Worcester: L, 3-9 (BOX SCORE)

Brayan Bello allowed seven hits, three runs, walked two, struck out five, and let his pitch count get up to 88 (with just 49 strikes) without getting out of the fifth inning. The line by itself was fine for most pitchers. It wasn’t fine, though, for a guy already on a contract extension that many thought, myself included, solidified him as the future at the number two or three slot in the big league rotation. And, listen, Bello did keep the WooSox in the game. The offense even hung around. Tyler McDonough hit a homer in the fifth, the WooSox only had two at-bats with runners in scoring position but scored a runner with one of them, and Matt Thaiss had a clutch RBI knock, It wasn’t until Seth Martinez allowed five IronPigs (Phillies AAA) to score in the eighth when Iggy Suarez conceded the game and had Nate Hickey pitch the last out, officially turning this into laugher status.
Portland: W, 6-2 (BOX SCORE)
Gage Ziehl’s redemption arc continued against the Patriots (Yankees AA) on Friday night. He struck out nine and allowed four hits on two runs (one being a homer) as the bullpen carried the game the rest of the way scoreless. The Sea Dogs enjoyed a 5-for-10 night from the bottom of their lineup including a 3-run home run from nine-hole hitter Abhram Liendo. The Sea Dogs scored five in the second inning which would make Ziehl’s outing a lot more stress-free. Stanley Tucker is also on a nice five-game hit streak since joining the Double-A squad.
Greenville: L, 2-4 (BOX SCORE)
Greenville had just four hits on the night on the Jersey Shore (Phillies High-A) and just two of their starting nine had knocks, but that’s all the offense they needed behind Kyson Witherspoon’s five innings in which he struck eight Blue Claws out. Joe Vogatsky added five before Steven Brooks slammed the door. Ronny Hernandez, the catcher who’s been spending some time at first base, had what would become the put-away shot in the sixth inning with his sixth home run of the season.
After losing ten consecutive games, the RidgeYaks have now taken two in a row from the Nationals. This was a high-scoring affair that was just 3-1 after six innings. The Nats’ three defensive errors came back to haunt them as the RidgeYaks also bid them death by a thousand paper cuts, essentially singling them to death. Mayers’ eleven outs in relief, striking out six, was also huge.
For those of you still in front of a screen for the Red Sox, last night was a late night. Today will be the same, with first pitch at 10:10 PM. So, have a slumbering Saturday.
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