Powered by a six-run first inning, the Stompers reclaimed control of the CCL North with a 7-3 win over the Crawdads.
By Jordan Kimball, Beat Writer
Stompers manager Zack Pace enjoys shuffling his lineup each day. He’s constantly aiming to find the right combination to what seems like a broken lock. Inside the box that lock protects are a few things: a reliable run producer, an error-free game, an unrelenting lead and maybe, just maybe, a spark that puts Sonoma’s destiny in its own hands.
Pace may have unlocked the box Sunday against the Crawdads. Last season, the manager had mixed emotions following the Stompers’ CCL playoff defeat to Walnut Creek. He was filled with joy from their deep run. A bitter taste also lingered as he knew they could go further. The squad had one hit before the ninth inning; They’d relied on their offense before.
So when Sonoma battled the Crawdads for the first time this season on June 22, Pace was eager to erase the past and build something new. He wanted to break the norm and put the Stompers on the map. A 10-4 Sonoma win surfaced, but Walnut Creek continued to present problems.
Fast forward to game No. 9 between the two teams — the season series finale — the Crawdads had the Stompers’ number. On Saturday, they’d clinched the season series with a 9-1 win in front of Arnold Field’s second-largest crowd of the season. Postgame, Pace emphasized Sonoma’s need to get back on track Sunday. It couldn’t let one loss spiral into a premature exit.
The Stompers didn’t just hear Pace’s words; they responded. Guided by a six-run first inning — boosting its record to 18-4 when it scores first — Sonoma (27-16, 22-14 CCL) beat Walnut Creek 7-3. The team looked in sync. It used just two pitchers and didn’t commit an error, handing it sole possession of first place in the CCL North with four league matchups to go.
“It’s great to have it in your hands. It’s awesome,” Pace said postgame. “Hopefully, we can win the week, that’s the idea.”
Justin Jones had rarely started for the Stompers this season. He opened a June 8 matchup with the Seagulls, which Sonoma won 14-0. Since then, he’s been a middle-inning to set-up pitcher who Pace slots in regularly when Jayden Harper starts. But with Harper absent this week, Jones was thrust into the high-pressure stakes of Sunday’s matchup.
The Los Medanos senior didn’t just shut down Walnut Creek’s lineup; he did it with ease, surrendering just three hits in four innings. Yet, while the stakes were high, Jones was handed a cushion from the beginning.
Monte Vista High School has been a friendly place to play for Sonoma. It took three of five matchups at the Danville school this season, scoring 37 total runs. Trent Keys kept the trend going in the first with a leadoff single. He was Pace’s decision at the start of the lineup, which has shuffled from Landon Akers to Colton Boardman. Heeryun Han and Cam Hegamin have seen action there, too. Now it was Keys’ turn.
A walk to Max Handron followed the right fielder’s base hit. Kyle Olimpia was then hit by a pitch to load the bases, and Paul Lizzul punched a fielder’s choice back at Walnut Creek starter Dylan McShane, which scored two runs.
Connor Pawlowski then walked to reload the bases. Xander Sielken drove Olimpia in by forcing an error on first baseman Brady Wilson — one of his three on the day. Anthony Scheppler scored Lizzul on a sacrifice fly. Gabriel Tapia plated Pawlowski, and Hegamin doubled to score Tapia.
“Having scored those runs already, you can be more aggressive in the way you play. On the pitching side, you can fill up the zone,” Pace said of the team’s approach moving forward. “When you put balls in play, it puts the pressure on (the opposing team).”
The six-spot was more than enough for Jones, who breezed through the Crawdads’ order. He gave up his only run in the bottom half of the first — his first earned run of the season — on a Zach Justice double, but it was smooth sailing from there.
While Sonoma’s offense fell stagnant, Jones went 1-2-3 in the second. He walked one in the third but silenced Walnut Creek besides that. The fourth, another three-up, three-down inning, punctuated his impressive start.
“He just mixed up his fastball and slider and was really effective with both,” Pace said of Jones’ performance. “He did an outstanding job attacking those hitters and putting them on the defensive mode.”
Pace flipped things around, then inserting David Howard, who’s started five games for the club this season. The way he pitched looked like an entire start within itself. The Sonoma State southpaw picked up where Jones left off by recording a strikeout in a scoreless fifth inning. He gave up a run in the sixth but retired the Crawdads in order in the seventh and eighth before allowing one more run in the ninth.
Still, it was too little, too late. Handron put the finishing touch on the victory by sprinting home on a Stompers’ special — a passed ball — in the ninth.
The win, combined with the Blues’ loss, takes the pressure off Sonoma as it prepares for a Wednesday matchup with the Seagulls. But one victory won’t keep Pace away from that lock, searching for the right combination to bring a CCL title to Wine Country.
“We’re just gonna take it one game at a time and try to go get San Francisco,” Pace said.