Courtesy of St. Joseph's College Sports Information
STANDISH, Maine – MIT baseball
(16-16) split a non-conference twinbill
with non-conference opponent Saint Joseph's College
(32-11) at Larry Mahaney Diamond on Thursday afternoon. In the
opener, the Monks fell 7-6 in eight innings before rebounding to
edge the Engineers, 3-2, in the nightcap.
In the first game, St. Joe's rallied from a 6-2 deficit
with four runs in the bottom of the fifth to force extra innings,
but MIT shortstop Dan Hyatt '11 led off the top of eighth
with home run over the left field wall to provide Tech with the
eventual game-winning run. Aric Dama '13 tossed two innings
of one-hit relief with a pair of strikeouts to earn the victory for
the Engineers, while Mason Roberge '11 allowed one hit, the
Hyatt homer, with three K's in two frames and falls to 4-1 on
the year with the loss for the Monks. St. Joe's starter Pat
Moran '10 fanned a season-high 10 batters in five innings
with four earned runs and seven hits allowed, while reliever Chris
Nanof '10 allowed a run off two hits with two K's in an
inning of work.
St. Joe's did not trail in the nightcap, as the Royal Blue
scored single runs in the first, third and fourth innings en route
to a 3-2 triumph. SJC starter Sam Murray '12 improved to 7-1
after allowing an earned run off five hits and three walks with
four strikeouts in 6.1 innings. Kevin Chamberlain '11 notched
the first save of his career after sitting down the only two
batters he faced in the top of the seventh. Engineers starter Max
Ockner '13 went the distance for the Cardinal and Gray,
surrendering three earned runs off six hits and three walks with a
pair of punch-outs in the losing effort.
GAME ONE
The Monks got on the board first in the opener with two runs off
a pair of hits in the bottom of the second inning. The Engineers
cut their deficit in half with a run off a first and third double
steal play in the top of the third.
In the top of the fifth, MIT took advantage of an infield error
on an apparent double-play ball by scoring four runs to gain a 5-2
lead. Zach Carr '12 plated a pair with a bases-loaded single,
while James McKinney '13 doubled home a run and Stewart Park
'10 registered an RBI double during the frame.
The Engineers padded their lead with an RBI single by Andrew
Jeanquenat '13, but the Monks rallied with four runs off four
hits to tie the game at six apiece in the bottom of the sixth.
Craig Woodbrey '10 and Mike Burdin '10 notched RBI
singles, Ben Grant-Roy '10 doubled home a run and Woodbrey
scored on an infield error during the four-run sixth.
Roberge entered the game for the Monks in the seventh and
produced an efficient 12-pitch inning with a pair of K's and
a pop-up, but the Royal Blue squandered an opportunity to win the
game in the bottom of the inning. Moran led off with a line-drive
single to right and was lifted in favor of speedy pinch-runner Nate
Martin '13, who advanced to second on a wild pitch. Mike
Pratt '13 moved Martin over to third with a deep fly-out to
center, but the inning ended with the winning run 90 feet away, as
Woodbrey took a called third strike on the outside corner.
Hyatt greeted Roberge with a solo jack in the eighth, the junior
right-hander settled in to retire the side on a couple of
ground-outs and a strikeout. Now trailing by one, pinch-hitter Kyle
Neagle '12 was plunked to lead off the bottom of the eighth
and was moved over to second with a sac bunt by Burdin. Neagle
advanced to third when Todd Keneborus '11 grounded out to the
right side, but was left on third as Grant-Roy grounded out to
second base to end the game.
For the Monks, Woodbrey went 3-4 with three RBI, Moran was 2-2
with two runs, Burdin went 2-3 with a run and an RBI and Keneborus
was 2-5. Saint Joseph's stranded 10 base runners in the loss.
For the Engineers, Brian Doyle '11 went 2-3 with two
runs scored and a pair of stolen bases and A.J. Hansborough
'12 scored twice and also swiped two bags in the
victory.
GAME TWO
St. Joe's struck quickly in the nightcap, as Burdin led
off the game with a double to right and scored when the next
batter, Keneborus, hit a line drive up the middle. The Monks tacked
on another run in the third, as Keneborus doubled and later scored
on an infield ground-out to make it a 2-0 game.
SJC shortstop Dan Achorn '12 plated catcher Travis
Adams '10 with a single in the bottom of the fourth to put
the Monks on top 3-0, but the pesky Engineers chipped away at the
deficit with an unearned run in the top of the fifth, as Carr led
off with a single, stole second and scored on an error by Murray.
Chamberlain entered the game with one out in the top of the
seventh after MIT scored a run on a bases-loaded hit batsman. The
junior righty forced Tech to strand all three runners, as MIT
slugger Ricardo Perez '13 stuck out and Hyatt, the game-one
hero, popped up to second to end the game.
For the Monks, Keneborus went 2-3 with a run and an RBI and
Pratt was 2-3 in the triumph.
The twinbill caps the regular season for the Monks, who captured
the 2010 GNAC Championship over the weekend to earn an automatic
qualifier into the NCAA DIII Tournament, which begins on May 19th.
MIT will host Suffolk University on Saturday at 1:00 PM.