Coplay records clutch
Tri-County victory 7-2
By Jack Lapos
Of The Morning Call
"We
needed a good win and we got it," jubilant Jim Emerick exclaimed yesterday
after he pitched a superb three-hitter to give Coplay a 7-2 win over North
Parkland in a Tri-County League game at East Texas.
The
victory was doubly sweet in that it lifted Coplay into undisputed possession
of first place in theNorthern Division. Coplay went into yesterday's contest
deadlocked with Limeport at the top of the standings. Coplay is now 17-6.
North Parkland has a 9-16 record.
Emerick, 23-year-old righthander who played his high school baseball at
Whitehall, struck out four and walked three and got some nifty support from
his teammates. Coplay did not commit an error.
Coplay came up with 11 hits off righthander Rich Correll, who went the
seven-inning distance. Correll fanned six and issued only one walk but at
times his teammates let him down on defense as they committed three errors.
Four
players for Coplay had two hits - John Marushok, Randy Remaly, Jeff Erie and
Lou Falco. Remaly, Falco and Charlie Kelly of North Parkland all had
doubles. Player-coach George Horn of North Parkland had the evening's
longest hit, a triple.
Coplay, which is the defending champion in its division, has only four games
to go in the regular schedule. One is a showdown with Limeport Sunday at
Fegely Stadium.
The
5-10 and 165-pound Emerick is well aware his team is involved in a crucial
part of the season. He has played for Coplay in all three years of its
Tri-County League existence. Two years ago he had a 7-4 mark. Last year he
was 5-1. This season he is 6-2.
"Our
team really has been struggling lately," Emerick said. "I knew we needed
this one . . . I threw mostly fast balls . . . nothing fancy . . . just
trying to get the ball over the plate . . . our guys gave me nice support."
Assistant coach Rick Keppel, who directed the team in the absence of head
coach Bob Bartholomew, agreed with Emerick that Coplay did indeed need an
impressive win.
"The
team looked dead the past week or so and now suddenly we are quite alive
again," Keppel noted. "We know we must keep winning if we hope to stay in
front of Limeport."
Coplay led all the way, jumping into a 2-0 lead in the first inning. Remaly
doubled. Jeff Erie singled. Remaly then scored on a delayed double steal.
Falco singled. Then Bill Erie came through with a run-producing single.
The
visitors boosted their lead to 3-0 in the third. Remaly singled and stole
second. Jeff Erie singled him home.
North Parkland made the game a bit closer by scoring once in the fourth.
Brett Simock and Horn walked. Tom Kucharczuk singled home Simock. It looked
like North Parkland would have a big inning when Ted Young walked to load
the bases. However, Emerick struck out Charlie Kelly and got Chris Ficek to
line out to second base.
That
line drive catch was a beauty by Jeff Snyder, who dived to his left and
snared the ball before tumbling to the ground. It was by far the best
defensive play of the game.
North Parkland moved to within 3-2 in the sixth when Horn tripled and
Kucharczuk followed with a run-producing groundout.
Coplay moved out of reach with a four-run outburst in the seventh, making
the most of three hits and two errors. The key blows were an RBI single by
Marushok and Falco's two-run double. Correll managed to escape further
damage by retiring the next two batters.
Incidentally, one thing Coplay does not want to do now is look too far
ahead. Before Coplay faces Limeport Sunday, it must take on Bethlehem
Township tomorrow at Coplay.
-
Gilbertsville posted its 18th win on a 9-3 bumping of Delaware Valley. Scott
Gilbert hit 2-for-3 with a pair of RBI for the winners, and Kevin Endy added
two RBI on a single in the fourth. Jim Evans blasted a solo shot in the
fifth to help Kevin Mackey to his win. George Piperato provided a DelVal
bright spot with an RBI single in the loser's three-run seventh. George
Becker took the loss.
-
Dennis Jones hurled a two-hit shutout to lead Quakertown past Limeport 2-0.
Rob Rush broke the scoreless deadlock with a two-out single for two runs in
the top of the fourth after loser Deron Erney issued two walks. Terry Keller
hit 3-for-3 for the winners and scored in the seventh.
From The Morning Call --
July 16, 1986
Copyright
© 1986,
The Morning Call
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