Series XVII Featured Game: Birmingham Black Barons @ Houston Colt 45’s
We're going to focus on the usual see-saw affair, this one between the
Birmingham Black Barons and
Houston's Colt 45's, pitting Birmingham's
Tim Hudson against Houston's
Stephen Strasburg.
It's an interesting matchup: Hudson was seen as pretty washed-up, but the 36-year old has posted a 5-0 record with an ERA in the mid 2.00's, and could begin appearing on league leaderboards within a few starts. Strasburg, on the other hand, has shown great promise at only 23, but has yet to harness his potential, posting a 2-4 record with an ERA in the low 4.00's.
The two hurlers were at the top of their game, and we saw a scoreless contest into the bottom of the 5th when a solo homerun from
Jim O'Rourke gave Houston a 1-0 lead. Houston missed a chance to double their lead when
HR Johnson missed on a suicide squeeze attempt, leaving
Craig Biggio to be easy pickings at home.
The Black Barons would finally touch Strasburg in the top of the 7th, when
Hank Aaron launched a 2 run homerun, scoring
Curtis Granderson to put Birmingham in front. They would add another run in the 8th, scoring against
Mark Melancon when an RBI single from
Tom Herr plated
Omar Infante for a 3-1 lead, and then another in the 9th when
Eddie Mathews took Melancon deep.
So. 4-1 Birmingham. But Hudson was gassed at this point after a marvelous effort: 8 innings, 5 hits, and only the single run allowed. But, Birmingham's closer,
Carlos Díaz, wasn't an option. So the Black Barons turned to
Harley Young to close the door.
It went OK at first:
Jim Wynn led off the bottom of the 9th with a single, but Johnson grounded out, and after consecutive singles loaded the bases,
Lance Berkman struck out. So, bases loaded, 2 outs.
Young gave up an RBI single to
Jorge Posada, prompting Birmingham to bring in hard-throwing
Steve Bedrosian ... who promptly surrendered a walk-off, grand-slam, homerun to
Casey Stengel.
Melancon, who did not pitch very well, improved his record to a stunning 7-1 out of the bullpen, while Birmingham ended up with nothing to show for Hudson's great effort.
Granderson had 2 hits for Birmingham, while
Jeff Bagwell and
Tony Gwynn had 2 each for Houston.
BBB 4 (Young 0-4; Bedrosian 2 BSv) @ HOU 6 (Melancon 7-1)
HRs: BBB - Aaron (11), Mathews (11); HOU - O'Rourke (5), Stengel (6).
Box Score
Other Noteworthy Games
The
Ottawa Mounties turned to
Gary Peters, freshly back from AAA, to take on
Ned Garvin of the
Baltimore Black Sox, who is making an argument for the best pitcher in the WBL at the moment: this certainly seemed like a mismatch. But it was Ottawa, perhaps enlivened by the return of
Larry Walker from the DL, who held the lead, 4-3, heading into the 9th.
Curt Blefary turned it around with a 2-run shot,
Brian Roberts added another RBI, and while they gave up a run in the bottom of the frame, Baltimore's bullpen held on.
BBB 6 (Miller 2-0, 1 BSv; Bessent 8 Sv) @ OTT 5 (Bowsfield 2-1, 1 BSv; Dempster 2 H; Leroux 1 H)
HRs: BBB - Blefary (19).
Box Score
A 6-run
Homestead comeback in the bottom of the 8th, keyed by homeruns from
Tom Brown and
Rick Reichardt, went for naught as
Yasiel Puig hit his third homerun of the day in the 9th inning to give the
New York Gothams the win. Puig tied the league record for homeruns in a game and picked up 6 RBIs, while
Mike Epstein and Reichardt each had 3 hits for the Grays. While note involved in the decision, the Gothams'
Gaylord Perry was fantastic through 5 innings, allowing only 1 unearned run.
NYG 8 (Wilson 1-0) @ HOM 7 (Jackson 2-2, 1 BSv)
HRs: NYG - Puig 3 (6), Rojas (1); HOM - Brown (1), Reichardt (9).
Box Score
When the
Los Angeles Angels closed out their series against the
San Francisco Sea Lions, they were looking to salvage a series split and, perhaps as importantly, to find out more about what they have in young
Nolan Ryan, who has been a bit erratic since moving into the starting rotation. Ryan delivered a typical "good" performance for him: 5 innings, 2 hits (but 7 walks), and no runs. San Francisco's
Eddie Plank turned in another strong start, going 7.2 innings allowing only 2 runs. So the Angels took a 2-1 lead into the 9th. And then the wheels fell off for both teams: Los Angeles rocked
Ron Robinson for four runs, the key hit being a 2-out, bases loaded triple from
Doug Radar. But two of the Angels better bullpen arms--
Jonny Venters and closer
Joe Nathan--couldn't hold it, with
Mickey Cochrane, who seems perpetually on the verge of being sent to AAA, ending the contest with a walk-off 3 run homerun.
LAA 6 (Nathan 3-4, 4 BSv; Galvin 1 H; Rodríguez 6 H; Venters 8 H) @ SFS 7 (Robinson 4-1)
HRs: SFS - Cochrane (5).
Box Score