Knights take life out of Sailors
Steve Virgen
All the energy, momentum and life that the Newport Harbor High
baseball players had built up for themselves with a three-game
winning streak seemed to fade away with one stroke of the bat.
The Sailors’ hopes of an upset over Sea View League defending
champion Foothill appeared daunting, considering Knights’ starter
Phil Hughes, whose fastball consistently reaches the low 90-mph
range, was on the mound.
Yet for all of Hughes’ prowess, Newport ridded itself a chance of
an upset because of a heartbreaking sequence of events in the top of
the fourth inning and lost its Sea View League opener, 8-0, to the
visiting Knights, ranked No. 1 in CIF Southern Section Division II,
Friday.
Hughes, who improved to 3-0, tossed a two-hitter that came with 10
strikeouts and no walks for his first shutout of the season. Still,
the Sailors were frustrated they hurt themselves with four errors and
allowing four unearned runs.
With two outs in the fourth, the Sailors committed two straight
errors. Shortly thereafter, Foothill’s Chris Moe faced a 1-2 count
and dealt a dramatic blow to Newport Harbor by smacking a home run
over the right-field fence.
“We were [excited] and we were in the game,” Sailors Coach Joel
Desguin said. “But the kids got deflated after that.”
It was realistic to think Newport Harbor was capable of beating
the Knights. Last year the Sailors nearly stunned Foothill, losing,
2-0, in the league finale. Joey Cantarella struck out three and
scattered seven hits in that game.
This year, Cantarella got the start again and allowed one hit
through the first three innings. He struck out two in those innings
and was definitely hanging with Hughes. But then came the fourth
inning and Moe.
“The two-strike adjustment that Moe made was huge,” Foothill Coach
Gary Fishel said. “That was the swing of momentum there. With two
strikes and two outs? That helped us get it going.”
Fishel said Moe’s home run was the difference, but Hughes led the
Knights to the victory. According to Baseball America, he is one of
the top five high school pitching prospects in the nation.
Newport senior Mike McLean was the only one to hit Hughes.
McLean’s base hit in the second inning landed just in front of the
left fielder. McLean, who played third base and pitched the final two
innings, also got a single with a high chopper toward second base and
he beat the throw in the fifth inning.
“I’m proud of them,” Desguin said of his players. “They battled.
It’s not like they got up there and watched [Hughes] pitch. They were
swinging at it.”
Though he was proud of his team’s effort, Desguin was disappointed
in the Sailors’ inability to respond to Moe’s three-run blast.
The Knights scored five more runs in the fifth, capitalizing on
their momentum. The Sailors committed another error and there were
three instances when Newport players misplayed hits, allowing for
Foothill to get men on base.
Desguin and assistant coach Jim Kiefer, a former Newport coach,
stressed to the players that the loss was just one game and they must
gain back the momentum they carried through their three-game winning
streak, which included an 11-4 victory over Back Bay rival Corona del
Mar.
*--*
Sea View League
Foothill 8, Newport Harbor 0
Score by Innings
Foothill 000 350 0 -- 8 10 0
Newport 000 000 0 -- 0 2 4
Hughes and Kirkpatrick; Cantarella, McLean
(6) and Sanchez. W -- Hughes, 3-0. L --
Cantarella, 1-2. 2B -- Hicks (F), Moe (F).
HR -- Moe (F).
*--*
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