Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

JSerra claims baseball title

- By Luca Evans

Eric Silva throws a one-hitter with 11 strikeouts and Gabe D’Arcy has three RBIs in a 5-1 victory over Ayala in final.

Starting pitcher Eric Silva stood on the mound, glove and ball tucked under his arm, as San Juan Capistrano JSerra coach Brett Kay approached the mound.

Silva was at 85 pitches in Saturday’s Southern California Division I championsh­ip game against Chino Hills Ayala.

Runners were on second and third with one out in the sixth inning, the Lions leading 4-0. If Silva allowed another runner, Kay told him, he’d be taken out.

This was the last game of Silva’s senior season. The last of his team’s season. The last of the wild ride of restrictio­ns that every program playing baseball in Southern California had overcome.

That ball stayed put in Silva’s glove. “He didn’t want to come out,” Kay said after the game.

Silva went all seven innings in a 5-1 JSerra win to clinch the regional title, allowing a lone run via a sacrifice fly in that sixth inning before whiffing Ayala’s Ryan Moreno.

Silva gave up just one hit against a team that batted .361 on the season, striking out 11.

After starting in JSerra’s loss to Studio City HarvardWes­tlake in the Southern Section Open Division championsh­ip game last weekend, he wanted to redeem himself.

“I just wanted to be dominant on the mound,” Silva said.

JSerra center fielder Gabe D’Arcy went two for three with three RBIs to drive the offense.

In the third inning, the Lions strung together a twoout rally that brought home three runs, capped by a solo moon shot over the left-field fence by designated hitter

Luke Jewitt, whose status was up in the air for much of the week because of a pulled hamstring.

Both teams were playing with “house money,” as Ayala coach Chris Vogt put it. Both had lost in the Southern Section playoffs and had another shot in regionals, thanks to Open Division semifinali­sts having the opportunit­y to advance. Harvard-Westlake elected not to participat­e.

It was a strange feeling to be playing games this deep into June, Kay said — normally, they’d be eight or nine contests into a summer slate. Seven JSerra players opted to end their seasons early and not participat­e in regionals, leaving Kay with 18 on the roster instead of his usual 25.

Yet after all those strange feelings the season brought on, JSerra stands alone on the mountainto­p.It’s a spot Kay believes the team deserves. “I feel like we’re one of the best teams in the nation,” Kay said.

Softball

Camarillo beat Westlake Village Westlake 2-0 in an allVentura County championsh­ip game to claim the Division I title. Junior Natalie Yamane’s two-run home run in the fourth inning provided all the offense.

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