There were lots and lots of hits in Binghamton. There were not many at all down in St. Lucie. The Phillies prospects played a quartet of games against the Mets’ affiliates, and won three of them. Gotta get that rivalry started early.
Rochester 5, Lehigh Valley 3
The IronPigs held their foes scoreless for eight of nine innings. Unfortunately, the one inning they didn’t— a five-run second— was enough to sink them. Starter Tucker Davidson had a rough night, taking the loss. Ryan Cusick pitched four scoreless in relief,
and Felix Reyes hit a two-run homer to put Lehigh Valley back in striking distance, but the Red Wings ended up flying to victory over the IronPigs.
Binghamton 16, Reading 11
They were not lacking for runs in New York. The Fightin Phils had a good night at the plate, with Dante Nori going three for six, and Aroon Escobar adding a hit and a pair of free passes. But starter Jean Cabrera struggled, allowing nine hits and nine runs, all earned. His night ended after just 1.1 innings of work. A trio of relievers steadied the ship, but Colin Peluse allowed a quintet of runs in the seventh (four earned), and the Fightins couldn’t recover.
Jersey Shore 5, Brooklyn 4 (1o)
The BlueClaws were kept quiet on offense, at first. They had only one run through six. But they scored a trio in the seventh, then held their Brooklynite foes scoreless in the eighth and ninth to force extras. The Cyclones couldn’t muster a run in the tenth, and that made things simple for the BlueClaws. Tyler Pettorini gamely sacrificed himself via a bunt to put the ghost runner on third, and Luis Caicuto ended it with a single to right. Center fielder Pedro León was three for four on the night, and starter Sam Highfill made the Cyclones dizzy, with 8 strikeouts through five IP.
Clearwater 2, St. Lucie 0
After being rained out yesterday, Clearwater had a doubleheader against the St. Lucie Mets today. And they started it in grand fashion. A trio of Threshers hurlers took to the mound, and not one of them allowed a hit. Tanner Gresham K’d 8 Mets through five innings, Marty Gair continued the no-no in the sixth, and Gabe Craig struck out the side to complete it. The game only ran seven innings due to the Single-A doubleheader rules. Nevertheless, a no-hitter is always to be celebrated, even more so when it comes against the next generation of Mets. The Threshers were themselves held scoreless through five, but plated two runs in the sixth in scrappy fashion, with Griffin Burkholder and Robert Phelps making it to base on a walk and error, respectively, Nathan Humphreys showing that the sacrifice bunt is not a lost art, and Alirio Ferrebus singling to send the first two home.
Clearwater 5, St. Lucie 3
The Threshers continued their no-hitter through nine, in a sense: they held the Mets hitless through the first two innings of the second game. Jaeden Calderon hit a homer in the third to give Clearwater a lead, which they surrendered in the bottom fifth. But the Threshers were not content to settle for a split, even if their half of it was a no-hitter. Instead, they chose late-inning heroics, scoring four in the seventh (and final) inning via a pair of singles, a walk, and a pair of errors. Cody Bowker had 6 strikeouts through four as the Threshers concluded a very successful day in St. Lucie.















