The
Aggies dropped two of three to #1 in conference, Jax
State,
on the road. The Aggies won the opener, 6-3,
Behind Connor
Wylde’s
six-inning, 1-run performance on the mound. Julio
Ramos
(who got the win) and Dylan
Weekly
shut the door. Aidan
Taclas had
the winner with a 3-run homer. Boston
Vest
and Chris
Daniels
also homered. The two losses were shutouts, however. The first was
a 4-0.
Jack
Turner
took a hard luck loss with 7 innings of work and 3 earned runs. The
next was a 10-0
staff effort.
The
Aggies came back to New Mexico and had a 16-15
win over the Lobos
in 10 innings in Albuquerque. They scored 6 runs in the tenth for
the win. Bryce
Campbell’s
3-run double was the big blow. Weekly closed it out, but the Lobos
did score 5 in the bottom. Camden
Kaufman
had 5 RBI’s, including a home run. Tommy
Meluskey
was 2 for 3 with 2 RBI’s. The Aggies went through 8 pitchers.
Three of them worked 4 scoreless innings, including Ramos, who worked
2 of them. This was the Aggies third win over a good UNM
team.
The
Aggies began their next home series against #2 in conference,
Liberty,
on Friday night. Unfortunately, nobody cleared this game with the
weatherman. It was tied at 3 when it was suspended for a downpour.
The game restarted on Saturday afternoon, but without the Aggies
showing up, as they lost, 15-4.
Steve
Solorzano
had a good game, as he went 3 for 5, with an RBI.
Also
not showing up at the game was myself. I was tired and depressed.
The high humidity was slowing me down, as well. I had invited my new
senior citizen neighbor, Monty, to the game, but I cancelled early
when it looked like another rainy day, though it turned out to be
nice in the afternoon.
I
did walk over for lunch at Roni’s
trying to make myself feel better. I mis-ordered and put green chili
on my mac and cheese, which I didn’t want. (It didn’t really
hurt anything.) It was also Free
Comic Book Day,
but our local store wasn’t participating. (I knew this a couple of
days ago. I called. They said their distributor had gone out of
business and they couldn’t order the comics.) Undaunted, I went
next door to Dollartree,
who had put up a display with $1.25 DC comics a couple of weeks ago.
The display was now gone. Disappointments abounded. (I should have
gotten all of the comics I was interested in a couple of weeks ago,
instead of just four.) I’m surprised I didn’t go back to bed.
The
Saturday night game was, at least, a closer loss at 9-7
Liberty. The Aggies had a 7-6 lead, but gave up 3 in the ninth.
Ramos was working in his third inning in the ninth. The team had 3
errors for 2 unearned runs. Solorzano went 3 for 5 with an RBI.
Campbell was 3 for 5. Turner worked 6 innings giving up 3 runs. It
was an over 3 hour game with only 300+ in attendance. You know, I’m
kind glad I didn’t go to either of these games in the mood I was
in.
I
was feeling better about life in general on Sunday morning. Monty
was eager to go, so off we went. I had some initial shock at the
ticket office getting his ticket. I didn’t know that Baseball had
raised its prices to $10. That’s a bit steep for what you’re
getting. Inside the stadium, it was a sparse crowd of 388 with a
small knot of Liberty fans behind us.
Fan
Michael was there and a surprise appearance by Ken, who’d sworn off
Aggie Sports, at least for this season. He’d wanted to come to see
everyone. Ken mentioned seeing a snapped bat in a Softball game,
like I had (3-29-26). Trey Reese was also present. Since he was
by himself, he gave up his good seats to sit with us. I was
extremely pleased that everyone hit it off. Monty is a musician and
Trey and Michael are big music fans, so there was something to talk
about immediately. There was again a sudden Anthem playing that
caught everyone by surprise. There used to be a musical cue before
they’d do it.
Considering
how much conversation was going during the game, I can’t believe
these added up. I got one play wrong on it, but it was in pencil, so
no ink corrections were needed. All of the scoring was fairly
straight-forward, as well.
JT
Price
started for the Aggies. He began with allowing a single. The runner
made it to third via a stolen base and bad pickoff throw, but was
left stranded. Jonatan
Clough
began the bottom with a double from the leadoff spot for the Aggies.
A double play and strikeout stranded him.
It
was overcast, but enough sun was coming in-and-out that I was wearing
sunblock. A couple of times I felt a sprinkle, which was forecast,
but there was never a drop. Michael mentioned that there had been a
sudden deluge at Friday’s game with no chance of playing later that
night.
Price
gave up a single, but picked off the runner. He then got a
groundout, but hit the next batter. Kyle
Hvidsten
came up and crushed a home run to left to give Liberty a 2-0 lead.
The Aggies went down in order in the bottom. The Flames
only
had a single in the top of the third. Liberty starter, Bradley
Zayac,
got two strikeouts in the bottom of the third, but gave up a massive
shot to Clough that went out to left center to make it, 2-1 Liberty.
Trey
mentioned that there were several scouts at the game last night.
They were here for Jack
Turner,
who pitched pretty well. The scouts left right after he left the
game. Trey said they disapproved of the players’ walkup music.
(They are correct.) We were talking about the Texas
Rangers’
stadium. A co-worker of mine had gone to a couple of games there and
brought back a yearbook and a game program for me. (I may do a post
on these in the future.) He said they were selling season tickets
there for $299? That would be like $4 a game, which is way less than
the single game ticket I bought for this game. That can’t be
right.
The
Flames again began with a single in the fourth. Cam
Kaufman
then made a jump catch on a liner at third. Price knuckled down and
got a pair of strikeouts to end the inning, though a stolen base and
an errant throw by catcher, Brandon
Clizbe,
advanced the runner on base to third. With two outs in the bottom of
fourth, the Aggies started a rally with a hit and a walk. Jordan
Jaffe
at third made a catch on a sky-high infield popup against an overcast
background for the final out.
Somehow
we ended up having a conversation about MASH
and Catch-22.
I displayed my trivia knowledge here. Trey didn’t know that the
MASH
theme song is called Suicide
is Painless
and has words to it. (It’s only in the movie.) Also, the Catch-22
movie broke up Simon and Garfunkel. (Art was in the movie, but got
called back for a reshoot, and it disrupted their tour schedule.)
Price
got into trouble in the fifth with a pair of singles. An attempted
double steal half worked. One runner made it to third; the other was
thrown out. Two walks loaded the bases, though. Coach
Angier
had a long talk with JT before pulling him. Jaden
Davis
was ready to come in the whole time, so JT might have tried to talk
the Coach into letting him stay in.
Davis
walked the next batter to force in a run. It was on a 3-2 count with
all the runners taking huge leads of their bases. A Liberty fan
behind us said, “Thank you.” Davis got an easy grounder to
second and Bryce
Campbell
completely whiffed on it. Two runs scored on the error and the
Flames went up, 5-1. Davis reared back for a strikeout to end the
inning.
We
were getting attacked by flying bugs by this point. I can’t
remember this happening before. Also, how did they afford the $10
tickets? Tommy
Meluskey
began the bottom of the fifth with a double. A walk to Clough and a
beautiful bunt single by Steve
Solorzano
brought in a run to make it, 5-2 Liberty. Unfortunately, Steve was
then picked off. A lone Aggie fan started an Aggie chant. A Liberty
fan added an, “Aggies suck,” to it. A flyout ended the inning,
so she might have had a point.
Yet
another pickoff ended the top of the sixth. That one was a quick
rundown. The Aggies got two on in the bottom with a walk and a
single. Jackson
Evans,
who come in for Liberty in the inning, got three strikeouts to end
it. Ken and Trey both got up and left in disgust. Trey did come
back about 5 minutes later. He’d been angry that the Aggies didn’t
even try to bunt the runners over with no outs.
Monty
began a long story about being a kid in Milwaukee
when the Boston
Braves
moved into the town. Everyone was so excited. It was a very safe
city. He took a 10-cent trolley ride to the stadium by himself and
snuck into games with his friends. He got autographs of great
players like Hank
Aaron.
He was there for Warren
Spahn’s
300-th win. Everyone was given a souvenir card after the card. (He
still has all of this stuff.) When his Braves beat the Yankees
in the World
Series,
everyone in the city walked around with a smile. The team was later
moved to Atlanta
later when Coca-Cola
bought them. Later, I tapped Trey and said, “Aren’t you glad you
came back?” He’d been listening in rapt attention. He sure was.
Bradyn
Barnes
came in to start the seventh. A walk, a single, a wild pitch moving
up the runners, and an RBI single chased him from the game. Dylan
Weekly
came in. Aidan
Lombardi,
who come in last inning for Campbell for that error in the fifth,
made a great dive play at second for the second out. Weekly struck
out the final batter, but now it was 6-2 Liberty. Trey noticed that
the Flames were actually choking up on their bats with 2 strikes.
How Old School is that? In the bottom, the Aggies hit into a double
play with a nifty glove flip by Tanner
Marsh
at short.
Then
there was a lazy glove flip by Weekly in the eighth to let on a
runner, but no damage. The crowd literally groaned during the play.
Michael said, “We don’t deserve to win.” Cooper
Reese
came close by collecting a wild pitch during the warm up between
innings. We gave him a wave. The bottom of the eighth began with
walk. Lombardi came up and hit a high-arcing shot that landed just
over the centerfield wall. 6-4 Liberty. This finally put a jolt
into the crowd. You almost might have thought we were losing 10-0
the way this game was being played, but it was actually close.
Unfortunately,
the Flames added another run in the ninth in a two-out rally. Solo
had made a great play on a low-liner at first, but 3 singles in a row
made it, 7-4 Liberty. Liberty brought out their closer, Cooper
Harrington.
The Aggies began the bottom of the ninth with a single. Clough then
gave one a ride to center, but Josh
Campos
made a jump and catch at the wall. A groundout finished it. Liberty
wins, 7-4.
Even
with some efficient innings, this game took nearly 3 hours. That was
another three-game sweep. It’s not that the team isn’t trying,
but they’re not playing well, sloppy even. This seems like a
discipline problem with the team, which is a coaching issue. If the
Aggies miss the conference tournament, come back to that last
statement for the inevitable result.
I
needed to ask a Trey an important question before he left. I’d
noticed Aggie
Volleyball
players, Maggie
Lightheart
and Bella
Castro,
had been showing up to games. He confirmed that they were dating
baseball players. The boys did well there. (If any of them are
going out with Tess
Fuqua
as well, one could only wish they were playing as well as they’re
dating.)
Gameballs.
Nobody had a better game than Nick
Barone
for the Flames, who went 4 for 4 with 2 RBI’s. Their pitching was
good with Bradley
Zayac,
who pitched 5 innings for the win giving up only 2 runs. Cooper
Harrington
got the save for a scoreless ninth. For the Aggies, Jonatan
Clough
went 3 for 4 with an RBI from a solo home run. Aidan
Lombardi
made the most of his mid-game sub appearance with a 2-run homer.
I
had a free Whataburger
coupon burning a hole in my pocket from a co-worker. I couldn’t
talk Monty into getting anything when we were there, so we returned
home to our respective apartments. I ate my meal while watching the
Royals
at the Mariners
on Mexican TV and listening to a Chihuahuas
game. I kind of got what I paid for with that burger. That wasn’t
their best, but I’m not having good luck with food lately. We’ll
hopefully be back to for the regular season finale and ***Senior
Day*** in two weeks.