By Seth Lakso, Charlotte Observer Correspondent
With one out in the fourth inning and Braves leadoff man Todd Cunningham on third, Tommy La Stella sent a sinking line drive into the outfield.
With one out in the fourth inning and Braves leadoff man Todd Cunningham on third, Tommy La Stella sent a sinking line drive into the outfield.
Knights’ centerfielder Gorkys
Hernandez came charging in to make the catch, as Cunningham retreated to third
to tag up.
Hernandez’ throw made it all the way
to Charlotte catcher Josh Phegley on the fly, a full step ahead of Cunningham.
The record crowd of 10,323 on hand at
BB&T Ballpark on Thursday erupted with the kind of sound you hear in the
background of a SportsCenter Web Gem replay, and then, just a quickly, fell
silent, as the ball trickled out of Phegley's glove and toward the Braves batter’s box.
The run was Gwinnett’s only of the
night, but it was all they needed to hand Charlotte its fourth consecutive home
loss, 1-0.
“Gorkys made a nice throw and when
Phegley put his glove down, (Cunningham) kicked the ball right out of it,” said
Knights manager Joel Skinner. “It’s a situation where he’s going down to get
his glove in front of home plate and the kid’s cleat went right through his web
and dislodged the ball.”
“I caught it clean and I went to put
the tag on and (Cunningham) slid and his spikes went straight into my glove and
just basically yanked the ball out,” said Phegley, who was charged with an
error on the play. “There’s nothing you can really do about it, just bad timing
I guess.”
The Knights entered Thursday night’s
game with the second lowest batting average in the International League at .215
and it looked as though they might be catching a break when Braves starter
Yunesky Maya had to leave the game one batter into the second inning with a leg
injury.
However, the Gwinnett bullpen put up
one zero after the next for the game’s remaining eight frames, holding the
Knights -- who had two hits in the first inning -- to just three more for the
remainder of the game.
Twice Charlotte put a runner on third
with one out and each time the next batter up struck out and the inning
ultimately ended without a run.
Asked if he felt as though his guys
are pressing at the plate, Skinner replied, “Overall, your first 50-100 at bats,
it’s just human nature to want to get off to a good start, so you’re always
going to kind of fight some of that a little bit. As a group, you feed off each
other. Once a couple guys get going things should loosen up.”
Knights’ starter Charlie Leesman went
seven innings, allowed four hits, one unearned run, and struck out four. He was
helped out by three double plays turned behind him during the game.
“Tonight, he just threw strikes with
all his stuff,” said Phegley of Leesman, who fell to 0-2 on the season despite
lowering his ERA to 1.59. “He’s got good movement on his fastball and he gets a
lot of groundballs with it. He had some downward cut to his fastball and I just
stuck with it as long as they weren’t squaring it up and it worked pretty well.”
In three starts this season, the
Knights’ southpaw has allowed just five runs (three earned). However, in those
starts, he’s received just six total runs of support from the Charlotte bats.
With the loss, the Knights dropped to
6-9 on the season and 2-5 on their current eight-game home stand.
With Atlanta Braves lefty Mike Minor,
who is with Gwinnett on rehab assignment, slated to start against Charlotte Friday, things won’t get any
easier.
1 comments:
well.. they have a brand new million dollar stadium and they still arent any better team to go watch then they were in Ft Mill. How long will it take for the new wears off and no one wants to watch a losing team
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