From the desk: THE SURF AVENUE SLUGGERS
I - BRK 5; WIL 0
II - Rained Out
III - WIL 6; BRK 0
No, this was not a deja vu; it really happened. In one of several instances this season, the Brooklyn Cyclones were yet again one-hit by the opposition, this time via the arms of three Wilmington pitchers.
Starting for the Blue Rocks, southpaw Evan Lee pitches the first six innings. He retires Brooklyn in order during the first and second innings. Left fielder Zack Ashford singles leading off the third but is quickly erased when Nic Gaddis grounds into a 5-4-3 double-play. Evan Lee again retires Brooklyn in order during the fourth and fifth innings. The Cyclones draw their first base on balls in the sixth but nothing more.
Brooklyn starter J.T. Ginn throws five scoreless innings, then yields a leadoff double and a two-out run-scoring single in the sixth. Thus, Evan Leee exits on the winning side of a one-run affair. His counterpart J.T. Ginn allows the one run on seven hits and one walk with one strikeout over 5.2 innings.
Josh Hejka secures the final out in the sixth, then tosses a scoreless seventh.
Facing Todd Peterson, the Cyclones go down in order in the seventh, and in the eighth, Luis Gonzalez
reaches safely on a strikeout that gets away but is stranded in place. In the ninth inning, reliever Zach Brzykcy issues only the Blue Rocks' second walk. Otherwise, the Cyclones go down quietly into the night.
The So-Called Surf Avenue Sluggers: one hit, two walks, four baserunners, twelve strikeouts.
Hitting aside, Coney Island's bullpen could not pick up where J.T. Ginn and Josh Hejka left off. Making his first appearance with the Cyclones, Luis Montas allows two runs on three hits in the eighth, and in the ninth, Bryce Montes de Oca surrenders three more runs on three hits giving the Wilmington Blue Rocks a 6-0 victory over Brooklyn.
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