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California
Community Colleges
Commission on Athletics
Baseball Championship
May 26, 2003
Fresno, CA
(John Euless Ball Park)
CYPRESS ROLLS TO FOURTH
STATE TITLE
The championship featuring
two Orange Empire Conference teams, goes to the Cypress Chargers, 13-3
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Catcher Felipe Garcia hit
two home runs and pitcher Justin Keadle tossed a complete game with eight strikeouts
to lead Cypress College to a 13-3 victory over Saddleback in the 2003 California
Community College Baseball Championship final, Monday at Fresno City College's
John Euless Ball Park.
Cypress (37-14-1), the top
seed from Southern California, claims its fourth state title under coach Scott
Pickler in six appearances.
"I thought it would
come down to good pitching," said Pickler, who joins Wally Kincaid (Cerritos,
6 titles) and Len Bourdet (Fresno, 4) as the only coach to win four state rings.
"I didn't expect for
us to explode like that. It's neat that Bourdet was the first (coach to win
four), and it was here (in Fresno)."
Tournament MVP honors went
to Garcia (8 for 12, 2 HR, 2 doubles, 6 RBI), third baseman Kevin Smith (7 for
13, 3 doubles, 7 RBI), and pitcher/first baseman Jason Vargas (1-0, 1.33 ERA,
5 for 10 batting, 3 RBI).
A four-run fourth inning
broke open a close ballgame, and all but sealed the Cypress win.
The Chargers wasted little
time scoring against Saddleback starter Geoff Overstreet.
With one out in the bottom
of the first inning, Garcia belted a 2-2 pitch over the right-field wall for
a two-run homer, and a quick 2-0 lead.
Garcia's third homer of
the postseason also gave Cypress its 10th consecutive scoring inning.
In his next at-bat, Garcia
blasted Overstreet's first offering high over the left-field fence for a solo
homer, giving Cypress a 3-0 lead.
"I tried to keep my
emotions down, see the ball, and hit the ball as hard as I can," said Garcia,
who went 3 for 4 in the last two games.
Then with two outs, the
Chargers got an RBI-double from Paul Smyth and a run-scoring single by Kevin
Smith for a 5-0 lead.
Saddleback (34-17-1) climbed
back in the game by scoring three runs off Keadle in the top of the fourth inning.
Robert Johnson led-off with
a single, followed by a double to left field by Travis McConnell.
Johnson would score on a
wild pitch, and McConnell came home on a RBI-groundout from Keahi Kapana.
Nick Lentine's single scored
Jorge Ariaza, cutting the Cypress lead to 5-3.
But, Cypress charged back
again in its next at-bat.
After a walk to Waldo Sauceda,
a single by Matt Fry, and a sac bunt, Overstreet intentionally walked Garcia.
Overstreet (3-2) got Smyth
to pop-up for the second out, but Jason Vargas ripped a single to left. All
three runners came home after the ball rolled under Jordan Struble's glove and
to the wall.
Smyth followed suit with
a double off reliever Kyle Christensen to score Vargas, giving Cypress a commanding
9-3 cushion after four complete.
Fry added a sac fly RBI
in the seventh for a 10-3 lead.
For good measure, Cypress
sent nine batters to the plate in the eighth and scored three unearned runs,
keyed by doubles from Garcia and Vargas, and a two-run single by Ricky Sauceda
to make it 13-3.
Keadle, who signed with
Wake Forest, allowed just two earned runs on seven hits to improve his record
to 6-1.
Saddleback, the No.7 seed
from SoCal, had a chance to score first.
The Gauchos loaded the bases
in the third inning with one out, but Jordan Struble grounded to third baseman
Kevin Smith, who stepped on the bag and threw to first for a double play.
The Chargers, ended the
season winning 24 of their last 27 games, and scored 42 runs in their three
games this weekend.
As a team, Cypress batted
.405, slugged .603 (3 HR, 11 doubles, 2 triples), and had an on-base percentage
of .475 in outscoring the opposition, 42-5.
"It makes my job a
lot easier," Keadle said about the run support. "It changes the perception
of the game."
Cypress pitchers posted
a 1.33 ERA (4 earned runs in 27 innings), while striking out 33 batters. All
of that without their team ace Jake Baxter (9-3), who was being saved for a
potential seventh game between the two schools.
The OEC rivals split their
four regular season meetings, with Saddleback winning the first two, 9-3 and
10-8.
Cypress took the last two
OEC games, 11-8 and 7-6, and clobbered the Gauchos in Fresno, 16-1 and 13-3.
"Playing each other
in our conference, day in and day out, really prepares you for the Final Four,"
said Saddleback coach Jack Hodges.
"It's disappointing
now (to lose), but we appreciate the effort from our players," he added.
Garcia, heading to Cal State
Fullerton, said his team came a long way from its 14-11 start.
"We've been saying,
'It's not how you start the season, but how it ends.'"
-- Report from the California
Community College Sports Information Association, compiled by Eric Mendoza (Fullerton
College SID) and Josh Butters (Fresno City College Rampage Sports Editor)
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