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Both Lansing and Dunedin advanced to the next round of their playoffs with exciting one-run wins. Dunedin swept Fort Myers in extra innings, while Lansing got out to a lead and refused to relinquish it.



Fort Myers 2 @ Dunedin 3 (11) - Box Score

Dunedin Wins Series 2-1

Dunedin won an extra-inning affair at home in the eleventh after scoring a run in the eight inning to tie the game. Despite outhitting Fort Myers 12-5 the game was knotted after eight innings. Ron Davenport homered for Dunedin in the bottom of the first to give the D-Jays a 1-0 lead. A walk, a single and a ground out in the fifth inning tied the game at one-apiece. In the seventh Fort Myers got the first two runners on base, but Dunedin starter Orlando Trias was aggressive on the sac bunt and threw out the lead runner at third. When the next batter hit a grounder to second it looked like Dunedin might be out of the inning, but second baseman Carlo Cota booted the ball. The bases were loaded and Dunedin could only get one out on the next ground ball and an unearned run scored to give Fort Myers the lead.

 Daniel Powers came in for Anthony Swarzak to hold the lead in the eighth inning and an Eric Nielsen single drove home Aaron Matthews to tie the game. Matthews would then ground out in the bottom of the ninth inning with two out and runners on second and third. Both teams threatened in the tenth, but neither scored. With two out and nobody on in the bottom of the eleventh Juan Peralta singled and then stole second base. Aaron Matthews was intentionally walked, but then the reliever couldn’t find the plate for Robinzon Diaz and he took a base on balls, as well. With two out and the sacks full Ron Davenport drove home Peralta with the series-winning run with a single.

 Five D-Jays had two hits on the night and Cory Patton and Christian Snavely were the only Dunedin players not to have hits. Both Dunedin pitchers turned in fine performances as Trias gave up four hits and two walks over seven strong and then Connor Falkenbach gave up one hit and one intentional walk over his four innings.

 
South Bend 3 @ Lansing 4 - Box Score

Lansing Wins Series 2-0

Lansing knocked out South Bend on a bunch of singles and timely pitching by Adrian Martin. Lansing had six hits on the night, all singles. Jacob Butler and Brian Pettway had two each and Brian Bormaster and Jesus Gonzalez each had one. Everybody singled in Lansing’s four-run first inning, when Butler and Pettway scored, along with Luke Hetherington who reached on an error and Joey Metropolous who walked. The rest of the night saw Lansing get two singles, never get a runner past second base and go 1-2-3 in four of their remaining seven innings at the plate.

 So, it was up to the pitching to hold up and Adrian Martin turned in a strong performance. Despite giving up eleven hits on the night, he only gave up three in an inning once and did not walk a batter. Martin struck out four and allowed two runs, only one of which was earned. He also was the beneficiary of some fine defensive play, as both Butler and Pettway added to their nights by throwing out South Bend runners at home plate. Po Hsuan Keng allowed an unearned run on two walks and an error. Jordan Timm came in after two batters in the eighth and did not allow a hit and Paul Phillips closed it out for his second save of the series. Justin Upton ended the game on a fly out to center field and finished his season 0-5 with three strikeouts.

 After defeating the defending champion Silver Hawks, Lansing will move on to the semifinals of the Midwest League and will have an extra day off as no other team managed to sweep.

 
Mahoning Valley 2 @ Auburn 0 (7) - Box Score

Wilfreddy Aguirre had his worst appearance since he gave up four runs in an inning back on August 14th, as he allowed two runs in two innings. Javier Nieves, Seth Overbey and Brian Bull kept the Scrappers hitters down for the rest of the game as Mahoning Valley managed a walk off Nieves and that was it. However, Mahoning Valley wouldn’t need any more runs after niftily-named Cirilo Cumberbatch’s two-run homer in the second.

 Joshua Tomlin gave up three hits over six innings and that was all Auburn was able to piece together. Aside from an Adam Calderone triple, the bats were very quiet all game and the fine efforts of the bullpen didn’t amount to anything.

 
Mahoning Valley 0 @ Auburn 6 (7) - Box Score

In the second game of the doubleheader Auburn proved turnabout was fair play as five pitchers combined to throw a two-hitter against the Mahoning Valley Scrappers. Chris Reddout allowed a hit in his three innings and reliever Patrick McGuigan allowed one in his inning, but Ronald Lowe, Nathan Starner and Dennis Bigley were all flawless as Auburn pitchers did not walk a single batter over the seven innings.

 Jonathan Baksh had a 3-3 night to total 1/3 of Auburn’s hits as he roped two doubles and drove in a runner. Brian Jeroloman was 2-3 with a double and an RBI. The Doubledays only had 3 RBIs on the night, as they took advantage of three Scrapper errors, including two by first baseman Josh Roberts. Matt Liuzza and middle infielder Luis Fernandez were the only Auburn starters not to have a hit.

3 star selection

3rd star –  Jonathan Baksh, 3-5, 2 R, 2 2B, RBI, 5 TB

2nd star – Connor Falkenbach, 4 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 1 IBB, 4 K and Orlando Trias 7 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 7 K

1st star – Ron Davenport, 2-6, R, HR, 2 RBI, 5 TB

Playoff Success | 15 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Pistol - Friday, September 08 2006 @ 08:55 AM EDT (#154952) #

Falkenbach pitched 55.2 innings over 47 games for Dunedin this year. 

He pitched an inning on Wednesday night to get the save.  He then pitched *4* scoreless innings yesterday to keep the D-Jays alive.  Someone has their manager's trust.

Craig B - Friday, September 08 2006 @ 09:21 AM EDT (#154953) #
I don't know how Falkenbach will handle going up levels (AA was rough on him), but what a marvelous organizational player.  Just as he was a marvelous college player.  I hope he can be the next Chad Bradford, or at least the next Steve Schmoll and get a shot at the majors.
braden - Friday, September 08 2006 @ 09:24 AM EDT (#154954) #

The attendace in Dunedin last night was 310.  Toss in a two hour rain delay and I wonder how many people were still on hand for the series-clincing hit.

 

MatO - Friday, September 08 2006 @ 10:20 AM EDT (#154956) #

Very conveniently the 1st and 10th overall picks from the 2005 draft played in the MWL and also as OFers.  So who's going to be the better player?

http://www.minorleaguebaseball.com/app/milb/stats/stats.jsp?n=Cameron%20Maybin&pos=OF&sid=milb&t=p_pbp&pid=457727

http://www.minorleaguebaseball.com/app/milb/stats/stats.jsp?n=Justin%20Upton&pos=OF&sid=milb&t=p_pbp&pid=457708

Maybin certainly put up the better numbers but those K's without much power has to be a concern.  Upton had a nice season for someone who just turned 19 but for the 1st overall pick it was a bit disappointing.

Mike Green - Friday, September 08 2006 @ 10:37 AM EDT (#154957) #
Both have all the ability needed to be stars.  Motivation and luck (avoidance of long-term injury predominantly) will determine who does better.
Craig B - Friday, September 08 2006 @ 10:45 AM EDT (#154958) #

Both look on track to me, though Maybin's clearly broken from the gate better.  I think Maybin has a good chance to be the better player over the long term because although Upton was viewed as having better baseball skills, Maybin appears to have more pure speed, which is a very important tool for a guy who projects as a .300-hitting centerfielder.  If Upton really is an outfielder for the long haul, I can't give any clear reason why he was the #1 pick over Maybin (who was the consensus #2 or #3 but fell for perceived signability reasons) other than his brother's top prospect status at the time.

Arizona's staff know what they are doing, though. A lot more than I would.

Craig B - Friday, September 08 2006 @ 10:57 AM EDT (#154959) #

those K's without much power has to be a concern

I wouldn't think so.  Maybin had 35 extra-base hits in 445 PA, which isn't great but is perfectly reasonable for a kid his age in a big pitchers' park.  He hit for a lot more power on the road and hit for considerably more power with men on base (.405 SLG with the bases empty, .511 SLG with men on) indicating that he's a very heady young player who alters his approach to suit the situation he's in. 

To reiterate, the park there is brutal... West Michigan hit 92 doubles and 29 homers at home and 130 doubles and 52 homers on the road.  Their pitchers gave up 26 homers at home and 38 on the road.

Like a lot of warm-climate players (Maybin is from North Carolina) his power came with the warmer weather - 7 of his9 homers were in July and August - suggesting that the Tigers would be wise to keep him on a cold-weather team early next year (probably in AA) to let him continue to adjust as he'll have to in Detroit.

flbball - Friday, September 08 2006 @ 11:10 AM EDT (#154961) #

Was at the Dunedin game last night (as well as the game in Fort Myers on Tuesday).  WHAT A SERIES!  3 games decided by one run, the last in extra innings.

Falkenbach looked great in 4 strong innings of relief.  He made some of the batters look positively clumsy at the plate.

Ron Davenport's homer in the 1st was a monster shot.  Not only did it clear the fence, it actually landed on the metal roof of the building past the outfield wall.  The line in right is 327, and he must have hit it at least 400, had the roof not stopped the ball's momentum.

Finally, I have been big on Orlando Trias all year, and what a season and game he had.  He led the FSL in wins at 13, and pitched a real gem last night, going 7 strong with 2 runs (1 unearned) on 4 hits with 2BBs and 7 Ks.   Last year Orlando was promoted to the major's in Venezuela's winter league playing for the " Leones del Caracas".   As many here know, at that level he faced many players who are major leaguers here in the U.S. and did a great job.  In fact, he helped the Leones (the Venezuelan Champions) win the 49th Caribbean Series (season 2005-2006), Venezuela's 1st since 1989, and he helped the Leones win their 1st Venezuelan championship since 1970.   A great snapshot of his season down there can be found here:   http://mlb.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20060203&content_id=1306247&vkey=news_mlb&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb
If you want, on that same page hit the link to Caribbean Series photo gallery where they have a photo of Orlando in action in the Carribean series.   Anyone interested in seeing Orlando's progress can always google: "Orlando Trias Caracas Leones"   Congrats to Dunedin and Lansing!      
 
Lugnut Fan - Friday, September 08 2006 @ 11:22 AM EDT (#154962) #

I will tell you what I noticed in Upton last night.  The kid gets fooled easily and takes terrible hacks at curve balls.  They just fed him a steady diet of breaking stuff and he got himself out.  The question is, how is he going to adjust?  He also started the year in extended spring because of injury.  I don't know if that played a part in everything or not.

Maybin scares me.  From what I have seen of him, he is scary good and is definitely the real deal.  If I had to chose who was going to have the better MLB career at this point, it would for sure be Maybin.

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