Late rally gives ‘Cats an Erie victory

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Brock Lundquist (Christina Carrillo)

ERIE, Penn. – Two ninth­-inning runs provided the difference between victory and defeat on Friday night as the New Hampshire Fisher Cats opened up their series with the Erie SeaWolves with a 7-5 victory.

The late rally came as one final pendulum swing in a fairly even contest.

Erie’s Derek Hill opened up the scoring with a solo home run in the first, with Cam Gibson’s RBI double adding another SeaWolf run before the inning’s close.

The Wolves added another run in the second, providing a lead that remained until four extra-base hits transformed into four runs for the visitor in the fifth.

Brock Lundquist drove home Forrest Wall in the fifth to make it 5-3, a New Hampshire lead that lasted until Kody Eaves’ two-run homer in the eighth.

Echoing their fourth-inning result, the Fisher Cats collected hits on four of their first five at-bats, with Dany Jimenez putting up a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the night to seal the win.

That ninth inning gave Jimenez his second save of the year while Corey Copping climbed to 1-1 with his three innings of relief.

Ethan DeCaster fell to 3-2, pitching Erie’s final four innings and not allowing a single baserunner until the ninth.

Santiago Espinal joined Lundquist and Chad Spanberger in the two-hit column for New Hampshire with Lundquist also driving in three of the ‘Cats five runs.

Isaac Paredes went 3-for-3 with a run, walk and RBI for the Wolves, with Hill adding another hit along with the homer.

Both teams return on Saturday with first pitch scheduled for 7:05 p.m.

 

About this Author

Andrew Sylvia

Assistant EditorManchester Ink Link

Born and raised in the Granite State, Andrew Sylvia has written approximately 10,000 pieces over his career for outlets across Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont. On top of that, he's a licensed notary and licensed to sell property, casualty and life insurance, he's been a USSF trained youth soccer and futsal referee for the past six years and he can name over 60 national flags in under 60 seconds according to that flag game app he has on his phone, which makes sense because he also has a bachelor's degree in geography (like Michael Jordan). He can also type over 100 words a minute on a good day.