The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

H-K explodes for 17 runs in final 2 innings vs. E. Hampton

- By Paul Augeri

EAST HAMPTON — Forget the final score for a moment. Haddam-Killingwor­th defeated East Hampton 18-3 in a Shoreline Conference interdivis­ion game for its eighth straight win to start the season.

H-K looked nothing like an unbeaten team Monday — at the plate, in the field and with its body language —and coach Mark Brookes said as much. East Hampton held a 3-1 lead after five innings and it seemed almost enough the way righthande­r Jared Reed had the Cougars waving at pitches. The combinatio­n of the junior’s fastball and slider produced nine strikeouts and four hits.

But Reed couldn’t last forever in this one, and as good teams do, H-K seized on the moment when he left the game and the Cougars exploded at the plate.

In the decisive sixth inning, H-K’s Ross Meglin led off with a walk and Jon Civiello doubled on Reed’s 103rd pitch to knock him off the mound. Mike O’Toole lined a single to center to tie the score, and the Cougars ended up batting around to the tune of 11 runs. They batted around again in the seventh for six more.

Still, Brookes wasn’t pleased to see a listless team the majority of the game, especially with defending Shoreline champion Cromwell (8-1) visiting the Cougars on Tuesday.

“You have to start with the fact that we came out flat and didn’t play like we wanted to win,” Brookes said. “We did not field well or hustle, things you should do well when you’re 8-0.”

Freshman right-hander Alec Erskine got the victory for H-K in long relief. He held East Hampton hitless in three innings and struck out seven.

The loss went to reliever Aaron Riley, who pitched East Hampton (2-6) to a 4-1 victory over Hale-Ray just last Saturday. The Bellringer­s were undone, in part, by a defense that committed three errors and had trouble measuring up an H-K offense that dropped hits into the outfield and powered balls over heads or into the gaps.

Having a lead after five innings against the caliber of a team like H-K did not brighten Tom Seidl’s mood. He has coached the Bellringer­s into the state tournament his first three seasons on the job but realizes a fourth straight appearance is unlikely.

“Not at all. Just the way

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States