Caribbean Series: Dominicans scratch a run to get by Puerto Rico 5-4 on Thursday

February 6, 2020

By Lewis Rubman

Dominican Republic (4-1) 5 7 0

Puerto Rico (2-3) 4 10 1

Winning pitcher: Jhan Marinez, in relief (1-0, 0.00)

Losing pitcher: Jason García (0-1, 9.00)

Save: Ramón Ramírez(3)

HATO REY, PUERTO RICO–After Mexico’s tidy victory over Colombia, highlighted by Edgar Torres’s seven and two-third innings of one hit ball, played before a sparse audience, last night’s rowdy battle before a near sell out crowd (also rowdy) was a quite a contrast. Not a surprising contrast, but nonetheless a strong one.

The game itself provided internal contrasts. There was some excellent fielding. In the top of the second, Emmanuel Rivera alertly made a strong and accurate throw after his spectacular stop of a shot off the bat of Gustavo Núñez to retire Abraham Almonte at home and keep the game a scoreless tie. There also was some sloppy fielding. In the top of the third, Jack López mishandled a throw, which broke up a double play. Later on in that inning, the Dominicans jumped ahead on Jhordanny Valdespín’s three run homer.

Puerto Rico began a comeback by scoring once in the bottom of the third, on a double by Emmanuel Rivera that drove in López. In the fourth, the hosts played little ball, turning singles, a sacrifice, a walk, and a wild pitch into a 4-3 lead. They would have scored more if home plate umpire David Arrieta’s safe call on Raymond Fuentes hadn’t been reversed on appeal. Valdespín drove in Junior Lake and Rubén Sosa on a double in the fifth, bringing the score to 5-4, and they never relinquished that lead.

The results are in. Mexico, the Dominican Republic, and Venezuela are in a three-way day for first place at 4-1, while Puerto Rico has earned the last remaining replace in the play-off schedule, bringing up the rear of the qualifiers at 2-3. Colombia and Panama have been eliminated.

Because there is a three-way tie, the complicated tie-breaking rules have come into play. I’ve translated the relevant portions from the Caribbean Professional Baseball Federation’s web site.

“Among three teams who share the same place in the standings with the same won-lost percentage, the the winner of the group will be the one that obtains the best result in the TQB (Team Quality Balance), which is reached by the number of runs scored, divided by the number of innings played at bat, less the number of runs allowed,, divided by the number of innings played in the field (RS/IPO)-(RA/IPD)=TQB.

To calculate the TQB the outcomes of games between the involved teams will be taken into account. If the equality between two or more teams exists, the group’s winner will be the one that gets the best result from the ER-TQB formula (Earned Runs Team’s Quality Balance), which is obtained from the sum of the number of earned runs scored, divided by the number of innings at bat, less the number of earned runs allowed, divided by the number of innings played in the field (ERS/IPO)-(ERA/IPD)=ER-TQB. If the equality between two or more teams continues, the positions will be decided by batting average; and if none of the previous criteria is effective, the standings and classifications will be decided by lot.”

Based on the above, the Series organizers announced at last night’s game the following schedule for tomorrow, now today:

2:30: Mexico vs. Venezuela, with Venezuela as the home team; 8:00: Puerto Rico vs. the Dominican Republic, with the Dominican as home team.

Headline Sports podcast with Tony Renteria: Can Dusty right the ship in Houston?; Kings host the Heat Friday night; plus more

sfchronicle.com photo: Houston Astros manager Dusty Baker meets the media during his press conference introducing him as the new manager at Minute Maid Field in Houston

On Headline Sports with Tony R:

#1 How weighty of an issue is it really for new Houston Astros manager Dusty Baker taking over the helm of a team who will hear it everywhere they go and how much work does Dusty have in front of him to clean up the mess from the sign stealing scandal

#2 The Sacramento Kings have won two of their last three games their biggest win comes against the Minnesota Timberwolves 113-109 in a game where neither team gave up

#3 The Kings have had such a tough road experience and head coach Luke Walton is trying to see if in late in the game he could keep the defensive pressure up against opponents to protect the lead.

#4 Golden State Warriors deal Glen Robinson III and Alec Burks to the Philadelphia 76ers which many say will weaken the team. Head coach Steve Kerr said it was said seeing them leave.

#5 The San Francisco Giants manager Gabe Kapler says the Giants should have a powerful line up and he lends that to player development

Join Tony Renteria each Thursday for Headline Sports at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: 2020 State of the Athletics Armed and Dangerous

photo from mercurynews.com: Oakland Athletic pitcher Jesus Luzardo participates in fielding drills during spring training at Fitch Park in Mesa, Ariz., Saturday, Feb. 16, 2019.

2020 State of the Athletics: Armed and Dangerous

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND–The Houston Astros will be picked favorite to repeat and win the American League West for the fourth consecutive year. The Oakland A’s have finished in second place during the past two seasons when they ended with identical 97-65 record.

The best one-two pitchers in the American League last season were Justin Verlander who won 21 games and the Cy Young Award and Gerrit Cole who won 20 games. However,Cole, the top free agent in the market left for the New York Yankees who signed him to a $324 million contract, the fourth largest deal in MLB history.

To the Athletics advantage,they will not have to face Cole that many times,since he is now in the AL East. That by itself could be worth three to four games in the standings. The Astros will be lingering from the biggest scandal in baseball the sign-stealing scandal,which cost the jobs of their field Manager and General Manager.

The Astros will be busy fielding all kinds of questions beginning next week when they open their Spring Training in West Palm Beach,Florida. That would be the busiest Spring Training in baseball this year,since the Astros share that same facility with the World Champions Washington Nationals.

The A’s pitchers and catchers will land next week in Mesa,Arizona and their young pitching staff is definitely Armed and Dangerous.Their main starters are here by age, youngest to oldest: Jesús Luzardo,  Frankie Montas(22)  A.J Puk (24) Sean Manaea(27) and Mike Fiers(34).

This is indeed a formidable bunch of pitchers; Luzardo,Montas and Puk all power pitchers with fastball scratching the 100 mph on the radar. Either Mike Fiers or Sean Manaea (one of the two) most likely will be announced by A’s manager Bob Melvin as the Opening Day pitcher, for Thursday afternoon the 26 of March at the Oakland Coliseum.During this first homestand for the Athletics, the Houston Astros will follow the Twins to Oakland, presenting a delightful early season match-up between the A’s and the Dusty Baker Houston Astros.

This Athletics rotation will the potential to match and even better the Houston Astros,the team they will probably have to beat,to win their division. Not to forget the Rangers and Angels both much improved during this off-season,but there is little doubt who the A’s will have to beat, to forget “about a One-Game wild card playoff, and try to win the division affording them a better chance to go deep into the postseason.”

These pitchers will have the support of one of the youngest and most talented teams in the game. The A’S in 2019, were one of the best hitting teams in baseball. Among all MLB teams, A’s ranked #5 in Home Runs with 257, #9 in Runs Batted In with 800. Their pitching staff had the 6th best Earned Run Average with 3.97.

Bob Melvin’s young ball-club will also have excellent defensive support for that young and powerful pitching staff. Among all 30 clubs in MLB the Athletics finished #4 in fielding with a .986 percentage. Only St Louis,Kansas City and Houston had better defensive numbers than the A’s.

A’s won Gold Gloves at first base with Matt Olson and third base with Matt Chapman,with a most improved Marcus Semien at shortstop who comes out of this best season,finishing third in the very much coveted MVP,behind Mike Trout of the Angels and Alex Bregman of the Astros.

As Spring Training begins next week I will have more analysis of this young and very exciting team. But there is little doubt in my mind(injuries are the wild card)this is one of the best and youngest pitching staffs in all of baseball. More to come.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the Spanish play by play voice for the Oakland A’s with broadcast partner Manolo Hernandez-Douen on KIQI 1010 San Francisco and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

2020 Caribbean Series: Mexico gets some solid pitching blanks Colombia 4-0

February 5, 2020
By Lewis Rubman
Colombia (0-5)            0      1    0
Mexico (4-1)                  4    10  0
HATO REY PUERTO RICO–In a series notable for its well pitched games, the masterpiece that Mexico’s Edgar Torres  achieved this afternoon stands head and shoulders above the rest. The six foot, 218 pound lefty from Puebla, who toiled ineffectively for the Durango Generals of the Mexican League last summer and had an unimpressive record of 4-6, 3.96 for the Mazatlán Deers of the Mexican Pacific League this past fall, hurled seven and two-thirds of nearly impeccable baseball against the Montería Buckaroos of the Edgar Rentería Colombian Baseball League, Colombia’s representative.That the Colombian contingent isn’t a powerhouse helps put Torres’s achievement in perspective, but it remains an achievement.
In his labor of nearly eight innings, Torres threw 97 pitches, 69 of which were strikes, to 24 batters. The only hit he allowed was a first inning single to Brallán Pérez, and Torres picked him off first almost immediately after that. The only other base runner he allowed was José Brizuela, on a fifth inning walk. Torres’s ground out to fly out ration was 10:3.
Mario Meza mopped up with a perfect inning and a third of relief.
The Mexicans didn’t score until the fifth, when Juan Gamboa singled and advanced to third on José Guadalupe Chávez’s single to right, scoring moments later on a wild pitch by Colombia’s starting pitcher, Edinson Frías. Rico Noel´s single brought Chávez home.
That was all that Mexico needed, but Roberto Peña’s two run homer in the seventh gave them some more breathing room.
Mexico is assured of a play off berth, but we’ll have to wait for the results of tonight’s game between Puerto Rico and the Dominican to see what mathematical calculations, if any, are necessary who plays whom and which team gets last licks.

2020 Caribbean Series: Venezuela bests Panama with shutout 2-0

February 5, 2020
By Lewis Rubman
Venezuela        2    5    4
Panama            0    9    1
HATO REY, PUERTO RICO–Going into the final day of its classifying round, here are the standings of the sixty-second Caribbean Series:
  Team                                            W-L    Pct.    GB
  Mexico (Tomateros de Culiacán)            3-1    .750     –
  Dominican Rep. (Toros del Este)            3-1    .750        –
  Venezuela (Cardenales de Lara)            3-1    .750        –
  Puerto Rico (Cangrejeros de Santurce)     2-2      .500        1
  Panama (Astronautas de Chiquirí            1-3      .250    2
  Colombia (Vaqueros de Montería)        0-4      .000        3
By winning this morning’s game against Panama, assured itself of at least a tie with either Mexico or the Dominican Republic for the best won and lost record. Who will earn the number one seed will depend on how the Venezuelans fared against the team or teams, if any,  who equal their winning percentage.
How that is determined is fairly complicated, and I promise to explain it if  Mexico defeats Colombia this afternoon, which is a probable outcome of their meeting. The same goes in the case of the quite possible, but not nearly as likely, case of the Dominicans beating Puerto Rico in tonight’s sold out contest between the representatives of those neighboring islands.
The Cardenales grabbed an early lead this morning and never relinquished it.
Alí Castillo lined Manaurys Correa’s first pitch into right field for a triple. Gorky Hernández also swung on Correa’s first offering and dropped a run producing single into short center field, and that was all the Redbirds needed. Just to be sure, they tacked on an insurance run in the ninth on Alí Castillo’s single to right that brought Angel Reyes in from second.
As the score indicates, pitching was the story. Right hander David Martínez went six innings, scattering eight hits along the way, to earn the win. Jesús Enrique Sánchez pitched the seventh and eighth without allowing a hit or a walk, and Pedro Rodríguez allowed a hit before closing out the game and receiving credit for the save.
Panama’s pitching also was excellent. Correa was the hard luck loser, in spite of four-hit, one-run hurling.  Of the four Astronauta relievers, Abdiel Velásquez, Anfernee Jesús Benítez, Jean Carlos Corpas, Tyler Wilson, and Carlos de Jesús Díaz, only Wilson was less than totally effective, having allowed one run, one hit, and three walks in his two thirds of an inning of work.

2020 Caribbean Series: Puerto Rico takes advantage of home field with win over Colombia 3-2

February 5, 2020
By Lewis Rubman
Colombia (0-4)            2    5    3
Puerto Rico (2-2)            3    10    0
HATO REY, PUERTO RICO–Last night’s contest between Colombia’s champions, the Montería Vaqueros (which is the Spanish word from which our “buckeroos” is derived) and the host Santurce Cangrejeros, or Crabbers, had loads of the ingredients that make baseball fun: speedy base running, outfield assists, close plays, a close score, an enthusiastic crowd, and, of course, a local angle for the fan. Just the thing to cap off the fourth straight day filled with three games and four straight nights filled with little sleep.
Wasted opportunities are frustrating. In baseball, they’re also fun. Every chance to achieve something – a shut down inning, a run, a double play, a stolen base- carries with it the excitement of being on the verge of a desired attainment. And last night’s game had its share. I can’t begin to list all of them, but I can point out a few examples.
Take Puerto Rico’s half of third inning. The Crabbers held a one run advantage over the Buckaroos. Jack López led off with a single and advanced to second when Colombia’s center fielder, Andy Vásquez, lost control of the ball. A sequence like that is an invitation to score. But pitcher Julio Vivas promptly withdrew the invitation by picking López off second. Notice that two mistakes were involved in this scenario, bad fielding and bad base running. Interesting or exciting baseball is not necessarily good baseball
In the top of the seventh, with the score knotted at two all, Vásquez laced a single to center. Arvicent Pérez followed this up with a single to right. Vásquez never stopped on his way to third, where he was cut down by a laser throw from right fielder Jan Hernández that would have put Ramón Liriano to shame. Of course, Colombia challenged the call, but it was upheld.
A lousy throw can afford as much excitement as a great one. Earlier in the game, after Colombia had tied the score at one all on a fifth inning solo homer by Vásquez,  the men from Montería jumped to a brief, one run lead in the sixth. Andrés Angulo led off with a walk and stole second. Jordan Díaz singled him home and went to second on the throw. Francisco Acuña sacrificed Díaz to second, but he kept on running. Seeing this, catcher Roberto Peña threw the ball towards third. Towards, not to. Left fielder David Vidal retrieved the errant missile and fired it to Peña, who put the tag on the overly ambitious Díaz. At this point, Devin Raftery relieved starter Héctor Hernández and struck out Rey Fuentes to get the final out of the inning.
There was drama when Puerto Rico went ahead in the eighth, using bunts and bunt attempts (including a couple by the fifth spot hitter) before Andury Acevedo plunked Jonathan Morales on a 3-0 count with the bases loaded to force in the winning run.
As for the local angle. That was provided by the Vaqueros’ first baseman, Alberto Callaspo.

Caribbean Series: Mexico rolls to one run win over Venezuela 7-6

February 4

By Lewis Rubman

Mexico (3-1) 7 13 0

Venezuela (3-1) 6 10 2

HATO REY, PUERTO RICO–I never tire of quoting (although people who know must get tired of hearing) the saying the Cubans have about our shared national pastime, “La bola es redonda y viene en caja cuadrada,” “the ball is round and comes in a square box.” The Cubans didn’t make it to this year’s Caribbean Series, but their refrain sure did. Just look at the games Venezuela played last night and this afternoon.

Last night, the Lara Cardinals squeaked past Puerto Rico in a game that had been tied at one through nine innings and won in the tenth, aided by the offensive-friendly extra inning runner placement rule and a questionable call involving an arcane rule.

This afternoon, they were being blown out by Mexico’s Tomateros (Tomato Growers) of Culiacán until the Venezuelans provided some blow back of their own. After last night´s game, Venezuela’s manager, Luis Ugueto, told the press corps that his team’s poor offensive performance was due to the strong winds that keep the ball in the park. An intregral part of Venezuela’s comeback today was a wind blown three run homer by Carlos Rivero in the sixth inning.

Mexico, playing as the visitors, started the scoring early. It was their lead off hitter, Rico Noel, who scored the first run first run, driven in by Joey Meneses’s single. Their hits came off Mayckol Gauipe, the Cardinal starter, who lasted a mere three and a third innings and managed to give up six runs, all earned, on nine hits in that time. Rico and Meneses teamed up in the third to double Mexico’s lead. This time it was Meneses’s ground out that brought his teammate home.

The fourth, however, was when Mexico celebrated its version of the Book of Genesis. They scored a quartet of runs in the big inning. With one down, Alí Solís singled to right and reached third moments later when Juan Carlos Gamboa also singled, taking second on the throw.

Rico’s two bagger, another hit to right, doubled Mexico’s lead to four. Noel then lit out for third, which he stole, and kept on running when catcher Alixón Suárez threw the ball into left field, Mexico now was up 5-0 and showed no signs of stopping its advance.

Andrés Pérez relieved Guaipe after the latter walked Ramiro Peña, but that was the last run Mexico was to score this afternoon. It was the only one Pérez surrendered in his three and two-thirds innings on the mound, and Francisley Bueno shut the Tomateros out in the game’s two remaining frame

Singles by Alexis Amarista and René Reyes set the scene for Carlos Rivera. His hit, something between a fly and liner, kept carrying and carrying until it flew over the left field fence, putting Venezuela back in the game, 7-3. Although shaken, Mexico still was in charge.

Culiacán’s left handed starter and the eventual winner, Antony Vázquez, left after six innings. His successors, Gerardo Sánchez and Santiago Gutiérrez, each working an inning, held the Redbirds hitless and scoreless. But disaster struck for the Mexicans in the bottom of the ninth.

Mario Meza, who had been untouchable in his previous, two-out, relief appearance, came in to close out the game for Mexico. He disposed of Carlos Rivero, he of the three run homer in sixth. Adonis García and Angel Reyes laced a pair of singles, and things began to look dicey.

Still, Meza got pinch hitter Oscar Angulo to line out to left. After all, cardiac closers still are closer. But not this time. Ali Castillo pinch hit for Suárez and scored García with a single that moved Reyes up to second.

That was it for Meza. Six foot four inch, 250 pound Alberto Baldonado from Panama assumed pitching duties for the team from northern Mexico. He fulfilled them with more excitement than finesse. After yielding a two run double to César Valera that brought Venezuela within a tally of tying the game, Meza struck out Amarista, clinching a playoff berth for Mexico and clearing the way for the game between Colombia and Puerto Rico that should start in about fifteen minutes.

Caribbean Series: Venezuela gets key run in 10th inning to defeat Puerto Rico

February 4

By Lewis Rubman

Puerto Rico (1-2) 2 8 3
Venezuela (3-0) 3 3 0 ten innings

HATO REY, PUERTO RICO–The game that began last night at 8:06 Atlantic Time may well go down in history as one of the best ever played in the Caribbean Series. It also might be among the most controversial. The two, of course, are not mutually exclusive.

Going into the ninth inning, Adalberto Flores, Bradin Hagens, and NIcholas Padilla had limited Venezuela to one hit. But Venezuela had parlayed that fourth inning double by Alí Castillo into a run, and the resulting 1-0 lead had held up until the eighth, when Angelo Palumbo, their starting pitcher, walked Jan Hérnandez, who was sacrificed over to second by Roberto Peña, scored on Henry Ramos’s automatic double.

It wasn’t as though the team representing the island nation lacked scoring opportunities. They hit into inning ending double plays in the second, third, and fifth frames. In one of them the bases had been loaded, and in another there had been runners on first and second. Most double plays come on well hit balls, but the one that had stymied Puerto Rico’s effort in the fifth was particularly ironic; it came on a hard line drive to second that didn’t give the runner a chance to return to the bag.

Both teams remained scoreless until the tenth, which was under the new rule that mandates that extra innings begin with a runner on second. Puerto Rico’s runner was Rey Fuentes, Carlos Beltrán’s cousin and also a journeyman who has seen big league action with San Diego, Kansas City, and Arizona.

He stayed put on second when David Vidal flew out to right, but he stole third while Jack López was at bat and scored on López’s single to center. Henry Ramos bunted for a hit, and everything seemed seemed in place to seal a victory for the islanders. But Iván de Jesús ground into a 6-4 force out of López, and now it was Venezuela’s to use the extra inning-extra runner rule.

Their runner was René Reyes. He stopped at third after Adonis García lined a single to right. Gorkys Hernández received an intentional walk to load the bases and set up a force out at home.

Juan Apodaca hit a sharp grounder to Emmanuel Rivera at third, who threw home for the force on Reyes. Santurce’s strategy was working! But then catcher Jonathan Morales overthrew first, allowing García and Hernández to score. Venezuela had snatched its irons from the fire. Puerto Rico’s manager, José Valentín left the dugout to ask for a review, but the umpiring crew walked off the field. Replays showed that Apodaca had run out of the base line to first.

The loss was disappointing for Puerto Rico, not just because of the emotional cost of this roller coaster ride of a game or the team’s won-lost record falling to 1-2 but because their first baseman José Sermo was injured while striking out in his last, ninth inning, at bat and isńt expected to recover before the end of the series. After the game, Valentín commented, “We’ll just have to accept defeat like the men we are.”

Venezuela leads the Series pack at 3-0. The Dominican Republic and Mexico are tied for second at 2-1, followed by Puerto Rico and Panama, whose 1-2 mark ties them for fourth. Colombia trails the pack at 0-3.

 

Caribbean Series: Dominicans get the pitching Espino holds down Colombia

February 3

By Lewis Rubman

Dominican Republic (2-1) 4 5 0

Colombia (0-3) 0 5 0

HATO REY, PUERTO RICO–This afternoon’s hard fought contest between the Toros del Este, champions of the Dominican League, and the Montería Vaqueros (Buckaroos) their counterparts from Colombia, was a lot closer and exciting than the final score would indicate. The totals for hits and errors gives a better idea of the tightness of the encounter than the runs total does.

Two right handers, the Dominican’s Pablo Espino and Colombia’s Randy Consuegra, held their opponent scoreless for almost six innings. Espino completed that stretch; Consuegra was replaced by a situational lefty with after five and a half frames, which may have been the start of his team’s undoing.

The slow building tensions of a pitchers’ duel exploded in the top of the seventh. Ronald Ramírez, the southpaw who closed closed down the Dominican threat in the sixth, didn’t take the mound to start the seventh. Of course, “threat” is a relative concept.

In this case, it consisted of a man on first with two outs. His right handed successor, Pedro Escobar, immediately faced a real threat and was unable to deal with it. He walked the first batter he faced, Junior Lake. Another baseball lifer, 29 year old Peter O’Brien who achieved a lifetime batting average of .209 in four years of cups of espresso, then whacked a might home run over the right field wall, and the two evenly matched teams were two runs apart. Not an insurmountable different but not an insignificant one, either.

The Toros’ impetus carried over from their pitching and hitting to their fielding. The first play of the Buckaroos’ half of the seventh was memorable. Andy Vásquez, hoping to ignite his teammates’ bats, executed a beautiful drag bunt, equidistant from the mound, the first baseman, and the second baseman. Gustavo Núñez, playing second, charged the ball, picked it up with his gloved, and shot it straight from the glove, untouched by human hands, in a sharp, straight line to O’Brien at first. O’Brien made an acrobatic grab of the ball and still managed to maintain contact with the bag long enough to get the out.

In any case, in the top of the eighth, with Carlos Díaz on the mound for the Vaqueros, Oakland prospect Jorge Mateo lined a single to center field. He advanced to third on Rubén Sosa’s line drive single, also to center. Díaz was yanked, and Anthony Vizcaya took over. He uncorked a wild pitch that allowed Mateo to score and Sosa to reach third base, known in Spanish as the waiting room before scoring on Lake’s ground out to short.

The excitement didn’t end there. Colombia fought back valiantly in the bottom of the eighth. Díaz allowed a single to Jordan Díaz and a base on balls to Brallan Pérez open the episode. Men on first and second, no outs – the perfect time for a sacrifice.

Francisco Acuña bunted, but not as well Vásquez had in the previous frame. Acuña’s attempt resulted in a pop up to Jumbo Díaz, now pitching in relief for the Toros. He threw to O’Brien at first for the out on Pérez, who had taken off for second. O’Brien then hurled a cross-diamond bullet to third baseman Diego Goris that nabbed Jordan Díaz to complete the triple play.

Espino got the win. There was no save, but Bay Area fans might find it interesting that Fernando Abad pitched a perfect top of the ninth to end the game. Pedro Escobar was charged with the loss.

Puerto Rico will take on Venezuela in about an hour and a half.

2020 Caribbean Series Puerto Rico: Quiala gets quality start in seven innings for Mexico in 6-1 win

February 3, 2020

By Lewis Rubman

Panama (1-2) 1 4 2

Mexico (2-1) 6 11 1

HATO REY, PUERTO RICO–After losing its Caribbean Series opener to Venezuela to the Dominican Republic on Saturday afternoon, Mexico, represented by the Tomateros (Tomato Growers) of Culiacán, bounced back by defeating Puerto Rico yesterday afternoon and trouncing Panama’s entry, Chiquirí Astronautas, 6-1, in this morning’s contest.

Mexico’s right handed starter, Yoanys Quiala was sharp through all seven innings he pitched, shutting out the Astros over four and two-third innings. When he left the game, Quiala had faced 81 batters and surrendered just three hits and struck out four without a walk.

The one run he allowed was earned, coming on a ground out by Edgardo Thomas that followed singles by Edgar Muñoz and Rodrigo Orozco. Zach Dotson and Aldo Montes, each of whom pitched a scoreless inning. Dotson gave up a hit; Montes didn’t. Thanks to the Tomateros’ potent offense, there was no save.

That offense struck early. Joey Meneses led off the second with a double to left. Dariel Alvarez promptly drove him home with a single to center. After a pausing while Alan Sánchez flew out to center, the Mexican offensive resumed its work of destruction and José Guadalupe Chávez drove in both runners, in spite of the intervening strike out of Ricardo Valenzuela.

Culiacán tacked on a couple of runs in the fifth, thanks to a double by Ramiro Peña, who advanced to third when Panama’s second baseman, Geral Chin, bobbled Antony Giansanti’s grounder. Peña scored on Meneses’s single to right center, which allowed Giansanti to get all the way around to third. He crossed the plate on a sacrifice liner to center by Alvarez.

Panama got its face saving run in the top of the sixth on singles by Muñoz and Orozco, followed by Eduardo Thomas’s slow grounder to second, which allowed Muñoz to dash across the plate.

An error by Astrós third sacker, Isaías Velásquez, put Ramiro Ríos on first. Ricardo Valenzuela’s single sent him to third. Chávez´s sac fly drove him home with the final tally.

The loss went to José Mesa, who faced 23 batters over 4-2/3 innings in which he allowed five runs (four earned) on eight hits. Luis Ramos allowed a run on two hits in his inning of work, and Wilfredo Pereira held Mexico to a single hit in his two and third frames.

From the sound of things, the game between the Dominican Republic and Colombia is starting now.