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| Freshman Kyle Lamanteer hit two home runs and Brayden Davis added one in No. 8 Rowan's 7-3 win over Vermont State Castleon, paving the way for a doubleheader sweep while the Profs captured the second game, 14-3, in seven innings. Rowan (3-0) hit a total of six home runs on the day in the rescheduled game played at Diamond Nation. Davis went 7-for-8 at the plate on the day, with a total of five doubles in the two games. He also drove in four runs and scored two. Rowan athletics photo by Miceli photography |
WPI improved to 2-0 on the season with a doubleheader sweep of La Roche on Sunday at the Myrtle Beach Spring Break Tournament. The Engineers claimed a 6-4 win in the opener before securing a 5-3 victory in game two at Ebbets Field. WPI’s defense was noteworthy on Sunday in its first games of the 2026 season, following a preseason that was conducted almost entirely indoors due to arguably the harshest New England winter in more than a decade. Head coach Brendan Casey’s squad did not commit an error in either contest, successfully handling all 54 of its fielding chances on the day. It also marked Casey’s first day with his father, John, an NABC Hall of Famer, on the bench serving as the Crimson and Gray’s pitching coach.
Tufts captured two wins from Hobart, 4-0 and 3-1, on the second day of a back-to-back doubleheader at Sol Gittleman Park as the Jumbos start the season off hot with a 4-0 record. The Jumbos (4-0, 0-0 NESCAC) put Emmet Christian on the bump to start game one. Christian was in total control allowing just two hits through 5.0 inning of dealing. The sophomore struck out four batters and conceded no earned runs in the win. Jack McLaughlin relieved Christian in the top of the sixth inning and delivered 1.1 innings of effective work allowing zero hits, zero walks, and zero runs while striking out one batter. Derek Desmarais came in for the final two outs of the ball game and struck out both batters by painting edges. In Game two, Michael O'Brien took the mound to start for the Jumbos. O'Brien produced a solid 6.0 innings, allowing six hits and zero earned runs. The junior also waved two batters as he registered the win in his season debut. Mark Herlihy earned the save with 3.0 dominant innings pitched, no hits, no walks, and three strikeouts.
Wooster achieved something only three Major League Baseball franchises since 1990 are believed to be able to claim on Sunday, as the Fighting Scots scored in all nine innings of a 13-4 win over Elmhurst in Lafayette, Indiana. Earlier in the day, Wooster beat Illinois Institute of Technology 9-5. Per the Society for American Baseball Research, there are believed to be 20 games where a MLB team has scored in every inning. Only three of those instances have been by the road team – the 1923 New York Giants against the Philadelphia Phillies, the 1964 St. Louis Cardinals against the Chicago Cubs, and the 1999 Colorado Rockies against the Chicago Cubs. Wooster (9-2) has accomplished this twice in the last nine seasons, as the Scots scored in all nine innings of a 28-2 rout of Hiram College on April 5, 2018, and now today against Elmhurst (3-4). Wooster scored twice in the third, fourth, sixth, and eighth innings, and one time in each of the other trips to the dish.
St. Olaf split the final two games of its four-game set with Luther, posting a 15-2 victory in game one and a 5-3 loss in game two on Sunday at West Liberty High School. After dropping the first two games of the series on Saturday, St. Olaf (4-4) got out to a 6-0 lead midway through game one before breaking it open with an eight-run sixth inning. Luther (6-4) completed a 3-1 series win in the finale as four Norse pitchers limited the Oles to five hits to close out the weekend. In game one, Luther used a two-run home run in the top of the fifth to make it a 6-2 game, but St. Olaf scored once in the fifth and eight times in the sixth to run away with it. Dex Pudduck's three-run home run highlighted the Oles' eight-run sixth that included seven hits, two of which came from Pudduck. After the teams traded two-run innings in the third, Luther broke the tie with two in the fourth and another in the fifth and shut the Oles down from there to gain a split on the day. The Norse held St. Olaf to one hit over the final six innings.
For their final game in Florida, the Diamond River Hawks won in thrilling fashion. Trailing 5-3 heading into the top of the ninth inning, Susquehanna knocked in six runs to steal the win against Penn State Behrend, 9-5. Michael Girardi's single gave the River Hawks the lead, with Austin Ozarowski shutting down the Lions in the bottom half for his first career win in an orange and maroon uniform. Susquehanna finishes their trip down south going 7-1 and return to Selinsgrove 8-3 overall. The Lions had a three-run lead heading into the eighth inning. The Crusaders added a run in the eighth before exploding for a total of six runs on six hits in the ninth.
Swarthmore won its Sunday finale, 7-6, to take two of three games against No. 16 Case Western Reserve. The Garnet walked off the nationally-ranked Spartans for the second time this weekend with more late-inning heroics. Aidan Sullivan delivered for the Garnet with a walk-off double in the 11th inning, scoring Leor Kedar for the game-winning run. The sophomore finished 5-for-5 with three runs, a home run, two RBI, and a walk to cap off an excellent start to spring break. Kedar went 8-for-13 during the three game set against the Spartans. David Herrin earned the victory for the Garnet, tossing three clean innings of relief. The sophomore faced the minimum in the final three innings to shut down the Spartans offense.
Maryville blasted Greensboro 14-1 to cap a 3-1 Week. The Maryville Scots jumped on the board in the first inning when Frank Derner drove in Brayden Evans with an RBI single to give Maryville an early 1-0 lead. Greensboro answered in the fourth to tie the game, but Maryville reclaimed the advantage in the sixth when Det Dettwiller launched a solo home run to right field. The game turned decisively in the seventh inning as the Scots erupted for eight runs. Masin Hall sparked the rally with an RBI triple before Colin Dunworth, Dettwiller, and Luke Winter each delivered key hits. Jay Pichardo capped the inning with a two-run homer that extended the lead to 10-1. Maryville continued to pile on in the eighth when Frank Derner crushed a three-run homer and Evans added an RBI single as part of a four-run frame. Derner led the offensive charge by going 3-for-5 with a home run and four RBIs, while Dettwiller added two hits and three RBIs. Winter contributed two hits and two RBIs, and Hall finished with two runs scored and an RBI triple. The Scots collected 12 hits and drew seven walks in the victory. On the mound, Titus Torbett earned the win with seven strong innings, allowing just one run on seven hits while striking out two. Xavier Resto worked the final inning in relief to close out the win.
New York University (1-2) split a two-game stand with No. 17 Cortland (4-5-1) winning 8-7 and dropping the nightcap 15-3 on Sunday, in Edwardsville, PA. The first game was a great showing of NYU's offense as they scored a season-high eight runs. NYU held Cortland scoreless for five innings in game two before the top-25 ranked team went on to score 15 runs to even the series between the two teams. In game one, both teams' bats were active from the first inning leading to a combined 15 runs scored. The star of the day for the Violets was CJ Franchini came up big during the eighth inning getting his second hit of the game knocking in two runs and pushing his team back in front. Cortland scored a run in the bottom of the eighth to add drama to the final inning. The Red Dragons got a runner on, but the following batter lined into a double-play to conclude the game and give the Violets their first win of the season. A two-run home run opened Cortland's scoring in the sixth inning and tied the game. The Red Dragons exploded for eight runs in the inning. Mason Clark hit into a double play with bases loaded in the bottom of the sixth to marginally cut into Cortland's lead, but this concluded the scoring for the Violets. A Red Dragon double in the seventh pushed their lead to seven before they added another five in the ninth.
Five pitchers combined to surrender three earned runs over a pair of games as Skidmore opened the 2026 season with a sweep of Baruch at the Gene Cusic Collegiate Classic in Fort Myers. The Thoroughbreds won game one, 6-2, on a 10-strikeout performance from Quinn Hocom, and then won 2-1 in game two behind a one-hit Chase Siegel start of five innings. Hocom retired his last seven in a row after a Baruch rally in the third. He finished with five innings pitched on two runs, 10 strikeouts, and two walks. Nick Palovich pitched a clean sixth, and Sam Dalsimer struck out the side in the seventh to end it. The only hit Baruch got off Siegel in the nightcap was a two-out Michael Rossi single in the second inning. He also worked around a pair of hit batters to blank Baruch through five. Siegel struck out eight and walked one. Charles Modlin got six outs to preserve the lead and get the save.
Linfield (9-4, 4-2 NWC) won their second Northwest Conference series on Sunday, downing the Willamette Bearcats (3-6, 2-4 NWC), 11-6. A strong five-inning start from Casey Struckmeier proved crucial for Linfield to take the series-decider on Sunday, earning his first win of the season. Struckmeier allowed just one run on four hits, striking out two and walking one. Offense carried the 'Cats to another series win, with Jackson Bui and Ely Kennel each driving in three and combining for six of the team's 18 hits on Sunday. Jaxson Kister also went 2-4 at the plate, both hits garnering extra bases with a double and a triple. Most notably, Linfield's 11 runs on 18 hits also featured just one strikeout and three walks.
The early offense that allowed Eastern Connecticut State to build an early six-run lead reappeared in the late innings to help protect a slim advantage as the Warriors returned from a six-day layoff to post an 11-6 non-conference victory over Farmingdale State Sunday afternoon at Rams Field. With its fourth straight win over Farmingdale, Eastern (3-2) improves to 6-1 all-time against the Rams. Eastern scored seven runs on seven hits to take a 7-1 lead after three innings, and after Farmingdale inched back to within 7-6 with the help of a three-run seventh inning, the Warriors bats re-emerged after going scoreless in the middle four innings to tack on two runs in the eighth and two runs in the ninth to secure the win. While the offense was productive early -- and then again late -- the same could be said of the pitching behind starter Stephen Rickert and closer Rob Moynihan. In his 15th career appearance over two seasons – second as a starter – Rickert was credited with his first win while Moynihan gained his first save in his first relief appearance to go along with a win as a starter in his first start.
No. 5 Johns Hopkins carried a one-hit shutout into the eighth inning Sunday afternoon to upset second-ranked Salisbury, 7-2, at Babb Field at Stromberg Stadium. In a game that featured a pitcher's duel through the early innings, both starters kept opposing lineups in check. Although Hopkins starter Thomas Cancian settled for a no-decision after tossing 4.1 scoreless innings, he was effective throughout his outing. Cancian worked around leadoff walks in three separate innings, striking out six while allowing just one hit. Connor Henk continued to deal in the sixth, striking out the final two batters of the inning after issuing a leadoff walk. The Blue Jays then broke the game open in the bottom half, plating four runs to extend their lead to 6-0. Salisbury broke up the shutout in the eighth with a two-run home run after back-to-back hits cut the Hopkins lead to 7-2. Dylan Zucker then induced three ground balls in the ninth to close out the victory and secure the upset of the nation's second-ranked team.
Kalamazoo defeated Oberlin 14-4 and 11-1 each in seven innings Sunday afternoon. After a scoreless first inning in the opener, Kalamazoo scored three in the second, four in the third and one in the fourth to take an 8-0 lead. Oberlin made it 8-2 with runs in the bottom of the fourth and fifth. Kalamazoo pulled ahead 14-2 in the seventh. Oberlin scored two in the bottom half but was unable to extend the game due to the 10-run rule. in the second of two, Kalamazoo scored five runs in the first highlighted by a 3-run home run by Ryar Rinehart. Kalamazoo led 8-1 after five innings before adding three in the seventh to end the game due to the 10-run rule.
Alfred State swept Wis. Lutheran, 10-3 and 5-3, to open the spring break trip 2-0. The Pioneers are now 3-11 on the season. Jordan Hughes led the way as he went 2-4 with two homers and two RBIs. He also picked up the win on the mound as he pitched 5.0 innings scattering one run on two hits with seven strikeouts and no walks. Zach Young went 2-5 for three RBIs, while Logan Lutz, Gavin Lasko, and Matty Eygabroad tallied three hits each. In game two, Young went 1-3 with a homer and two RBIs. Eygabroad went 1-2 with three RBIs. Grad tallied a triple and Hughes notched a double. Daniel Lewis got the win after pitching 2.0 innings only allowing two hits no runs and three strikeouts.
Gustavus wrapped up their spring trip to Arizona with a split against Aurora, winning via a 5-4 walkoff walk in the second game. In game one, Aurora was a 6-5 winner. Sophomore Charles Gearen led with three hits and a run across the two days while senior Joe Burns had three RBI in the second game, including the discipline at the plate to earn an eight-pitch walk for the win. In game one, neither team scored in the fifth or sixth inning, setting up a pressure-filled seventh inning with the game on the line. With runners on first and second with no outs, junior Brayden Kohls hit a bases-clearing double for himself, setting up a runner on second and the tying run at the plate with no outs. After a strike out, junior Simon James was walked, putting runners on first and second with one out. Gearen singled to third on the first pitch of his at-bat, loading the bases with one out. Senior Tomas Nelson drove home Kohls with a sacrifice fly, but Becker could not tie or win the game, flying out to right field. Just like the first game, the Gusties gave up three runs in the first and trailed 4-1 halfway in the fifth. Gustavus scored three in the bottom of the inning to tie the game. With no scoring late, this allowed the Gusties to make their mark, as Joe Burns was walked in the seventh to bring the Gusties their first win in four games, going 5-3 in Arizona.
After four road games in three days against nationally-ranked opponents that saw No. 21 Penn State Harrisburg outhit their counterparts in three of them, the Lions finally secured a well-deserved win in a 10-6, 10-inning victory over No. 23 Christopher Newport on Sunday afternoon. Trailing 6-3 with two away in the top of the eighth, Alexander Ruiz blasted the first pitch of his at-bat over the fence in left field, driving in three to tie the game. Baker retired the Captains (10-4) in order in both the eighth and ninth frames before the bats did the rest in the top of the 10th. The Lions worked back-to-back walks before Adam Bova was hit by a pitch and Jon Morgante singled in the go-ahead run. Braeden Piotrowski walked to push one run across and Coy Schwanger plated another with an RBI single to center field two at-bats later. Cade Baker closed the door in the bottom half to seal the win in the series finale.
North Park used a fast start on offense and a dominant late-inning pitching effort to secure a 10-3 win over host Webster on Sunday afternoon in Sauget, Illinois. The win marks the first Sauget sweep in program history, as Coach Luke Johnson's squad enjoyed consecutive wins over 15th-ranked UW-Stevens Point, Buena Vista, and Webster. The Vikings broke the game open in the second inning. The inning was bookmarked with sophomore right fielder Vinnie Marvucic's home run to right center and a bases-loaded walk to junior left fielder Noa Fujitani, extending the lead to 6-0. Webster responded with single runs in the second, third and sixth innings, but North Park starter, junior left hander LeBaron Lee, Jr., repeatedly worked out of trouble. Though Webster collected 11 hits against him, Lee allowed just three runs (two earned) over 5.1 innings, using timely outs, a pickoff and steady strike throwing to limit the damage. The Gorloks threatened again in the sixth, scoring on an RBI single by Ethan Wielt, but Lee departed with North Park still in control. From there, freshman right-hander Jacob Titsworth shut Webster down completely. Entering in the sixth with runners aboard, he stranded all three and proceeded to throw 3.2 innings of hitless, scoreless relief, striking out two and retiring every batter he faced aside from one hit-by-pitch. Webster's offense, which had produced 11 hits earlier, could not muster anything against Titsworth.
Saint John's (Minn.) earned the series win at Simpson with a doubleheader sweep – 20-9 and 4-1 – on Sunday. The Johnnies (4-2 overall) tied a program record with 25 hits, including 10 for extra bases, in the 20-9 win. Junior second baseman Alex Matchey became the fifth Johnnie to record five hits in a game – the first since Dominick Schleper on April 29, 2018 at St. Scholastica – with a 5-for-6 performance and nine total bases (two doubles and a triple) at the plate. The Johnnies, similar to yesterday's 5-4 loss to the Storm (3-3 overall), fell behind 3-0 after the first two innings. This time, however, the visitors batted around three times with five crooked innings – five runs in the third and fourth, and six in the sixth – to blow open the game. Junior Matthew Magnuson allowed one run on three hits with three strikeouts in six innings to lead SJU to the Sunday sweep. Simpson scored its only run of the game on a solo homer in the fifth inning.
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| Emerson Fleck drove in eight runs on two home runs and a double to lead visiting Whitworth to a 19-6 seven-inning win over 13th-ranked Claremont-M-S in the finale of a four-game non-conference baseball series on Sunday at Azusa Pacific University. Whitworth athletics photo |
No. 9 Adrian wrapped up its trip to North Carolina on Sunday with their final game against Montclair State. The Bulldogs snapped their three-game losing streak after winning 8-7 to move to 6-3 on the season. In the top of the first inning, Jaxon McGuigan started the scoring with a 2-run homer. Monclair State responded with a run in the bottom of the inning, but Rolando Jimenez had an RBI groundout and Jack Boike hit a sacrifice fly to lead 4-1. Montclair State scored a run in the third before McGuigan was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded in the fourth to make it 5-2. After Montclair State scored two in the fourth to pull within one, Adrian answered scoring a run on an error and a fielder's choice to lead 7-4. In the sixth inning, McGuigan launched his second home run of the day to pull ahead 8-4. Montclair State added a run in the eight and two in the ninth, but the Adrian bullpen shut the door and held on to win, 8-7.
Mount Union (9-2) notched a ranked victory against no. 19 Wisconsin-Oshkosh (2-2) with a convincing 9-4 victory. Junior pitcher Luke Ickes starred on the mound and at the plate, pitching 5.2 innings with eight strikeouts and allowing only three runs. Ickes at the plate batted 2-5 with an RBI single, having a strong overall performance. Mount Union went on to score five runs between the sixth, seventh, and eighth innings to lock down the game. Oshkosh managed to score one more run in the ninth inning, but freshman right-hander Logan Ellis secured his first save of the season, pitching 3.1 innings and recording four strikeouts. Ellis's performance helped secure a 9-4 victory.
For the fifth time this season, No. 12 Washington University did not go the full nine innings of its game. All five times, including Sunday's 15-5 win over Illinois Wesleyan, ended early due to the run-rule as the Bears led by 10 runs or more after the seventh inning. Nearly half of the Bears' runs on the day came in the fourth and fifth innings. Shane Pellegrino led off the fourth with a single up the middle and stole second. After Will Taigen was intentionally walked, Eli Sitzer sacrifice bunted Pellegrino to third and Taigen to second. Sophomore Cooper Greene walked to load the bases. In a very rare occurrence, the Titans' pitcher balked, allowing all three base runners to advance one base, allowing Pellegrino to score. A sacrifice fly by Birke scored Taigen, and a single by first-year Chance Cromer scored Greene as the Bears took a 6-1 lead. Miles Birke walked in the eighth inning on four straight pitches to reach the 10-run gap, with WashU leading 15-5.
Baldwin Wallace defeated Haverford by a score of 11-4 at Terry Park Sports Complex for their third consecutive win. The Yellow Jackets' offense was the story of the day for the second time in the streak. They were led by senior All-Ohio Athletic Conference third baseman Sean Kolenich, who had four hits, his second game of the season with at least four hits, as BW moves to 5-2 on the season. Senior left-hander Brit Kostura was the starter and winner for BW. In the effort, he went six innings, allowed only one hit, one run, and two strikeouts while allowing just five men on base all day long, while throwing 70 pitches. Sophomore infielder Matt DelDuca pitched the final out, marking the first time this season a position player threw a pitch for the Brown and Gold.
Catholic tried to capture the weekend series against Coast Guard on Sunday afternoon in a rubber match after splitting Saturday's doubleheader. Four runs in the first four innings for the Cardinals offense brought the early momentum and the pitching staff was nails throughout the game to help them claim the series with a 4-3 win over the Bears. Nate Stafford brought in the lone run that would be allowed by Landon Penney in his start in the top of the first. Penney worked through five strong innings for the Cardinals, only allowing the one run in the first inning, with four strikeouts without walking a single batter. Brennan O'Keefe came in out of the pen for the sixth and also recorded a clean inning to keep the lead at three. The Bears were able to push two runs across in top of the seventh to cut the Cardinals lead down to one. With the tying run at second, Luke Cardman induced a pop out to the catcher to strand the runner and hold on to the advantage. Cardman remained in the game for the final two innings and had to deal with the tying run in scoring position with just one out in the top of the ninth. Cardman once again stood up to the challenge with a strike out and foul pop out to wrap up a 4-3 victory for Catholic.
Down six runs and staring at a sweep, Whitman ripped up the script and walked off George Fox 8–7 in a wild, emotional comeback Saturday at Borleske Stadium. For six innings, it looked like George Fox had the day locked away. The Bruins blasted three home runs in a four-run fourth and tacked on three more in the fifth to sprint out to a 7–1 lead, silencing the home crowd and chasing Whitman starter Jack Finn after four innings. But the Blues refused to fold. The turning point came from the bullpen. Hawthorne Moody entered in the fifth and was nothing short of a rock, grinding through 4.1 scoreless innings while scattering just two hits and striking out five. His steady presence froze the George Fox offense in place and gave Whitman's dugout the belief – and the time – it needed to claw back. In the final inning, a wild pitch skipped to the backstop, allowing Tristan Buehring to race home with the tying run and Nate Petz to rumble into third, flipping all the momentum squarely onto the Whitman side. With the Bruins in full retreat, Landon Runyan stepped in and lasered a 2–1 pitch back up the middle for a walk-off single, scoring Petz and igniting a celebration as the Blues completed the 8–7 comeback win.
SUNY Oswego traveled west toward Utica for a round robin type of weekend and kicked things off against the Clarkson Golden Knights. Oswego opened the Classic with a 9-3 win over Clarkson. They later defeated Hamilton 5-4 in their second game of the day. Oswego opened game one with an early lead and held it behind the pitching of Mason Sands. The Lakers would finally relieve Sands, who completed six full innings, striking out 6 batters, and allowing just 6 hits. Matt Drillings would come in as the closer, wasting no time, and getting through the bottom of the seventh in just 3 batters. Neither team would score in the final 2 innings, as Oswego would rotate in two more pitchers, and walk away on top by a score of 9-3. In game two, Hamilton would get one back in the bottom of the eighth, and then another in the ninth off of an RBI-double to tie things up at 4-4, forcing extra innings. Both Dylan Rosenberg and TJ Harrington were able to get on base to start the 11th inning. Benjamin Silverman singled to right field, driving home Harrington, and taking back the lead for Oswego. Rosenberg tried to tag up on a sac-fly, but was gunned down at home by the Continentals, keeping the score at 5-4 and giving Hamilton one more chance to keep their hopes alive. Matt Drillings came in for the 11th to close it out for the Lakers, and struck out the final batter swinging, as the Lakers prevailed 5-4.
Sam Palmer tallied the go-ahead two RBI double in the extra innings of game one to propel Westfield State to their first win of the season as part of a doubleheader split against McDaniel to wrap up a three-game series from Westminster, Maryland on Sunday. Palmer's go-ahead double sent the Owls to an 8-6 win in game one before falling 12-4 in the second game of the day. The Green Terror won Friday's game in comeback fashion to win the series and take two of three games. After a furious rally from McDaniel which saw the Green Terror plate five runs in the bottom of the seventh to the tie the game and force extra innings, Westfield quickly regained momentum in the top half of the eighth. Three straight singles by Nick Lenfest, Colin Ryan, and Alex Martin set up Palmer for a golden opportunity to retake the lead. The Owls did just that with Palmer thumping a fly ball into the gap in left centerfield for a two-RBI double, giving the Owls an 8-6 lead heading into the bottom of the frame. Ben Davis attempted to set the table for another McDaniel comeback effort with a leadoff single, but Owls reliever AJ Moore forced Shea McKenna to ground the ball to Lenfest who smoothly fielded the ball, stepped on the second base bag, then fired to first for the double play to clear the bases. Moore then followed with a strikeout to clinch Westfield's first win of the season in an eventual final two innings. In all three games of the series, McDaniel strung together a sizeable inning, and in game three it was a six-run fifth inning to break the tie and put the game out of reach.
Westminster (Pa.) opened its trip to the Ripken Experience Sunday with a doubleheader sweep of Rivier, winning game one, 6-1, before taking the nightcap, 5-3. Junior right-hander Tyson Djakovich went 6.0 innings to secure his first win of the year, allowing one run on seven hits with a career-high 10 strikeouts. Trailing 2-1 after two-and-a-half innings in game two, junior Quinn Marquis and sophomore Jack Strausser belted run-scoring doubles in the bottom of the third to tie the game at 3-all. Temple's two-out, RBI single in the fifth pushed the Titans' lead to 4-3 before Lyons drew a bases-loaded walk in the sixth. Junior righty Jon Albers went 5.0 innings in the no-decision, allowing three runs (3 earned) on five hits with five strikeouts and a walk. Freshman right-hander Jacob Harrelson claimed the first victory of his career in the nightcap, allowing one hit while striking out three in 2.0 scoreless relief innings.
Keuka earned a doubleheader split with St. Lawrence on Sunday at Finger Lakes Community College. The Saints took the opening game 2-1, but Keuka (1-2) rallied for an 8-6 victory in game two. The Wolves used a patient eye at the plate to take a lead in the second inning to see St. Lawrence answered two innings later with a pair of runs to take a 2-1 lead over the Wolves. The Green and Gold threatened in the sixth. Ian Ruhmel was hit by the pitch with two outs. He then moved to third on a pinch-hit single by Owen Osborne. However, Ruhmel would be stranded there as St. Lawrence maintained the lead. The Saints would retire the Wolves in order in the seventh to secure the 2-1 victory. Keuka took an early 5-1 lead in game two. St. Lawrence quickly got back into the game in the third as they plated three runs in the third and then added a two-out single in the fourth to regain the lead, 6-5. The Wolves answered back in the sixth inning. The Saints looked to strike right back but Keuka ended the seventh with a double play. In the eighth, St. Lawrence got a runner to third with two outs, but Alex Evans snared a line drive at short to end the inning. Liam Eshelman entered for Keuka in the ninth and slammed the door. He opened the inning with a strikeout. A pair of flyouts sandwiched a walk as he got the save for the Wolves.
For the second time in three games, Centre delivered the dramatics as the Colonels completed a weekend sweep of the Wabash Little Giants with a 5-4 win in walk-off fashion. Wabash got on the board first, connecting on a single and a double in the first three plate appearances of the game to take an early 1-0 lead. In Centre's half of the first, Ayden Lohr worked a walk after a long at-bat and Evan Weyler took the first pitch he saw and deposited it over the left field wall for a 2-1 Centre advantage. Things calmed down until the fifth when Wabash had runners on second and third with one out. An RBI groundout tied the score, but starter Andrew Zimmerman avoided further damage. JT Weisberg led off the bottom of the fifth with a shot up the middle for a base hit and a steal of second. Chase Austin snuck one through the right side for an RBI single and after Centre loaded the bases, a Wabash error allowed Austin to score to give Centre a 4-2 edge. Wabash rallied in the seventh with three straight hits to tie the score at 4-4, but TJ Schira came on in relief to record the final two outs of the inning and keep the score tied. After Wabash failed to score with runners in scoring position in the ninth, Matthew Maggard placed a one-out single over the shortstop's head. After Austin walked, Weyler came through again with a base hit to score pinch runner Wesley Taylor for the winning run.