Brooklyn vs. Jersey Shore
I - BK 7; JS 0
II - BK 5; JS 4*
*10 innings
Resilient Cyclones Win in Tenth Inning
The Cyclones and BlueClaws played a barnburner at ShoreTown Ballpark.
With two outs and two runners on base in the top of the first, right-fielder Stanley Consuegra singled home the game's opening run. In a presage of things to come, Jersey Shore answered with two runs in the home third. After a scoreless fourth inning, shortstop Shervyen Newton homered to left field with catcher Matt O'Neill on base. But Brooklyn's slim lead did not last, as the BlueClaws tallied a run in the home sixth facilitated by a Matt O'Neill throwing error.
The deadlock then remained unchanged through the eighth.
Both starting pitchers exited to no decisions. Brooklyn's Junior Santos allowed three runs (two earned) on three hits and two walks with eight strikeouts in 5.2 innings. Jersey Shore southpaw Rafael Marcano yielded three earned runs on four hits and two walks with seven strikeouts in 5.0 innings.
Cyclone right-hander Dylan Hall delivered 2.1 scoreless innings of no-hit baseball with two strikeouts to complete the eighth. Two BlueClaw relievers joined in tossing 3.0 innings of one-hit ball with six strikeouts.
Then came the ninth. Stanley Consuegra homered over the left field wall leading off the visitor's half. Manager Rivera then summoned from the bullpen right-hander Daison Acosta to close. But the game was again tied with a leadoff hit, a walk, and two sacrifice plays later.
In the top of the tenth, with Matt O'Neill, the ghost runner at second, Shervyen Newton singled, putting runners on the corners. O'Neill then scored on Matt Rudick's sac-fly to right, giving Brooklyn a 5-4 lead.
Daison Acosta again climbed the bump. With the ghost runner on base, Acosta fanned the first batter faced, then issued an intentional walk, followed by an unintentional four-pitch walk that loaded the bases. Acosta regrouped to strike out the next batter, then ended the game on a groundball 3 to1 putout at first base for the win.
The Cyclones held on for another crucial win. They've re-achieved par with a 58-58 season record and improved to 28-22 in the second half. Wednesday night's victory keeps Brooklyn on pace with first-place Hudson Valley, who still lead the division by one-half game, and Aberdeen, who again defeated Wilmington to remain tied in second place with Coney Island.
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