Box Score EAST PROVIDENCE, RI – Craig Woodbrey '10 (Gorham,
ME) knocked home the winning run with a two-out single in the
bottom of the ninth to lift second-seeded Saint Joseph's (31-10,
11-3 GNAC) past #1 Suffolk University (21-15, 13-1 GNAC), 5-4, in
the Great Northeast Athletic Conference Championship on Sunday
afternoon.
The Monks trailed 4-0 after five and half innings, but pushed
four runs across in the bottom of the sixth to tie the game and
proceeded to win the title in dramatic fashion in the ninth.
Shortstop Chris
Campbell '11 (Rochester, NH) led off the bottom of the ninth
with a hustle infield single and was replaced at first with
pinch-runner Dan
Achorn '12 (Bow, NH), who was moved up a base with a sac bunt
by second baseman Mike
Burdin '10 (Gardiner, ME). Three batters later, Woodbrey, who
entered the game in the top of the eighth as a defensive
replacement, delivered a line-drive single to right to plate
Achorn, who slide headfirst ahead of the tag at home and was mobbed
by the Monks roster in celebration.
Monks reliever Mason
Roberge '11 (Franklin, NH) entered the game in the third inning
and proceeded to finish the game and improved to 4-0 on the year
with the winning decision. The junior right-hander did not yield a
run and scattered five hits over 6.2 innings in the victory.
With the title-game win over the defending GNAC Champion Rams,
Saint Joseph's earns an automatic qualifier into the NCAA DIII
Tournament, which begins on May 19th and will be played
at Eastern Connecticut State University in Willimantic, CT. For the
Monks, winners of two GNAC titles in three years as a conference
member, the trip to the NCAA's will be the Monks' fourth overall
and third in the last four years.
Rams starter Andrew Babb '11 (Hopkinton, MA) allowed just two
hits over the first five frames and finished the game with eight
strikeouts in 8.2 innings. The junior southpaw yielded five earned
runs off eight hits and eight walks and tossed 143 pitches in the
losing effort.
Suffolk jumped on top early, as the Rams scored two runs with a
pair of hits off SJC starting pitcher Chad Rafferty '13 (Keene,
NH) in the top of the first inning. Rory Gentile '10 (Gloucester,
MA) led off the game with a looping double to right and, after an
infield groundout, Bobby Barrett '10 (Milton, MA) was intentionally
walked to create the force play. Marc Doyle '10 (Whitman, MA)
worked an eight-pitch walk to load the bases for Babb, who slapped
a two-run single to right, scoring Gentile and Barrett.
Rafferty worked his way out of a jam in the second, as the Rams
managed to load the bases with two out but Barrett grounded out to
end the scoring threat. The rookie righty wasn't so fortunate in
the third, however, as Suffolk doubled its lead with a pair of
runs, forcing SJC Head Coach Will Sanborn '86 to call upon Roberge
from the bullpen. Babb, who tripled down the right field line and
Jhonneris Mendez '13 (Roslindale, MA), after reaching with a walk,
scored the Suffolk runs on singles by Mark Annese '11 (Winchester,
MA) and Mark Addesa '11 (Revere, MA), respectively.
Roberge held the powerful Rams lineup in check for their next
three turns with some heads-up defensive play, which allowed the
Monks to knot the game with four runs in the bottom of the sixth.
In the top of the fourth, with runners on first and second and
two out, the junior righty used an inside-move to pick off Chris
Stanley '13 (Orange County, CA) to end the inning.
Mendez led off the fifth with a single to right and the Rams
looked to bunt him into scoring position. The bunt attempt by
Annese was popped up in front of home plate, and SJC catcher Travis Adams '10 (Saco,
ME) dove to make the catch, but the ball fell out of his glove when
he hit the ground. The heady senior receiver jumped up and fired a
strike to second to start the rare 2-6-3 double play and Roberge
induced a groundout to end the frame with the 4-0 deficit intact.
St. Joe's loaded the bases in the bottom of the fifth with
walks, but was unable to push a run across until the following
frame, when the Royal Blue scored four two-out runs off four hits
and a pair of walks. SJC third baseman Mike Pratt '13 (Dartmouth, MA)
broke the seal with a two-run single to left, scoring Todd Keneborus '11 (Hollis
Center, ME/Cheverus) and Ian
Lee '11 (Hampden, ME). Campbell tied the game with a two-RBI
double to left-center after pinch-hitter Eric LaBatte '11 (Rochester,
NH) kept the inning alive with a single up the middle.
After a scoreless seventh, Gentile reached on an infield miscue
with two out and promptly stole second base. The Suffolk speedster
then attempted to steal third, but the wily Roberge noticed his
jump and picked him off to end the inning with the middle of the
Rams lineup looming.
Both teams took scoreless turns at the plate, setting up the
thrilling finish for the Monks in the bottom of the ninth. With
runners on first and second and one out, Ben Grant-Roy '10
(Biddeford, ME) hit a line drive up the middle that was snared by
Addesa, the Suffolk shortstop, who had seemingly just ended the
inning with a double play after flipping the ball to Stanley at
second, but the first-year Rams infielder muffed the catch as
Achorn slid back in safely to keep the inning going.
Grant-Roy was named as the GNAC Tournament Most Valuable Player,
while Sam Murray '12
(Walpole, MA), Roberge and Adams all garnered All-Tournament
honors. Murray earned a complete-game victory over the Rams in
Saturday's winners-bracket contest.
Babb, Barrett and pitcher Matt Sliney '13 (Brockton, MA)
collected All-Tournament Team honors for the Rams.
Campbell was the lone repeat-hitter for the Monks and went 2-4
with two RBI in the triumph. Pratt registered two RBI and Keneborus
reached base four times with three walks and a HBP.
Stanley, Babb and Mendez all recorded two hits in the losing
effort for Suffolk.
The Monks, winners of their last 11 games and 22-3 since April
1st, seem to be peaking at the right time after a
somewhat sluggish start to the 2010 campaign. St. Joe's entered its
first conference weekend on March 27th with a 6-6
overall record, with all six losses being one-run defeats. Also of
note, the Monks' 10 losses this spring have been by a combined 21
runs.
The title-clinching victory also pushes Coach Sanborn past
former SJC Men's Basketball coach Rick Simonds as the winningest
single-sport skipper in Saint Joseph's College Athletics history.
Sanborn, in his 18th season as the Monks' manager, is
467-270-6 (.634) in his career and ranks as the most successful
leader in program history. Simonds, who also coaches softball for
one season, amassed 504 victories in his esteemed coaching career.
The Monks will wrap up the 2010 regular-season docket when they
host Massachusetts Institute of Technology on Thursday in a
non-league doubleheader at 3:30 PM. Suffolk will host Wheaton
College on Saturday at 12:00 PM.