Haverford won twice on Sunday
to claim a ticket to the 2014 NCAA D-III
playoffs. Haverford athletics photo |
GETTYSBURG, Pa. – In a game filled with dramatic moments,
Justin Coulter singled home the game-winning run in the bottom of
the 12th inning to give second-seeded Haverford College a 2-1
victory over top-seeded and 21st-ranked Gettysburg in the
winner-take-all final of the Centennial Conference baseball
championship tournament Sunday afternoon in front of a large and
spirited crowd at Kirchhoff Field.
Haverford (22-18), which received an automatic bid in the NCAA
Division III tournament, also won 3-0 over the Bullets in the
opening game of the championship round on Sunday to force a
deciding final.
The Fords captured their second Centennial Conference title after
claiming its first championship in 2012, and they became just the
second team in the 12-year history of the tournament to win the
title after losing their opening-round game. Haverford rallied from
its loss to Muhlenberg College on Thursday to claim two victories
in the loser's bracket on Saturday before its sweep on Sunday.
Gettysburg (33-8), making its first-ever appearance in the
Centennial Conference championship game, will now hope for a
possible at-large berth in the NCAA playoffs. The field will be
announced on May 12 on NCAA.com.
Haverford shortstop William Bannard was named the tournament MVP
after hitting .450 while going 9-for-15 in the team's four
wins.
Making just his second start of the season, Max Gerard threw a
six-hit shutout in the opener for Haverford before Tommy
Bergjans - the Fords opening-round starter on Thursday
– came on to throw six shutout innings of relief on two days
rest to pick up the victory in the clincher, allowing just one hit
and striking out five.
The Fords out-hit Gettysburg 17-10 in the deciding game –
the longest in the history of the Centennial Conference tournament
– but left 17 runners on base, as the Bullet pitching staff
worked out of trouble throughout the game while throwing 10
straight scoreless innings from the second through the 11th.
In the bottom of the ninth, junior Mike Kielbasa kept the Bullets
alive when he fielded a single in leftfield and threw out the
potential tournament-clinching run at the plate, igniting a packed
Gettysburg crowd. But Haverford would go on to load the bases with
one out in the 12th against sophomore Luke Lawrence – who
kept the Bullets alive by escaping jams in four previous innings
– before Coulter lifted a liner over Kielbasa's head in left
for just his second hit of the tournament after starting
1-for-13.
In the opening game, Haverford supplied Gerard (3-1) with all the
offense he would need when it plated two unearned runs in the top
of the second against freshman starter Rich Power (Toms River,
N.J./Monsignor Donovan), who would throw four scoreless innings
before yielding a final run on two hits and a walk in the
seventh.
Gettysburg put up its biggest threat in the fourth, when it loaded
the bases with one out after Kielbasa hit Gerard in the leg with a
screaming line-drive single. But Gerard stayed in the game and
recorded a pair of infield outs, starting a string of 12 straight
batters retired.
The Bullets put runners on first and second with two outs in the
eighth but Gerard got out of it with a flyout, then retired the
side in order in the ninth. He walked just one and struck out
four.
Power (5-2) scattered eight hits and three walks while fanning
six. Senior Al Posch finished 2-for-4 in the opener for
Gettysburg.
The Fords took an early 1-0 lead against senior starter Chris
Yoda in the deciding game, as Bannard singled, stole second, and
scored on a single from Jared Deveau. Gettysburg answered in the
third on three-straight two-out singles against Ford starter Kyle
Waney, as seniors Nate Simon and Tommy LeNoir started the rally
before Kielbasa sliced a single to left, bringing home Simon.
Gettysburg then dug in defensively, starting when senior catcher
Cam MacDonald threw out a runner attempting to steal second before
Yoda stranded runners on the corners in the third.
One inning later, Haverford loaded the bases on two singles and an
error, and with two outs Gettysburg head coach John Campo summoned
senior Drew Felsenthal out of the bullpen. Pitching on just one day
of rest after starting in the Bullets 6-4 opening-round win over
Johns Hopkins, Felsenthal induced Bannard into a flyout to end the
inning.
Felsenthal would retire the eight batters he faced before leadoff
hitter Nick Miranda singled and went to second on a throwing error
in the seventh. After a walk, Felsenthal was replaced by Lawrence.
MacDonald then came up big again, gunning down Miranda attempting
to steal third, before Lawrence ended the inning with a flyout.
After its run in the third, Gettysburg threatened in each of the
next three innings but was unable to score again versus Waney.
Bergjans was called on in the seventh, and he would retire the
first nine batters he faced.
Lawrence, meanwhile, continued to play the role of Houdini,
starting in the eighth when he left runners on the corners with one
out. Then in the ninth, Bannard drew a one-out walk before stealing
second, setting up Kielbasa's defensive heroics.
The Bullets finally reached Bergjans in the 10th, when Posch led
off with a single. However, the Fords quickly snuffed out the rally
when Bergjans struck out a batter and Posch was thrown out stealing
second.
Bergjans (8-2) retired the next five batters before senior Mike
Elisio reached on an error leading off the 11th. He was bunted to
second by MacDonald, but Bergjans got out of it with a strikeout
and groundout.
Lawrence left the bases loaded in the 10th, when Kielbasa flagged
down a fly ball into the left-center gap to end the inning, before
tossing a three-up, three-won 11th. He got the leadoff man in the
12th, but Haverford would load the bases, reaching on an error, an
intentional walk, and a single before Coulter's game-winner.
LeNoir finished 3-for-5 while Lawrence (4-1) scattered eight hits
and two walks over five innings. Casey Fox went 3-for-5 for
Haverford.