缅北禁地

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Late escape: Masontown comeback eliminates Copperheads

By Rob Burchianti, For The Greene County Messenger 6 min read
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Rob Burchianti | 缅北禁地

Alex Gesk slides home to score Carmichaels鈥 second run as Masontown catcher Zach Uhazie takes the late throw during the first inning of Monday鈥檚 Fayette County Baseball League playoff game at German-Masontown Park. (Photo by Rob Burchianti)

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Carmichaels鈥 Joe Sabolek pitches against Masontown during Monday鈥檚 Fayette County Baseball League playoff game at German-Masontown Park. (Photo by Rob Burchianti)

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Rob Burchianti | 缅北禁地

Rob Burchianti | 缅北禁地

Carmichaels鈥 Joe Pacconi (38) congratulates Joel Spishock on his solo home run against Masontown during Monday鈥檚 Fayette County Baseball League playoff game at German-Masontown Park.

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Carmichaels鈥 Nick Ricco smacks a run-scoring single to left field against Masontown during the Copperheads鈥 two-run rally in the first inning of Monday鈥檚 Fayette County Baseball League playoff game at German-Masontown Park. (Photo by Rob Burchianti)

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Carmichaels' Justin Schrader pitches against Masontown during聽Monday's Fayette County Baseball League playoff game at German-Masontown Park.

MASONTOWN 鈥 Masontown entered its first season in the Fayette County Baseball League last year as a loose team with nothing to lose.

They wound up winning the league title in that inaugural campaign.

The 2021 regular season turned out to be much different but, even so, Masontown finds itself in position to repeat as champions after a come-from-behind 5-3 win over Carmichaels on Monday at German-Masontown Park.

Masontown battled back for the second day in a row to win the best-of-three semifinal playoff series, 2-0. They will play either Mill Run or Mitch鈥檚 Bail Bonds in the best-of-five league final beginning on Thursday. That series was tied 1-1 going into Game 3 on Tuesday night.

Masontown trailed the Copperheads 3-1 before rallying in the bottom of the fifth, parlaying a walk, a hit batter, a balk, an error, singles by Mike Coll and Colby Simmons and a sacrifice fly by Reed Long into four runs.

That was enough for winning pitcher Willie Palmer who survived a rocky start to give Masontown its second straight complete-game performance in the postseason following Zach Uhazie on Sunday.

鈥淭hey will fight from start to finish,鈥 Masontown manager John Palmer said of his squad. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e got heart. They鈥檝e been through it last year so they know what to do this year.鈥

Winning tight games was something his team did not do well during the regular season, Palmer pointed out.

鈥淭here was a bullseye on our chest and that put a little bit more pressure on us this year,鈥 Palmer said. 鈥淟ast year was different. We were the new team, we were underdogs, they were having run. We won all the close games we were in.

鈥淭his year around midseason I could see them feeling the pressure, feeling tense. We were losing those close games. We lost one game 1-0 where our pitcher threw a no-hitter. So I had a meeting with them and said we鈥檝e got to get back to Masontown baseball, have fun with it, relax, go out there and do what you do. We started coming together after that and went on a winning streak.鈥

The close games have now gone Masontown鈥檚 way in the first two games of the postseason. They won Game 1 on Sunday in Carmichaels, 6-5, after falling behind three times.

鈥淚 told them when the playoffs started this is a new season and we鈥檝e got to start winning the close games. So far we鈥檝e done that.鈥

Masontown had 13 hits, all singles, including two apiece from Palmer, Nate Zimcosky, Coll, Long and Nick Groover.

Carmichaels put the defending champs back on their heels with an explosive first inning in taking a 2-0 lead.

鈥淲e wanted to get a quick start on them,鈥 Copperheads manager Dickie Krause said. 鈥淏ut we weren鈥檛 able to add much. We didn鈥檛 have the closing ability.鈥

Joel Spishock led off the game with a double, Alex Gesk singled and Chuck Gasti followed with a run-scoring hit to right field. Two outs later, Nick Ricco rifled an RBI single into left field to bring Gesk sliding home with the second run.

鈥淭hey came out hitting today,鈥 Willie Palmer said. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e got some good ballplayers. I couldn鈥檛 blow it past them. So you鈥檝e got to get more ground balls, let your defense play for you. I tried to keep the ball a little lower after that.鈥

鈥淭hey had their backs against the wall and that鈥檚 a good-hitting team,鈥 manager Palmer said. 鈥淭hey came out and they put the bat on the ball. I have a ton of respect for Carmichaels and Dickie and that whole staff. Every time you play them you鈥檙e in a dogfight. So I expected that from them today.

鈥淲e just had to stay mentally and physically strong and not lose focus after that.鈥

Palmer settled down and allowed only one more run on three hits the rest of the way. The right-hander retired 10 of 11 batters from the first through the fourth innings before allowing a solo homer to Spishock in the fifth, a double to Torey Wright in the sixth and a single to Gesk in the seventh.

Masontown got one run in the first inning off Copperheads starting pitcher Joe Sabolek when Chad Petrush scored on Uhazie鈥檚 sacrifice fly.

Masontown, which stranded 12 runners, threatened in each of the next three innings but Sabolek escaped each jam. He got help in the fourth from centerfielder Spishock who threw out Long trying to score on Chad Petrush鈥檚 single with catcher Conner Kelly making a nifty catch and swipe tag.

Sabolek ran out of gas in the fifth when he walked Zimcosky with one out, hit Uhazie and gave up a single to Coll to load the bases.

Krause called on Justin Schrader to relieve Sabolek but Simmons greeted the right-hander with an RBI single to left and a balk call brought in another run to make it 3-3. Long followed with a sacrifice fly and Simmons scored on an infield error to put Masontown up by two.

鈥淪ame scenario as the first game,鈥 Krause said. 鈥淲e made a couple mistakes, the last run was an unearned run and we had the balk call in the middle of the inning. Those things happen, they throw you off and Masontown pounced on it. That one big inning was enough to do us in.鈥

Masontown played error-free defense and ended the game with a Simmons-to-Coll-to-Austin Bergman 6-4-3 double play. Masontown made just one error in the series.

鈥淧laying a quality team like that, you can鈥檛 make mistakes,鈥 manager Palmer said.

Palmer allowed seven hits, two walks and two hit batters while striking out three.

Spishock was the player of the game in defeat, going 2-for-3 with a homer, double, walk, two RBIs and two runs scored to go along with an outfield assist.

鈥淛oel is clearly, without question, one of the best hitters in the league,鈥 Krause said. 鈥淗e had a phenomenal year for us.鈥

Krause had no qualms about his team鈥檚 effort.

鈥淚 could not be more proud of them,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e had a 44-year-old second baseman, a 48-year-old third baseman, a shortstop out of position, a first baseman playing the outfield.

鈥淭his series was a real challenge for us. We were contending with work schedules, vacations and one of our best players with a family situation going on, the birth of his first child (Joby Lapkowicz).

鈥淚 love this team and these guys. They really worked hard for me.鈥

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