St. Petersburg Times Online: Sports
TampaBay.com
Place an Ad Calendars Classified Forums Sports Weather
tampabay.com

printer version

Pirates get past Wildcats

By WAYNE GRUMET

© St. Petersburg Times, published April 3, 2001


WESLEY CHAPEL -- Crystal River arrived at Wesley Chapel on Monday with quite a handicap.

The Pirates were not only playing without two starters, but they were missing two players hitting .460 or better.

However, the rest of the Pirates did their part to help Crystal River beat Wesley Chapel 3-0.

The absence of catcher Danny Caron and shortstop Jonathan Runnels was felt on offense. Crystal River mustered just six hits, but four went for extra bases.

Pirates ace Clayton Trenary said he pitched his worst game despite not allowing a hit until the fourth inning.

Crystal River (18-2 overall, 7-0 in Class 3A, District 6) simply found a way to win.

"That's been our earmark all year. We play together," Crystal River coach Brent Hall said. "We try to bunch things together and get a run here and a run there."

Crystal River got on the board with two outs in the third when Scott Miller sent a long drive down the leftfield line. The ball curved just inside the foul pole to stake the Pirates to a 1-0 edge.

Trenary gave himself some insurance in the fourth by keying a two-run rally. Trenary led off by popping up to rightfield, but Wesley Chapel's Derek Laboy never saw the ball and then watched it land 30 yards to his left.

Trenary ended up on third with a triple and Marcus Galvan subsequently drove him home with a double to left. Galvan would later score on a Kevin Bradley sacrifice.

Wesley Chapel (2-16, 2-4) had plenty of chances to get to Trenary. The Wildcats had runners on in each inning but stranded all 12.

"We've got to get the clutch hit. We're being patient at the plate and getting baserunners," Wesley Chapel coach Steve Mumaw said. "What's disappointing is (Crystal River) made a couple errors on ground balls early but we're letting them out of the inning with lazy pop flies."

Trenary struggled, walking six batters in four innings. He still managed to fight out of a number of jams, striking out five while allowing just the one hit in the fifth.

Back to Sports
Back to Top

© 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111
Contact the Times | Privacy Policy
Standard of Accuracy | Terms, Conditions & Copyright
 

From the Times sports desk

NCAA Tournament
  • Duke's triple crown
  • NCAA notebook
  • Title game delivered more than expected
  • Second-half prowess again
  • Walton fine, replay system not

  • Devil Rays
  • Rays find plenty of reasons to believe
  • DiFelice remains as valuable reserve

  • The Masters
  • Singh has his game 'in tune'

  • Lightning/NHL
  • To: Rick Dudley Subject: What the team needs
  • Around the NHL

  • College basketbnall
  • Around men's college basketball

  • Motorsports
  • Jarrett gets a familiar feeling now

  • NBA
  • Around the NBA

  • NFL
  • Around the NFL

  • Et cetera
  • Boston next stop for winners
  • Sports digest

  • Outdoors
  • Captains' Corner

  • Preps
  • Devil Rays to honor 11 area athletes
  • Velasco's happy ending unclear
  • Pirates get past Wildcats
  • Mustangs win over Chargers


  • From the wire

    From the state sports wire
  • Jacksonville's Spicer placed on IR after leg surgery
  • FIU-Western Kentucky game postponed because of Jeanne
  • Brown anxious to face old team for first time
  • Dolphins' desperate defense readies for Roethlisberger
  • Former Sarasota lineman sheds tough-guy image with Michigan
  • Rothstein rejoins Heat as assistant
  • No. 16 Florida has history on its side against Kentucky
  • FSU and Clemson QBs both off to slow starts