April 29, 2008
BASEBALL: Lutes Take Third in NWC,
Bid Farewell to Seniors
LUTES AND LOGGERS SPLIT: Bleecker allowed
only four hits and just one earned run in seven innings
of work as the Lutes won Saturday’s opener, 11-3.
Jeremy Ellison finished the final two innings, allowing
only one hit. Puget Sound scored the most runs allowed by
the Lutes in a game this season when it won an exciting
18-16 decision in the second game. That duo got plenty of
offensive support as the Lutes came up with 11 hits, including
two each my Josh Takayoshi, Matt Akridge and Geoff Gabler.
Takayoshi scored three runs and Gabler drove in three, including
one in the first inning with a double and the other two
in the third inning with a home run. The Lutes scored three
more runs in the fourth on Carl Benton's RBI single and
a two-run homer by Akridge. The other two runs came on the
ninth inning on RBI singles by Ryan Aratani and Brandon
Sales. The Loggers had all kinds of base runners in the
second game. In addition to their 20 hits, they took advantage
of seven walks and five hit batsmen by a total of five PLU
pitchers. Puget Sound led 12-8 through seven innings and
then scored three runs in both the seventh and eighth innings.
Trailing 18-8 going into their last at-bat, the Lutes rallied
for eight runs on eight singles, two walks and a UPS error.
PLU had the tying runs on base when the final out was recorded.
Pacific Lutheran had 15 hits in the game including two each
by Takayoshi, Gabler, Aratani, Andrew Hernandez and Ben
Shively. Gabler hit his second home run of the day and his
fourth overall this season leading off the sixth inning.
Pacific Lutheran lost Sunday’s first game to a walk-off
home run but came back with 17 hits to win the nightcap.
The Loggers used Gregorio Beck's two-out homer in the bottom
of the seventh to beat the Lutes, 9-8, in the first game.
Brandon Sales had four hits and Geoff Gabler capped a great
offensive series with three hits as the Lutes won the finale,
11-5. As was the case in Saturday's second game loss to
Puget Sound, the PLU pitching staff simply could not stop
the Loggers' offense. The hosts collected 16 hits in Sunday's
opener after getting 20 in their 18-16 win on Saturday.
Pacific Lutheran actually led 5-3 entering the bottom of
the fourth when Puget Sound broke through for five runs.
The Lutes whittled away at the lead and eventually scored
two runs on a Matt Akridge base hit in the top of the seventh
to tie the game at 8-8. That led to Beck's heroics against
Jeremy Ellison, PLU's fifth pitcher in the game. Unfortunately
for the senior, it was the first earned run he has allowed
in two years as a member of the Lutes pitching staff. Gabler
had three singles and Ben Shively added two doubles and
a single to PLU's 12-hit attack. Trey Watt improved his
season record to 6-1 with a complete-game effort in the
finale. He allowed nine hits while walking two and striking
out four. Watt got plenty of support from the Lutes, who
broke open a close 1-0 game with four runs in the fifth
inning and four more in the sixth inning, and it was Gabler
who started both rallies. He led off the fifth with a double
and scored on a base hit by Ryan Aratani. Sales followed
with a hit and Aratani scored on a single by Andrew Hernandez.
Sammy Davis laid down a bunt for a hit, scoring Sales, and
Shively hit a sacrifice fly to drive in Hernandez. In the
sixth inning, Gabler led off with a single and Aratani followed
with a single. Consecutive walks to Sales and Hernandez
brought in Gabler, and Kris Hansen followed with a pinch-hit
two-run single. After a walk to Josh Takayoshi, the final
run scored when Carl Benton was hit by a pitch for a school
record 26th time this season. The Lutes scored their final
two runs in the seventh on doubles by Gabler and Sales and
a single by pinch hitter Ryan Boyles. Sales was 4-for-4
during the game and Gabler finished 3-for-5 with two doubles
and three runs scored. Aratani, Davis and Shively all added
a pair of hits for the Lutes.
FINAL RANKINGS: The Lutes finished the
season in third place in the Northwest Conference with a
21-11 record, 24-14-2 overall. Pacific Lutheran’s
.334 team batting average ranked first in the conference,
with its 4.57 earned run average placing third and its .962
fielding percentage ranking second. Geoff Gabler’s
late-season offensive explosion carried him all the way
to the NWC batting title, as he finished the season with
a conference-leading .429 batting average in 26 games played.
Gabler also led the team with a .701 slugging percentage
and .482 on base percentage. Ryan Aratani finished an outstanding
freshman season with a .397 average, good for second in
the conference. Brandon Sales followed up an All-American
season with a .388 batting average and a team-leading 57
hits and 14 doubles in his junior campaign. Jordan Post
paced the Lutes in numerous offensive categories, including
runs (41, tied with Josh Takayoshi), home runs (6), runs
batted in (34), total bases (85) and walks (30). Robert
Bleecker finished the season with an undefeated 6-0 record
and a conference-best 2.51 earned run average in 64.2 innings
pitched. Trey Watt’s 56 strikeouts tied for the conference
lead, with his 8.4 strikeouts per nine innings the most
in the conference. Jeremy Ellison finished his PLU career
giving up only one earned run.
PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Geoff Gabler earned
Northwest Conference player of the week honors for the final
week of the season, batting .588 (10 for 17) with three
doubles and two home runs in four weekend games. He drove
in five runs and scored nine times, and also had a pair
of stolen bases in two attempts.
BENTON’S PAINFUL RECORD: Second
baseman Carl Benton earned his place in the PLU record books
with a painful assault on the single season hit by pitch
record. His 26 hit by pitches easily surpassed Paul Montmeny’s
23 in 1990.
SENIOR RECOGNITION: With the season coming
to a close, the Lutes bid farewell to four seniors, all
pitchers, this season. Jeremy Ellison, Brett Brunner, Jeff
Danforth and Matt Keller all completed their final year
of eligibility. Pacific Lutheran would like to thank these
players for their contributions over the years, both on
and off the field, and wish them all the best of luck in
their next endeavors.
- PLU -