Monday, March 31, 2008

Raised on The Farm

(Note: Long Beach State travels to Palo Alto today to play Stanford. I grew up there and thought I would reflect on that).

Before there were lights, or stadium seats or crowds in the thousands there were just sun-swept afternoons. There was the "ping" of the aluminum bat like the sound of a golf ball and there was freshly cut green grass. There was Sunken Diamond.

Against the crystal clear blue backdrop of the Northern California sky the ball would careen higher and higher and as a kid I often wondered if it would ever come down. Sometimes, it did. Even more exciting was the fashion in which it would.

We went to a lot of games. So many games, Friday and Saturday and Sunday afternoons. I rarely missed one and if I did it was probably because I had my own. I knew many of the players. Or should I say they knew my friends and I.

Because there we always were, rolling around the grassy hill below the clubhouse next to the bullpen. Talking to whoever would listen, constantly with ball and pen in hand seeking more autographs.

One player in particular, a sub-mariner named Brendan Sullivan, really took to my liking. It was a thrill for four years going down there and talking to him. A kid and a college athlete, forging a bond. I always loved watching him pitch.

The submarine style he employed meant he bent over at the waist and threw the ball not only sidearm but brought it down as if he would scrape the ball in the dirt before flinging it upwards toward the plate. Yet, even he, like so many players before and after, graduated and moved on.

The real thrill of the game were the baseballs that were hit out-of-play. Tearing down the hills behind the grandstands towards the fence and the concessions, that was our arena, and we patrolled it as such.

In a bin in my parent's house in St. Louis sits the remnants of these days. 50-60 foul balls, most signed, many still bearing the mark of their original sender into my possession. The blue-green stamp of contact with the bat, and even more the wear of becoming batting practice fodder for my training days.

One magical afternoon everything came together. The perfect storm of ball-retrieving-possibility. First, it was a Tuesday. Tuesday opponents were usually local second-rate teams. Plus, this was before the days of lights so it was a mid-afternoon start. Finally, it had been raining.

My friend's mom used to pick us up from school and take us to the games. With all the elements above working in perfect unison, the place was practically empty. And for a ten-year-old kid it created an unbelievable day.

Over the course of the two or so hours, because I'm sure all these years later we didn't make it in time for the first pitch -- which in retrospect makes the achievement even greater -- I snagged 4, yea that's right four foul balls.

I can vividly remember the feeling of trying to cradle all four balls in my arms. This was my World Series. My perfect game, and the confused looks of all 19 other people in attendance made it all the sweeter.

Just a game on a Tuesday afternoon, many years ago, in a season filled with fifty or sixty. A season that will later seem to be little more than a line in a record book. But those games, those seasons, define us. The precious memories of who we are or were, where we came from and what will become of us.

I was born at Stanford Hospital, raised at Sunken Diamond and will no doubt die a Cardinal fan. Generations of ballplayers come and go like seasons but the feelings of those games, those perfect moments, will live on within them and will certainly never leave us.

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Golden Bears Thrash The Beach

The "weekend warrior" moniker I gave the Dirtbags apparently forgot to accompany The Beach to Berkley. Long Beach St. (17-7) hadn't lost a three game set before yesterday but continued the four game free-fall by falling this afternoon and giving 11th ranked Cal a sweep of the 4th ranked Dirtbags.

Cal took the games by scores of 6-1, 10-6 and 4-3. Friday night saw Long Beach ace Andrew Liebel (2-1) struggle for the first time this season. Liebel pitched into the eighth giving up six runs and 12 hits to the Bears. Cal ace Tyler Ross got the W running his unblemished record to (4-0). Ross tossed eight innings of shutout ball, silencing the Dirtbag bats to the tune of just five hits while recording six K's.

Josh Satin paced a balanced Bears attack with three hits while Blake Smith and Dylan Tonneson went deep for Berkley. Freshman sensation Jonathan Jones had two hits for the Dirtbags as did DH Shane Peterson.

Saturday's affair marked the first series defeat for The Beach this season. It was a game the Dirtbags certainly feel like they could have won. After grabbing leads of 4-1 and 6-4, they could not hold off the Bears who took the game 10-6. The first lead came on the strength of transfer and former Cal Bear Jason Corder's third inning grand slam.

Yet it was the work of another transfer, Cal's David Cooper, who scorched the Big West as a freshman at Fullerton, that made the biggest difference in the game. Cooper launched his Pac-10 leading 10th and 11th big flies of the season to lead the home team to victory. Tonneson went deep for the second time in as many games for the Bears as well.

Although the Dirtbags touched up Cal starter Craig Bennigson for six earned runs in just four-and-a-third, the 'pen surrendered just one hit the rest of the way to allow the Bears to get back in the game. Dirtbags starter Vance Worley (3-1) suffered his first defeat of the season like Liebel the night before. Also in line with Friday's starter Worley got rocked for 12 hits and six earned too.

Today's final crusade between the chalk lines offered only another change in the loss column for the suddenly eroding Beach squad. An extremely tough non-conference schedule finally caught up to them this weekend. Alex Rollin (3-0) went the minimum for the win and David Cooper got another three hits for Cal. Jake Thompson (1-2) gave up two earned in 6.1 innings of work but before the 7th was over Cal took a 4-1 lead that the Dirtbags couldn't overcome.

Espinosa, Godfrey and Howell had two hits apiece for Long Beach. The tough opponents continue in advance of Big West play. The Dirtbags head to "The Farm" Monday to play Stanford. Look for a post prior to the game, sometime tomorrow morning, about my personal attachment to the match-up.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Waves Batter Beach's Streak

Despite an early 2-0 lead and the confidence that came from winning eight in a row and 15 of 16, the Dirtbags three first inning errors led to five Pepperdine runs and an eventual 7-5 defeat.

Steve Tinoco and Taylor Krick led the way with two hits apiece for The Beach. Tyler Topp went just an inning and a third, giving up six runs (four earned). Long Beach took a 2-0 lead in the top half of the first but quickly fell behind 5-2 after suspect defense paved the way for a big home half for the Waves.

The Dirtbags had a chance to steal a win in the ninth. They loaded the bases with no outs and Tinoco's two-run single cut the deficit in half but they would get no closer.

Robert Dickman got the win for Pepperdine, who improved to 16-7 on the season with the win.

Long Beach State takes its 17-4 mark up North for four games against Pac-10 foes California and Stanford Friday-Monday.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Four More W's for The Beach

In a continuing effort to blow away the competition, Long Beach St. swept UCLA Friday and Saturday before smoking the Harvard squad. The Crimson just 1-11 on the year would have been better off staying in the sand for their Spring Break trip than hitting The Beach for a game.

The Dirtbags got a day off Sunday to rest, but the weekend warriors got their three wins in just two days, taking the opener Friday night in LA 13-3 and two more Saturday in a doubleheader by the scores of 3-2 and 10-3.

Andrew Liebel dominated again Friday to improve to (2-0). His 1.14 era is Bob Gibson-esque, yet he has a lower mound and faces the impending ping of an aluminum bat. Scattering a meager four hits over 7 innings, only one run against him was earned.

In the first game of the double dip Saturday the Dirtbags put three across in the bottom of the ninth to steal a 3-2 victory. Freshman John Hill and Jonathan Jones each had three hits in the win.

Game two brought another stellar outing from Vance Worley who ran his record to (3-0). Petersen and Corder registered two R.B.I.'s apiece pacing a balanced and efficient Dirtbag attack.

Monday's game was a thorough beat down against a clearly outmatched opponent. Harvard managed just one hit to The Beach's 19, and after putting up 10 runs in the first three frames Long Beach St. cruised to a 15-0 win.

The Beach, now 17-3 on the year is ranked as high as #3 nationally, and higher than any other team in California.

Long Beach travels to beautiful Malibu today to take on Pepperdine. They head to the Bay Area this weekend to visit two bitter rivals in succession. They play the Golden Bears of California this weekend, before heading to Palo Alto to face the Stanford Cardinal on Monday.

Much more about the Monday affair forthcoming....

Monday, March 17, 2008

Dirtbags Crush the Men of Troy

Another weekend and another three wins for the Dirtbags (12-3). After losing a head scratcher to Western Illinois 3-0 on Tuesday, the 2nd mid-week defeat at the hands of a lesser opponent already this season, the weekend warriors dominated a quality team Friday through Sunday for their third straight sweep and are now 11-1 on those days this season.

Friday night saw the dazzling work of Andrew Liebel finally rewarded with a W. After giving up just three runs and three walks while striking out 31 in his first three outings - all extra inning Dirtbag wins - Liebel finally became the pitcher of record by going the distance for The Beach. In just over two-and-a-half hours Liebel struck out five, gave up just one run and Long Beach held on for a 2-1 victory at Blair Field. Rylan Sandoval's two-out single in the third would be the difference.

Saturday at USC this time, Long Beach snatched a 9-6 victory from the Trojans. Despite two homers from USC, a three-run shot by Grant Green in the seventh to even the score at 6 and a two-run bomb from Anthony Vasquez to bring Southern Cal within one in the fifth, the Dirtbags prevailed. Jonathan Jones put the Beach ahead for good with a triple in the eighth sparking a three run burst and Shane Peterson went 4-5 with 3 RBI's and two doubles. Jason Corder doubled and homered for the Beach.

Sunday brought the teams back down the 405 to Long Beach where the Dirtbags' offensive onslaught proved too much for the Trojans to handle. Shane Peterson went off again this time with 6 RBI's including a grand slam inciting a huge seven-run rally in the 7th. Another great AB from Jonathan Jones led to the go-ahead hit, his second in as many days, and after two more runs crossed the plate and LBSU held a 12-9 lead, Peterson's big fly provided the final margin of victory. The Dirtbags had 17 hits in all, but blew early leads of 4-0 and 8-2 before they exploded in the 7th for the win.

Long Beach hosts SDSU Tuesday night at Blair Field. Next weekend they will continue the home-away series pattern with another LA foe, the Bruins of UCLA.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Different weekend, same result; The Beach takes three

A trip to the islands yielded three more wins for the Dirtbags running their record to 9-2. They won Friday 4-3 in 12 innings, 4-2 on Saturday, and closed the Warriors out with an 8-4 victory in the finale on Sunday.

In the series opener Shane Peterson doubled home the game winner in the 12th and Andrew Liebel was spectacular again on the mound. He went eight strong innings, striking out nine, and giving up only three runs. Nick Vincent got the win in relief and Bryan Shaw the save giving them each three in their respective categories.

Vance Worley dominated the Warriors on Saturday to run his record to 2-0. He scattered six hits over eight innings and struck out 11 Hawaii batters as Dirtbag pitchers continue to ring up opposing hitters at a tremendous rate. Nick Vincent worked the ninth for the save. Long Beach took the lead for good right from the start. Robert Burk's first Long Beach State home run led off the game and Devin Lohman extended the lead with a triple that scored two, giving the Beach a three run first that would prove to be the difference.

On Sunday Long Beach rode the tide of a five-run seventh inning frame to victory over host Hawaii. Jason Corder and Chris Nelson drove in three runs apiece as the Dirtbags overcame an early 4-0 hole. Starter Jake Thompson went four and a third surrendering four earned while Hawaii got only 4+ from its starter Harrison Kuroda who hadn't taken the bump in that capacity since high school.

The Beach comes home for Tuesday's match-up with Western Illinois before a three game set with USC next weekend.

Monday, March 3, 2008

Weekend Wrap: Dirtbags Sweep Shockers

With the Southern California sunshine registering temperatures near the 80's the Dirtbags started some spring cleaning early. They brought their brooms and the Wichita State Shockers got swept right back to the cold Midwest.

The 7th ranked Wichita State team, the second top 10 squad to come to Long Beach in as many weeks, fared even worse than the Rice Owls. Behind great pitching and timely offense the Beach took all three games.

Behind weekend one's hero Danny Espinosa's four hits and Shane Peterson's three, including the walk-off double in the 12th, to bring home a 3-2 victory in Friday's series opener.

Andrew Liebel repeated his sparkling work on the mound with seven-and-a-third innings of four hit ball, giving up just an unearned run and striking out 11 for the second straight week.

Unfortunately, the Dirtbag relievers couldnt hold the 2-0 lead and Liebel remains winless despite back-to-back tremendous outings.

In Saturday's matinée the Dirtbags posted a five-spot in the sixth to erase a 4-2 deficit and never looked back winning 8-5. Vance Worley got the W on the mound for The Beach scattering four earned runs and 12 hits over 7+ innings.

The Jason's keyed the sixth inning rally. Jason Tweedy got two RBI's with a bases loaded knock and Jason Corder, in his first at-bat of the '08 campaign, doubled home two more to break a 4-4 tie.

Sunday's affair solidified the Dirtbag's dominance of the series. Behind another great performance from the starter - seven innings and just two runs - this time by Jake Thompson (1-1), Long Beach defeated Wichita State 8-3.

Dusty Coleman's second two-run jack in as many games gave the Shockers a 2-0 lead in the first but Shane Peterson tied it in the home half with a two-run double, his first of two on the day, en route to a five RBI effort.

Thompson struck out eight and walked none, not only getting the win, but providing The Beach with a promising Sunday starter who could bring home the series victory come tough rubber matches as the season wears on.

The seventh and final game of the opening homestand will be Tuesday night (6:30) at Blair Field against the Lions of Loyola Marymount (3-5). This weekend the Dirtbags say Aloha to the mainland and hello to the University of Hawaii Rainbows as they travel to Honolulu for a weekend set.

After taking two-of-three from Rice last weekend the Dirtbags rose to #10 in the polls. The sweep of Wichita State should negate the 5-3 defeat to San Diego last Tuesday. The Dirtbags are 5-2.