Boyd leads Pirates to series win
By
Al Myatt
©2016 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
Post-game
audio: Cliff Godwin,
Jimmy Boyd,
Dwanya
Williams-Sutton...
GREENVILLE — Jimmy Boyd lost a
shutout bid in the top of the ninth inning but East Carolina won its
American Athletic Conference series with Houston by topping the Cougars
5-1 at Clark-LeClair Stadium on Saturday.
Freshman Dwanya Williams-Sutton had
three RBIs and Joe Ingle got his seventh save as ECU improved to 19-8
overall and 2-0 in the AAC with a crowd of 2,966 looking on.
Boyd (4-1) limited the Cougars
(16-10, 0-2) to six hits over eight and two-thirds innings. He walked
one and struck out eight.
The run that was charged to the
senior right-hander was unearned. The Pirates committed three errors.
Grayson Padgett reached on a miscue
that allowed Corey Julks to score in the final frame.
Lefty Seth Romero (4-1) was dealt his
first loss as he went five and two-thirds innings. The Pirates scored
four runs in the sixth to extend their lead to 5-0.
Romero hit Eric Tyler with a pitch in
the second inning and Tyler stole second base with two out, enabling him
to score for a 1-0 ECU lead on a single to left by Williams-Sutton.
"I didn't see any fast balls today,"
Williams-Sutton said. "My coaches said, 'Sit slider,' and that was my
approach the whole game."
Charlie Yorgen walked to start the
Pirates' half of the sixth. He moved to second on a balk. Travis Watkins
was hit by a pitch and Tyler had an RBI double to left for a 2-0 ECU
lead.
Luke Bolka had an infield single
before the Cougars turned a double play. Tyler and Bolka scored on a
double down the left field line by Williams-Sutton.
Turner Brown singled through the left
side to bring in Williams-Sutton for a 5-0 Pirates lead.
ECU coach Cliff Godwin referred to
Romero as possibly the best left-hander in the country.
"With a guy like Romero, I just have
to minimize mistakes," Boyd said. "I have to play my game, throw the
ball down, get ground ball outs, get quick outs and try to keep him on
the ropes."
There were more intense moments in
the second game of the series. The Cougars thought ECU first base coach
Jeff Palumbo was stealing signs on Saturday, resulting in a conference
with the coaches and umpires.
"If we were stealing signs, we
wouldn't have struck out however many times (eight)," Godwin said.
Bryce Harman was ejected in game one,
a 3-1 Pirates win, for an illegal slide at the plate
on a new rule designed to protect catchers. Some players on both teams
left the dugout after the collision at home but there were no physical
confrontations. Harman served an automatic one-game suspension on
Saturday.
Williams-Sutton, Tyler and Brown each
had two hits as the Pirates moved into position for a sweep going into
an 11 a.m. game today.
"I mean it would be awesome," Godwin
said of the chance to take three games against Houston. " ... It's like
I told our guys, we could come out and play flat and win the series.
Everybody would say, 'Good job.' But if you want to be great, you want
to try to focus on hosting regionals and hosting super regionals, then
you've got to do something special every once in awhile. We'll need to
play our best baseball to be able to beat a great Houston team."
The Cougars are ranked No. 25 in the
USA Today coaches poll.
PAGE UPDATED
05/16/16 09:32 PM.
Copyright © Bonesville.net. All rights rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any fashion. Information from
Bonesville staff members, East Carolina University, Conference USA
and other sources was used in composing and/or compiling the articles
and data on this site. This site is editorially independent and is not
affiliated with East Carolina University or Conference USA. View
Bonesville.net's
privacy policy. For advertising or
other information, e-mail
editor@bonesville.net.
*You are viewing an
alpha version of Bonesville Mobile. You may view this trial version
of Bonesville Mobile at no charge. After alpha and beta testing are
completed, a subscription version of Bonesville Mobile will be
available at a nominal price. Bonesville Mobile incorporates minimal
and non-obtrusive advertising. |