Riverview baseball again falls to Mercyhurst Prep in PIAA 1st round
Jun. 1—ERIE — There was nothing but zeros on the scoreboard through four and a half innings of Monday's PIAA Class 2A first round baseball game between Riverview and District 10 champion Mercyhurst Prep at Erie's Mercyhurst University.
It was an old-fashioned pitcher's duel between the Raiders and the Lakers.
Then Prep broke through with four runs in the bottom of the fifth.
They turned out to be the only runs scored in a 4-0 Prep victory which sent the Lakers onto Thursday's quarterfinals..
"Last year, after we lost in the Western finals, we said we would be back, and we are," said Lakers coach Randy Durkoske, who saw his team improve to 21-2 on the season.
"The guys are excited for the chance to go even further this year. We don't want to quit playing."
Monday's game was a rematch of a 5-3 victory by Prep in last year's first round. Riverview, the third-place team from the WPIAL with no seniors on its roster, capped its season at 15-8.
"When we walked out to left field and talked after the game, I told the guys to not drop their heads," Raiders coach Bill Gras said.
"These guys battled all year and made a nice run in the playoffs. We were in every game this season. These guys should be proud of what they accomplished. The good thing about this is we went this far and everyone is back next year. Another year of experience, we should be able to go further. This hurts now, but there is a lot of excitement for the future."
Prep had gotten a few runners on over the first four innings against Raiders junior starter Owen Metz but weren't able to get on the scoreboard.
That changed in the fifth as eight Lakers came to the plate against junior relievers Rex Roberts and Lukas Duncan and produced four runs.
The inning started with some controversy as Prep shortstop Zack Kruszewski, a Pitt Bradford commit, hit a grounder to short, and the throw to first was slightly off the mark.
Kruszewski initially was ruled out, but when the first and home plate umpires came together to talk, they changed the decision, and he was ruled safe with first baseman Jake Sprajcare's foot coming off the bag.
Kruszewski stole second and moved to third on a flyout from right fielder Noah Reigel.
First baseman Hayden Spencer was walked intentionally to put two runners on.
Third baseman Cam Aresco then hit a grounder to Riverview third baseman Liam Tomlinson, and Tomlinson's throw home in an attempt to get Kruszewski was not in time, and the Lakers took a 1-0 lead.
Lakers pitcher Hunter Krahe followed with a single to score Spencer to make it 2-0.
Prep doubled the lead from there as Aresco scored on an error and Ryan Gaeta, a courtesy runner for Krahe, came home on a fielder's choice.
"That's what we do," said Durkoske about his lineup stringing successful at-bats together in the inning.
"We have trust in each other, and we pass the baton down the line. The next guy up wants to produce and help get those runs on the board."
Prep got two hits in the inning, and Riverview also committed three errors.
"That's playoff baseball," Gras said. "It can often end up coming down to one inning. You either execute the plays or you don't, and we didn't in that inning. They put a couple hits together and put the bat on the ball and forced us to make plays. That's the name of the game at this level."
Riverview attempted to respond in the top of the sixth and loaded the bases while chasing Lakers starter Hunter Krahe.
Left fielder Ian Stempfer and catcher Miles Duncan singled, and Metz walked against Krahe.
Lakers reliever Brady Rice came on and induced a fielder's choice grounder by Roberts. Prep second baseman Mike Manendo make a diving play at second to keep the ball from heading into right and helped end the Raiders' threat.
Prep hoped to add on in the bottom of the sixth and loaded the bases with one out on two singles and a walk off of Lukas Duncan.
But a double play — a force at home and then a throw to first — quickly quelled the Lakers uprising.
Riverview got a runner on in the top of the seventh — designated hitter Dom DelRosso walked with two outs — but Rice closed things out by getting second baseman Ashton Saunders on strikes.
Krahe picked up the win.
The Charleston Southern commit struck out six, walked one and allowed just three hits over 5 2/3 innings. He didn't allow a hit until Metz singled with two outs in the fourth.
"Riverview is a great team, and they're up there to get base hits and drive the ball," Durkoske said.
"They are a fundamentally sound lineup. Hunter was just a little bit better, and our defense bailed us out, too, with some great plays."
Metz, in four complete innings, walked four, struck out four, and held the potent Lakers lineup to just three hits. Prep finished with six hits overall.
The Lakers loaded the bases in the fourth on a walk, a single and an error but came up empty.
Spencer singled with two outs in the bottom of the first but was left stranded.
"Owen came to me and said, 'I'm done,'" Gras said.
"He was out of gas, and then we made the decision. Owen pitched really well. We were going to get Rex and Lukas warmed up and ready just in case because Owen was getting up there in pitches. The game was still tied, so we decided to see what we could do."
Michael Love is a TribLive reporter covering sports in the Alle-Kiski Valley and the eastern suburbs of Pittsburgh. A Clearfield native and a graduate of Westminster (Pa.), he joined the Trib in 2002 after spending five years at the Clearfield Progress. He can be reached at mlove@triblive.com.