Monday, May 22, 2006

"River Ridge prevails in 8 innings, then bows out of tourney in 9" -- May 20, 2006

CALEB BREAKEY
THE OLYMPIAN

MOUNT VERNON -- Inspired by River Ridge's close games this season and passion to never lose, fans dubbed the Hawks the "never-say-die kids."

But the Hawks could only escape elimination in extra innings once Saturday, losing their second game of the Class 3A state baseball tournament to the Burlington-Edison Tigers 5-4 at the Skagit Valley Dream Field.

The nine-inning loss to the Tigers ended the Hawks' season and came just six hours after edging Seattle Prep 3-2 in eight innings.

Tears slid down several of the players' cheeks while giving and receiving hugs from their misty-eyed coach, Chad Arko, after the game. Other Hawks stood quietly and peered across the field at the celebrating Tigers.

"They've been my sons for four years," Arko said. "They played everything they could for me."

Hawks pitcher Stephen Raudenbush pitched a complete game, giving up five runs and striking out five.

"You couldn't ask anything more from a pitcher," Arko said. "He went about 130 pitches, and I knew he could keep going."

Raudenbush said he never felt tired throughout the game despite his high pitch count.

"That's just flat out playing hard and playing your guts out," Arko said.

The Hawks threatened in the bottom of the ninth after the Tigers jumped ahead 5-2 with three runs in the top half of the inning.

But after scoring two runs and placing runners at second and first, River Ridge third baseman and league MVP Connor Lambert struck out to end the game.

"Down 5-2 in the ninth inning, what do you expect?" Arko said. "You expect a team to roll over, but they didn't."

The Hawks scored only two runs before their extra-inning comeback fell short.

After loading the bases on three consecutive infield hits in the third inning, Lambert smacked a grounder to the right side off the Tigers second baseman's glove, scoring left fielder Kyle McClellan from third.

Hawks catcher Chase Doughty followed with a sacrifice fly to right field to bring in the other run.

"These kids have won two Pac-9 titles, they've got a second place in district -- how many feet away from going to Safeco Field?" Arko said. "It's been a fun ride."

River Ridge came within two strikes of being eliminated from the tournament in their first game against the Panthers.

With two outs and no runners on in the seventh inning, McClellan launched a 2-1 fastball over the "325" sign in left field.

"I could tell our team was getting down -- two outs in the bottom of the seventh," McClellan said. "I was just swinging as hard as I could, trying to make something out of nothing."

Hawks pitcher Seth Harvey started the game and gave up two hits in four innings while striking out two. He also led the team at the plate, finishing 2-for-3 with a home run and two RBIs.

Monday, May 15, 2006

"Destination: Big leagues...Rainiers prospect on fast track to making M's" -- May 15, 2006

BY CALEB BREAKEY

FOR THE OLYMPIAN


TACOMA -- Fresh out of high school, Adam Jones turned down an offer to play baseball for one of the game's legends.

It was June 2003. Tony Gwynn, future Hall of Fame outfielder and head coach of San Diego State University's baseball team, thought highly of the young shortstop and had Jones' friend, Quintin Berry, on the Aztecs' roster as a recruiting tool.

But nothing could persuade Jones from his desire to play against the toughest competition and reach the major leagues quickly, not even Gwynn's off-season phone calls.

"I could have learned his style, but I look at it as I'm 20-years-old in Triple-A compared to being 20-years-old and a junior in college with one of my good friends," Jones said. "Sometimes I wonder how college life would have been, but I'm closer to my goal."

The Mariners' first-round draft pick in 2003 out of Morse High School in San Diego said he made the right decision.

Just three years into his minor league career, Jones is hitting .288 with a team-leading seven home runs and 21 RBIs through his first 31 games. After being converted to center field during the Arizona Fall League last year, Jones anchors the Tacoma Rainiers' spacious center field at Cheney Stadium.

Teammate Mike Morse said Jones' hitting and defensive potential is impressive, and others agree.

People compare Jones with center fielders such as Torii Hunter and Mike Cameron, but he doesn't let the player-comparison compliments go to his head.

"I'm not trying to be like anybody," he said. "When someone says I remind them of that person, that's fine."

Jones' athleticism made the transition from shortstop to the outfield an easy one.

But the move also went against his craving to be in the middle of every play.

He said sometimes seven or eight balls pepper the outfield gaps throughout a game, while other times he sees no action in center field.

"It's totally different out there," Jones said. "You're far away from everything and it's as boring as anything you can do."

Jones, the Mariners' minor league player of the year in 2005, said Tacoma outfielders T.J. Bohn and Shin-Soo Choo have helped him adjust to the outfield by their example, and manager Dave Brundage shares defensive techniques with Jones regularly.

Brundage said Jones improves daily and that his tremendous arm-strength -- radar-guns clocked Jones at 96 mph off the mound in high school -- allow him to run an occasional ugly route in the outfield.

"He can be as good as he wants to be in the outfield, and he will because he picks things up very quickly," Brundage said. "He might make more errors and he might make more mistakes, but how are we ever going to learn from it if he never makes mistakes?"

Offensively, the right-handed hitting Jones sticks with the advice of friend and former Mariner, Mark McLemore. He said the ex-Mariner utility player showed him the ropes of the game, such as how to deal with batting slumps.

Jones, who considers himself a gap-to-gap hitter with speed, said McLemore and Tacoma coaches offer the same advice -- stay inside himself and don't try to do too much with the baseball.

"Sometimes I'll get a bigger swing trying to hit the ball out, because I know I can hit the ball out," Jones said. "But when I try to, it never goes."

After his 2004 season, Jones was told that he needed to get more walks and cut down on strikeouts.

Baseball critics continue to point toward Jones' .290 on base percentage this season as his weakness, but the 6-foot-2-inch, 200-pound outfielder said he must remain aggressive at the plate at this point of his career.

He struck out 124 times in 2004, cut down to 112 in 2005, and has 27 whiffs in his first 120 at-bats this season -- tied for third-most in Tacoma's lineup.

Jones said he takes hacks at juicy pitches early in the count, especially ones that pitchers are just trying to throw for first-pitch strikes.

"Walks come as they come," said Jones, who has four walks. "Up here I want to be as aggressive as I can because I don't want to miss that pitch that I should drive. A walk is nice, but a double would be better."

Brundage said young players go through peaks and valleys more frequently than veterans and need experience to overcome patience issues with the bat.

Both Rainiers' hitting coach Terry Pollreisz and Brundage agree that Jones must stay forceful and wide-eyed for his pitch at the plate.

"You want to keep him aggressive because you don't want him to be timid and passive at the plate," Brundage said.

While Jones' roommate and friend on the team, Jose Morban, said the Mariners' future outfielder enjoys kicking back and playing videogames in his spare time, Jones said fans at Safeco Field would see non-stop hustle when he runs out toward the 405 sign in his big-league center field debut.

Jones said he never hot-dogs a ball or jogs to first on a hit toward the pitching mound.

"They'll always see hustle and a hard worker, trying to learn the next best thing," he said. "Trying to learn the pitcher, trying to learn situations -- a student of the game."




Adam Jones file
  • Position: Converted from shortstop to center field.
  • Height, weight: 6-foot-2, 200 pounds
  • Age: 20
  • Drafted: Selected 37th overall in the first round of the 2003 amateur draft.
  • Personal: Jones grew up in San Diego and was drafted by the Mariners in 2003 out of Morse High School, where he batted .406 and posted a 2.71 ERA in his senior year. He enjoys playing video games, hanging out with his parents and brothers in San Diego, and is a "relaxed guy."

    He is thankful for his relationship with his parents, Kenneth and Andrea -- especially his mom's interest in his career. When he was with the San Antonio Missions, the Mariners double-A affiliate, Andrea e-mailed the Missions' commentators about everything, Jones said. "They started to like her, and when she came to San Antonio she got to meet them," he said. "She's so into baseball. As soon as this gets published, she'll be the first one to have it."


  • Saturday, May 06, 2006

    "Baseball team may conclude regular season without Roach" -- May 5, 2006

    By C. Jennings Breakey
    The Western Front

    Western’s rival the University of Oregon Ducks bowed in respect of a death close to the Vikings before the teams battled through a four-game series last weekend at Civic Stadium in Eugene, Ore.

    Viking sophomore right fielder Kevin Roach’s sister, Kristen, died last week of a brain aneurysm.

    Ducks’ head coach Bradley Ficek gathered his team on the field with the Vikings before the first game started. University of Oregon junior pitcher Jonathan Jwayad then walked toward the bleachers and addressed more than 100 people in attendance.

    “A player from Western’s team, Kevin Roach, has had a loss in his family and we would like to take a moment of silence for his family,” the player said.

    When the moment concluded Ficek handed a card signed by the Ducks to Western head coach Michael Johnson, who sent it to the Roach family in Bainbridge, Wash.

    “It was good to see everybody have that understanding of the importance of life,” Johnson said. “I felt a friendship with their coach.”

    Roach told the Vikings to play hard and compete with the Ducks over the weekend. Western responded to Roach’s request with a four-game split with the University of Oregon as both teams clinched spots in the Northern Pacific Regional Tournament, which is comprised of four teams.

    Johnson said he didn’t set a timetable for Roach’s return to the team.

    The Vikings came away with an 11-4 record while the Ducks remained atop the Pacific Mountain Conference at 12-3. Western heads to regionals as the number four seed and will face the Weber State University Wildcats while the University of Oregon enters as the number three seed and will play the University of Montana Grizzlies.

    Western senior left fielder Mikel Lenox said the Vikings’ rivalry with the Ducks is heated but both clubs acknowledge that baseball is just a game — a low priority on life’s scale.

    “(The rivalry) is only between the lines,” he said. “Outside of that things do matter more.”

    Lenox, who’s hitting .368 with 14 stolen bases this season, said pitching and shaky defense characterized the Vikings’ weekend.

    Western sophomore pitcher Adam Bloom pitched four and two-thirds scoreless innings in the first game of Saturday’s doubleheader before the Ducks scored five unearned runs on a Viking error in the fifth inning.

    The teams stayed tied at five until the eleventh inning, when Western senior center fielder Matt Rhode hit a blooper over the pitching mound that scored senior third baseman Andrew Irvine from third.

    Western sophomore pitcher Alex Arima, freshman Brain Sims and senior Ryan Kauffman combined for six and one-third scoreless innings in relief.

    After dropping the second game of the doubleheader Western rebounded with a complete game, two-hit performance by Kauffman on Sunday. The right-hander improved to 6-0 this season with a 1.54 ERA and 50 strikeouts in 41 innings.

    Western concludes its regular season this weekend against Evergreen State University in Olympia. The regional tournament’s location hasn’t been determined, but will take place May 12-14 at either Lane Community College in Eugene, Ore., or Volcanoes Stadium in Salem, Ore.

    The Vikings hoped to take three of four games against the Ducks, but the team is satisfied with the weekend’s outcome and is preparing for regionals, Johnson said.

    Two years ago Western came within three outs from advancing to the World Series but the Ducks squashed the Vikings’ hopes with a seventh inning comeback. Last year the Ducks beat Western again in a winner-to-World Series game.

    Johnson said the Vikings’ young teams lacked experience the past two years, which accounted for both mental and physical errors in the final games of the previous regional tournaments.

    “We tend to beat ourselves in that final and decisive game,” he said. “We have to take the memories and pain of the previous years and turn it into positive energy this year.”