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Negaunee splits doubleheader with Houghton Thursday

NEGAUNEE – If there are two words to sum up Wednesday’s doubleheader between Negaunee and Houghton, they are rain and rallies.

With a constant drizzle occurring during both games and being under the threat of weather delays, the Miners and Gremlins fought punch for punch all afternoon with both teams earning a comeback victory. Houghton scored two runs in the bottom of the sixth to win the opener, 8-7, while Negaunee overcame a 5-0 deficit by scoring nine unanswered runs to win the nightcap, 9-5.

“The first game the kids played well and we came back, but the second game, we just had a little trouble putting two (wins) together,” Gremlins manager Joe Romano said. “We were a little lackadaisical defensively, but Kevin (Bostwick) pitched a good game. Our bats cooled off too. They’re (the Miners) a very nice team. They’re well-balanced and well-coached. To take one game down here, that’s a big accomplishment for us.”

In the first game, Negaunee opened up the scoring with three runs in the top of the first, but Houghton answered with three runs in its half of the frame, one of them on a double by Sam Keskimaki off Miners starting pitcher Tylor Robinson. The Gremlins later took the lead with a run in the third when Keskimaki scored on a base hit by Brandon Norkol. Houghton had a chance to add another run, but right after Keskimaki crossed home plate, Will Romano was thrown out at home.

The Miners fought back in the fifth, plating four runs in the inning. Two of them came on a two-run single by Alex Munson and later, Carter Richardson scored on a fielder’s choice by Robinson and Munson came around on a fielder’s choice by Jason Waterman.

Trailing 7-4 now, the Gremlins got two runs back in their half of the inning. Keskimaki scored on a base hit by Norkol and with Negaunee’s Eric Anderson now pitching, Romano scored on a wild pitch. After shutting down the Miners in the top of the sixth, Houghton had its last at-bats to try to stay alive and the Gremlins came through. Houghton’s Dylan Horning scored on a passed ball to tie the game at 7-7 and one batter later, Bostwick scored on a fielder’s choice to win it.

“Our kids don’t quit,” coach Romano said. “I’ve got seven freshmen, which are led by three great seniors and those seniors are instructing them all the way through to keep rolling. We’ve got a good nucleus for our team.”

Kade Farrell got the win for the Gremlins as he gave up seven runs on four hits with four strikeouts and five walks, while Anderson was dealt the loss after giving up two runs on one hit with two walks in two-thirds of an inning of work.

“The game just kind of slipped away,” Negaunee head coach Jason Siik said. “I don’t think we played with a ton of energy the first game. We’ve had quite a few days off from what we’ve been used to, so we were a little flat. It’s tough to lose a game that way in the bottom half of an inning. I think that’s the third time this year that we’ve lost in the bottom half of the last inning.”

In the second game, Houghton started off with hot bats again. The Gremlins plated five runs in the first inning off starting pitcher Alex Zampese, two of them on a single by Norkol to take a big early advantage.

Negaunee did not go away without a fight though. The Miners put three runs on the scoreboard in the bottom of the first on a two-run double by Munson and another on a fielder’s choice by Robinson. Down just 5-3 in the third, Negaunee got rolling again as Richardson scored on an error and the Miners trailed by just one going into the fourth.

That’s when things really started going the Miners way. With one out, Richardson hit a two-run single and that was followed by a two run-double by Munson to the gap in left center. Now leading 8-5, Negaunee got one more run in the frame on an RBI single by Waterman.

“We pulled together and brought some more energy the second game,” Siik said. “It was nice to see. They were stinging the ball and getting good swings. We were patient, waiting on the ball and letting the ball travel.”

Zampese, who bounced back from that rough first inning, continued to keep the Gremlins off the board the rest of the way and the Miners salvaged a split. The impressive thing was that he did it despite not being able to see clearly.

“Alex said he couldn’t see,” Siik said. “He has glasses and he said they were fogging up and he took them off and really beared down. I was worried when he told me he couldn’t see and he took his glasses off, but he really commanded the strike zone really well after that.”

Zampese picked up the win after giving up five runs on four hits with four walks and two strikeouts in five innings. Bostwick was handed the loss for the Gremlins after surrendering nine runs on nine hits with three walks and two strikeouts.

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