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Gabelsville in
finals with win over Volpe's
Limeport and Northern Yankees play
deciding game today for other series slot.
By Keith Groller
Of The Morning Call
Tough as
it was for him to admit, Jeremy Arner conceded the better team won the
Tri-County League semifinal series between Gabelsville and his Volpe's
Fleetwings.
''Man for man, they're just better,'' Arner, the Fleetwings' player-manager,
said Friday night after his club was on the short end of a 9-2 loss at
Gabelsville in the fifth and deciding game of the series.
Chuck Nicholas and Justin Konnick combined for a five-hitter and Jon
Kalejta's two-run double in the third opened up a 3-0 lead the Owls wouldn't
relinquish.
Gabelsville will begin its bid for a second straight Tri-Co title and sixth
championship in the last 11 years on Monday night when the league title
series begins.
The Owls received a few
extra days off because later Friday night at Limeport, the Northern Yankees
extended the Tri-Co's other semifinal series to a fifth game by beating the
Bulls 3-0 on a two-hitter by Tim Kay.
The fifth game in that series is set for 1 p.m. today at Scherersville No.
5.
The Owls (29-7-1) will be looking for a more consistent offensive effort in
the finals than they had against Volpe's (27-10-3).
They tallied 24 runs in their three victories, but managed just a total of
one run in their two losses.
''It's hard to explain,'' Gabelsville manager Matt Danner said. ''In the
games we lost, the Fleetwings had just excellent pitching. In the three we
won, they weren't as sharp. And in this one, they also had some trouble
throwing and catching the ball.''
That was evident in the fourth inning when, with two out, the Fleetwings
committed four errors leading to four runs.
''Their team speed forces you into mistakes and if you give them extra outs,
they're going to kill you,'' Arner said. ''They're all good contact hitters
and so fast all the way through the lineup. They came out and did what they
had to do. We knew we had to make every play, and we didn't.''
Kalejta's double off the fence in left highlighted the three-run second.
''It was good to get off to a good start,'' Kalejta said. ''We were dead in
the dugout the last game we lost up there, so the hits early picked us up.
We've been real streaky here in the playoffs, and hopefully, we can get on a
hot streak over the next week.''
Gabelsville stayed hot in this one. The Owls tacked on two in the third when
Cody Kulp homered, and singles by Shane Houck and Matt Cotellese led to
another run.
Volpe's had chipped away for runs in the first and third, but were blanked
over the final four innings by Nicholas and Konnick.
The Fleetwings had runners in every inning but the second, but stranded
eight.
''We really battled and if we kept it close for five innings we would have
had a shot,'' Arner said. ''We had to keep it close because we haven't
scored more than four runs against them all year.''
Danner said his team has tremendous depth and he hopes that will make a
difference in the finals.
The Owls were 3-1 against Limeport and 2-2 against the Yankees during the
regular season. Gabelsville beat the Yankees three games to one in last
year's finals.
''For some reason we have trouble matching up with the Yankees,'' Danner
said.
On Friday
night, Limeport had trouble scoring against the Yankees.
First-year player Tim Kay, a 22-year-old Georgia native out of Bluffton
(Ohio) University, made his first start of the season a memorable one for
Northern (29-7).
He allowed only a questionable infield single by Jake DeBoer in the third
and a bloop double down the line in right by Ricky Rivera in the sixth.
''They were hitting the ball hard, but the guys behind me were making all
the plays and that's all you can ask for,'' said Kay, who worked around
three hit batters and four walks and struck out just two.
Few knew
who Northern manager Brian Polaha would give the ball to with his team's
season on the line, but he said he couldn't go wrong by giving it to Kay.
''He's such a gamer,'' Polaha said. ''He shows up all the time, ready to
play. I knew he'd give me everything he had. You want to win or lose with
the guys who really care. You knew it meant something to Tim and that's why
I ran him out there.''
Polaha said that Kay is not overpowering, but sneaky quick.
''He throws a big, almost an Eephus curveball,'' Polaha said. ''He threw an
inning in relief and he struck out a couple of batters. When he gets guys
looking for that slow curve, it makes his fastball seem quicker.''
Both teams must prepare for a quick turnaround for today's series decider.
The Yankees will also look to spruce up their offense. They got just enough
to even the series as Mike Venarchick and Landon Parker had two hits apiece.
Parker knocked in a run with a sacrifice fly and Caleb Calarco singled in a
run. Another crossed on a balk.
''It's not a surprise we're going to a fifth game,'' Polaha said. ''We'll be
ready. I said all along that we're evenly matched. This is why you play
baseball. It's going to be fun.''
Volpe's Fleetwings 101 000 0 -- 2 5 5
Gabelsville
032 400 x -- 9 10 1
Wiltrout, Nigito (3) and Arner; Nicholas, Konnick (5) and Bealer. HR: G:
Kulp (3rd, none on). W: Nicholas. L: Wiltrout.
Northern Yankees 000 110 1 -- 3 8 1
Limeport Bulls 000 000 0 -- 0 2 0
Kay and Venarchick, Faust (4); Walter,
Heilman (7) and Shortall.
keith.groller@mcall.com
610-820-6740
From The Morning Call --
August 8, 2009
Copyright
© 2009,
The Morning Call
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