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Lakers nip Twins in marathon game

by Matt Baldwin / Whitefish Pilot
| July 11, 2011 6:10 PM

After nearly four hours of

back-and-forth baseball, the Kalispell Lakers stole another game

from the Glacier Twins at home July 6 at the Sapa-Johnsrud Memorial

tournament.

Michael O’Connell put the Lakers in

control just before midnight with a solo homer that made the final

score 10-15.

Glacier used a strong offensive

performance through seven innings to build a lead, but pitching

woes in the wee hours let the Lakers slip back into the conference

game.

The Twins jumped out to 4-0 lead in the

opening frame after a Geoff Streeter RBI and a Chris King two-run

homer.

Kalispell equalized in the top of the

second, but Kyler Blades crushed an RBI single to left in the

bottom half to make the score 5-4.

In a key defensive stop in the third,

Devyn Rocker knocked down a grounder, tossed it to Blades at second

who then hit Cody Hill at first for an inning-ending double

play.

Kalispell took the lead in the fifth

off of a two-run dinger from O’Connell.

The Twins took the lead back in the

seventh when Jack Cronin connected for an RBI triple to make it

10-9.

Mistakes plagued Glacier in the eighth

as Kalispell scored runs on a wild pitch, a walk with the bases

loaded and a fielding error.

“Our offense did a good job of giving

us a chance,” Glacier coach Lindsay Fansler said. “Defensive errors

let us down. That’s a recipe for losing games.”

He noted the slow tempo didn’t play in

their favor.

Five Twins had two hits, including

Jeremy Nielsen (2-for-4), Cronin (2-for-5), Blades (2 for 4),

Streeter (2-for-5) and King (2-for-3).

Kalispell won both games against

Glacier this season at Memorial Park. The Twins topped the Lakers

in Kalispell on June 2.

Glacier earned a win at their home

tourney July 8 with a 3-2 win over Apple Valley. Talsma drove in

Cody Elek with an RBI single to center in the third inning to help

the Twins get the victory. Rocker scored the win on the mound.

Glacier finished 1-4 in the

tourney.

The Twins (3-9 league) next host

Lethbridge on Friday, July 15 in a conference doubleheader.

Glacier needs to play near perfect

baseball through the remaining conference schedule to have a chance

at the playoffs, Fansler said.

“We need a few things to happen,” he

said, “but all we can do is take care of our business.”