Dayton Dragons at Clinton Lumberkings


April 16th, 2004

Dragons
Name POS AB R H RBI
Chris Dickerson CF 3 0 2 0
Luis Bolivar SS 5 0 0 0
Joey Votto 1B 4 1 1 0
Ryan Fry LF 4 0 1 0
Ben Himes RF 3 0 0 0
Habelito Hernandez 2B 4 0 0 0
Walter Olmstead 3B 4 1 2 0
Evan Conley DH 4 0 1 1
Jeff Urgelles C 4 1 1 0
Kings
Name POS AB R H RBI
Ian Kinsler SS 4 0 1 0
Dane Bubela RF 4 0 0 0
Juan Senreiso CF 4 0 0 0
Andrew Wishy DH 2 1 0 0
Kevin Richardson C 4 1 1 2
Luke Grayson LF 4 0 1 0
Brock Jacobsen 1B 3 0 0 0
Emerson Frostad 3B 3 0 1 0
Tobin Swope 2B 2 0 1 0

Dayton 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 3 8 1
Clinton 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 5 2

E-Urgelles, Swope, Cunningham, LOB DAY-9, CLI-4, 2B-Conley, Frostad, Swope, HR-Richardson (Noriega/4th/2 run), SB-Kinsler, Grayson, CS-Olmstead

Dragons
Name IP H R ER BB SO Decison
Luis Noriega 4 2 2 2 2 6 ND
Josh Thigpen 4 3 0 0 0 9 W (1-1)
David Shafer 1 0 0 0 1 1 SV (2)

Kings
Name IP H R ER BB SO Decison
Williams Sarmiento 4.1 4 1 1 0 8 ND
Brian Mattoon 0.2 0 0 0 1 2 ND
Tim Cunningham 2.2 2 1 1 2 2 ND
Craig Frydendall 1.1 2 1 0 1 3 L (0-1)

WP-Cunningham, SO-Richardson, BB-Wishy, Dickerson 2, Olmstead, Votto
U-Jesse Redwine
T-2:48, A-2,358

Clinton Herald
by Jon Gremmels

Only one thing could spoil a gorgeous opening night of Midwest League baseball Friday at Allient Energy Field. And that one thing, a loss, wasn't even that terrible.

"It was almost perfect, except for the results," Clinton catcher Kevin Richardson said after the LumberKings lost 3-2 to Dayton in front of 2,358 fams on an 80 degree evening. The loss evened Clinton's record to 4-4.

Richardson drove in both Clinton runs with a fourth inning home run, but the Lumberkings couldn't muster much offense against three Dayton pitchers who combined to stike out 16 batters in a five hit effort.

"They did a good job of hitting spots," Richardson said. "When they shut us down like that you've got to tip your hats to them."

Dayton starter Luis Noriega allowed two hits over the first four innings for the Dragons, who like Clinton employ a piggyback system that utilizes a tandem of pitchers who rotate starts and long relief outings and are limited to about 75 pitches every four games. Josh Thigpen (1-1) added four innings of three hit relief during which he struck out nine batters, and David Shafer pitched the ninth inning to earn his second save.

"I thought we took too many pitches and swung at some bad pitches." Clinton manager Carlos Subero said.

A key example of that came in the bottom of the ninth inning after Andrew Wishy worked a 10 pitch wallk to lead off the inning. Richardson followed with a strikeout and Larry Grayson hit into a game ending double play. "Richardson has 10 RBI but wasn't able to make him elevate the ball and went fishing (on a 1-2 pitch)," Subero said. "Grayson also went after a slider down there."

Dayton, on the other hand came through when it needed a run in the top of half of the ninth inning. For the third game in a row, Luis Bolivar was the hero for the Dragons.

Bolivar, who hit a walk off three run home run Thursday and also drove in the winning run in the second game of a doubleheader Wednesday, hit a ground ball to the right side Friday that got past second baseman Tobin Swope for an error that scored the go ahead run with two outs in the ninth.

"When we had the chance to win the game, I though, OK, I have to do it." said Bolivar, who admitted his confidence has riden in the past three days after getting off to an 0 for 16 start to the season. "I don't know if it's good luck or what. I'm happy because I helped the team."

The winning run came after Clinton appeared to have gotten out of trouble in the inning. Walter Olmstead led off with a walk off Craig Frydendall (0-1) but was thrown out trying to steal second base. Evan Conley followed with a strikeout, but Jeff Urgelles the No. 9 batter, singled to keep the inning alive and Chris Dickerson (2 for 3, plus two walks), walked to put runner on first and second. Bolivar followed with a bouncing ball to Swope's left and Swope was unable to come up with it. Urgelles beat Dane Bubela's throw to the plate to put Dayton ahead 3-2. "It was a tough play because the ball stayed down on him," Dayton manager Alonzo Powell said. "It looked like a routine play, and it ended up going into right field". Subero said. "We were just a play away."

Powell would probably argue that it was simply the Dragons getting some justice. They battled back from a 2-0 deficit, scoring single runs in the fourth, fifth and ninth innings.

But in Powell's view they never should have been behind. That's because he thought Richardson's towering two run home run in the third inning which followed a two out walk by Wishy, was a foul ball. He was unable to convice home plate umpire Jesse Redwine of that however.

For his part, Richardson wasn't sure. "I hit it and started running and hoping. he said.

Dayton pulled within 2-1 in the next half inning when Olmstead singled with one out and scored on Conley's double. The Dragons pulled even in the fifth when Joey Votto led off with a walk, moved to third base on Ryan Fry's single to right field and scored on a wild pitch by Tim Cunningham.

Subero wasn't overly concered about losing the home opener however. "We went 4-3 on the road, and you have to like that." he said. "We got off to a 3-0 start and colled off a but, but that's not a concern."

Notes
Clinton general manager Ted Tornow had no complaints about opening night, either. "This is definitely the best opener (in his time at Clinton) from our standpoint: it's just unfortunate we didn't win." he said. "I expected a good crowd with this weather, but not this good."

Richardson said more great game shoud await Lumberkings fans. "I think we've got a really good group." said Richardson. who started last season in Clinton but spent most of the year at Spokane in the Northwest League. "This homestand is a good chance to get going and get after some teams."

The eight game homestand continues with 2pm games today and Sunday at Allient Energy Field. Matt Lorenzo (1-0, 1.13) is scheduled to pitch for Clinton against Dayton's Tyler Pelland (0-0, 0.00)

Dayton Daily News

The Dayton Dragons double starters Luis Noriega and Josh Thigpen, with the help of closer David Shafer held the Clinton Lumberkings to just a couple of runs and five hits on their way to a 3-2 victory at Alliant Energy Field.

On a night when the Dragons needed good pitching, they scored one earned run, Noriega the first pitcher in Dayton's to starter system, gave up two hits and two runs in four innings. Thigpen, the winner, pitched four scoreless inning, giving up three hits and striking out nine. He is 1-1 with a 2.00 ERA. Shefer got hte save, his second of the season.

Evan Conley's fifth inning double provided Dayton's only RBI. The Dragons scored the tying run on a sixth inning wild pitch and won it in the ninth when Jeff Urgelles scored on an error.

Quad City Times
by Steve Batterson

As Dayton's Luis Bolivar settled into the batters box in the top of the ninth inning Friday night at Alliant Energy Field it was like deja vu all over again.

For the third straight game, Bolivar was at the plate in his team's final at bat. And for the third straight game, the Dayton shortstop delivered.

His two out infield single disappointed a crowd of 2,358 and spoiled Clinton's Midwest League home opener 3-2.

"It was like, it's happening again, a chance to win the game," said Bolivar, who followed a last inning RBI double Wednesday with a three run, walkoff home run in the 10th inning at Lansing on Thursday.

Friday's difference maker was less dramatic.

He hit a two out dribbler in the top of the ninth toward Clinton's Tobin Swope at second. By the time Swope recovered, his throw to the plate slipped past the reach of Kevin Richardson. The Dragons' Jeff Urgelles, who had reached on the first of two straigh two out walks, scored the game winning run.

"The ball stayed down. It could have gone either way, but we didn't get the hop we needed." Clinton manager Carlos Subero said.

Richardson had given the Lumberkings a 2-0 lead in the 4th inning on a two run home run just inside the foul pole in left that was disputed by Dragons manager Alonzo Powell.

The Dragons pushed across single runs in the fifth and sixth runs to tie the game at 2-2.

The teams combined to strike out 31 times.

"We're taking too many pitches and swinging at some bad ones." Subero said.

Josh Thigpen (1-1) earned the win, striking out nine and not walking a batter in four innings of relief. David Shafer earned his second save.

Craig Frydendall (0-1) took the loss for the Lumberkings, who continue their four game series with the Dragons at 2 pm today.