We’ll
take a minute to go over what happened to Aggie
Softball
at the C-USA
Tournament
before we recount Aggie
Baseball’s
final games. The Aggies were the #5 seed. They beat Sam
Houston,
3-0,
as Kendal
Lunar
homered twice and Tamara
Carranza
also homered to account for all of the scoring. Catcher Madi
Bachman
was listed as the starter, but Faith
Aragon
pitched all 7 frames with 11 strikeouts.
The
Aggies lost to Delaware,
11-7,
in their next game. Bachman was in this game and hit a grand
slam, Devin
Elam
went 3 for 3 with an RBI. Faith and Zantelle
Rodriguez
split the pitching duties and the runs given up. I guess the
Blue
Hens
got the final say after the teams’ bad blood in their previous game
(4-26-26).
The
Aggies bowed out of the tournament after their next game against LA
Tech
with a 3-1
loss. They left it all on the field though, as the game took
11 innings! Bless her heart, Faith pitched all 11 innings with
11 strikeouts. Skye
Johnson
provided the final Aggie run of the season. At 27-27 overall
and 16-11 in conference, congratulations to Aggie Softball.
Finishing at .500 overall and over .500 in conference, you guys were
the best Aggie team this year. (Men’s
Basketball
was .500 overall, but under that in conference.)
Back
to Aggie Baseball, events have not gone well. They had an 8-6
loss to Arizona.
The Aggies did score 5 in the ninth to make it interesting.
Camden
Kaufman
was 3 for 4 with an RBI and Aidan
Taclas
had a 2-run double.
Next,
the team visited my Aunt Judy in Springfield, Missouri to play MO
State.
All three games in the series were set for 11:00am CST, even the
Friday game, which still had over 600 in attendance. The
morning games did not agree with the Aggies, as they lost all three.
It was a 14-8
loss in Game 1. Aiden
Lombardi
went 3 for 4 with 2 RBI’s from a home run. The Aggies lost
the next game, 9-1.
Jack
Turner
took the loss, as he gave up 7 runs in 5 innings. They dropped
the final game, 7-6.
They never led, but made it a 1-run game in the ninth.
Taclas was the standout going 3 for 5 with 2 RBI’s. The
Aggies did accumulate 4 hit by pitches in the game.
Back
in New Mexico and playing in Albuquerque, the Lobos
beat Aggies, 12-6,
on Tuesday. The game was being streamed on the Lobos’
website. Unfortunately, I only remembered the game in time to
watch the ninth. The Aggies committed 3 errors, which
accounted for 7 of the Lobos’ 12 runs. Asa
Briggs
got hung with 4 unearned runs. Aggie pitching did allow 9
walks. Easton
Rulli
had a good game going 2 for 4 with a 3-run homer. The Aggies
at least went 3 and 1 in the Rio Grande Rivalry.
The
Aggies began their final series against FIU
on
Thursday. It was a 17-12
loss. FIU was 0-12 in conference road games until this win.
It was 15-6 FIU, until the Aggies had a 6-run eighth, but that
was as close as they got. All five Aggie pitchers gave up
multiple runs. Steve
Solorzano
had a great game going 2 for 5, had 4 RBI’s off a grand slam, and
stole home. Taclas went 2 for 3 with 2 RBI’s from a homer.
There were over 700 there for the weekday night game.
On
Friday, the Aggies had a 6-5
win. It was a close one. There was a 5-run third for
the Aggies and they led most of the way, but the Panthers
came back and had a 2-run inside-the-park homer in the ninth to get
it to one. Turner got the win with 6 scoreless innings.
Dylan
Weekly
got the save with 2 and 2/3 innings of work, while only giving up
that 2-run homer. Solorzano was 3 for 5 with an RBI, Aiden
Lombardi
was 3 for 3 with an RBI, and Boston
Vest
doubled in 2 runs. (I heard a rumor at work that Solo is on
his way to Arizona next year, by the way.)
I
was listening to the Tigers
and Blue
Jays
on the radio Saturday morning. The game was tied late at 1 off
of 2 solo home runs. I went to collect my neighbor, Monty, for
the game. I had told him that the time on the game had changed
to 2:00pm yesterday, but he’d only remembered the original 11:00am
time and had made other plans.
I
kept listening to the MLB
game
on the way over. I’d hoped the Tigers would win it in the
ninth, but that didn’t happen, so I brought in a portable radio to
keep listening. The Pan
Am Center
parking lot was full for Graduation Day. I think game had been
pushed back to accommodate graduation, but I’m not sure.
It
was hot and sunny. It was 89-degrees to start and got hotter.
A stiff breeze blew over stadium. This was the first time
it’s been hot this season for a game I was going to. I’d
had leftover pizza for lunch and was too full for corn-in-a-cup.
I missed it for the whole season.
I
got lousy reception on my radio in the stands. The Jays scored
in the tenth and won it, 2-1.
Bah, humbug. There was a Senior Ceremony before game
recognizing the 10 seniors on the team. I noticed the team
photographer was wearing a throwback Randy
Johnson
Diamondbacks
jersey. Looked cool. The umpires huddled up in prayer
before the game. It was a light crowd, at 431, but they were
enthusiastic. I was seated with Fan Michael, as usual.
His sister, Esther, joined us. I didn’t see the Reese family
there. Michael said there was a big party that Nellie was
going to later. Nothing was out of the ordinary to this point.
They’re
unreal aren’t they? I had no idea what I was walking into
here today. I never exactly lost the scorecards. The
scoring in this was reasonably straightforward, but I certainly ran
out of space in places. There were a couple of scoring
variances in places that made it hard to add up, especially when
you’re dealing with large numbers.
JT
Price
started for the Aggies and the FIU Panthers started early with a
3-run homer in the first. Jonatan
Clough
punched right back in the bottom with a triple into the right field
corner. Aidan
Taclas
cashed him in on a groundout. 3-1 FIU. There was a
friendly couple behind us. Michael got a souvenir hat for the
lady. It was a nice hat and I passed up several opportunities
to get one. I just couldn’t justify another hat when I have
a crate full.
Price
got the first two outs in the top of the second. Aiden
Lombardi
at third battled the sun and a clear blue sky to get a foul fly for
the second out. After a walk, Mario
Trivella
was hit for the second inning in a row and hard this time. Lombardi
made a heroic effort on an infield single, but Cooper
Rasmussen
beat it out to load the bases. Andrew
Ildefonso
then drove in 2 with a single and then another single drove in a
third run. 6-1 FIU.
The
Panther backup catcher warmed up the pitcher, while the starter got
ready. They head knocked heads when exchanging positions.
Boston
Vest
began the bottom of the second by getting plunked. He set the
program record for getting hit by pitches during this series.
Lombardi brought him in with a double. Dane
Woodcook
singled Lombardi in. There was a near double play, but the
ball to first was thrown away. The Aggies weren’t able
capitalize further. 6-3 FIU.
The
FIU Seniors were recognized before the top of the third. The
PA got a tip of the cap from a Panther player. Jaden
Davis
came in to pitch in the third. He worked a scoreless 1-2-3
third inning. For what was to come, this inning was an
accomplishment.
Steve
Solorzano
singled to begin the bottom of the third. Easton
Rulli
skipped a ball past third base and the two runners hustled to take an
extra base. Vest was hit for the second inning in a row to
load the bases. That “Hit Me” sign he wears really works.
Lombardi came up and dropped a bunt in front of the pitcher.
Solo flew into home just ahead of a glove flip from the pitcher to
the catcher. 6-4 FIU. Cole
Cleveland in
center made a play on a shallow flyball and then threw out Rulli at
the plate to end the inning.
I
saw a kid in the crowd wearing a Texas
Tailgators
t-shirt. El Paso was hosting Banana
Ball
games this weekend. I got to watch one of them on Youtube on
Friday. From seeing the crowd, they do some brisk merchandise
business.
Trey
Reese arrived and brought drama with him. His daughter,
Nellie, was not invited to a senior party at the country club. This
brought about some angry e-mails from her mom, Robin, to Athletic
Director Fields,
who was here for the Senior Ceremony, and others. Soon enough,
Nellie was on the guest list, but the slight hadn’t been
forgotten. This doesn’t sound like a big deal, but Trey and
Robin were taking this deadly seriously. Trey wasn’t blaming
Coach
Jordan
for this, but he thought the coach would be gone soon.
Enough
gossip. Davis gave up two doubles in the top of the fourth,
which scored a run to make it, 7-4 FIU. To start the bottom,
Woodcook hit an infield popup that dropped in between five fielders
for a gift double. Camden
Kaufman
walked, before Solorzano singled in a run.
Taclas
was next called out on a check swing, which was called by the second
base ump behind the pitcher. The crowd was not happy with
that. I mentioned that Triple-A
is now using ABS on check swings. Trey was surprised about
that. Vest cleared the bases with a double and got the crowd
up. Rasmussen snatched a low liner at third to end the inning,
but the Aggies were up, 8-7.
A
few of the Volleyball
girls were here, the ones with Baseball player boyfriends.
They looked so pretty. Michael and I were invited into the
Diamond
Club
by Trey for drinks. “I’d take a cold cup of piss right
now,” I said, as I was sweltering in the heat. “Let’s see if
they have water before you ask for that,” Trey said wisely.
(I did get a cup of water.) I missed a couple of outs, which
was too bad, as it was Davis working another 1-2-3 inning. I
didn’t realize how precious this was at the time.
I
stayed for the bottom of the fifth. It wasn’t a great view,
much like when the club was situated down the other baseline (4-10-22). I was standing at a table next to the field and
still with no shade. (There was a pavilion there, but it was
full, as were the tables with umbrellas.) Going back for more
water, I met the guy that runs the place. There wasn’t any
food out there and the alcohol drinks weren’t free. I don’t
know if they had any sodas. Let’s just say, this place isn’t
exactly selling itself.
Bryce
Campbell
doubled to start the bottom of the fifth. A pair of sacrifices
brought him in. Clough painted the right field line for
another double. I finally got to see it go into the corner,
which I can’t see from the stands. (Actually, ump’s call
was a little questionable.) Solo doubled again down the right
field line and that was definitely fair. Clough scored to make
it, 10-7 Aggies. Rulli struck out to end the inning, but I
have to mention his epic at bat fouling off pitch-after-pitch.
Graduate
Connor
Wylde
started the top of the sixth. He hit the first batter.
Clough made a great diving catch for the first out. Coach
Angier
came out and got him for Carson
Timmons,
who struck out the next two batters to end the inning. In
retrospect, this might have been the turning point of the game for
the worse. Wylde probably should have finished the inning.
The Coach seemed committed to letting all of the seniors play,
which would have disastrous results.
The
bottom of the sixth brought out a new FIU pitcher. One of his
warm up pitches went straight to the backstop, which brought out
jeers from the crowd. It was foreshadowing. Vest was
walked to start the inning and two wild pitches moved him over to
third. Campbell brought him on a groundout. 11-7
Aggies. It was all looking good.
The
top of seventh and I can’t do it. I can’t do all of the
details. Let’s just hit the total button here: 11 runs
(there wasn’t enough space on the scoreboard to show it), 10 hits,
16 batters, 4 pitchers. Timmons gave up four-straight hits to begin
the inning, which culminated in a grand slam by Cole
Cleveland
over the batter’s eye. I think I’ve only seen two other
shots go over the batter’s eye.
Vest
went ole’ on a grounder next, but no error. Woodcook took a
bad foul tip off his hand. It really must have hurt, as he was
shaking out his hand for about a minute, but he stayed in. The
first out of the inning was on the ninth batter. Worse, it was
a badly executed attempt by Solo to get a double play that only got
one. The Volleyball girls left. “Tsk. Baseball
boys losing. Volleyball girls out,” they said walking by.
(They came back later. Did they have to go to the bathroom
together?) By the time the inning finally, blessedly, ended, the
crowd was completely deflated. The PA did the Stretch, but
then there was silence afterward. 18-11 FIU.
The
Aggies did come back in the bottom of the seventh. A walk, a
hit batter, and an error from short that pulled the first baseman off
the bag, loaded the bases with no outs. After a strikeout, there was
an attempted double play. The ball went to second, but the
fielder dropped it. The umps conferenced. It was ruled
an out and that the fielder lost it on the transfer. The crowd
was unruly, but that did score a run. After a pitching change
and another walk to load the bases, Lombardi was hit. That
drove in a second run to make it, 18-13 FIU.
The
top of the eighth began with a single, a walk, a pitching change, and
then an FIU 3-run homer by Ildefonso. The Panther dugout
didn’t even seem to care about it. There wasn’t any big
celebration. A solo homer followed along with another pitching
change. It was be another 4-pitcher inning with 6 more runs
scored. Rulli slammed into the wall in right field to get the
final out. 24-13 FIU.
We
were in run rule territory which would have finally ended the game,
but it was not to be. FIU did not help themselves here with 2
walks, 3 wild pitches, 2 errors, and a hit batter. At one
point, the FIU Coach gave the pitcher an angry talk we could hear in
the stands. Aidan
Cohall
at first fell down catching a foul to finally end the inning.
The Aggies came up with 6 runs, as they batted around. 24-19
FIU.
By
the top of the ninth, I’d now seen everything. After Asa
Briggs
gave up a walk and a double, Kaufman, the second baseman, came in to
pitch. The Aggies were out of available pitchers, but at least
all the seniors got in (ugh). Camden walked his first batter.
When he got his first strike, there was a cheer from the crowd.
They went wild when he got a strikeout. Unfortunately, things came
back down to earth as 5 consecutive batters got on after. A chant
went up from the crowd. I was mishearing it at first, but
figured out they were saying, “We want Solo!” Solorzano
was a pitcher when he started here, but his arm is apparently
permanently on the shelf. Six more runs and it was, 30-19
FIU.
Solo,
#15, started the bottom of the ninth. A guy yelled, “Take us
to the Promised Land, One-Five!” You can’t buy that kind
of support. Solo doubled. By this point, I’d suddenly
noticed that the Aggies had scored in every preceding inning.
I was not surprised when Taclas jacked out a two-run homer. I
immediately began ranting to Michael, “They’ve scored in every
inning! Why are they losing!” After that final
outburst, the game finally, at last, definitely, ended. FIU
wins 30-21.
Let’s
examine this. The Aggies scored in every inning. Do you
know how hard it is to score in 9 straight innings of a ballgame?
It basically never happens, even in blowouts. The Panthers
committed 4 errors and the Aggies played clean. The Panthers
also came into this series winless in 12 conference road games.
All that and the Aggies weren’t even close.
Further,
FIU scored 1 run over 4 innings, so they scored 29 runs over 5
innings. The Aggies batted around in 1 inning; the Panthers
did that for 3 consecutive innings. There were 51 total runs
in the game. Don’t credit this to good hitting. Today
was batting practice level pitching. There were 18 pitchers
used in this game (well, 17 pitchers, 1 position player) and only 2
were not scored upon for a total of 2/3 of an inning.
This
was a bad team versus a terrible team. The Aggies should have
swept this series, but instead might end up as the butt of a joke on
Sports Center for this game. They’ve already been made a
joke of this week. On the Clay
and Buck
political talkshow, a Missouri senator talking about NCAA
rules mentioned that Arkansas
had cut their Men’s
and Women’s Tennis teams.
He said, “They’re in the SEC.
They’re not New
Mexico State.”
Nine teams make the C-USA
Baseball tournament.
That’s not a high bar. Heads need to roll.
Gameballs?
After that rant? Obviously, the Panthers did well hitting
today. I’ll highlight two. Andrew
Ildefonso
did particularly well going 5 for 7 with 9 RBI’s (!) and 2 home
runs. On the other end, Cole
Cleveland
went 1 for 6. That 1 was a grand slam home run. It was
that kind of day for FIU.
The
Aggies did pretty well hitting, too. Steve
Solorzano,
possibly in his final game as an Aggie, went 4 for 7 with 2 RBI’s.
Aidan
Taclas
was 2 for 4 with 4 RBI’s and a home run. Boston
Vest
was 2 for 3 with 3 RBI’s. Aidan
Lombardi
was 1 for 4, but worked out 4 RBI’s. That’s lots of hustle
and on defense, as well. I will single out one pitcher today.
Jaden
Davis
worked 3 innings and gave up 1 run. That was a masterpiece by
comparison to everyone else.
In
spite of the 8 hit batters, the teams did line up and shake hands.
As the FIU guys lined up, they tossed their gloves to the
dugout. (Is that a Little League tradition?) I helped
Michael take his signed souvenir posters to hand out to the players
and said, “Goodbye.” I found Trey and Robin and ranted to
them about the game and said my farewells there. There were a
couple of AggieVision
guys talking in the bathroom. They were horrified by the game
and its length, but pleased with their coverage for the day.
If
the game had been quick, I might have just gone home, still full from
lunch. Four and a half hours later in the heat, I had my
appetite back and wanted something to drink and some ice cream to
cool off with. I flirted with going to McDonald’s,
but didn’t think I could take the disappointment if their ice cream
machine was down. A Chik-fil-a
sandwich sounded better than a burger anyway. Unfortunately,
it was a bit of a disappointing meal, much like the season.
Dad called and wondered why I wasn’t home and if there were extra
innings. “Nope,” I said, “Care to guess the score?”
I
do plan on coming back for Baseball next year and the Crimson
and White Volleyball Scrimmage,
but at $10 a game, there won’t be many for me. This will end
with them charging for parking. The other sports I’m done
with, unless I get a free ticket. All of the teams were .500
or worse. I’ve got no reason to expect better from any of
the Aggie
Sports
next year.