From the Ithaca Journal
LANSING — Has the balance of power in Interscholastic Athletic Conference baseball shifted a few miles east, from Lansing to Dryden?
At
least for this year, the answer appears to be yes. The Purple Lions
erupted for six runs on five hits in the fifth inning and went on to
defeat the host Bobcats, 10-6, on Monday at Lansing High.
The
bottom three batters in the lineup combined for seven hits and six runs
scored for Dryden (11-3 overall, 9-1 IAC North Large), which took a
two-game lead in the division over Lansing (8-5, 6-2). Bruno Bugliosi
got the win in relief of Purple Lions starter John Whitmore, who gave up
five runs in 3
2⁄
3 innings.
Dryden
— which also beat Lansing, 9-2, on April 14 in Dryden — scored three
times in the second inning and once more in the third to take a 4-1 lead
before the Bobcats battled back to take a 5-4 lead after four.
“It’s
exactly what you want, you want to get up early like we did,” Dryden
coach Kim Brown said. “But credit Lansing, they came back and battled
hard and put us in a tough position. In high school athletics, things
don’t always come easy, but we did a nice job coming back. We could have
hung our heads, but we continued to put the ball in play and with
authority. When you do that, you’re really going to give yourself a
chance.”
Whitmore,
Dryden’s No. 9 hitter, went 2-for-3 with a pair of doubles and two
RBIs, while No. 8 hitter Joel Potter added three hits and two RBIs.
Justen Geddes, batting seventh, sparked the Lions’ three-run second with
a two-out double and was the first of six straight batters to reach
base in the inning. Dryden pounded out 16 hits overall.
Lansing,
two years removed from a state Class C title, managed eight hits off
Whitmore and Bugliosi, three of them from senior Alex Schutz and two
from Pat Judd. Schutz got picked off first after singling home leadoff
hitter Ben Kutler in the fourth inning to make it 5-4 Lansing, derailing
a potentially big inning, and the Bobcats would collect three hits the
rest of the way.“We didn’t pitch very well, we didn’t run the bases very well and I
think that really contributed to our problems,” Lansing coach Stu Dean
said. “And they (Dryden) hit the ball pretty good, so you’ve got to give
them credit.”
Dryden took charge of the
game in the fifth inning, sending nine men to the plate and scoring six
of them. Whitmore and catcher Brian Colbert both had two-run doubles in
the inning, and a Lansing error — the only one of the game — helped
extend the rally.
Geddes, Potter and Whitmore all had base hits in the inning.
“Credit
the bottom of the order,” Brown said. “Those guys really put the bat on
the ball hard and allowed our guys who typically drive in runs to have
runners on base.”
Bugliosi
came on with two outs in the fourth inning and got the Bobcats’ Jared
Strait to fly out to centerfield. Whitmore had trouble throwing strikes,
particularly over his final two innings, and Brown was pleased with his
third baseman’s relief job.
“That’s
a tough spot,” Brown said. “We knew he had something to give us today
because he hasn’t thrown a lot lately. And when John’s pitch count got
up there and he was struggling to throw strikes, we knew we were going
to have to go to someone. (Bruno) was basically the only guy that was
really available, to be honest.
“He
did a really good job,” he added. “I thought he could have done a
better job in his first two innings throwing strike 1, thank goodness he
finally found it in the seventh inning and threw a lot of strikes.”
Bugliosi,
who made a couple of terrific plays himself at third base, benefited
from a sensational running backhand catch in centerfield from senior
Alan Davis, robbing Pat Judd of an extra base hit. Bugliosi got Lansing
freshman Jesse Richardson out on a called third strike to end the game.
Bugliosi said he thinks his team has the talent to make a deep run this postseason.
“There
are no holes in our lineup,” he said. “We’re great defensively,
outfield and infield, and we have a great pitching staff. I think we can
do really well.”
Dean,
on the other hand, said his team might be a pitcher or two away,
although he credited Richardson with doing the job over the final two
innings in relief.
“For
the past three games, I thought we played really well,” he said. “But
today, for whatever reason, we didn’t get the pitching I thought we were
going to get. The silver lining may have been Jesse, I thought he came
in and pitched well. He was pretty composed and he kept it at 10, which
is all we could ask of him.”