Missed opportunities abound in the Cyclones’ return to Lowell
The last time the Cyclones visited Lowell, they had a rotation full of all-stars, This time around, the arms aren’t quite as hot. This is the New York Penn League though, so you don’t really need a 95mph fastball and precise control to get the job done, just one or the other is usually more than enough. Last night, Spinners starter Mario Alcantara brought the heater while Cyclones starter Seth Lugo had the control, combining for four scoreless innings en route to a 2-1 Cyclones loss.
Offense is at a premium in the NYPL and the Brooklyn Cyclones should be reminded of that with their return to Lowell. After all, they scored only a single run in each of the three games they played here last year. You have to go back to September 1, 2011 for a game with multiple runs, a 7-1 victory to close out the Spinners’ home season. So when Alcantara walked the first two Cyclones batters to start the game, it was the perfect opportunity to take control of the game and not add another 1-run game to the streak. The first of several opportunities to be squandered over the course of the game. Three outs later, it was Lugo’s turn to show his stuff.
That stuff isn’t particularly overpowering, but it will get the job done at this level. Lugo’s speed tops out at 90mph, but his control gives him an edge with plenty of called strikes. And balls put in play. It’s the swinging strikes that aren’t part of his repertoire that prove to be a problem for Lugo, but some solid defense, particularly from second baseman L.J. Mazzilli, went a long way toward keeping the Spinners off the board. Mazzilli watched a grounder roll into the outfield in the bottom of the first (which is listed as a fly ball in the play-by-play for some reason, must be one of those really low-flying ones…) but was otherwise on the mark for the rest of the game, fielding seven ground balls and one pop fly out of the 18 balls put in play for outs.
Lowell threatened again in the second with a pair of two-out singles, but that would be the end of the offense in the first four innings except for a throwing error that put Alex Sanchez on second with two outs in the top of the fourth. Brooklyn once again couldn’t make use of a runner in scoring position and then Lowell went down in order in the bottom half, the second of five times they would end an inning without a runner.
James Roche set things back up the way they were left in the top of the 4th with a leadoff double to start the 5th. Colton Plaia followed with a fly ball to shallow center that nobody could get to, putting runners at the corners with no outs for Anthony Chavez, who struck out. Patrick Biondi followed that with a broken bat single, plating Roche and sending Plaia to third. After either an attempt to steal home or a botched hit and run was stopped by a foul ball, Biondi pushed his luck with his second stolen base attempt of the night and Juan Gamboa struck out to end the inning. Three times in the first five innings, Brooklyn stranded a runner in scoring position. With Alcantara exiting the game after the 5th inning, they wouldn’t get another chance.
By the bottom of the 6th, Lugo clearly didn’t have his best stuff anymore. He had his best pitch sequence in the 5th on a 74-90-79-82 with two called strikes, a ball, and a swinging strike to finish the strikeout. In the 6th though, his speed was down around 85 and his control just wasn’t there anymore. The Spinners got their leadoff man on with a slow roller that Lugo and Mazzilli both tried for but couldn’t reach in time to get the out. The apparent confusion on that play proved costly as a sac bunt and a groundout put the tying run on third with two outs and Lugo issued his first walk of the night. With nobody warming in the pen, it was up to Lugo to get out of this mess. He responded by giving up a two-run double that gave the Spinners the lead. Lugo ended the inning on a called strike three, but Brooklyn’s one run wouldn’t be enough anymore.
And that was pretty much the game. If not for some substandard fielding from the Spinners, there wouldn’t be anything else to say. Lugo put the Spinners down in order in the 7th thanks to the defense behind him and Kevin McGowan did the same in the 8th with a pair of strikeouts and the requisite groundout to Mazzilli. Gamboa singled for Brooklyn in the top of the 8th, but then Mazzilli hit a double play ball that for some reason Lowell second baseman Cleuluis Rondon couldn’t hold on to long enough to make the throw to first. Oberste hit a routine grounder to short with one out in the top of the 9th, but Lowell shortstop Tzu-Wei Lin forgot to put his glove under the ball. Both times, the runner was stranded at first, leaving the final score 2-1 Spinners.
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