(F/10) Indianapolis Indians 5, Toledo Mud Hens 4 (box)
Toledo overcame another rough outing from Carl Edwards Jr., forcing the game into extra innings, but Indianapolis still came out on top in the 10th.
Edwards, working as a spot starter, gave up a run in the first with two outs, and then back-to-back homers in the third made it 4-0. He walked the batter after the home runs and came out of the game after that. Edwards’ stuff isn’t deceiving. Despite drawing nine whiffs, the result is more often a ball or contact. His fastball stays above the zone, and plenty of his curveballs find the dirt — albeit his most effective pitch (44% CSW).
The Mud Hens battled back, starting with a solo home run in the fourth from Eduardo Valencia.
The problem was with runners in scoring position, as Toledo went just 1-for-9 in that category. That one hit came courtesy of Max Anderson in the fifth with Luke Ritter on third and Andrew Navigato. Anderson put one through the left side, driving in both runners. He also moved Ben Malgeri up to second, but Jace Jung and Valencia stranded the tying and go-ahead runs.
Anderson came up big again in the seventh with one out and Navigato on third. He did his job and sent a sacrifice fly out to right field, tying up the game at four runs apiece.
Toledo’s bullpen was good all-around in relief of Edwards. Scott Effross worked around a pair of hits to get through the fourth, and Cole Waites, back from rehab work in Lakeland, struck out a pair in the fifth. Jack Little got the sixth and seventh, giving the Mud Hens two frames of no-hit ball, and Nick Sandlin worked around a pair of walks while getting five outs.
Tanner Rainey took the loss. He got the third out in the ninth and a sacrifice bunt to start the tenth, but a base hit allowed the winning run to come in. Rainey struck out the next two batters he faced, but Toledo went down 1-2-3 in the home half of the inning.
Anderson: 1-3, 3 RBI, BB, K
Valencia: 1-5, HR (8), R, RBI, K
Coming Up Next: It’s a 5:35 p.m. ET start on Sunday. Toledo trails in the series 3-2.
Game 1 (F/7): Erie SeaWolves 8, Altoona Curve 0 (box)
Erie took the first game of Saturday’s doubleheader against Altoona, 8-0, behind a two-hit performance from the pitching staff.
Carlos Pena got the start and is responsible for both hits allowed by the SeaWolves — doubles in the second and fourth. He also walked a batter in the third. Other than that, Pena was excellent, striking out four and working the outer edge of the zone against righties well.
Wandisson Charles took over for Pena in the fifth. Altoona had a tough time catching up to his 97-mph fastball, and he drew a couple of whiffs on the slider. Tanner Kohlhepp closed things out, striking out the side on 11 pitches. Kohlhepp’s pitches all move a lot, and the Curve didn’t seem to have a handle on any of them.
The offense got going right away, scoring two runs in the first inning. Seth Stephenson scored from first base on a Brett Callahan double that snuck down the right-field line. Stephenson is lightning on the base paths, so there wasn’t even a throw in. Callahan scored on a strike ’em out, throw ’em out double play with Thayron Liranzo at the plate. Altoona was content to give up the run for a second out.
The sixth and seventh innings were big for Erie. The SeaWolves scored three runs in each frame on a combined four extra-base hits. The first was a solo home run from Liranzo, and it was absolutely crushed — 422 feet, 110 mph exit velocity. The switch-hitting catcher has caught fire after taking time to find his footing after returning from injury. He came into the day slashing .263/.378/475 with 4 homers and a 127 wRC+ in 24 games back with Erie.
Izaac Pacheco and Andrew Jenkins both doubled in runs later in the inning. Pacheco went down the line into right field, and Jenkins went into left field — a major-league outfielder might grab that one, though. Regardless, that’s 19 straight games on base for Jenkins.
In the seventh, Altoona loaded the bases without giving up a hit: Stephenson got hit by a pitch, stole second and third, while Callahan and Bigbie both drew walks. Chris Meyers cleared the bases with a triple.
Liranzo: 2-4, HR (5), R, RBI, K
Meyers: 3-4, 3B (1), 3 RBI
Callahan: 1-3, 2B (8), 2 R, RBI, BB
Pena: 4.0 IP, 2 H, 0 R, BB, 4 K
Game 2 (F/7): Altoona Curve 3, Erie SeaWolves 1 (box)
Erie dropped the second game of Saturday’s doubleheader against the Altoona Curve, 3-1, despite both teams finishing the game with four hits apiece.
Four of Erie’s nine baserunners in the game came in the first. Brett Callahan led off the game being hit by a pitch, Peyton Graham and John Peck walked, and Justice Bigbie singled in the lone SeaWolves run of the game.
Kenny Serwa got the start for Erie and gave 4 2/3 innings of two-run ball, despite walking five batters. He worked through his first walk with a double play in the first, but things were rough in the second. The leadoff man reached on an error by Graham, and a sacrifice bunt moved him over to second. A passed ball and walk set up another sacrifice bunt, which scored the tying run this time.
Callahan had a double in the second, and Bigbie did the same in the third. Neither ended up advancing from second, though. E.J. Exposito made it three innings in a row with a double and nothing to show for Erie in the fourth, and that was it until the seventh. The SeaWolves went 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position in this one.
Serwa gave up back-to-back singles in the third, which cost him another run. The runner scored from first and juked catcher Bennet Lee on what looked like a throw that had him dead to rights, albeit up the line a bit.
Eric Silva replaced Serwa in the fifth with two outs. Silva walked a batter but got out of the inning with the score still 2-1. He had a bit of a mini meltdown in the bottom of the sixth with two outs, though. A walk and two singles made it 3-1, and that’s where the game ended.
Exposito led off the seventh by reaching on an error, and Callahan walked before Graham and Peck stranded both of them.
Callahan: 1-2, 2B (9), R, BB
Bigbie: 2-3, 2B (10), RBI, K
Serwa (L, 1-5): 4.2 Ip, 2 H, 2 R, ER, 5 BB, 4 K
Coming Up Next: It’s a 1 p.m. ET start on Sunday. Erie trails in the series 2-3.
South Bend Cubs 5, West Michigan Whitecaps 3 (box)
West Michigan couldn’t survive Rayner Castillo’s shortest outing of the season and fell to South Bend, 5-3, on Saturday. The pain continues for the Whitecaps.
Castillo has given up five or more runs twice already this season, but he at least made it into the third inning in those starts. This time, Castillo only recorded five outs and gave up four earned runs on as many hits and two walks. What’s odd is that Castillo looked really good in the first. He struck out three and got a ground out before blowing up with one out in the second.
Things tend to snowball for Castillo when they go bad, and this was no exception. After the first out, the inning went: single, RBI double, walk, RBI single, fielder’s choice, walk, two-run single. There was a defensive interference call on a pickoff mixed in there, but the runner would have reached second anyway. The fielder’s choice to home did prevent a run from scoring, though.
That was the end of the road for Castillo. Logan Berrier took over, and it became a bullpen game.
The Whitecaps tried to fight back in the bottom half of the second. Luke Shliger led off with a single into right, stole second and moved to third on a wild pitch. Juan Hernandez traded a groundout for an RBI, getting West Michigan on the board.
Caleb Shpur had a chance with the bases loaded in the third — after South Bend walked in a run — but he grounded into a double play to kill the threat. West Michigan also left the bases loaded in the first, so this game was very winnable. The Whitecaps went 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position on the day.
Berrier pitched through the third, working around a pair of base hits. Luke Stofel took over in the fourth and gave West Michigan two perfect innings. Stofel struck out the side in the fifth.
Rainer had an 111-mph exit velocity single in the bottom of the fifth that he came up lame on at first. It turned out to be nothing, but a replay shows him swinging his front leg out while making contact. He had a smile and didn’t see a trainer, so it looks like everything is fine.
Duque Hebbert was next on the mound for West Michigan. He gave up a bomb in the sixth but was otherwise good through two innings. Dariel Fregio got the final two innings of work and worked around a pair of hits for a scoreless outing. This was Fregio’s season debut with West Michigan after throwing 22 innings for Erie.
The Whitecaps didn’t do much at the plate after the fourth. Andrew Sojka hit a solo homer to open the seventh, but that’s all the action.
Rainer: 2-4
Sojka: 1-4, HR (3), R, RBI, 2 K
Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:35 p.m. ET start on Sunday. West Michigan trails in the series 1-4
Lakeland Flying Tigers vs. Bradenton Marauders (postponed)
Weather delayed and eventually postponed this game. Bradenton and Lakeland will play a doubleheader on Sunday.
Coming Up Next: It’s a noon ET start on Sunday. Lakeland leads the series 3-1.
FCL Blue Jays 5, FCL Tigers 4 (box)
Cris Rodriguez: 2-3, R, RBI, HR, CS
Santiago Pinto: 1-4, R, 2 RBI, HR, K
Owen Hall: 3.2 IP, 3 ER, 5 H, 0 BB, 3 K