By Jordan Kimball, Beat Writer
Quinn Medin’s five-hit performance powered the Stompers to a dominant 18–2 win over the Philippines National Team, with just one regular season game remaining.
It’s been a steady but unexpected shift at the leadoff spot for the Stompers. Landon Akers carried it at first. The Bellarmine outfielder was hitting .309 until an injury derailed his season, with his final appearance in orange and blue coming on June 27.
Then came Colton Boardman. One of Sonoma’s most reliable bats, Boardman’s elevation to the leadoff spot paid off. The Cal State Northridge shortstop hit .282 across 32 games for the Stompers. But when he suffered an injury at the CCL Showcase Game in Compton on July 16, manager Zack Pace was left to find another replacement for the most crucial stretch of the season.
First came Cam Hegamin. Trent Keys appeared in the spot as well. Pace tried new combinations, as if flipping through a deck of cards. Now he’s stopped, finally landing on his ace of spades: Quinn Medin.
A Santa Rosa native, Medin stayed local and began his collegiate career at San Francisco State in 2022. After not seeing action for the Gators, though, he transferred even closer to home to Santa Rosa Junior College. Over 39 games, the outfielder hit .261 with 14 RBIs.
Then he leveled up, committing to the University of Colorado Colorado Springs, where Medin posted a .298 batting average through 20 games. Though a late addition to Sonoma, Medin’s made an undeniable impact. That continued Saturday against the Philippines National Team.
Setting the tone all evening, Medin reached base in all seven of his plate appearances. The 5-foot-9, 165-pound starting right fielder ended the night 5-for-6 with four RBIs. He also scored five times, fueling the Stompers (30-17, 24-15 CCL) to an 18-2 thrashing of the PNT.
“He’s a pest. He’s a spark plug,” Pace said of Medin postgame. “I really love his game. He has a great approach, taking quality at-bats, puts good swings on balls, and good things happen when you do that. We love him at the top.”
Entering Saturday, just two games remained on Sonoma’s schedule, and at first glance, they looked like freebies. On paper, a four-win team facing a 29-win squad isn’t fair. But baseball isn’t played on a piece of paper.
After each game, Pace meets with his team. Whether a win or a loss, he consistently reminds them never to get complacent. When they do that, they’ll start losing games. Saturday served as a test. If the Stompers win, they clinch a home playoff game. If they lose, they no longer control their own destiny.
With Medin steering the ship, Sonoma charted the right course from the start. After taking a strike from Filipino starter Stefano Gonzales, Medin ripped the second offering right inside the third base bag. He raced into second with a standup double.
Another thing a leadoff man possesses is speed, and Medin checks that box also. He had five stolen bases at UCCS and 12 at SRJC. On a passed ball with Max Handron at the plate, he eased into third base. Then, Handron chopped Gonzalez’s pitch to first baseman Ben Lee, where an out was recorded, but Medin came home. The Stompers were in front.
As Brandon Leon held it down on the mound, pitching a season-high 3.2 innings while giving up just one run, Sonoma’s offensive bubble began to burst. After Keys popped out to open the third, Medin pinned a single into center field. Nic Sebastiani’s base hit moved him to second, and he scored the Stompers’ — and his — second run of the day on a ground ball single into right field by Xander Sielken.
Pace’s focus has always been on keeping the line moving. Sonoma’s grasped three, four and five-run leads but has also failed to continue applying pressure from the batter’s box. Back to complacency, Pace didn’t just want the Stompers to keep their foot on the gas; he needed to see it happen.
A five-run fourth inning did the trick. With the score 2-1, the game’s result was far from decided. But hitting through the order, plus some, certainly extends the lead. After taking two walks and a hit-by-pitch, Medin came to the dish. Facing a 1-1 count, he did what you’re told not to do in that situation: hit the ball to the middle infielders.
But as mentioned, Medin has speed, and he showed it off. PNT second baseman Brady Feramisco fielded the ball cleanly, flipped it to shortstop JJ Fagfoomsintu, who — with Medin racing down the first-base line — rocketed the ball into the dirt and off of Sonoma’s bullpen. One run came in. A second run came in. Medin entered second base. He called a timeout before he caught his breath.
“They’re just taking what the pitchers are giving them,” Pace said of the offensive outburst. “When they got a good pitch to hit, they’d put a good swing on it. They took whatever the game dictated.”
Medin then scored on a Handron single. Handron and Sebastiani crossed the plate three batters later on a Hegamin bloop base hit into no-man's land. Just like that, a 2-1 lead ballooned to a 7-1 cushion. It’s precisely what Pace had hoped for.
It was more of the same from there. Andrew Balentine — while wild at times — lasted two innings and earned the win. Jaxen Rowland, Luke Duncan and Micah Marquez each pitched a frame, too.
But the win wasn’t highlighted by the Stompers’ staff. They did their job, but it was the offense that carried them this time around.
Three. Four. Three. One. That was how many runs Sonoma scored each inning for the remainder of the game. At one point, it was a tight 2-1 ballgame. By the time the clock hit three hours and 52 minutes, it was an 18-2 blowout.
One final game, once again against the Philippines. But Sunday’s test is simple: return to the fundamentals, keep control and play baseball the right way. The Stompers’ postseason run depends on it.
“Anything can happen any day, and you have to re-establish yourself every single day,” Pace said. “It’s day-to-day in baseball. It’s pitch-to-pitch. It’s about staying locked in that moment. It’s a brand new day, and I’m expecting a dogfight.”