SIOUX FALLS, SD – At the end of three innings of play, the Sioux Falls Sunfish (3-9) were feeling hot. They carried a 4-0 lead into the middle third of the ballgame and held the Pierre Trappers (6-5) to two one-two-three innings. Things continued to look bright for the home team entering the top half of the fourth as well. Two quick outs pitched by Sunfish starter Caleb Kranz led fans to believe it would be another typical inning for the Pierre Trappers. That was until Joseph Bramanti in just his second game with the Trappers ever, stepped up to the plate.
On their third road trip of the season, the Trappers looked towards not only their fourth straight win after a three-game sweep over the Sunfish at Hyde Stadium, but also their first road victory of the season after dropping their first three contests listed as the visitors. The roadtrip also marked the first game in which Trapper’s outfielder Richie Williams, relief pitcher Mason Wells, and starting pitcher Mason Torve appeared in. Torve had a rough start allowing a run in the first, before opening the flood gates further allowing the Sunfish to push across three in the second in route to a 4-0 lead through two.
The Sunfish started hot with a leadoff triple by a new player of their own in Jeff Mejia. A sacrifice fly a batter later pushed the run across, marking the first time the Sunfish pushed across a run in the opening frame against the Trappers. An RBI-single, sacrifice fly, and RBI-groundout pushed across the three Sunfish runs in the second.
The fourth inning for the Trappers started like the rest, Sunfish starter Caleb Kranz striking out the first batter. However, an uncharacteristic walk and hit batter pushed a runner into scoring position for the first time in the ballgame for Pierre. A quick flyout a batter later suppressed the Trappers chances of getting on the board. Despite that, Joseph Bramanti in only his second game dressing in a Trappers uniform lined his first base hit of the season into right field. A stand-up double. It pushed two Trapper runners across the plate cutting the deficit in half.
In the fifth the Trappers once again benefitted from a hit by pitch as Braeden Cordes reached as the leadoff batter of the inning. Two batters later, the Trappers would cash in on that free pass to first as Eric Mast lined a triple into the outfield that scored Cordes and cut the lead to just one as the Sunfish still led 4-3. On a 1-1 count to Colin Adams, a wild pitch to the backstop allowed Mast to score and tie the ballgame at four a piece.
Great pitching by both sides including the debut of Trappers reliever Mason Wells took us into the eighth inning where Wells, already through two innings of work started to tire. A walk and a single, separated by a flyout put runners at first and second with one away in the inning. But a runner in scoring position was all it took for Coach Monterio May to pull the plug and turn to “fireman” Tyler Luban. After a first pitch flyout to put two away in the inning, Luban hit a batter with a pitch loading the bases in a tie ballgame. An extremely tense situation arose when nine-hole batter Benito Garcia stepped into the box in a make-or-break situation for the Sunfish. Garcia worked a full count, creating a nervous energy in both dugouts. Every spectator knew, this pitch decided the game. Garcia struck out swinging as the Pierre dugout erupted in celebration. But there was still work to be done, as the game was still tied 4-4.
Brooks Caple came out of the pen for Sioux Falls to try to keep the Trappers at bay in the ninth; and it worked for a moment as the first batter popped out to the first baseman to begin the inning. However, only one domino needed to fall as the next batter Bennett Osborn singled to put the potential game winning run 270 feet away from home. With one away Osborn was given the sign, steal. The Trapper runner took off for second avoiding the tag and giving the Trappers a runner in scoring position. 180 feet away. A flyout to deep center field allowed Osborn to tag up and break for third, safe. 90 feet away. With two away Richie Williams took a 3-1 pitch low in the dirt that got away from the catcher as Osborn made a break for it, safe at home. The Trappers led 5-4.
For the second straight game, the Trappers looked to Clay Odenbach to earn the save in a one run ballgame. A pair of strikeouts, one swinging, one looking put the Trappers and out away from the comeback victory over their new in-state rivals. A walk to Zeph Hoffpauir gave the Sunfish an ounce of life, but a popout in foul territory to first baseman Joseph Bramanti ended the game with the Trappers securing the comeback victory 5-4.
Despite only pitching two-thirds of an inning Tyler Luban earned the win due to him being the “current pitcher” for the winning team when the winning run crossed the plate. Luban continues to dominate not allowing a non-inherited runner to score this season. He advances to 2-0 on the season, while Sioux Falls reliever Brooks Caple took the loss in his Sunfish debut. Clay Odenbach got the save, his second of the season in as many appearances.
The two teams meet again for game two of the two game series at Karras Park on June 10th at 6:35 CT before both teams go their separate ways for the first time in a week.
--Tyler Katz