Quantcast The Daily Barometer
College Media Network

No. 16 baseball can't generate runs in WSU series

Beavers fall short in bookend games of series to cost them shot at moving up in conference

Casey Grogan

Issue date: 5/16/07 Section: Sports
  • Print
  • Email
Junior shortstop Darwin Barney tries to make a play over the weekend against Washington State.
Media Credit: Peter Strong
Junior shortstop Darwin Barney tries to make a play over the weekend against Washington State.

Baseball is a sport in which a team consisting of individuals competes against another team of individuals in hopes that one team as a whole will be victorious. A lack of individual victories, however, cost the entirety of the Oregon State team a series against the lowly Washington State Cougars last weekend.

From the get-go, the seventh-place Cougars had the No. 16 Beavers (36-13 overall, 8-10 Pac-10) numbered as Washington State (25-22, 8-13 Pac-10) touched up OSU ace Mike Stutes for five runs. On offense, they failed to score more than 10 runs combined in their two losses to WSU.

"It is tough when we don't put ourselves in situations to succeed," shortstop Darwin Barney said. "We are playing from behind; we have to instigate a little earlier and just get it done. When you let a team come in and stomp on you on your own field, it doesn't feel too good."

The issue in Game One was a lack of runners to begin with. Double plays and the inability to make solid contact off Cougar starter Wayne Daman Jr. created problems, as OSU was beaten, 5-4 on Friday. Second baseman Joey Wong and left fielder Mike Lissman led OSU with two hits apiece in the loss.

"We're just not doing the fundamentals of the game," coach Pat Casey said. "When a bunts on and we can't get it down, just things within the game we are not doing."

In Game Two, something changed, and the Beavers lit up the Washington State pitching staff in an 11-5 victory. With the lineup jumbled around, Mitch Canham slipped into the designated hitter spot, Jason Ogata moved to leftfield, and catcher Erik Ammon earned a start.

As it has been for most of the year, it took a big inning or two for the Beavers to put themselves ahead of their opponent. In the fourth, the Beavers plated three on a bases-loaded double by first baseman Jordan Lennerton. The Cougars kept Oregon State from scoring until the seventh inning when the Beavers put up five runs.

"Whatever we have to do to win games, it doesn't matter," Lissman said. "We can't let teams hang around; we have to bury guys early."
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Note: writers will not reply to comments.

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Comments by registered users are approved by default.

Advertisement

Advertisement