Monks win GNAC, Sanborn wins 500th
| Saint Joseph's (Maine)captured the program's third GNAC
Championship in four seasons. Saint Joseph's (Maine) sports information |
STANDISH, ME – Top-seeded Saint Joseph's (Maine) (29-11, 12-2 GNAC) negated a 6-2 deficit with six unanswered runs and defeated #3 Suffolk (20-19, 9-5 GNAC), 8-6, in the GNAC Championship at Larry Mahaney Diamond on Sunday afternoon. Monks pinch-hitter Dan Brown broke a six-all tie in the top of the ninth with an RBI double and later scored an insurance run on an infield error during the final frame.
St. Joe's, which defeated #4 Lasell by a 13-9 score on Thursday
and topped #2 Johnson & Wales yesterday, 4-0, had two
opportunities to defeat Suffolk at Mahaney Diamond today. The
Monks, who played as the away team this afternoon due to tourney
regulations, required just one contest to dispose of the Rams and
captured the program's third GNAC Championship in four seasons as a
league member in the process.
With the win, Saint Joseph's collects the NCAA DIII Tournament
berth awarded to the GNAC Tournament victor. The Monks, who won
three games in the NCAA tourney last spring, will be making their
fifth appearance in the NCAA New England Regional Tournament in the
last six years.
| Head Coach Will Sanborn won his 500th game in the
Monk's title contest. Saint Joseph's (Maine) sports information |
Not to be lost in all the excitement is the fact that today's
win was the 500th victory in Head Coach Will Sanborn's esteemed
career. Coach Sanborn, now 500-284-6 (.638) in 19 seasons as the
Monks' skipper, is just the second coach in SJC Athletics history
to reach the 500-win mark. Recent SJC Athletics Hall of Fame
inductee Rick Simonds posted a 504-187 (.729) in 23 years as the
men's basketball coach and one season as the softball clipboard
carrier.
For the Monks, second baseman Chris Campbell went 4-5 with a run
and two RBI and center fielder Nate Martin was 2-5 with a run, a
double and an RBI.
Starting pitcher Mason Roberge yielded six runs (three earned) off
six hits and fanned a pair in 4.1 innings but did not factor into
the game decision. Freshman righthander Joe Gruntkosky tossed 3.2
scoreless innings with three K's and four hits allowed and improved
to 3-1 on the year while Tyler Laverriere picked up his first
career save with a strikeout in a scoreless ninth.
For the Rams, senior right fielder Andrew Babb went 3-5 with an
RBI and senior center fielder Nick Travelyn was 2-4 in the
loss.
Suffolk starter Tim Belanger allowed five runs (three earned) off
seven hits and a walk in 5.2 innings and reliever Charles Kilgore
gave up a run off a hit and a free pass in 1.1 innings of work.
Rams ace Alex Torres was hit with the loss after allowing two runs
(one earned) off four hits and a hit batsman in two innings of
relief.
Following the completion of the championship contest the 2011 GNAC
All-Tournament Team was announced. SJC starting pitcher Chad
Rafferty, who tossed a complete-game shutout with 12 strikeouts
in a 4-0 win over JWU yesterday, was selected as the
Tournament Most Valuable Player while Campbell – who hit .733
(11-15) in the playoffs, Brown and Ian Lee collected all-tourney
honors for the Monks.
Matt Sliney, Mark Annese and Joe Cintolo garnered honors for
Suffolk while Lasell's Conor Cavanagh and Bobby Stachura and JWU's
Nick Alosco and Teddy Katz also received All-Tournament
mention.
The Monks looked to go ahead by way of the long ball early in
today's title bout, but a westerly breeze knocked down deep flies
hit by Mike Pratt and Alex Lorenc as both balls were snagged for
outs in the first two innings.
The wind would not hamper a line-drive blast hit by Suffolk left
fielder Stephen Schultz, however, as the rookie outfielder turned
on a Roberge offering for a three-run jack to put the Rams on top
in the bottom of the fourth.
The Monks immediately responded with two runs off three hits and a
Suffolk miscue in the top of the fifth to make it a 3-2 game.
Campbell and left fielder Sam Butts reached with one-out singles
and both runners scored on a single hit by Todd Keneborus. Campbell
scored easily, but Butts scampered home and Keneborus reached
second when Travelyn, the Rams' center fielder, overran the ball in
the outfield.
Suffolk answered with three runs in the top of the fifth to take a
6-2 advantage. First baseman Michael Muse led off with a single and
wound up on third when Roberge tossed a double-play feed, on a
ground ball hit by designated hitter K.C. McCarthy, into center
field. With runners on the corners, Cintolo singled to right-center
to send Muse across the plate and Roberge to the showers in favor
of Gruntkosky, who fanned the first batter he faced but gave up
run-scoring singles to Babb and Annese before inducing a fly out to
end the inning.
Unfazed, St. Joe's went right back to work in the top of the sixth
when the Royal Blue scored three runs off two hits and a Suffolk
error to cut the deficit down to 6-5. Martin rapped a 2-0 pitch
down the left field line for an RBI double and Campbell plated
Achorn, who reached on an error, and Martin with a single to
center.
The Monks tied the game in the top of the seventh when Keneborus
reached with a leadoff walk and later scored on a single to right
off the bat of Lee.
Saint Joseph's squandered an opportunity to grab the lead with
bases loaded and one out in the top of the eighth. Torres, who
started the inning in place of Kilgore, worked his way out of the
jam by inducing a pair of harmless outs.
In the meantime, Gruntkosky held the Suffolk bats at bay during
the seventh and eighth innings and the Monks headed into the top of
the ninth with measureable momentum after Travelyn whiffed and
pinch runner Danny Gunn was caught stealing to end the bottom of
the eighth with a strike-out, throw-out double play.
Pratt, who had hit the ball hard with nothing to show for it in
prior at bats, led off the ninth frame with a line-drive double to
right center, but it seemed he would be stranded at second as
Torres, who tossed eight innings on Friday, fanned the next two SJC
batters. With two down and Pratt in scoring position, Coach Sanborn
tapped Brown to pinch hit for Brandon Chase, who entered the game
as a pinch runner for Alex Markakis '14 (Lynnfield, MA) in the
eighth. The wily veteran came up with the season's biggest hit, a
double to right-center on a 2-2 pitch, to finally send Pratt home
and put the Monks on top by a 7-6 margin.
Brown, who had not appeared in a game since April 23rd, used some
old-fashioned hustle and heads-up play to score his team's eighth
run of the game. SJC shortstop Dan Achorn '12 (Bow, NH) hit a
ground ball to second but reached on an errant toss and Brown,
sprinting all the way, scored from second base without a throw.
Laverriere plunked a pair of Suffolk hitters in the bottom of the
ninth but worked out of the jam with a strikeout and a tailor-made
6-4-3 double play to end the game.
Saint Joseph's, which won North Atlantic Conference championships
in 2005, 2006 and 2007, is now 22-2 (.917) in conference tournament
play since 2005. St. Joe's and Suffolk have met in the GNAC title
game in each of the last four years and the Monks' only playoff
losses have come at the hands of the Rams, who topped the Royal
Blue twice in the 2009 tourney en route to the GNAC crown.
The Monks have now won eight straight contests and own a 27-4
record since returning from their spring trip in mid-March.












