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April 19, 2006
St. Albans’ pitchers go deep — way deep By KEVIN HILGERS Current Staff Writer
Matt Petros/The Current
Georgetown Day junior Joe Bubar, left, caught, pitched and hit a go-ahead grand-slam Friday when his team upset Maret.
Bubar, GDS baseball stun Maret By KEVIN HILGERS Current Staff Writer
Nobody expects Georgetown Day’s baseball team to get a win over Maret — let alone a comeback win. And nobody expects junior infielder Joe Bubar to hit home runs — let alone clutch home GDS runs. So much for those expectations. After his team fell Maret behind by as many as 10 runs early in the game Friday, Bubar rocketed a fifth-inning grand slam — his first home run of the season — that put the Mighty Hoppers ahead all the way to a historic 16-15 victory over Maret. “I’m more of a singles guy,” Bubar said. “That was just like, the best feeling ever. I wasn’t expecting it.” Neither was Georgetown Day coach Pete Robinson. “Who knew? Who knew Joe Bubar’s going to hit a grand slam?” he said laughing. “I’m glad he did.” Making the story of his grand slam even more compelling was
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that Bubar started the game at catcher — the first time he had played that position in high school — and pitched two innings in relief. “He’s a workhorse,” Robinson said. Before Bubar’s clutch at-bat, Maret had blown the game wide open after the first three-and-a-half innings. Maret sophomore Liam Duffy, starting at pitcher for the first time in his career, threw three strikeouts in three hitless innings. The Frogs (42, 2-2 Mid-Atlantic Athletic Conference) knocked out four home runs and led 11-1 after batting in the top of the fourth inning. That’s when Robinson dispensed some of his own brand of inspiration. “My philosophy? I get mad,” he said. “And they know that.” It seemed to work. “We felt bad because we felt like we were letting [our coach] down, like we weren’t living up to our expectations,” said junior Gabe Rust-Tierney, who as the starting pitcher got rocked by the Maret bats but came back to score four RBIs. “We were just able to focus in and
bounce back.” In the bottom of the fourth, Georgetown Day (3-6, 2-4) loaded the bases. Matt Bradley hit a single to left field, bringing Eli Blum in from second to score. Nick Efron then singled and eventually made his way around the bases, thanks to a walk and two errors by the Frogs. With the threerun fourth inning, the comeback was on. “This game keeps you honest,” Maret coach Antoine Williams said. “You’ve got to do the right things out there and make the plays, of course. Towards the end of the game, we didn’t make enough plays.” Georgetown Day did make enough plays, but just barely. Maret sophomore Sam Mulroy launched a two-run home run in the seventh inning to cut Georgetown Day’s lead to 16-13. The Frogs scored twice more to cut it to one. But, with the tying run at third and the go-ahead run at second, senior Josh Idaszak grounded out to first. That prompted winning Georgetown Day pitcher Matt See GDS/Page 14
St. Albans sophomore Danny Hultzen is usually overshadowed by his better-known teammates on the mound. His counterparts are bound for Division I college programs next year. Clay Bartlett is headed for Columbia University, Will Krasne will go to Stanford University, and Jeremiah Meiners plans to enroll at Coastal Carolina University. Before they go, the threesome is making St. Albans one of the toughest rotations in the area to hit. Nevertheless, the Bulldogs have made room for one more hurler. Hultzen exemplified the depth of the Bulldogs’ acclaimed pitching staff Saturday. He fired off seven strikeouts and allowed only one run in just over five innings to win 5-3 over Avalon at SatterleeHenderson Field. Then, after coach David Baad called the left-hander off for a rest, another sophomore, Francis Burke, excelled in relief to preserve the win. “There’s always been a lot of
Matt Petros/The Current
Sophomore Danny Hultzen complements St. Albans’ strong senior pitching. hype about Jeremiah and Will,” Hultzen said. “But me and Francis both being sophomores, we can be the future.” It was Hultzen’s first start and second appearance on the mound this season. He gives the Bulldogs See St. Albans/Page 14
Maret gives nothing to Sidwell By IAN THOMS Current Staff Writer
Before the top of the softball game’s fifth inning Friday, Sidwell coach Ann Ellen asked her Maret counterpart the grade level of his new pitcher. When she got her answer — a freshman — she just shook her head and chuckled. The question came after another young Maret hurler had thoroughly confused Ellen’s batters for the game’s first four innings.
Sophomore Janie Abernethy held Sidwell scoreless and allowed just four hits before she moved to second base in the fifth inning. Taking over on Maret the mound was the freshman, Lauren Becker. And her situaSidwell tion could not have been better, thanks to Abernethy and the Maret hitters, who had set her up with a 10-0 See Maret/Page 14
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Bill Petros/The Current
Junior Rachel Profit puts the tag down on a Sidwell baserunner. She also hit a triple in the game.