BASEBALL: Upstart Scots Ousted in Heartbreaker
Carlmont victimized by Salinas' walk-off single in 2-1 defeat; Baroncini suffers concussion in collision.
Three days removed from pulling off arguably one of the most stunning upsets in Central Coast Section baseball history, Carlmont High lost a heartbreaker.
But by the time the Scots walked off the field after a tough 2-1 loss to Salinas in a Division I quarterfinal at Hartnell College in Salinas on Saturday afternoon, the game’s outcome was practically an afterthought, with the health of a player who left the field in an ambulance with a head injury weighing heavily on players and coaches.
Carlmont’s Willie Baroncini was chasing a fly ball in the leftfield corner in the sixth inning of a 1-1 game when he crashed into a fence post. Though severely shaken up, Baroncini crawled to retrieve the ball and was able to reach a cutoff man on a play that went for a leadoff triple.
“He wanted to go back in the game,” Carlmont coach Rich Vallero said. “He was dizzy, but he was like, ‘I’m not coming out, I’m leaving everything on the field.’”
A CT Scan at a local hospital revealed no serious brain injuries – which the Scots found out well after the game ended. Baroncini was diagnosed with a concussion, and is expected to make a full recovery.
“It puts things in perspective,” Vallero said. “I have a (baby) daughter, and there’s more important things (than baseball).”
No. 8 seed Salinas (19-9-1) was unable to capitalize on the sixth-inning threat. Carlmont starter Bradley Levine got the next hitter to ground out to second with a drawn-in infield. Catcher Colton Hicks ran down the base runner when Salinas botched a suicide squeeze on the next play.
Salinas had the bases loaded with one out in the seventh when it scored the game-winning run on a walk-off single.
No. 16 seed Carlmont (19-9), which shocked top-seeded St. Francis 4-3 on Wednesday, trailed 1-0 in the sixth when Nic Bongi singled in the Scots’ only run.
The Scots had seven hits but were unable to capitalize on several scoring chances.
“It’s unfortunate when you have an offensive club that you know can swing the bat,” said Vallero, whose team notched the program's first playoff win since 1996 on Wednesday.
But Vallero believes his players learned some valuable life lessons on their wild playoff journey.
“They played with all the heart and passion that they possibly could have, one of them did it so much that he got carted off in an ambulance because he was willing to do whatever it took to catch a ball,” Vallero said.
“If these kids approach life the way they approached that game, they’re all going to be successful, and at the end of the day that’s what it’s all about. How many of these guys are really going to the big leagues anyway?”
____________________________________________________________
Salinas 2, Carlmont 1
C -- 000 001 0 -- 1 7 0
S -- 000 100 1 -- 2 9 0
WP: Vasquez. LP: Bongi (3-1).
3B: White (S). 2B: Belnick 2 (C). 3 hits: Ontiveros (S). 2 hits: Hicks, Belnick (C).
Records: Carlmont 19-9. Salinas 19-9-1.
Diane
11:14 am on Sunday, May 22, 2011
In Carlmont's most recent CCS history, the Scots won consecutive Division 2 CCS championships in 1992 (vs. Santa Cruz) and 1993 (vs. King City). Still in Division 2, in 1994 Carlmont lost in the first round vs. Soquel, in 1995 Carlmont made it to the Semi-Final game and lost to Pacific Grove, and in 2000 they lost in the first round game vs. Monterey. Now in Division 1, which is based on the number of students enrolled in each school, Carlmont has played in the first round of the CCS playoffs in 2004 (loss to Serra), 2008 (loss to Mitty), 2009 (loss to Wilcox), and 2010 (loss to Mitty). Reaching the Quarter-Final game vs. Salinas is the first time Carlmont has gone beyond the first round of CCS action since 1995. Congratulations to the Scots and their coaches. And most importantly, feel better soon Willie Baroncini. You're all champs!
George Metropulos
3:50 pm on Sunday, May 22, 2011
You did the unexpected. That, in itself, is a tremendous achievement. Go Scots!
Rick
12:12 am on Monday, May 23, 2011
By the way Salinas didn't "BOTCH" a squeeze attempt, they got thier pocket picked by the Carlmont pitching coach who called for a pitchout on the attempt. Great job boys, proud to be a Scot.
Scots Fan
8:56 am on Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Congrats to Ryan Gavasse who was the staring pitcher an threw lights out in this CCS game. He went 5 complete innings for the Scots and had a 1 to 1 game going for the team!
JordieBleu
12:54 am on Monday, March 5, 2012
hell yea