NBA Finals podcast Michael Roberson: Pacers-Thunder battle for title in elimination game Sunday night

Indiana Pacers guard Andrew Nembhard (2) rebounds over the Oklahoma City Thunder guard Luguentz Dort (front) in second half action of game 6 of the NBA Finals at Paycom Arena in Oklahoma City on Thu Jun 19, 2025 (AP News photo)

Michael Roberson on NBA Finals podcast Michael Roberson:

#1 The Indiana Pacers lives to play another game as they dominated the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday with a 108-91 win to tie the series up at 3-3.

#2 The Pacers Obi Toppin scored 20 points, Andrew Nembhard scored 17 points and were key in helping the Pacers forcing a game 7.

#3 Pascal Siakam scored 16 points, 13 rebounds and Tyrese Haliburton scored 14 points and played with a strained calf.

#4 After getting blown out in game 5 by the Oklahoma City Thunder the Pacers turned things around in game 6 they had a slow start but later blew the game up later to tie up the series and force a game 7.

#5 So the stage is set for game 7 for Sunday night in Oklahoma City for the deciding game. The Thunder have the home floor. Could the Thunder make a come back and win the finals or could the Pacers stay with their game 6 momentum?

Michael Roberson is a NBA podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: MLB Team for Sale

Tampa Bay Rays future ballpark renderings. Construction will start this year. The park is scheduled to be ready opening day 2028 (Tampa Bay Rays renderings)

MLB Team for Sale

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Unfortunately, for those real Athletics fans who are here in the Bay Area, the team is not the A’s. Sorry to give you the bad news. The Tampa Bay Rays are now officially for sale, after Major League Baseball put a lot of pressure on their owner.

Patrick Pulaski, a developer from Jacksonville who signed a letter of intent to purchase the Rays (according to Sportico) and the New York Times for around $1,7 billion Unlike the ATH, who have no choice but to play at the Minor League Sutter Health Park at West Sacramento, for at least 2027, maybe more, the Tampa Bay Rays, who are playing at Hal Streinbrener Stadium in Tampa, with only 10,000 capacity, the Spring Training Home of the New York Yankees, the Rays are expected to move to their regular home, Tropicana Field next season.

The Tampa City Council approved $22.5 million for a Teflon-coated fiberglass roof. Hurricane Milton in 2024 caused the damage. The Tampa Bay Rays are typically at the bottom of MLB teams in payroll and attendance, alongside the Miami Marlins and the Athletics; however, the Rays operate a much better front office than most of these ‘bottom dweller’ teams (including the A’s), despite having a very similar payroll.

Example. Currently, this season, the Rays’ payroll is $88 million. Yet, they are in second place behind the New York Yankees ($289 million payroll) by a couple of games in the mighty American League East, while the Athletics are in last place with a payroll of $77 million.

Over the past five seasons, the Rays have consistently finished with a competitive and sometimes winning record, despite having a smaller payroll, unlike the Athletics, who have not achieved such a feat recently. The Tampa Bay Rays have a reputation for excellent scouting, player development, drafting players, and starting pitching, which has kept them very competitive in comparison to the other two lowest teams in payroll and attendance, the Miami Marlins and the ATH of Sacramento.

Moneyball, a few years ago, did not win any Oscars, but was a decent film. However, the concept of Moneyball is no longer working for the A’s, as the data-driven approach to evaluating players that emphasizes using statistical analysis and other methods that made Bill Beane famous is no longer practical. Beane was the Oakland A’s General Manager from 1979 to 2015—Adiós to Moneyball. All success in business comes from the top.”

“The way a team plays as a whole determines its success. You may have the greatest bunch of individual stars, but if they don’t play together, the club won’t be worth a dime.” – Babe Ruth

Amaury Pi-Gonzalez – Cuban-born Pi-González is one of the pioneers of Spanish-language baseball play-by-play in America. Began as Oakland A’s Spanish-language voice in 1977 ending in 2024 (interrupted by stops with the Giants, Mariners and Angels). Voice of the Golden State Warriors from 1992 through 1998. 2010 inducted in the Bay Area Radio Hall of fame.

While in the Bay Area, great food and great prices. 998cuba.com

Jamaica’s two first half goals enough to escape with 2-1 win over Guadeloupe

Jamaica forward Leon Bailey battles for the ball alone the endline with Guadeloupe defenseman Steve Solvet during Jamaica’s 2-1 win in Group C play of the Gold Cup at PayPal Park on Friday JUN 20, 2025. (Soy502)

by Marko Ukalovic

SAN JOSE — Jamaica scored two late goals in the second half to defeat Guadeloupe 2-1 in group play of the Gold Cup on Friday evening at PayPal Park.

Jamaica earned its first win of the tournament and is currently tied for the top spot with Panama with three points in Group C. Guadeloupe has two matches in a row and anchors the bottom of the group.

Jamaica striker Leon Bailey’s right footed attempt was knocked away over the net by Guadeloupe goalkeeper Brice Cognard in the second minute as Jamaica earned an early chance in the match.

Thierry Ambrose gave Guadeloupe its first quality scoring chance in the 15th minute but his shot attempt from just outside the box sailed high and wide left.

Bailey had his second scoring chance after receiving a long ball from 30 yards out from his goalkeeper Andre Blake. Bailey dribbled over to the left wing before firing a shot off of the post.

In the 24th minute, Demari Gray tried to catch Cognard napping. Gray kicked the ball from 65 yards out with Cognard retreating back to his goal only to see the ball ricochet off of the crossbar.

Guadeloupe broke the ice in the 32nd minute off a set piece. After corner kick, Noah Cadiou sent a back pass out to Ambrose who one-timed the ball into the far corner of the net for his first goal of the tournament.

Jamaica scored the equalizer in the 42nd minute. Warner Brown centered the ball into the middle of the box where an unmarked Bailey buried a one-timer past Cognard for his first goal of the tournament.

Jonathan Russell gave Jamaica its first lead in the fourth and final minute of stoppage time in the first half. Gray centered the ball into the box where Russell jumped high in the air and headed the ball into the far corner of the net for his first goal of the tournament.

The second half saw chippiness from both sides as referee Kwinisi Williams issued four yellow cards, two each by both countries that were a result of unsportsmanlike fouls.

Guadeloupe had three chances to score the equalizer during 10 minutes of stoppage time. In the first minute, Blake stoned a close-range chance from Ange-Freddy Plumain. A minute later, Florian David sent in a cross over to Nathanaël Saintini but his header attempt was blocked. Blake made one final save in the ninth minute when he made a save on David’s right-footed shot attempt.

Blake, who plays for MLS’s Philadelphia Union, finished with four saves on five shots to earn his first win of the tournament. Cognard made two saves on four shots in the losing effort.

GAME NOTES: Jamaica finished with four corner kicks. Guadeloupe has six.

UP NEXT: Jamaica finishes up group with Panama on Tuesday June 24th while Guadeloupe concludes their group play against Guatemala also on the 24th.

San Francisco Giants Podcast with Michael Villanueva: Giants Avoid Sweep with 2-1 Win Over Guardians

Casey Schmitt (10) greets Jung Hoo Lee (right) at home plate after both score on San Francisco Giants Wilmer Flores two run double in the bottom of the seventh inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco Thu Jun 19, 2025 (AP News photo)

San Francisco Giants podcast Michael Villanueva:

#1 San Francisco Giants pitcher Logan Webb put together seven dominant innings with nine Ks and no walks. What do you feel clicked for him yesterday compared to the past starts?

#2 Wilmer Flores came through with a clutch two-run double off the bench — should the Giants be using him more in key late-game situations?

#3 Michael do you remain worried about the offense’s inconsistency, or are you more inspired by the Giants’ ability to fabricate a victory with just two runs scored?

#4 The bullpen held strong again, with Doval locking down the ninth — is the Giants’ bullpen quietly becoming the most reliable part of this team?

#5 Looking at the upcoming schedule, can a close win like this be a turning point to assert dominance in the league, or do the Giants still have too many unanswered questions?

#6 The Giants continue their homestand tonight at Oracle Park with a key game against the Red Sox, following a much-needed victory over the Guardians. When Rafael Devers plays his old team for the first time since the trade, everyone will be watching him closely. Boston’s Hunter Dobbins (3.74 ERA) will face Hayden Birdsong (2.79 ERA). 7:15 is the first pitch.

Michael Villanueva is a Major League Baseball podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Valkyries found Remedy for Fever win 88-77; get back on the winning track

Indiana Fever center Caitlin Clark drives to the basket past the Golden State Valkyrie defense in the second quarter in WNBA action at the Chase Center in San Francisco on Thu Jun 19, 2025 (AP News photo)

By Michael Roberson

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — The Golden State Valkyries (6-6) fought off the Indiana Fever (6-6) 88-77, in front of another sellout Bay Area crowd.

Although Indiana made the first bucket of the game, Golden State went on a 7-0 run, to take their largest lead in the first half, The Fever had their own big run of 14-0, and led by as many as 10 points.

After the first ten minutes of play, the visitors from the Hoosier State led by nine, 21-12. The first quarter had two lead changes and zero ties. The Valkyries took their first punch, and managed to stay within a reasonable competitive distance.

However, the Fever increased their advantage to as high as 12 before recess. Golden State continued to fight back, and got the deficit below double-digits, 44-36. Caitlin Clark was scoreless until around the 4:00 mark, when she converted a layup. Although she had six assists to her credit.

Aliyah Boston was the only player on both sides to reach the 10+ points plateau, with 15 points and seven rebounds. The Valkyries shot 35% from the field, while the Fever were at a heated 49%, matching their nickname. Neither team shot extraordinarily well from beyond the arc.

In the second half, the Fever posted their largest margin of 13 points, but the Valkyries continued to battle back, outscoring the Fever in consecutive quarters. By the end of the third stanza, Golden State narrowed the margin to four points, 59-54.

In the Final quadrant, the Valkyries managed to overtake the Fever around the 8:00 segment (62-61), at the hands of a Tiffany Hayes bucket. Once they put themselves in front of the Fever, they had to stave them off for nearly 80% of the last quarter.

Despite Indiana’s valiant attempts to regain the lead, Golden State forged the lead up to 11 points. That was also the lead they had at the final horn, 88-77. A raucous crowd was more than excited with the home team’s fight and resilience.

Golden State had five players in double-figures, led by Kayla Thompson (16), Tiffany Hayes (14), Chloe Bibby (12) and Laeticia Amihere with ten points.

Indian produced four players with that scenario. Aliyah Boston topped her team with 17 points and 12 rebounds, while Kelsey Mitchell (16), Natosha Howard (13) and Clark nearly had a triple-double with 11 points, nine assists and seven rebounds.

The Valkyries are next in action Sunday, June 22, as they host the Connecticut Sun at 5:30 PM PT, while the Fever head down to Las Vegas to take on the Aces, the same date, but at Noon PT.

Kurtz Walks It Off Again as A’s Beat Astros 6-4 in Extras

Nick Kurtz celebrating after his walk off home run on Thursday night. (Photo: Athletics on Instagram)

By Jeremiah Salmonson

WEST SACRAMENTO–After dropping the middle two games of their four-game series with the Astros, the A’s looked to salvage a split with a win on Thursday night at Sutter Health Park. In what’s becoming a familiar storyline, Nick Kurtz played hero once again, launching a two-run home run in the tenth inning to walk off the Astros as the A’s won 6-4.

It’s impossible to understate the impact Kurtz is having on the Athletics right now. Thursday marked the fourth time in five games that he’s delivered a late-inning home run. He’s everything you want in the clutch, and his approach at the plate seems to be catching up to his immense talent. His walk-off blast traveled 416 feet to dead center field and left the bat at 105.6 mph. Facing Josh Hader with a 2-1 count, Kurtz crushed a middle-middle sinker for a no-doubt shot.

The A’s were only in position for that moment thanks to a strong outing from their starter.

Jacob Lopez turned in a fantastic performance, tossing six innings of one-run, four-hit baseball while striking out five. Lopez’s biggest moment came in the sixth, when he worked out of a bases-loaded jam by striking out the final two batters of the inning. He walked off the mound fired up with the 2-1 lead still intact.

The bullpen had mixed results. J.T. Ginn relieved Lopez and fired a scoreless seventh but ran into trouble in the eighth. After recording two outs, Ginn issued a walk and gave up a single, prompting Mark Kotsay to call on Mason Miller for a four-out save. But on Miller’s first pitch—a fastball over the heart of the plate—Victor Caratini crushed a three-run homer to tie the game at 4-4. It was Caratini’s second three-run shot in as many nights. Ginn’s final line was 1.2 innings, two runs on two hits.

Miller bounced back to record the final out of the eighth and followed it with a scoreless ninth, finishing with 1.1 innings pitched, one run, and two hits.

The A’s couldn’t push across a run in the bottom of the ninth, sending the game to extras. After holding the Astros scoreless in the top of the 10th, Kurtz delivered the decisive blow in the bottom half.

With the win, the A’s improved to 31-46 and will welcome the Guardians to town for a three-game series beginning Friday night. Jeffrey Springs (5-5, 4.52 ERA) will get the start for the A’s against Cleveland’s Tanner Bibee (4-6, 3.79 ERA).

⚡Craft cocktails? Check.
🔥Game-day bites? Oh yeah.
🏟️Steps from Golden 1 Center? You bet.

Open daily, Cyprus Grille is serving up local flavor with a front-row seat to the action. Stop by before or after the game—or make it your new downtown hangout.

Cyprus Grille—where fans fuel up.

📍Located inside the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena @ 300 J Street

Happy Hour – 4pm-6pm

Show your ticket for additional discounts when dining in. 

ICE tries to access Dodger Stadium denied entry by Dodgers podcast Daniel Dullum

ICE agents set up at the entrance of Gate E at Dodger Stadium before being asked to leave by the Los Angeles Dodgers ball club before their game against the visiting San Diego Padres (AP News photo)

ICE attempts access to Dodger Stadium proper; Denied entry by ballclub ; LAPD sent in to send away Federal Agents podcast with Daniel Dullum

Los Angels Dodgers and ICE agents met at the entrance gate at Dodger Stadium Thursday before the San Diego Padres and Los Angeles Dodgers game at Chavez Ravine. Federal agents were just outside the stadium at the entrances trying to gain access to the ballpark property.

There were concerns about the White House’s immigration crackdown and ICE trying to get into the Dodgers parking lot. Protesters who had been in downtown Los Angeles rushed to the scene and started yelling anti US Immigration and Customs Enforcement slogans at the federal agents at the ballpark.

The other concern going forward now is that employees, fans, US citizens, naturalized citizens, undocumented citizens, and anyone doing any business at Dodger Stadium or at any professional sports venue has got to be concerned about being arrested and deported without due process as what has been reported in the news.

Daniel Dullum is a Major League Baseball podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants game wrap: Webb rewarded for 7-inning, 9-K gem with win, as Giants beat Guards 2-1 to avoid sweep

San Francisco Giant Wilmer Flores hits a two run double in the bottom of the seventh to give the Giants the lead over the Cleveland Guardians at Oracle Park on Thu Jun 19, 2025 (AP News photo)

Thursday, June 19, 2025

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Cleveland Guardians 1 (37-36)

San Francisco Giants 2 (42-33)

Win: Logan Webb (7-5)

Loss: Matt Festa (1-1)

Save: Camilo Doval (11)

Time: 2:22

Attendance: 40,093

By Stephen Ruderman

SAN FRANCISCO–Logan Webb was rewarded for an incredible seven-inning, nine-strikeout performance by a two-run double by Wilmer Flores with two outs in the bottom of the seventh inning, and the Giants avoided the sweep with a 2-1 win over the Guardians to snap their four-game losing streak.

Usually, weekday getaway games at Oracle Park start at 12:45, but that was not the case today. Thursday was Juneteenth, which became a federal holiday in 2021. “Lift Every Voice,” the black national anthem, was played prior to the start of the game, followed by the Star Spangled Banner.

The Giants sent their ace and stopper, Logan Webb, to the mound, as they looked to snap their four-game snide and avoid the sweep on a hazy afternoon at Oracle Park. The Giants were held to just two runs in both of the first two games of this series, and with the offenses’ inability to give Webb run support, Thursday looked to be a good old-fashioned pitcher’s duel at the ballpark.

Webb ran into trouble right away in the top of the first inning, as the Guardians placed runners at first and second with one out in the top of the first inning. Webb struck Carlos Santana out swinging for the second out. Heliot Ramos then took an RBI base-hit away from Lane Thomas with a great diving catch out in left field to end the inning.

Gavin Williams took the ball for Cleveland, and the Giants went down scoreless in each of the first two innings. Webb settled down with a one, two, three top of the second, but he got into trouble again in the top of the third.

Angel Martinez led off the top of the third with a double down the right field line, and then Steven Kwan lined a base-hit up the middle that almost took off Webb’s head. The Guardians had runners at the corners with nobody out.

Daniel Schneemann, who hit the big home run last night, struck out swinging for the first out. Kwan then stole second, but Martinez was cut down at the plate by first-baseman Dominic Smith.

Webb had a chance to get out of the inning unscathed, but Santana had other plans. Webb threw a sinker just off the outside corner at the knees, and Santana dunked it out to shallow left-center to put the Guards on the board.

The Guardians got to Webb in the top of the third, but he settled down the rest of the way. In fact, Webb was dominant the rest of the way, and he set down 12 of the final 14 men he faced to finish off an incredible outing. While Webb gave up seven hits, he gave up just one run, and he struck out nine over seven innings. On top of that, he did not give up any runs.

Webb did his job. The only question was whether the Giants’ offense would do theirs. The Giants wasted major opportunities in three-straight innings from the third through the fifth, and they were unable to do anything after Heliot Ramos was hit by a pitch in the bottom of the sixth.

Williams was done after giving up just two hits over six shutout innings. Perhaps, the Giants would have better luck against Matt Festa in the bottom of the seventh.

Casey Schmitt started things off by fisting a broken bat single up the middle to center. Jung Hoo Lee then drew a walk, and the Giants had runners at first and second with nobody out. Up came Patrick Bailey, and he did exactly what he was supposed to do: bunt the runners over to second and third. It was with a torpedo bat, a fad that is thankfully going away, but he still got the job done.

Guardians Manager Stephen Vogt then brought in Nic Enright to face Wilmer Flores, who was pinch-hitting for Christian Koss. Wilmer worked the count to 2-2, and then he grounded a double down the left field line to give the Giants their first lead of the day.

The Giants have been pressing as of late and trying too hard to hit home runs. The bottom of the seventh inning Thursday was how the Giants are meant to win games, and exactly how they won during their torrid 24-14 start. It was a base-hit; a walk; a sacrifice bunt; and then a double down the line. Beautifully done.

Bob Melvin entrusted Randy Rodriguez with the top of the eighth Thursday, and Rodriguez rewarded his skipper with a one, two, three shutdown inning. Camilo Doval then came in for the ninth, and he threw a 1-2-3 inning to notch down his 11th save.

The Giants beat the Guardians 2-1, and this sold-out crowd of 40,093 could all go home happy. Well, at least all of the ones who were Giants’ fans.

Logan Webb was rewarded for his great start with the win; Matt Festa took the loss; and Camilo Doval got the save.

The Giants improve to 42-33, and they will face Rafael Devers’ old team, the Boston Red Sox, over the weekend for three starting Friday night. It should be interesting and full of emotions to say the least.

Hayden Birdsong (3-1, 2.79 ERA) will take the ball for the Giants in the series opener Friday night. Hunter Dobbins (4-1, 3.74), a young pitcher who has excited fans in Boston, will make the start for the Red Sox.

First pitch will be at 7:15 p.m.

Giants News and Notes:

Thursday was Duane Kuiper’s 75th birthday. It was fitting that his milestone birthday came on a day that the two teams he played for faced off.

Duane’s son, Cole, brought a birthday cake into the broadcast booth, and he was joined by Jon Miller and Dave Fleming, who came over from the radio booth. Buster Posey also came into the booth for the cherry on the top, as Thursday’s sold-out crowd sang “Happy Birthday.”

Here’s to many more years of great memories with the great Duane Kuiper, truly one of the greatest baseball announcers of all-time, behind the mic!

Sacramento A’s podcast Jeremiah Salmonson: A’s pitching pounded in last two games; Series with Astros concludes tonight

Sacramento A’s hitter Jacob Wilson (5) grimaces after striking out in the bottom of the seventh inning against the Houston Astros at Sutter Health Park on Wed June 18, 2025 (AP News photo)

Sacramento A’s podcast Jeremiah Salmonson:

#1 The Houston Astros took it the Sacramento A’s on Wednesday night in an 11-4 win for Houston. The Astros Jose Altuve and Victor Caratini hit three run home runs in the seventh inning that was the inning where the A’s pitching opened the flood gates.

#2 The A’s cured a lot ills for the Astros line up the Astros got a season high 20 hits on Wednesday night.

#3 The Astros pitcher Framber Valdez held the A’s to two runs and five hits in six innings of work as the Astros won their seventh game in eight tries.

#4 The A’s after winning four games in a row the A’s dropped their last two to the Astros having their heads handed to them by scores of 13-3 and 11-4 those last two games were a struggle.

#5 Starting pitchers for the Astros Colton Gordon (2-1 ERA 4.70) for Sacramento Jacob Lopez (1-4 ERA 4.80) to conclude the four game series at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento. First pitch 7:05 PDT.

Jeremiah Salmonson does the A’s podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

⚡Craft cocktails? Check.
🔥Game-day bites? Oh yeah.
🏟️Steps from Golden 1 Center? You bet.

Open daily, Cyprus Grille is serving up local flavor with a front-row seat to the action. Stop by before or after the game—or make it your new downtown hangout.

Cyprus Grille—where fans fuel up.

📍Located inside the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena @ 300 J Street

Happy Hour – 4pm-6pm

Show your ticket for additional discounts when dining in. 

Oakland Ballers report: Ballers Butz and Sullivan keep Riders off balance in 6-5 win

Oakland Ballers pitching held off the Glacier Range Riders on Wed June 18, 2025 at Raimondi Park in Oakland in Pioneer League action (Oakland Ballers photo)

Glacier Range Riders (10-16) 100 001 300 5 8 0

Oakland Ballers (18-8) 303 000 00x 6 12 3

Time:2:35

Attendance: 1,872

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–In a marked contrast to Wednesday night’s thrilling come from behind win over the Glacier Range Riders, the Ballers put up a half dozen runs in the first three frames and then held on to their 3-1 lead as it dwindled to 6-5 in the seventh to hang on and record their fifth straight victory.

It was Baseball for All Night, with an emphasis on women in baseball, and the umpire for the right side of the diamond was Kate Hart, who did such a good job that she passed virtually unnoticed. This evening’s contest began, like its predecessor on Tuesday, with the Riders taking a 1-0 lead in the top of the first, only now the Ballers roared back with three on back to back singles by Tramayne Cobb, Jr., and Esai Santos, followed by double by Davis Drewek that drove in both of them.

Cam Bufford’s fly to right allowed Drewek to advance to third, and he scored on Christian Almanza’s ground out to second. The B’s added another three tallies in their half of the third. Bufford opened it with a single to center and motored on to third on Almanza’s safety to right.

Danny Harris IV’s single to left plated Drewek and allowed Almanza to move up another 90 feet. With Lou Helmig at bat, a wild pitch enabled both runners to advance another base, and the Baller’s now led, 4-1. Helmig’s two bagger to right that made it 6-1.

Reed Butz, Oakland’s starting southpaw began to waver in the top of the sixth, just about the time the temperature began to drop. Gabe Howell, the second batter he faced, went yard on him to left, and that was it for Butz.

The eventual winning pitcher had needed 107 pitches to complete his 5-1/3 innings of work, during which he had surrendered two runs, one earned, on five hits, including Howell’s homer that drove him from the box. He struck out seven and walked two. Connor Richardson replaced him and hurled another 1-2 /3 innings.

The Range Riders’ resurgence in the top of the seventh suggested the possibility of a repetition in reverse of Oakland’s Tuesday comeback. Kyle Ashworth, leading off, set the stage by reaching first on an error by Harris. One out later, TJ Clarkson doubled to right.

Now it was 6-3. Another out later and another double, this one by Xavier Casserilla, and it was 6-4. Next up was Kingston Liniak. He managed a single to short, allowing Casserilla to make it to third. Seconds later, Cobb’s errant throw resulted in Liniak hugging third and Casserilla crossing the plate with Glacier’s fifth run.

Carson Lambert was on the bump for the B’s to pitch the eighth, and he provided a sigh of relief by escaping unscathed after throwing 17 pitches, one of which hit Angel Mendoza ,which brought forth cries of “He didn’t get out of the way” and so on from the crowd. Lambert also fanned a couple of Riders in the frame.

Connor Sullivan wrapped it up for the Ballers, needing only 12 pitches to strike out a pair of opponents on his way to earning his seventh save of the season. That’s the most in the league.

The visitors used four pitchers.. All of the runs the B’s were scored against Glacier’s starter, starboard hurler Grant Taylor, who took the loss, which dropped his record to 1-4. Eldridge Armstrong II (two innings), Jacob Hasty, and Luke Cooper (an inning each) followed him.

Drewek and Helmig got the hosts’ only two extra bases hits, with a double apiece. Helmig, with three, and Almanza and Buggs, with two each, were the only B’s to have multi-hit games. The Range Riders accomplished a rarity for a Pioneer League team; they didn’t make any errors.

The Ballers made three, but it was their defense that sent the fans home satisfied. Casserilla seemed assured of a Texas League single or more when his pop up to short center, almost invisible in the poorly illuminated Bermuda Triangle in the area behind second base, befuddled almost the entire concurrence at Raimondi Field. But Baller left fielder Davis Drewek was on the ball. And then he was under it, making a sliding catch to put an end to another night of anxiety and excitement.

The next encounter of this seven game series will be a celebration of Juneteenth and scheduled to start at 6:35 Thursday evening.