Stompers Tie Four Records In 17-5 Rout Of Pacifics

Joel Carranza had a record-setting night as the Stompers tied four team records in a 17-5 blowout win over the Pacifics.Danielle Putonen/Sonoma Stompers

Joel Carranza had a record-setting night as the Stompers tied four team records in a 17-5 blowout win over the Pacifics.

Danielle Putonen/Sonoma Stompers

Tim Livingston, Director of Broadcasting & Media Relations

It's good to let your bats do the talking when looking to bounce back after a tough loss where tempers were raised. It's even better when you get to do it against your biggest rivals. It's the best when you get to set records while doing it.

A night after the San Rafael Pacifics soundly defeated the Sonoma Stompers, the Stompers roared back with an overall offensive attack that was the best single performance in team history, a 17-5 drubbing of the Pacifics where four team records were tied.

As a team, Sonoma's (5-3 2nd half, 31-14 overall) 17 runs tied the most runs scored in a single game, matching the number scored in their game against the Vallejo Admirals back on June 7 of this season. The 20 hits tied the record set back on July 17  in that crazy 16-5 loss against the Admirals.

In addition to the team records, Joel Carranza had the single most impressive performance by a player in the history of the franchise. The second-year Stomper went 5-for-6 in the game with two home runs and seven RBI, tying Mark Hurley's mark for hits in a single game (July 17 vs. Vallejo) and Isaac Wenrich's mark for RBI (June 7 vs. Vallejo). The night extended his hitting streak to 14 games and put his triple slash mark at .364/.406/.582 for the season with nine home runs.

The entire offense started off hot and didn't really cool down. Against Ryan DeJesus (2-4), the Stompers sent 10 batters to the plate in the first inning and had seven hits, bringing home five runs and putting the Stompers ahead basically for good. They scored in each of the first four innings, all against DeJesus, to go up 10-0 before the Pacifics got their first run. Of course, that run was on a Matt Chavez solo homer, his 21st of the season to extend his single-season home run record.

Yet even with the league's best hitter doing what he normally did, the Pacifics offense was shut down by Gregory Paulino (5-2). After allowing 14 runs in his previous two starts at Albert Park, Paulino was terrific in his seven innings on Saturday, allowing only two runs on seven hits with two walks and five strikeouts. The right-hander has struck out 20 batters in his last 21 1/3 innings and has allowed only four runs with 19 baserunners (15 hits, 4 walks).

Elsewhere for the Stompers, Kristian Gayday had a terrific game with a 4-for-5 night that saw him come to the plate in the eight with a chance at a natural cycle. Instead, Gayday dropped a single down the right-field line to just miss out on another historic event for the Stompers. It was Gayday's best night as a Stomper this season.

Gered Mochizuki extended his own hitting streak to 13 games with a 2-for-5 night and Brennan Metzger went 3-for-5 with a walk. Yuki Yasuda added two doubles and Mark Hurley went 2-for-5 with 2 RBI. Both Metzger and Carranza each scored four times.

With the major bounceback win on Saturday, the Stompers will try and take both the series and the week-long stretch against the Pacifics, as Paul Hvozdovic will get the start for Sonoma. First pitch is set for 1:05 with the radio broadcast beginning at 12:50 on StompersBaseball.com and the TuneIn app for mobile devices.

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2-Out Runs Doom Stompers In 11-4 Loss

Gered Mochizuki had two hits on Friday night to extend his hitting streak to 11 games.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Gered Mochizuki had two hits on Friday night to extend his hitting streak to 11 games.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Tim Livingston, Director of Broadcasting & Media Relations

2-out runs are always talked about as the most important runs a team can get, mainly because the team that gets them takes what could be a negative (In this case, the end of the inning) and turns it into a positive.

So when a team scores 11 of them in a game, well, maybe it's just time you tip your cap and move on to the next one.

That's exactly what happened to the Sonoma Stompers Friday night, as the San Rafael Pacifics scored all 11 of their runs with two outs to cruise to an 11-4 victory in the opening game of the team's weekend series at Albert Park in San Rafael.

The exclamation point for San Rafael (3-4 2nd half, 22-23 overall) came in the eighth inning as Matt Chavez hit his 20th home run of the season, breaking the single-season record for the Pacific Association of 19 set by Sonoma's (4-3, 30-13) Joel Carranza in 2014.

The three-run blast off Jon Rand, Jr. was the third home run in four games against the Stompers this week for Chavez, who broke the record with 33 games left to play in the season. Should he stick around the entire season, he could obliterate the record much like Carranza did last season, when Carranza broke the old league record of 11.

Sonoma had the initial lead at 2-0, but with two outs in the second, San Rafael took the lead for good with a three-run burst against starter Eric Schwieger (5-2). They repeated the effort in the third with three more runs, and the rout was on from there.

The Stompers offense that had been so proficient at Arnold Field (They scored 31 runs in the series and outscored the Pacifics by six runs) was held in check by Nick DeBarr (3-4) Friday night. After the initial burst, DeBarr settled down and retired 12 straight batters through the first four innings, giving his offense ample opportunities to take care of business.

There was some controversy after the play that ended the third inning. On a David Kiriakos single, Johnny Bekakis was thrown out at home on a great throw by Taylor Eads, but San Rafael manager Ryan Kavanaugh thought that Wenrich had blocked the plate as he was going for the ball. The home plate umpire disagreed and Stompers catcher Isaac Wenrich got into an argument with Kavanaugh, were teammates from both sides held their respective teammates back as they headed to the dugouts.

When Wenrich led off the fifth inning, he was plunked by DeBarr with the first pitch, seemingly a retaliation for the argument that occurred earlier. Words were exchanged between Wenrich and DeBarr as Wenrich went to first, but it was nothing more than that. Later that inning, DeBarr also hit leadoff man Brennan Metzger, and while it didn't look intentional, a warning was issued nonetheless to curb any ideas of escalating the situation further. No other issues occurred the rest of the game.

Sonoma's offense got a good night from Gered Mochizuki, who went 2-for-4 to extend his hitting streak to 11 games. Carranza hit a solo home run in the sixth, his team-leading seventh home run of the season.

The Stompers will return to Albert Park on Saturday for game two of the weekend series, as Gregory Paulino is set to take the mound for Sonoma. First pitch is set for 5:05 p.m. with the radio broadcast beginning at 4:50 on both StompersBaseball.com and the TuneIn mobile app.

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Stompers Take Series From Pacifics With 8-6 Win

Matt Hibbert was a terror on the base paths Thursday night, stealing four bases to raise his league-leading total to 26.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Matt Hibbert was a terror on the base paths Thursday night, stealing four bases to raise his league-leading total to 26.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Tim Livingston, Director of Broadcasting & Media Relations

Sean Conroy had seen Matt Chavez two times previously in Thursday night's game. For the right-hander who came in as a fireman way back in the fifth inning, Chavez was going to be his ultimate test throughout the rest of the game. He knew he would see Chavez twice at the very least, and come the ninth inning, there might be a chance the league's most dangerous hitter could come to the plate with the game possibly on the line.

So it came as no surprise that when it came to the most important at-bat in Thursday night's rubber match between the Sonoma Stompers and the San Rafael Pacifics that it was Chavez who stood in the batter's box with two outs, two on and a two-run deficit to make up.

After a meeting with manager Takashi Miyoshi and Isaac Wenrich, it was clear that Conroy was determined not to let what happened in Chavez's last at-bat happen again, when he hit a three-run homer just over the fence in left to tie Joel Carranza's single-season home run record with his 19th bomb of the year.

So he attacked. Down and in with fastballs, he went right after Chavez and dared him to try and do what he did two innings earlier. Instead, on a 1-2 pitch, Chavez swung right over the top of a fastball. The game was over. Conroy pumped his fist. Wenrich, as he always does with the pitcher after a victory, greeted Conroy with one of his trademark hugs. Sonoma took the rubber match, 8-6.

Sonoma (4-2 2nd half, 30-13) got out to a great start early against Patrick Conroy (2-4), scoring twice in the second inning before Conroy left the game with an undisclosed injury. Dan Rogers came in but fared no better, giving up two more runs in the third and three in the fourth inning.

The three runs Sonoma scored in the fourth were a good answer to San Rafael's (2-4 2nd half, 21-23) three runs in the top half from the team's first three-run homer from newcomer Jake Taylor, which ended Matt Walker's great run to start the game. Walker allowed two baserunners to begin the fifth before giving way to Sean Conroy (3-1), who pitched the rest of the way.

The Stompers offense got big nights from Matt Hibbert (3-for-5, RBI, R, 4 SB) and Joel Carranza (2-for-5, 2 2B, 3 RBI) as Sonoma had 13 hits on the night. Taylor Eads added his seventh double in only his eighth game with the Stompers.

Sonoma's victory now puts them atop the standings of the Pacific Association's second half standings alone. Vallejo's 10-8 victory over Pittsburg tonight moved the Diamonds into a tie with the Admirals for second place one game behind the Stompers.

After their short time at home, Sonoma will hit the road for six games beginning Friday. Their first series will be against the very same Pacifics team, with the first pitch for the weekend series opener set for 7:05 p.m. The radio broadcast will begin at 6:50 p.m. on StompersBaseball.com and the TuneIn app for mobile devices.

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Slugfest Sees Stompers Fall Short Of Pacifics, 14-13

Joel Carranza had three hits on Wednesday night including the game-tying hit in the seventh that brought Sonoma all the way back from a seven run deficit.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Joel Carranza had three hits on Wednesday night including the game-tying hit in the seventh that brought Sonoma all the way back from a seven run deficit.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Tim Livingston, Director of Broadcasting & Media Relations

Back on June 3rd, the Sonoma Stompers were down seven runs to the Pittsburg Diamonds. It was 9-2 in the fourth inning, and it looked bleak for the home team. Yet somehow, someway, the Stompers found their way back. It took them extra innings, but once Mark Hurley crossed home plate on a wild pitch in the 10th, Sonoma had their biggest comeback of the year.

Fast forward to Wednesday night against the San Rafael Pacifics. Down 13-6 later in the game, this time entering the bottom of the fifth inning, the Stompers were again down seven runs. This time, it was against a team that had their number coming into the game. The last time the Stompers played the Pacifics, San Rafael took five of seven over a week long series.

None of that mattered to the Stompers. They clawed back into the game with seven unanswered runs, with an RBI single by Joel Carranza tying up the game in the seventh inning, turning what looked like a certain blowout into a two-inning game. Unfortunately for Sonoma, their comeback was all for naught, as Maikel Jova's liner to center fell just in front of Matt Hibbert in the ninth, as Zack Pace scored to give San Rafael a wild 14-13 win.

Sonoma (3-2 2nd half, 29-13) had a chance in the ninth inning against Michael Kershner, as Yuki Yasuda walked and an error by newcomer Jake Taylor at third put runners at the corners with two outs and Daniel Baptista coming to the plate. Fighting off numerous pitches from the hard-throwing closer, Baptista made contact but bounced out to shortstop to end Sonoma's hopes.

It was a tough enough game for Sonoma to try and come back one time, let alone the multiple times they attempted to in such an offensively charged game. Yet they broke through thanks to a complete attack all throughout their lineup, as all nine starters had at least one hit. Yasuda (2-for-5, 2B), Carranza (3-for-6), Andrew Parker (3-for-4, 2-run HR) and Gered Mochizuki (2-for-3) all had multi-hit games.

Sonoma's 16 hits were the fourth-most hits in a game this season, as San Rafael had 19 hits in their highest run output since an 18-3 drubbing of Vallejo on June 27. Sonoma's 13 runs were the most since their first half-clinching victory back on July 12.

The Stompers will come back to Arnold Field tomorrow night for their series finale with the Pacifics. First pitch is set for 6:05 p.m. It will be the second night of Sonoma’s Women’s Week, where female fans get a great discount on tickets in the premium reserved ($12) and grandstand ($10) that includes a glass of wine for each seat purchased.

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Former Giants Farmhand Brennan Metzger Signs With Stompers

Brennan Metzger adds even more talent to the best group of outfielders in the Pacific Association.Danielle Putonen/Sonoma Stompers

Brennan Metzger adds even more talent to the best group of outfielders in the Pacific Association.

Danielle Putonen/Sonoma Stompers

Tim Livingston, Director of Broadcasting & Media Relations

On Tuesday, the Sonoma Stompers agreed to terms with former San Francisco Giants farmhand Brennan Metzger. The 25-year-old from San Deigo made his independent baseball debut that night and went 1-for-3 with an RBI double and a walk in Sonoma’s 10-5 win over San Rafael.

Metzger was a 22nd round draft pick by the San Francisco Giants in 2012 out of Long Beach State, the same alma mater as star Stompers outfielder Matt Hibbert. He played across four levels of the Giants minor league system in his three seasons with the organization.

Over those three seasons, Metzger hit .256/.416/.372 in 110 games. He walked 56 times and struck out only 40 times in 370 plate appearances. In 2013, Metzger was diagnosed with ulcerative colitis, which caused him to miss the entire season.

Metzger’s highest level that he reached in the Giants system was High-A San Jose, one of three stops he made this season prior to signing with Sonoma. An outfielder by trade, Metzger can play at all three positions and is noted for his speed and plate discipline.

At Long Beach State, Metzger played with Hibbert in 2010 and 2011. Metzger hit .288/.389/.399 in his four seasons with the Dirtbags from 2009-2012 with 48 doubles and 42 stolen bases.

The Stompers return to Arnold Field this evening for game two of their three game series with the San Rafael Pacifics. First pitch is set for 6:05 p.m. with the gates opening at 5 p.m.

It’s also Women’s Week at Arnold Field, as female fans ages 21 and older will enjoy discounted prices on seats behind home plate. Premium reserve seats will be only $12 and grandstand seats will cost $10, with each ticket price including a glass of wine complements of the Stompers.

Tickets begin at just $4 and can be purchased online at StompersBaseball.com or at the Stompers Fan Shop, located at 234 W. Napa St. in beautiful downtown Sonoma. Tickets can also be purchased at the gates at Arnold Field before any home game. For more information, call the Stompers at (707) 938-7277 or email the team at info@stompersbaseball.com.

Wenrich's Grand Slam Highlights 7-Run 5th In 10-5 Win Over Pacifics

Isaac Wenrich celebrates his grand slam with Yuki Yasuda that was part of Sonoma's seven-run fifth inning on Tuesday night.Danielle Putonen/Sonoma Stompers

Isaac Wenrich celebrates his grand slam with Yuki Yasuda that was part of Sonoma's seven-run fifth inning on Tuesday night.

Danielle Putonen/Sonoma Stompers

Tim Livingston, Director of Broadcasting & Media Relations

Max Beatty had been unhittable for four innings on Tuesday night. Well, maybe not literally unhittable, but the way the Sonoma Stompers looked at the plate against him, he might as well have been unhittable. Save for two hits from Gered Mochizuki in those innings, Sonoma had no answer for the hard-throwing right-hander for the San Rafael Pacifics.

Yet somehow in the fifth, it all came undone for Beatty. Pitches were left up, the Stompers were attacking him earlier in the count, fastballs were being raked all over the field. Then, he came to the plate.

It had been almost a month since Isaac Wenrich had hit a homer. June 25, to be precise, in a game against the Vallejo Admirals. So there he was, with the bases loaded in a 3-2 game where Sonoma had just taken the lead on a Yuki Yasuda two-run double. Beatty was trying to work quickly to keep Sonoma from getting comfortable in the box.

That did not deter Wenrich. On the first pitch, he got a pitch up and on the outer part of the plate that he went with to left field. Arnold Field's notoriously short porch came calling, and with a failing leap to grab it by San Rafael's Johnny Bekakis, the next instant was bedlam.

In one swing, Sonoma had its first grand slam of the season, put a huge dent in an adversary that had shut the team down previously on multiple occasions, and for Wenrich, a near month-long weight off his back.

It was the major highlight of Sonoma's 10-5 victory over the Pacifics on Tuesday, the first game of three between the two teams at Arnold Field this week. In that fifth inning, seven runs came across while 11 batters strode to the plate, tied for the most runs scored in an inning this year with the lucky seven in the second inning of Sonoma's 11-8 win over Pittsburg on June 26.

Before that inning occurred, the pitching matchup was as good as any in the Pacific Association this year, with Beatty (4-2) and Paul Hvozdovic (5-0) getting into their respective strides by the time the fateful inning came around. San Rafael (1-3 2nd half, 20-22) had opened things up in a big way with Jesse Chavez's league-leading 18th homer of the season in the first and an RBI double by Bekakis in the second.

The double left runners at second and third with nobody out, but Hvozdovic retired the next three batters in order to put the Pacifics early run-scoring aspirations at bay. Sonoma (3-1 2nd half, 29-12) then spent their first two times through the order trying to figure Beatty out before going nuts in the fifth with the big inning.

The Pacifics did have a chance in the seventh inning against Hvozdovic, as a Jesse Chavez single loaded the bases with one in an 8-4 game. Representing the tying run, Maikel Jova chopped a ball back to Hvozdovic, who came home to force out Zack Pace. Wenrich's ensuing throw was wild down to first, which allowed Danny Gonzalez to score and make it 8-5.

However, Chavez followed Gonzalez home by running through a stop sign from manager Matt Kavanaugh, and by the time Chavez put on the breaks, he was caught in a run down and eventually tagged out by TJ Gavlik to end the inning and what would end up being San Rafael's last chance to catch the Stompers.

When Matt Hibbert hit his third home run in his last seven games to score the final run of the game, Sonoma's league-leading offense had scored double-digit runs for the 10th time this season, making it easy pickings for Erik Gonsalves to finish off the Pacifics in the final two innings.

Sonoma got multi-hit nights from Mochizuki (3-for-4, BB, R, RBI), Hibbert (2-for-5, HR, 2 R, 2 RBI), Wenrich (2-for-4, HR, 2 R, 4 RBI) and Gavlik (2-for-4, 2 R). Newcomer Brennan Metzger, a former San Francisco Giants farmhand, knocked home a run with his first hit as a Stomper in the seventh.

Hvozdovic went seven innings and allowed five runs (four earned) on nine hits with two walks and six strikeouts. He threw 64 of 87 pitches for strikes.

Sonoma will try and make it four out of five to begin the second half on Wednesday night with Mike Jackson, Jr. on the hill. It will be the second night of Sonoma's Women's Week, where female fans get a great discount on tickets in the premium reserved ($12) and grandstand ($10) that includes a glass of wine for each seat purchased.

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Moneyball – Sonoma Style

Ben Lindbergh, left, and Sam Miller, right, check over the Sonoma Stompers lineup for statistics that could help bring them a league championship.Christian Keller/Sonoma Index-Tribune

Ben Lindbergh, left, and Sam Miller, right, check over the Sonoma Stompers lineup for statistics that could help bring them a league championship.

Christian Keller/Sonoma Index-Tribune

Originally Published: Sonoma Index-Tribune

Christian Keller, Index-Tribune Staff Writer

You probably won’t see Brad Pitt, or even Jonah Hill for that matter, at a Sonoma Stompers baseball game this season. But there’s a good chance you will spot one of two young men in the stands, the press box, or the bullpen, mining the game for elusive bits of information that are adding up to a championship season.

The 2011 movie “Moneyball” popularized the arcane science of sabermetrics. Now Ben Lindbergh, 28, and Sam Miller, 35, have been applying sabermetrics to Stompers ball since the beginning of the season as operations managers for the independent league team – the first such analytically-focused personnel to work with a team at this level, as far as anyone knows.

Saber-what? No, it’s not a sharp-edged sword for slicing through the plethora of factoids any single game generates, but a deeper dive into those stats to come up with some measures that add to our understanding of the role individual players have in forming a winning team, or a winning season.

That Miller and Lindbergh are avid baseball fans goes without saying – Lindbergh was an All-Star second base softball player, Miller more into the Fantasy Baseball side of things. But obviously, somewhere along the line they became fervent statistics geeks.

“The Bill James definition of sabermetrics is the search for objective knowledge about baseball,” said Lindbergh when we spoke with both him and Miller by phone last week. He’s referring to the widely recognized founder of the field, whose 1977 self-published “The Bill James Baseball Abstract” started the trend toward high-level baseball statistical analysis. His annual book spawned the present-day “Baseball Prospectus” book series and website, for which both Miller and Lindbergh have served as editors-in-chief.

Named from the Society of American Baseball Research (SABR), sabermetrics downplays such well-known statistics as batting average, runs-batted-in and even on-base percentage in favor of more esoteric measures such as WAR (wins above replacement player) or BABIP (batting average on balls in play).

“I tend to think of it as using information in a rational way to understand games and make better decisions,” said Miller from his home in San Carlos. He commutes up for game days, and since the Pacific Association independent league the Stompers play in has only four teams, there are only two games at any given time, meaning one of the two analysts are at every game.

In addition to their writing and editing for Baseball Prospectus, Miller and Lindbergh also have a podcast called Effectively Wild, usually analyzing major league players and their statistics. A year ago in their podcast they wondered if a small independent league team might be interested in applying sabermetrics to its operations.

Tim Livingston, director of media relations and broadcaster of the Stompers games (and fill-in contributor to the I-T), heard the show, talked to team general manager Theo Fightmaster about it, and they decided to give the pair a shot. They were hired as “additions to the club’s baseball operations department,” though Lindbergh points out that’s a department that doesn’t exist in most independent league teams.

Though they are not compensated, they also landed a book contract with Henry Holt to write about their season with the Stompers, whose working title is “Baseball Sandbox.”

They even got an interview on NPR’s “The Morning Edition” about the gig. “We’re hoping it’s the perfect place to kind of be a testing ground for some things that might not work as well in the majors,” said Lindbergh in that radio interview.

So far, it seems to be going quite well. The Stompers have a 28-12 record going into the second half of the season, after earning the first-half championship. If they win the second half as well, they will be crowned league champs; if another team wins there will be a single-game playoff on Aug. 31.

“The team has been incredibly exciting to watch, just from the standpoint of really dominating the league,” said Miller. Though he and Lindbergh shy away from taking full credit, they do believe their contribution is playing a part.

Since they came aboard preceding the season, their analysis helped shape the roster, the team that now takes the field three or four times a week and wins games. “We were as nervous and anxious as anyone when these guys showed up that we picked from a spreadsheet,” said Lindbergh to NPR. “But luckily, they’ve all showed up and actually looked like baseball players, which we were very relieved to see.”

As the season has progressed, Miller and Lindbergh and a squad of volunteers have diligently tracked every pitch, hit, play and run, both offensively and defensively. The pitches are recorded with the same technology many teams use, a two-camera computerized system called PITCHf/x that records speed, trajectories and location for each pitch.

They also videotape the pitcher’s mound and the batter’s box for the full game, then edit the footage to show players how they throw, how they hit, to highlight strengths and weaknesses in their play. The players themselves seem to be open to the information they’re getting – not only about their own game play, but also about how to face opposing pitchers.

“A major league player would get an advance scouting report on a pitcher so they know what he likes to do, or what he’s likely to do, or what his strengths and weakness are,” said Lindbergh. His and Miller’s reports are giving these independent league players the same level of information players in the Bigs get.

Miller and Lindbergh both emphasize the quality of the team’s players, and their own role as part of the management team as a whole. “We do a lot of talking with the other decision makers in the organization about the best way to run the team,” said Miller.

One member of the organization casually mentioned that one of the most valuable players on the team was outfielder Matt Hibbert. With a .304 batting average, 42 hits, 2 home runs and 17 runs batted in, he’s clearly a good player – but his value emerges when you begin to look at some of the other statistics.

In short, he gets on base a lot. He has drawn 23 walks and been hit by a pitch 13 times, both statistics that don’t show in his batting average. “And he’s stolen some bases,” added Lindbergh. “He’s well-rounded and good at everything.”

“I think another player that you might not notice in the stats is Isaac Wenrich,” said Miller. “His batting average is pretty good though it’s not at the top. However sabermetricians are able to more fully appreciate the effect that a good defensive catcher can have on a team.”

Miller points to Wenrich’s ability to “get more strikes from his pitcher because of the way he catches the ball, “ and his skills at calling pitch sequences, keeping an eye on pitching mechanics and coaching pitchers through a game – it all adds up to his total value. Along with the team’s other catcher, Andrew Parker, Miller concludes, “I would say we have the two best catchers in the league, it’s not even close.”

For the two “sabermetricians” it’s been an exciting season so far, and an enjoyable one – especially for Lindbergh, who is spending the summer a long way from his Manhattan home. “I think we lucked out doing it here. Because of the personnel that’s in place and the people that we work with, but also because it’s Sonoma, a nice place to spend the summer. And there’s a nice supportive community around the team.”

The team plays at Arnold Field tonight, against last year’s league champions the San Rafael Pacifics. First pitch is 6 p.m. And, according to the numbers, the Sonoma Stompers are favored.

Is MLB Ready For Gay Player? First Open Pro Sean Conroy Discusses Concerns

Sonoma Stompers pitcher Sean Conroy, the first openly gay professional baseball player, throws during a minor league baseball game against Vallejo Admirals on Pride Night in Sonoma, Calif., on June 25.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers, AP

Sonoma Stompers pitcher Sean Conroy, the first openly gay professional baseball player, throws during a minor league baseball game against Vallejo Admirals on Pride Night in Sonoma, Calif., on June 25.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers, AP

Originally Published: USA Today

Scott Gleeson, USA Today Sports

Sean Conroy dreams of playing in the major leagues someday.

However, the right-handed pitcher for the Sonoma Stompers, an independent professional team in Northern California wine country, knows there could be challenges if he ever makes it to the next level.

Conroy became the first openly gay pro baseball player last month when he publicly came out shortly before pitching a shutout victory on the team's gay pride night.

"Wherever I go next, whether that's in the MLB or with another team, I'm going to be nervous," Conroy told USA TODAY Sports. "Every time I've come out to a team, I've been able to feel out the situation first and kind of make sure there were no outliers who would react poorly. Anywhere I go, I'm going to have a reputation as a gay player because I've made national news. I'll have to be more prepared on my first day."

Conroy, 23, came out to his general manager Theo Fightmaster, his coaches and the 22-man roster not long after he arrived at the beginning of the summer after he was recruited by the Stompers from upstate New York.

"It's kind of a respect thing," Conroy said. "I told my teammates I was gay because as we were becoming friends, I didn't want to feel like I was hiding or have to lie when they start to comment on girls. If a teammate tells me about how he met a girl at a bar, I tell him about how I met this guy at a bar. I try to keep it one-to-one as much as possible."

Conroy told his family he was gay at age 16 and was open about his sexual orientation with his teammates in high school, summer league and college at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, an NCAA Division III program in Troy, N.Y.

"The coming out process is an everyday thing when you meet new people," Conroy said. "It's who I am, but when I'm at the field, I'm at the office. First and foremost, I'm a baseball player. ... I'm pretty comfortable in my own skin, but it's a growing process for me every day, trying to be a better person."

Conroy, who considers himself a private person, expected to be a pioneer in some regard, but said the spotlight has been bigger than expected.

"I didn't anticipate it entirely," he said. "I didn't expect it to be a big deal. After I found out from an MLB historian (John Thorn) that I was making history, then it kind of hit me."

Conroy said he's surprised he is the only active gay professional player to come out and said of potential closeted MLB players following his example, "I would guess it takes a certain kind of person to be able to handle having such a private part of your life in the public eye, in addition to being a professional athlete. ...I would say I look up to all (professional athletes) who have come out. It's not an easy thing to do."

"I've never held a conversation with an MLB player, let alone a gay one," Conroy said. "It's difficult to know if anyone else will come out. And it's hard to gauge how people would react if I was on their team."

Conroy said he's heard plenty of homophobic language over his career, but noted that one of the main reasons he's open to his teammates is to educate them.

"People think twice about it when they know there's a gay guy on the team," Conroy said. "They'll apologize or say, 'sorry, not in that way.' It's a teaching point in some regards. I would say that my teammates have grown up with the equality side of things, but it's different when none of them have had that gay teammate interaction. The face to face meeting is so much different than what you see on the news."

Conroy expressed gratitude for the way the team has embraced himself and the LGBT community. Players have been encouraging and wore rainbow-striped socks on pride night.

"I definitely feel lucky that I've been put in this opportunity here," Conroy added. "I could see other teams having less understanding environments and coaches. It's definitely important to feel welcomed on the team, to give yourself the best chance to perform at the highest peak."

While the majors is not a completely far-fetched goal for Conroy, his professional lifestyle is strikingly different. The Stompers are part of the Pacific Association of Baseball Clubs. Players live with host families during the 78-game June-to-August season, earn $650 a month on average, and supply their own cleats, batting gloves and elbow guards.

"I just love playing baseball," Conroy said. "It's my first year out of college. I'm trying to have a career at the highest level. If I ever get that chance, I'll be ready."

Even if some in the major league fraternity aren't.

 

Stompers Take First Series Of Second Half With 11-2 Blowout

Gregory Paulino was again dominant against Vallejo, throwing 7 1/3 innings in Sonoma's 11-2 win over the Admirals.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Gregory Paulino was again dominant against Vallejo, throwing 7 1/3 innings in Sonoma's 11-2 win over the Admirals.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Tim Livingston, Director of Broadcasting & Media Relations

The Sonoma Stompers won their 15th game out of 18 this season against the Vallejo Admirals with an 11-2 blowout victory at Wilson Park on Sunday afternoon. Sonoma won five of six games this week on the road and seven of nine including last weekend's home series against the Admirals.

It was more of the same from Sonoma (2-1 2nd half, 28-12), who continued to pound away against the worst pitching staff in the league. Right from the start, the Stompers offense was ready against Scott Weinschenk (1-4), who had experienced his struggles in the first half of the 2015 season and was hoping something might change with the second half reset.

Instead, Sonoma exploded for seven runs in the first three innings against Weinschenk to put Vallejo on their heels. A five run second inning was highlighted by Taylor Eads' two-run double to right-center, and once Yuki Yasuda and Gered Mochizuki hit their sacrifice flies, the Stompers had more than enough runs for a day's work.

For Gregory Paulino (4-3), it was like a recall to a week previous, when his stellar eight-inning performance at Arnold Field helped clinch the first half championship for the Stompers on July 12. In this start, he continued his dominance over the Admirals, allowing two runs on four hits and two walks with six strikeouts. It was his fifth quality start in eight chances in 2015, and against Vallejo, he has allowed only 2 earned runs in 25 1/3 innings.

Offensively, Eads was again the star. He went 3-for-3, with all three hits being doubles. He also drove in three runs, with one coming on a sacrifice fly to deep left with the bases loaded in the third that just missed being Sonoma's first grand slam of the season. He also drew a walk, meaning he's reached base in nine of his last 10 plate appearances.

Adding to Sonoma's 14 hit attack was the similarly hot Mark Hurley, who had yet another multi-hit day going 2-for-5. He now has nine multi-hit games in his last 13 and is on a 15-game hitting streak. Isaac Wenrich, T.J. Gavlik and Joel Carranza also added two hits each.

Sonoma will have the off day on Monday before returning home for a three game series against the San Rafael Pacifics beginning Tuesday. The Tuesday night matchup will be the beginning of Women's Wine Week at the ballpark, where female fans ages 21 and older will receive a glass of wine along with a discounted price on both premium reserved ($12 - $23 value) and grandstand ($10 - $18 value) seats.

Tickets begin at just $4 and can be purchased online at StompersBaseball.com or at the Stompers Fan Shop, located at 234 W. Napa St. in beautiful downtown Sonoma. Tickets can also be purchased at the gates at Arnold Field before any home game. For more information, call the Stompers at (707) 938-7277 or email the team at info@stompersbaseball.com.

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Stompers Pull Away Late For 8-5 Win Over Admirals

Yuki Yasuda had the go-ahead RBI single in Sonoma's 8-5 victory over Vallejo Saturday night.James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Yuki Yasuda had the go-ahead RBI single in Sonoma's 8-5 victory over Vallejo Saturday night.

James Toy III/Sonoma Stompers

Tim Livingston, Director of Broadcasting & Media Relations

The Sonoma Stompers scored a run in each of the last four innings to help them to their first win of the second half, defeating the Vallejo Admirals, 8-5 on Saturday night at Wilson Park.

After Friday's strange loss in the second half opener, Sonoma (1-1, 27-12) was hoping to bounce back behind Eric Schwieger (5-1), and it looked a lot like many of Sonoma's recent victories against Vallejo in the early going. A three-run first inning and an extra run in the third gave Sonoma a 4-0 lead.

Yet Vallejo (1-1, 14-27) did what they did in Tuesday's game, where they saw an early lead and chipped away at it. Unlike the Tuesday game, they didn't do it in one or two run bursts, as the fifth inning saw one swing of the bat from Joshua Wong to tie the ballgame. His three-run homer off Schwieger made it 4-4 and turned a nine inning game into a four inning game.

That's when the Stompers buckled down and took advantage of their opportunities. In each of the next four innings, they scored single runs, with Yuki Yasuda's RBI single that plated Taylor Eads in the sixth giving Sonoma the lead back for good.

In fact, it was Eads who came through with the most impressive night at the plate for Sonoma, as the rookie went to the plate five times and reach all five times. A night after Mark Hurley went 5-for-5, Eads went 2-for-2 with three walks and scored three times, all from the nine spot in the order. He also stole three bases.

The final of those stolen bases occurred on an odd play. Devon Ramirez (1-5) tried to pick Eads off at first, but his throw went into the dirt and past PJ Phillips, which allowed Eads to go all the way to third. However, simultaneously, Ramirez was called for a balk. The rule as stated is on any balk, the ball is live, which gives the team that the balk was committed against the choice of taking the balk or the result of the play. Since Eads would have only been at second on the balk, the Stompers declined and Eads had his third stolen base.

Sonoma's 13-hit night included yet another multi-hit night from Hurley, who went 2-for-5 for his eighth multi-hit game in his last 12. He now has a 14-game hitting streak, the longest streak of any Stompers player in 2015. Danny Baptista had his second consecutive three-hit night and Gered Mochizuki had two hits, as well. All nine players for the Stompers reached base.

Schwieger didn't have as strong a start as he did on Saturday against Vallejo, but he was good enough to pick up the win. He allowed four runs on nine hits, but was able to escape some jams. His biggest escape came in the sixth, as the Admirals had the tying run at third with one out.

The big lefty from Grand Island, NE settled down and struck out Gadiel Baez for the second out before getting former teammate Glenn Walker to fly out to left on the very next pitch, ending the last great scoring chance for Vallejo that evening. Santos Saldivar allowed one run in his two innings of work, but gave way to Sean Conroy in the final inning. Conroy got three groundouts to seal up his seventh save.

The Stompers will end their weeklong trek to Vallejo with a Sunday matinee at Wilson Park. The first pitch is set for 1:05 p.m. with the radio broadcast beginning at 12:50 on StompersBaseball.com and the TuneIn mobile app.

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