Tag Archives: Stockton Ports

STORM, QUAKES, GRIZZLIES MOVE TO 2-0

The Lake Elsinore Storm had another big offensive night in Visalia on Wednesday as they slugged their way to an 11-5 win over the Rawhide. The Rancho Cucamonga Quakes kept pace in the South division and the Rancho Fresno Grizzlies also moved to 2-0 to take over the top spot in the North.

SCOREBOARD:

LAKE ELSINORE – 11
VISALIA – 5
Box

FRESNO – 10
SAN JOSE – 4
Box

STOCKTON – 8
MODESTO – 3
Box

RANCHO  CUCAMONGA – 12
INLAND EMPIRE – 6
Box

GRIZZLIES OPEN LOW-A WEST PLAY WITH A WIN

The Fresno Grizzlies splashed down in the Low-A West with a 5-3 road win over the San Jose Giants as minor league baseball returned for the first time since 2019. Lefty Breiling Eusebio went five innings for the win while Ezequiel Tovar rapped three hits including two doubles.

SCOREBOARD

FRESNO – 5
SAN JOSE – 3
Box

LAKE ELSINORE – 8
VISALIA  – 7
Box
Storm go ahead to stay in the top of the 8th on a two-run homer by Matthew Acosta 

MODESTO – 3
STOCKTON – 0
Box
Five Nuts pitchers combine for the shutout and Matt Sheffler blasts a two-run homer

RANCHO  CUCAMONGA – 3
INLAND EMPIRE – 1, Bottom 9
Box
Five Quakes pitchers hold the 66ers to one run on four hits

OPENING DAY 2021

Graphic: MiLB.com

Tuesday is the day, an Opening Day like no other. What was called the California League will shake off a one-year hiatus and get back to business as the Low-A West following MLB’s takeover/shakeup of MiLB. It’s still an eight-team league but things are quite different.

The Lancaster Jethawks are no more, victims of MLBs decision to trim 40 teams and drop down to 120 total. In their place are the Fresno Grizzlies, now a Colorado Rockies affiliate, who had been in AAA since the team’s inception in 1998.

And the Grizzlies aren’t alone in dropping levels as the league as a whole has been moved from the old Hi-A to the new Low-A West.

There are some new experimental rules in play for the 2021 season, with Low-A West being the testing ground for limiting the number of times a pitcher can step off the rubber or try a pickoff to two per plate appearance. That’s right, two. I’m curious to see how this plays out. There will also be a timer for limiting time between pitches, innings and pitching changes.

These are all things we’ll have to get used to and we certainly will. The ballpark experience is going to be a little different at the start with teams limiting the number of fans and other pandemic-conscious precautions in place.

But professional baseball is back in the ballparks and in the communities, just a few days from now, and the fans are ready. The Visalia Rawhide held a season ticket pickup event this past Monday and  drew a large crowd of enthusiastic fans. The rest of the league’s cities undoubtedly have this same energy as the season approaches and teams prepare to take the field for the first time since 2019.

Speaking of the Rawhide, they appear to have the title of Reigning California League Champions for eternity.

So, here we are. No more trips to The Hangar in Lancaster but the Grizzlies will join the fray and, while they will have several rivals close to home, the Low-A West folks will have a chance to get a taste of some of their genius marketing events.

The rosters are being released and on Tuesday it’s go time. I’m in Visalia for their first series against Lake Elsinore, not all six games but I’ll hit a few. Then the following week the Rawhide are in Fresno so I’ll be on board for some of that series. Then I’ll be looking to head out into the great wide-open of the Low-A West. I’ll wear a mask, I’ll wear a space suit, I’ll sit on top of the light tower, whatever the rules are, I’ll be in a minor league ballpark this week. It’s time.

 

THE NEW CAL LEAGUE

After a season that didn’t happen and an endless stream of rumors, the California League has finally gotten some official news regarding 2021 and beyond. MLB, having completed its process of evaluating all things minor league, sent out invites to 119 clubs today for major league affiliation. Here’s the bottom line:

Seven of the existing eight Cal League cities will keep their major league affiliation well into the future. The eighth club was ultimately revealed to be the Fresno Grizzlies, who will replace Lancaster as the Rockies’ affiliate.

And the entire bunch will move from advanced-A ball to lo-A.

There’s a lot to digest here. Looking at last year’s North division, Modesto (Mariners), San Jose (Giants), Stockton (A’s) and Visalia (Diamondbacks) are all intact. The South division, Lake Elsinore (Padres), Inland Empire (Angels) and Rancho Cucamonga (Dodgers) return with Lancaster no longer in the league.

With Fresno becoming the Rockies’ lo-A affiliate, there is a question of divisional alignment as Fresno clearly fits in the North but the South only has three remaining teams. With the seismic shifting that has gone on between MLB and MiLB this past year, today’s outcome makes the alignment issue rather insignificant.

The California League itself survived this shakeup quite well, aside from the devastating loss in Lancaster. Dropping from advanced-A to lo-A isn’t ideal, but it’s not the type of demotion Fresno is coping with.

The Grizzlies, for that  matter, didn’t take the demotion lying down. But with their affiliation with the Nationals over with and amidst MLB’s heavy-handed move to remake the MLB-MiLB relationship, they came out of this ok. Not  what they were hoping for, but ok.

On the  plus side for Fresno is the immediate regional rivalries, specifically with Visalia. The Rawhide are the closest team, about a 45-minute drive away, and the Grizzlies share Highway 99 with the Modesto Nuts and the Stockton Ports. A ton of people in the greater Fresno area make these drives from time to time already and they now have one more reason to make a reasonable road trip.

The travel for the team itself will no longer send them to the far-flung cities and states of the Pacific Coast League. I would expect that to be easier on the players and definitely easier on the  team employee who has to plan all that travel. The games are all in the same time zone now so it’s easier for fans to hear road games online or on the radio.

The  drop down multiple rungs of the ladder? Fresno is justified to be unhappy about that. But if it was a choice between  lo-A ball and unaffiliated or no baseball at all (it was), lo-A is going to work just fine. Is the team rooted in the community? Did the locals show up at the park regularly, and not just when an MLBer or top-ranked prospect was playing here? If the answers are yes, then the team will do well in the California League.

And the top-ranked prospects are still coming. Anyone who follows the draft will be happy to see the Nolan Arenado’s of the Rockies’ minor league world come through Fresno just as Arenado himself went through Modesto when they were a Rockies affiliate. Not all of them make every stop on the way up but there will be plenty.

All in all, today was a day to exhale. Not for Lancaster, of course. Here’s hoping they find another team such as one in the wooden bat league that MLB is launching. But the eight-team California League marches on, largely intact. No more wondering, hoping or dreading. We’ve still got all MLB West division teams as parent clubs, we still have the Dodgers-Giants rivalry with Rancho and San  Jose and now we have Visalia-Fresno. Collectively, for everyone who loves the California League, it could have been a whole lot worse. Roll with us Grizzlies, you’re gonna like it here.

 

 

PLAYER OF THE WEEK: MICKEY MCDONALD

Photo: MiLB.com

Stockton’s Mickey McDonald earned Cal League Offensive Player of the Week  honors with a line of .556/.600/.944 over five games. The Ports’ RF went 10-for-18 with three doubles and two triples against Visalia and San Jose. On Saturday he went 4-for-4 with two doubles, a triple and three runs scored as the Ports beat the Giants 4-3.

McDonald was drafted by the A’s in 2017 in the 18th round and split 36 games between the AZL and short-season Vermont. Last season he batted .284/.356/.353 at loA Beloit.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK: AUSTIN BECK

Photo: MiLB.com

Stockton OF Austin Beck was named Cal League Offensive Player of the Week as he batted .478/.536/.783 over six games last week. In going 11-for-23, the big game was at Lancaster where Beck went 3-for-4 with a double and his sixth homerun while driving in three. He’s currently fifth in the league in RBIs with 29.

Drafted in the first round by the A’s in 2017, Beck started out in the AZL and played 123 games at loA Beloit last year. He’s playing in the Cal League for  the first time at age 20 and is Oakland’s #5 prospect per MLB Pipeline.

FRIDAY NIGHT: RAWHIDE EXTEND LEAD, QUAKES DROP A GAME

The first- and second-place teams in each division faced each other tonight and, believe it or not…….NO RAIN! With time running out on the first half, the Visalia Rawhide looked to strengthen its commanding lead over the surging San Jose Giants while the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes had the Lancaster Jethawks in their rear-view mirror with three-game sets on tap for the weekend.

The Rawhide won late with an 8th-inning run pushed across by an Anfernee Grier sac fly to break a 4-4 deadlock. Reliever West Tunnell came on to close it out in the top of the 9th and allowed the tying run to reach base when San Jose’s Randy Norris led off with a single. A passed ball put Norris at second with no outs but Tunnell struck out the next three batters to seal the 5-4 win.

RHP Kyler Stout (2-0)  picked up the win with a scoreless inning in the 8th and Tunnell notched his sixth save while lowering his ERA to 1.69.

Grier homered earlier, his third, and knocked in three runs while 1B L.T. Tolbert had three hits for the Rawhide, who stretched their North division lead to 10 games.

In the South division Rancho Cucamonga traveled to Lancaster to try to protect a three-game lead over the Jethawks. The back-and-forth contest arrived in the bottom of the eighth with the Quakes holding a 6-4 lead, but Lancaster put four runs on the board to take an 8-4 lead to the top of the ninth. Salvador Justo closed it out with a 1-2-3 inning, including two strikeouts, for his sixth save. RHP Austin Moore (3-0) pitched a scoreless eighth inning to pick up the win.

Three different Jethawks had three hits apiece as the home team belted out 14 hits including 2B Taylor Snyder’s third homer of the season.

They’ll square off again Saturday and Sunday.

OTHER SCORES

STOCKTON – 4
INLAND EMPIRE – 1

INLAND EMPIRE – 2
STOCKTON – 3

(Both games seven innings)

LAKE ELSINORE – 8
MODESTO – 2

MacKenzie Gore improves to 4-1, 1.15 ERA with 5IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 6 K

 

WEEKEND ACTION

All four games have gone final with the race in the Cal League South tightening up while Visalia stretched its already big lead in the North. The Rawhide got a stand-out pitching performance from Josh Green with six strong innings as he protected a four-run first inning lead withoug much drama. Here are the finals from tonight’s action:

VISALIA – 7
RANCHO CUCAMONGA – 2
W – Josh Green (4-1), L – Michael Grove (0-1)

LANCASTER – 5
MODESTO – 4
W – Nate Harris (1-2), L – Scott Boches (1-3), S – Salvador Justo (3)
HR – Joe Rizzo (2)

STOCKTON – 2
INLAND EMPIRE – 7
W – Andrew Wantz (3-2), L – Pat Krall (0-2)

SAN JOSE – 4
LAKE ELSINORE – 6
W – Steven Wilson (2-0), L – Carlos Sano (0-1), S – Evan Miller (4)
HR – Esteury Ruiz (3)

The Rawhide now enjoy an eight game lead over Modesto in the North while Rancho Cucamonga has Lancaster just a game behind them with all four series continuing through Sunday. The Modesto Nuts send April Cal League Pitcher of the Month Ljay Newsome to the hill against Lancaster. See other matchups HERE.

EXTRA-INNING DRAMA

The first Friday night slate of games featured two extra-inning contests as Visalia needed 10 innings to get past San Jose and Modesto and Lancaster went 11. Padres #2 prospect MacKenzie Gore earned his first Cal League win for the Lake Elsinore Storm and Rancho Cucamonga knocked off Stockton.

SAN JOSE – 3
VISALIA – 4 (10 innings)
W – Brill (1-0)
L – Rubio (0-1)
Ranae Martinez knocks in the winning run on a sac fly in the 10th

LAKE ELSINORE – 4
INLAND EMPIRE – 0

W – Gore (1-0)
L – Bradish (0-1)
MacKenzie Gore goes five scoreless innings, striking out 8

RANCHO CUCAMONGA – 4
STOCKTON – 3

W – Salow (1-0)
L – Sheehan (0-1)
Jeran Kendall singles in the deciding run in the 7th as Quakes earn first win

MODESTO – 11
LANCASTER – 8 (11 innings)
W – Haberer (1-0)
L – Lorenzini (0-1)
Joe Rizzo doubles in a run in the 11th and comes around to score as the Nuts get three runs

 

 

OPENING NIGHT 2019

The 2019 California League season kicked off tonight with all eight teams in action, including the defending champions, the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes. It was a pretty good night for the road teams to spoil some home openers. These matchups will continue through the weekend with four-game series all around. Here are the final scores:

MODESTO – 7
LANCASTER -4
W Newsome (1-0), L Harris (0-1), SV Delaplane (1)

SAN JOSE – 7
VISALIA – 3
W Vizcaino (1-0), L Bain (0-1)

LAKE ELSINORE – 3
INLAND EMPIRE – 2
W Cosgrove (1-0), L Cole (0-1), S Miller (1)

RANCHO CUCAMONGA – 1
STOCKTON – 4
W Jeffieries (1-0), L Crawford (0-1), S Cochrane-Gill (1)