season, but the last time they played, the Pirates flipped the script and beat the Legends 10-0.

This matchup was the best of the year with multiple late score changes. It looked like the Legends had bested their CPCL rivals once again until the Pirates came up with a clutch hit in the ninth to seal the victory. 

Costly errors at the start of the game allowed the Legends to cash in an unearned run in the first.

The Legends had a strong rally in the third behind a hard-hit RBI single from Moon Eom and a double from Sean Boscovich.

The Legends held their commanding lead until the fourth inning when the Pirates were finally able to make some noise. 

A leadoff walk and error allowed Cole Koniarsky to advance to third. Anthony Vasquez then hit a fly ball to center field, prompting Coniarksy to tag up. The throw beat Coniarsky by 10 feet, but he dodged the catcher’s tag to give the Pirates their first run.

Later in the inning, with two outs, Brett Bowers hit an RBI single to center to cut the Legends’ lead to 3-2. 

The Pirates began the sixth inning with singles from Coniarsky and Aidan Haller, who subsequently advanced to second and third on a fielder’s choice. With runners in scoring position, Sonny Rios hit a ground ball to the right side, allowing Coniarsky to score and tie up the ball game. 

On the mound, the Pirates’ pitching leaned on the team’s momentum and put up four consecutive scoreless frames. 

The Legends finally looked dangerous again in the top of the eighth after David Hays hit a leadoff double down the left field line. 

It looked like the Pirates were going to get out of the jam until Doug Allen hit a single to right with two outs to give the Legends the late lead. 

The Pirates battled back immediately in the bottom of the inning, with Adrian Diaz smoking a leadoff single to set the tone. Coniarsky got involved again, hitting another single to advance Diaz into scoring position. 

The Legends made two quick outs but allowed the runners to advance to second and third. The Pirates needed someone to come up clutch, and Sonny Rios answered the call again, this time hitting a single up the middle to drive in two runs and give the Pirates the lead heading into the ninth. 

Anthony Vasquez made three quick outs to give the Pirates a 5-4 win over the Legends. 

Vasquez pitched four innings in relief, allowing only one run and earning the win. 

Rios drove in three of the Pirates’ five runs and Coniarsky had three of the team’s eight hits.  

The Pirates 2024 CPCL schedule is now complete, but the team will have a few more non-league exhibitions this weekend. The Legends will play a winner-take-all game against the San Diego Wave, with the winner earning a spot in the CPCL playoff.

July 2024 alumni update

Alumni of the IVBA have accomplished some major feats throughout the 2024 season. From promotions to draft picks, these are some of the major developments among the IVBA alumni. 

On the second day of the MLB draft, a member of the 2021 IV Pirates, Christian Rodriguez, was selected by the Baltimore Orioles in the 10th round. Rodriguez recently finished his redshirt junior year at Cal State Fullerton, where he has spent his entire collegiate career. Rodriguez missed the 2023 season after undergoing Tommy John surgery. Rodriguez recently committed to play at the University of Hawaii to utilize his last year of eligibility, but he will now join the Orioles loaded farm system. Though the Orioles tout the top farm system in baseball, they still need pitching, making Rodriguez a valuable addition and giving him an opportunity to make a name for himself. In the 2024 season, Rodriguez appeared in 15 games with 12 starts and a total of 69.1 innings pitched.

Two IVBA alumni have been thriving in AAA since being promoted in June. 

Braves prospect and former IV Pirate, Nacho Alvarez has been with the Gwinnett Stripers for just over a month. Ever since being promoted, Alvarez has been on fire. In 25 games, Nacho has six home runs, a batting average of .317, and an ops of .942. Most impressively, Alvarez holds a strikeout rate of 16.8% and a WRC+ of 142. Alvarez has also been playing good defense at shortstop and can play second or third if needed. Alvarez is only in his age 21 season and has positioned himself as the Braves future shortstop. He is not on the Braves’ 40-man roster, but if he continues to hit like this, they could add him to the roster, and he could become the shortstop of the present. 

Iv Pirate alumni and Reds pitching prospect Julian Aguiar has continued to rise quickly through Cincinnati’s system. Aguiar has flown under the radar, ranked as the Reds #16 prospect, but has performed like a star. In 13 starts in AA, Aguiar held a 3.38 ERA, prompting Cincinnati to promote him to the AAA Louisville Bats. Since arriving in Louisville on June 18th, Aguiar has pitched to a 2.25 ERA. With his continued success and consistency, Aguiar has made himself a viable option for the Reds if they need to replace a starter due to injury at some point.

Chavez dominates Wave, Walz hits grand slam

The dry summer heat of the Inland Valley was replaced with an uncommon layer of humidity on Saturday. On this uncharacteristic summer day, the Inland Valley Pirates hosted a doubleheader against the San Diego Wave at Azusa Pacific University. 

The Wave took two of the first three games in the series earlier in the week in Escondido, but the Pirates had the opportunity to take the series if they won both games on Saturday. 

Inland Valley quickly evened up the series with a quick, clean, 3-0 victory. 

Starting pitcher Alex Chavez led the way, pitching six no-hit innings. Chavez has been the Pirates’ best pitcher this season and today was his best outing. 

Chavez would have been perfect through six innings, but the Inland Valley defense made three errors behind him. Even with shaky defense early, Chavez mowed through Wave hitters, striking out eight. 

Chavez did not surrender a baserunner of his own until the top of the seventh inning when he mercifully gave San Diego a leadoff walk. With his pitch count rising, Chavez was taken out of the game and replaced by lefty Chris Gonzales. 

Gonzales picked up right where Chavez left off, pitching three scoreless innings, only allowing one baserunner, and striking out three. 

On offense, Inland Valley got started early with a strong three-run first inning.

The Pirates loaded the bases before the Wave could even get an out. After scoring one run on a passed ball, Evan Evitia came up and walloped a double to left field to score the other baserunners. 

After the exciting first inning, Inland Valley’s hitters were shut out. The lineup found a few more hits and drew another walk, but they could not get anything going. 

The excellent pitching from the second inning on, allowed the game to breeze by in an hour and 58 minutes — the second sub-two-hour contest of the Pirates season.

The rubber match 45 minutes later would be much longer and include much more action.

In the first, the Wave quickly scored their first run of the day and then poured another three on. Despite the rough patch, Inland Valley pitching returned to its previous form, blanking the Wave over the next three innings. 

The Pirates got one run back a couple innings later from a Garrett Patterson RBI to bring the score to 4-1. 

Inland Valley finally bent in the fifth and gave up three runs in a strenuous inning, putting San Diego up six. 

The Pirates refused to give up though and they loaded the bases for leadoff hitter and star shortstop Isaiah Walz. 

In his best moment of the season, the incredible Walz blasted a grand slam through the left field netting and off an APU administrative building. 

After Walz’s heroics, there was an aura of confidence in the Inland Valley dugout that a comeback was more than possible. 

On defense though, the Pirates gave up another run. Out of the eight runs given up, only three of them were earned due to six errors in the field. 

In the last inning, Walz got on again and Patterson subsequently hit a single to bring the tying run to the plate. Walz advanced to third on a line drive to right, then scored on a fielder’s choice. 

Unfortunately for the Inland Valley, the Wave combatted the late comeback and held on for an 8-6 win sealing their series victory. 

All six of the Pirates’ runs were earned. 

The Pirates have one more league game on Tuesday against the Legends at 4 PM at Cal Poly Pomona’s Scolinos Field.

Pirates split doubleheader with Waves

The Pirates left the Inland Valley for the second time in a week to kick off their first two contests of their five-game series against the San Diego Waves. 

The Wave hosted the doubleheader in Escondido, where they play at Escondido High School.

The field is the smallest in the CPCL by a wide margin, and in game one it helped the Pirates to a 4-2 win. 

Inland Valley had to fight back from a deficit early in the game due to a controversial missed call from the field umpire who had his back turned when a San Diego hitter missed first base on a triple. 

If the umpire had followed the play like he was supposed to, the runner would have been called out, and the Wave would have been held scoreless in the first. 

San Diego took advantage of an error and a lead-off double in the third to add another run. 

If not for an error and an umpiring blunder, Pirate starter Alex Chavez could have had a scoreless outing and potentially pitched longer. Even with the misfortune, Chavez was excellent, pitching five innings and only allowing one earned run. 

Anthony Vasquez took over for Chavez and continued the momentum by striking out three batters in two scoreless innings. 

On the other side, Inland Valley was able to start chipping away at the Wave lead. A single from Chad Green got one run back in the fifth. 

In the sixth Cole Coniarsky, hit a deep fly ball to center giving Connor Green enough time to score from third and knot the score at two. 

The Pirates’ steady momentum continued into the seventh inning when Evan Evitia smoked a line-drive home run to center field to take the lead. 

Connor Green ambushed San Diego in the eighth, crushing a lead-off home run to dead center to give Inland Valley some breathing room. 

With six outs left to get, the Pirates called in flamethrower Chad Green. 

Green was impressive, only allowing two baserunners in a scoreless two-inning save. 

Game two was an uphill battle for the Pirates as they struggled to piece enough pitching together. 

The offense helped the pitching out by scoring a run on a first-inning RBI from Diego Orozco.

Unfortunately for Inland Valley, San Diego responded with a run of their own in the first, which was unearned due to another Pirate error.

Garrett Patterson made a lot of hard contact again and finally put a ball into the gap for a leadoff double in the third, though he was not driven in.

The Wave lineup finally broke out in the third inning, scoring two runs, though one was unearned. San Diego continued its success into the fourth, scoring three more runs to make the score 6-1. 

Orozco added a second RBI with two outs in the fifth, but the Pirates were not able to cash in any more runs.

Patterson threw two clean innings to stop the bleeding, but Inland Valley was not able to get the offense rolling as it did in game one and they fell 6-2.  

After splitting the doubleheader in Escondido, the two teams met up again Tuesday in what would be a 20-2 mauling by San Diego.

The Pirates and Wave will face off again Saturday for another doubleheader, this time in the Inland Valley at Azusa Pacific. 

Though the Pirates are coming off a demoralizing loss, they still have the chance to win the series against San Diego if they can take both games on Saturday. 

Game one is scheduled for 1 PM, and game two will be at 4 PM. 

Bucs take dramatic win over Pirates

After an 0-2 away series in Palm Springs, the Pirates returned home to Scolinos Field at Cal Poly Pomona to battle the Bucs. 

The struggling Pirates were still looking for their second win of the season, but they wouldn’t find it today. The games were the Pirates’s most impressive in weeks, but they still fell short, losing 3-2. 

The Pirates have not been able to put up nine innings of quality pitching in a row in most of their games this year. Today they did. 

Wyatt Johnson started the game, throwing three scoreless innings to set the tone. 

Evan Evita hit a double to center field to score one in the third and give the Pirates a lead. The Bucs responded with a two-run rally in the top of the fourth. 

The Pirates were not able to respond immediately, but they did find another run in the fifth to level the score. 

On the mound, Anthony Vasquez showcased his mastery once again. Vasquez has been the Pirates’ best pitcher thus far, and he added three no-hit innings in this outing. 

Chad Green held the tie before being replaced by Garrett Patterson, who was tasked with pitching the final two innings with the hope of earning a save or win. 

On the other side, the Bucs rode the arm of Moises Escobedo. Escobedo came in after the Bucs gave up the run in the fifth and he was fantastic. 

The Bucs offense finally broke the deadlock on an RBI single up the middle from Jarrod Hocking.

After three scoreless frames, it looked like Escobedo would finally forfeit a run to the Pirates in the bottom of the ninth inning after Patterson hit a hard leadoff single.

Patterson subsequently stole second, putting the tying run in scoring position and giving the Pirates hope that they could turn their fortune around. 

Michael Rodda appeared to have tied the game as he smoked a ground ball up the middle, but the ball was shockingly stopped by Escobedo, who spun around and caught the ball behind his back without ever seeing it. 

Patterson was caught between second and third, and Escobedo promptly threw him out, diminishing the Pirates’ momentum and hopes. 

For Patterson, the moment was on a long list of frustrating moments from the day. Patterson barreled up the ball twice early in the game, but both would-be doubles were hit straight to outfielders. 

Patterson has consistently hit the ball hard over the past few weeks, but he always seems to hit it straight to outfielders. While not seeing the rewards statistically, Patterson recognizes that it is part of the game and knows he will reap the benefits eventually. 

“At first, it’s very frustrating because I want to help the team by getting on base and moving runners over or driving them in,” said Patterson. “Those balls that I’m hitting are gap-to-gap, but they keep getting caught so it’s frustrating, but in the future, those balls are going to land, and once they do, the floodgates will be open.”

The Pirates have not always played the best, but they have certainly played better than their record reflects. While there have been definite struggles, it also feels that fortune has not favored the Pirates, which is best exemplified by Escobedo’s play in the ninth. 

“Baseball is baseball, plays like that happen, but I have to keep pushing because it’s a new day tomorrow,” Patterson said. “We might not have won this one, but we have to keep pushing. We hung with the Power the night before and we hung with the Bucs today. We can compete, we just need a little bit of luck, because we’ve been unfortunate lately.”

Nolan Smith wins 2024 Sunset League Home Run Derby

The sounds of bats cracking could be heard all the way from the In-N-Out across from the Cougar Baseball Complex at Azusa Pacific University, where the Sunset Baseball League held its 2024 home run derby prior to its all-star game. 

All six Sunset League teams picked one player to represent them in the contest. 

In the first round, all six hitters would take 10 swings, with the top hitter advancing to the finals and the next two best hitters moving into a five-swing playoff. 

Jake Daily, Nolan Smith, and Danny Rodriguez all swatted three home runs, creating a first-place tie. Since Rodriguez was the top seed, he moved on to the final, while Daily and Smith had five swings to barrel their way to the final.  

Daily, a right-handed hitter smoked hard line drives high up into the left field net. Smith, another right-handed hitter, demolished baseballs high over the left field net with some shots measuring around 400 feet. 

Rodriguez, the only left-handed hitter, crushed balls way above the short porch in right, with many of his balls landing in the In-N-Out parking lot. 

As the lower-seeded hitter, Smith went first in the final round. Exhaustion from taking so many swings with limited breaks along with the heat made it very hard for Smith to find the energy to replicate his power surges from the previous rounds, and he only hit one home run. 

“I felt pretty good, I got to take some pretty good swings early on in the beginning, but I got pretty worn out in the championship round,” Smith said. 

Rodriguez came to the plate only having to hit two home runs to win, but the rest of the time had an adverse effect on him, and he struggled mightily. 

Through nine swings he only had one home run and on the last swing, he struck off the top of the fence, meaning the contest would go to a five-swing overtime to determine the winner. 

Smith again went first, but this time he was well rested. With the much-needed rest, Smith knew he was capable of sealing the victory. 

“I was able to sit for a second, collect myself, and get my swing back together and I definitely felt like I could put some really good swings on” once I got my time to relax,” Smith said with a smile. 

In the overtime round, Smith sent two moonshots to the top of the left-field net to give himself a comfortable lead. 

Rodriguez could not regain his early momentum and failed to hit a single home run in the final round, making Nolan Smith the 2024 Sunset League Home Run Derby champion.

Smith’s performance impressed a lot of people including his all star coach.

“Nolan was really impressive. I did not see that coming from him and he definitely convinced everyone that he has a ton of pop,” said all star head coach Dylan Hoffman.

Pirates attempt to end Power win streak in Palm Springs

The Palm Springs Power hosted a two-game series with the Inland Valley Pirates on a scorching hot weekend at Palm Springs Stadium. 

It was so hot that even the wind burned. The games both started at 7 PM, but even with the sunset start time, it was at least 105 degrees at first pitch both days.  

The weather conditions along with the small, yet passionate fanbase is unpleasant for away teams and gives the Power a huge home field advantage.

The extreme heat is usual in Palm Springs, as is the Power winning games at home, which they did again two more times. 

On Friday night, Palm Springs asserted themselves immediately by scoring four runs in a taxing first inning for the Pirates. Inland Valley pitching has been vulnerable to inconsistency this year, but it was the defense that hurt the Pirates this time. 

Inland Valley’s defense made several mistakes, including three painful errors, which gave the opportunistic Power momentum to establish an early and commanding lead.

Palm Springs scored another run in the second to get out to a 5-0 lead. Pirates starter Noe Novella pitched excellently and likely would have only given up one or two runs through his four innings of work if the defense was better.

Corbin Duffield relieved Novella and threw three scoreless innings, stalling the Power’s momentum and giving the Pirates a chance to mount a comeback. 

Inland Valley finally capitalized on their offensive opportunities in the seventh. With a runner on second and third, Evan Evita hit a hard single up the middle to open the scoring for the Pirates. 

In the bottom of the inning, Inland Valley put up their sixth consecutive scoreless frame, capturing the game’s momentum with a three-run deficit heading into the ninth. 

Unfortunately for the Pirates, they could not rally in the eighth, and the Power scored two more runs to finish Inland Valley off.

Game two would be the Pirates’ last, and best chance to earn a win against Palm Springs in the 2024 season. 

UNLV’s Alex Navarrete started on the mound for Inland Valley and put on one of the best pitching performances from a Pirates pitcher this year. Navarette gave up two runs in the first inning, but after that, he dominated, throwing four scoreless innings, and allowing only two hits.

The defense made some mistakes with two errors but ultimately did enough to aid Navarette in his dominance. 

The Pirates got one run back in the third on a bad throw from the Power third baseman, which allowed Isaiah Walz to score from first base. 

In the top of the sixth, Inland Valley got multiple runners on base with two outs for Walz, who hit a hard ground ball into the center to knot the game up at two. 

With the game tied, the Pirates brought in Alex Chavez to continue Navarette’s dominance, which he did with a quick 11-pitch, two-strikeout inning. 

As Chavez was warming up for his second inning, Walz was injured in a freak accident, causing him to be removed from the game.

The accident forced Inland Valley to put their DH on the field and take Chavez out of the game prematurely. 

In response to the Pirates tying the game, the Power brought in Holden Phelps for the last three innings. Phelps was incredible, striking out five batters and allowing only one baserunner in three scoreless innings. 

It is hard to blame the Inland Valley hitters for failing to take the lead as Phelps was throwing a firm and accurate 93-MPH fastball with quality offspeed pitches. 

The pitching held up for the rest of the inning but ultimately could not hold together and the Power scored six runs in the bottom of the eighth to erase any hope of a Pirates victory in Palm Springs. 

Inland Valley was within striking distance on both nights, but could not find the runs needed to finally take the Power down. 

Palm Springs lost only one game last year and remains undefeated through 20 games in their 2024 campaign. 

The Pirates, who are often at a similar level or even better than the Power, continue to struggle this year due to high roster turnover.

The Pirates and Power will continue to have games this week, but the highlight of next week will be the IVBA’s Sunset Baseball League All-Star Game on Tuesday, July 2nd, at Azusa Pacific. The home run derby will be at 5:30, and the All-Star Game will follow. 

Double plays and double headers, Legends beat Pirates, lose heartbreaker to Bucs

On one of the hottest days of the year, the Inland Valley Legends hosted a doubleheader against CPCL opponents Pirates and Bucs at Azusa Pacific University. 

The Legends and Bucs both got off to slow starts, but have picked up momentum recently. The Pirates won their first game, but have struggled mightily ever since, losing their last eight games. 

All three teams are talented and can beat each other any day, but the Pirates have drawn the short end of the stick over the past two weeks. 

Game one started between the Legends and Pirates at 1 PM. 

The Legends wasted no time getting their offense going, scoring four runs in the bottom of the first off of five hits, a walk, and a sacrifice fly. The Legends were positioned to score even more until the Pirates rolled a badly needed double play. 

The Pirates responded in the next frame, scoring one and creating some momentum of their own. 

The Legends scored another run in the third, but they had the opportunity to score two until shortstop Isaiah Walz made an incredible throw from the outfield grass to cut a runner down at home. 

The Pirates loaded the bases in the fifth and looked poised to do some serious damage to the Legends’ lead. A hit batter allowed the Pirates to score one, but the next batter hit an unlucky line drive straight to the right fielder to end the promising rally.  

Down by three in the seventh inning, the Pirates badly needed another rally to hopefully take the lead late. 

Three consecutive singles to start the inning gave the Pirates the start they needed, but Legends’ pitching was able to limit the damage to two runs.

With their lead down to one run, the Legends needed to respond with some insurance runs. In the bottom of the seventh and eighth the Legends would add another five runs to bolster their lead to 10-4. 

The highlight of the Legends’ late success at the plate was a solo home run from Nathan Hellein. The biggest contributor to the Legends’ offense was Will Medina who got three hits, scored two runs, and drove three runs in. 

The Pirates were able to load the bases in the eighth, but Legends’ pitching came up clutch and ended the threat without surrendering a run. The Pirates had ducks on the pond again in the ninth, but the Legends were able to turn another double play, this time to end the game. 

Game two saw the Legends remain while the Pirates exchanged places with the Bucs. 

The Legends opened the scoring in the top of the third with one run from a Jackson Licata home run. The Bucs matched by scoring a run in the bottom of the inning on a sac fly. 

In the fourth, Will Medina continued his stellar day by mashing a solo home run to left field. 

The Legends could not hold their lead for long, and the Bucs went on to score three runs in the bottom of the fifth to establish a 4-2 lead. 

The Legends looked as dangerous as ever when they loaded the bases in the sixth. Unfortunately for the Legends, they were not able to capitalize on the opportunity and only drove one run in from a Medina sac fly — his fifth RBI of the day. 

Legends’ pitching was not able to slow the Bucs’ momentum, and they once again responded in the bottom of the inning by scoring another run to maintain their two-run lead. 

Medina came through once again in the eighth with an RBI single to bring the score within one. The Bucs came with a vengeance in the bottom of the inning and blew the game wide open, scoring five to extend their lead to 10-4. 

The situation looked bleak for the Legends in the ninth, but they never gave up. Down six runs, the Legends gave their best effort towards carrying out a seemingly impossible comeback. 

The Legends relentlessly battled back, scoring four runs with their backs against the wall. With two outs and the tying run at the plate, the Bucs were finally able to obtain the final out of the game, ending the Legends’ valiant comeback attempt. 

The Legends are now 5-6, the Bucs are 5-5-1, and the Pirates are 1-9.

The Pirates and the Bucs will meet up at Cal Poly Pomona’s Scolinos Field at 4 PM on Monday, and the Legends will be there on Tuesday to take on the Colton Nighthawks.