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Stanislaus State Athletics

Scoreboard

Michael Wyatt
Tim Sampley
5
Stanislaus State STAN 7-5, 3-3 CCAA
7
Winner Sonoma State SSU 4-4, 3-2 CCAA
Stanislaus State STAN
7-5, 3-3 CCAA
5
Final
7
Sonoma State SSU
4-4, 3-2 CCAA
Winner
Score By Periods
Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Stanislaus State STAN 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 6 3
Sonoma State SSU 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 X 7 8 2

W: A. Trahan (1-0) L: Hahn, Kevin (1-1)

Game Recap: Baseball |

Another solid outing on the mound spoiled in series finale loss at SSU

ROHNERT PARK — There is got to be something weird about playing at Sonoma State's Seawolf Diamond.
 
The Warriors spoiled another solid pitching performance to lose late in the game as Sonoma State defeated Stanislaus State, 7-5, to win the series three games to one. The strange, tough loss came after Saturday night's heartbreakers when the Warriors lost 4-3 after taking a no-hitter into the ninth inning.
 
After three straight losses at Sonoma State, Stanislaus State is now 3-26 on that field since 2007 (4-37 during the CCAA era).
 
A throwing error led to two runs in the SSU three-run eighth that erased a 5-4 Stan State lead.
 
Kevin Hahn, who came in in relief in the second inning, cruised for six innings before trouble in the eighth. After hitting the first batter he faced, Hahn retired 13 of the next 14 Seawolves. Only one runner reached second, a two-out double in the sixth.
 
But three straight singles in the eighth ended Hahn's outing, and even though Tommy Stropky got the outs he needed, a throwing error and a sac fly led to go-ahead and winning runs for SSU. Hahn ended up going 6 1/3 innings with three runs (one earned) on five hits with six strikeouts and no walks.
 
Jack Large drove in two runs with a double in the first to highlight a three-run Warrior rally. But Sonoma State scored four times in the bottom of the first to push out starter Nathan Gutierrez.
 
The Warriors scored single runs in the second (Michael Wyatt scored on a wild pitch) and third (Vinny Margiotta singled in Grant Bunker) innings for a 5-4 lead until that Sonoma eighth.
 
Wyatt ended up with three of the team's six hits in the game.
 
In the series, the Warriors yielded 17 runs but only nine earned runs. The defense was charged with eight errors while the offense left 34 runners on base. The Warriors were 5 for 35 with runners in scoring position.

All four games were decided by three runs or less.
 
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