Mon 28 Jul 2008
Clones Shipwrecked in Ugly 15-2 Loss
Posted by Patrick Hickey, Jr. under 2008 season , RecapsNo Comments
The gray clouds may have eventually cleared up after an hour and a half rain delay at Keyspan Park on Sunday, but the Brooklyn Cyclones never got a chance to put on a happy face.
Giving up 15 runs on 17 hits, the Cyclones were put to bed early and tucked in without a bedtime story in an abysmal 15-2 loss to the Staten Island Yankees.
“They hit the ball all over the place,” said Brooklyn first baseman Ike Davis. “You can’t really do anything when a team is hot like that.”
Tim Stronach made his first start since July 10 and lasted only one out into the first, surrendering four runs on RBI hits by Brian Baisley, Addison Maruszak and Daniel Brewer before being replaced by Jeff Kaplan.
However, despite the new hurler, Brooklyn continued to have problems as Kaplan gave up a triple to the first hitter he faced, Michael Lyon, that scored another Staten Island run, giving the Baby Bombers a 5-0 lead before the Cyclones came to the plate.
“There’s nothing you can do about it when the team your facing is hitting everything you’re throwing,” said Brooklyn manager Edgar Alfonzo. “Our pitchers made a lot of mistakes tonight.”
Kaplan kept the score at 5-0 until the fourth, when Baisley stroked a grand slam that put the Yankees up by nine runs. Staten Island wasn’t done pummeling Kaplan in the fourth either, as Lyon added an RBI double to his resume, giving Staten Island a 10-0 lead.
Erik Turgeon was then summoned to replace Kaplan and wasn’t his usual solid self early on either, coughing up a Taylor Grote three-run homer that stretched the lead to 13-0.
14-3 this season after scoring the first run, the Yankees offense destroyed the Baby Bums’ pitching staff and thanks to stellar starting pitching from David Phelps, the Mets Single-A affiliate was held to just two hits through the game’s first five innings.
Turgeon kept the Yankees scoreless through the fifth and sixth, striking out four Yankees out in a row at one point, but the offense was unable to put anything together. Nick Asselin replaced Phelps in the sixth and like his Brooklyn counterpart, was solid, throwing a scoreless frame. His successor, Tim Dennehy, also kept the Cyclones bats quiet, but allowed a bases loaded walk to Brooklyn shortstop Matt Smith that finally got them on board.
“They did a great job of throwing first pitch strikes today,” said Smith. “They got ahead of us early and made us pay.”
Wendy Rosa replaced Turgeon in the eighth and gave up a pair of RBI singles from Ray Kruml and Jahdiel Santamaria in the ninth, which gave the Yankees a 13-run lead. Brooklyn’s offense did show a small flicker of light in the eighth however, after a Jose Jimenez solo bomb off Jacinto Gonell, but was silenced in order by Andrew Shive in the ninth, wrapping up an ugly 15-2 loss.
Losing their second in a row after winning three straight, the Cyclones have been unable to find the consistency needed to reassert themselves in the playoff hunt. Now six games back of Staten Island, Brooklyn knows they have to come back strong in the final game of the series.
“If we win tomorrow, it’s not that bad,” said Alfonzo. “I told the guys that they need to forget about this game and go in strong tomorrow.”
Notes-
The most runs the Cyclones have have ever given up in a game was 21 on August 21, 2006, against the very same Staten Island Yankees.
Check out the recap from that game here.
Turgeon had eight K’s in only 3.1 innings pitched.
“He was really good out there,” said Alfonzo. “He over matched those guys with his fastball. He threw some good sliders too.”
Davis had two of the five Cyclones hits on the night and has three hits in his past two games.
Video:
Josh Satin single
Photos by Ron Hatcher. Video by Patrick Hickey Jr.
