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Rock Canyon routs Grandview 12-0
BY ALEX K.W. SCHULTZ SPECIAL TO COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
If the Rock Canyon baseball team continues to do what it did on April 12 against Grandview the rest of the season, watch out, 5A Continental League.
In their second-to-last nonleague game of the year, the Jaguars scored early, they scored often and they scored emphatically.
Led by Chase Jaworsky’s two-home-run day, the Jaguars pummeled Grandview 12-0 in a ve-inning, mercy-rule a air on their home diamond.
Jaworsy’s two dingers — a bomb to straightaway center eld and a moonshot deposited over the rightcenter eld fence — gave the senior seven homers on the season, which is second-most in Colorado. Jaden Clause also smacked a home run — the junior’s rst of the year.
Combined, Rock Canyon hit .524 (11-for-21) against the Wolves, who were forced to burn through four pitchers as the Jaguars teed o all afternoon.
“We can hit the ball,” fthyear Rock Canyon coach Allan Dyer said. “We work on it every day. It’s the focal point of our practices every day.”
Added Jaworsky, a threeyear varsity starter: “All the boys were hot today. We saw the ball well. We’re a good team.” e Jaguars got the scoring party started early, sending 11 batters to the plate, scoring seven runs and knocking out starting pitcher Justin Dean — all in the rst inning.
Matthew Shipley’s tworun triple to the right-center eld gap on a 3-2 count spotted the Jaguars a quick 4-0 lead. Next up was Zach Perry, whose laser-beam triple o the left eld fence scored Shipley. David Brabb and Will Garduno also had RBI singles in the opening frame.
“Once we’re on, we’re hot and we stay hot,” Jaworsky said. “We don’t go cold.”
And stay hot the Jaguars did. ree more runs in the second inning — courtesy of Jaworsky’s rst big y and a two-run double smashed to left eld by Manaav Bhatt — stretched Rock Canyon’s lead to 10-0.
Jaworsky’s and Clause’s third-inning home runs rounded out the scoring.
While the Jaguars’ (8-3) hitters were doing damage at the plate, their pitchers were shutting down the Wolves (6-5) on the mound.
Starting pitcher Austin Bowker threw 41 pitchers — 28 of them going for strikes — and surrendered just two hits, one of which was an in eld single in the rst inning. Bowker also tallied four strikeouts.
Chase Goode and Eric Hagner also got some pitching work in and combined to give up only two hits.
“To keep it small, we want to win as many innings of every game as we can. en the games will take care of