Cal Wins First Series at Stanford Since 1995

Photo: Left fielder Charlie Cutler went 4-for-12 against the Cardinal this weekend, including Friday's game-winning single in the 10th.
Ted Kwong/Staff
Left fielder Charlie Cutler went 4-for-12 against the Cardinal this weekend, including Friday's game-winning single in the 10th.





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After two narrow wins over Stanford in the first two games of the weekend, the No. 16 Cal baseball team entered Sunday with the possibility of sweeping the No. 6 Cardinal for the first time in 16 years still very much intact.

With one swing, Brent Milleville shattered it-and possibly the ball, as well-to pieces.

Stanford's designated hitter unloaded on a fastball from Kevin Miller with the bases loaded and one out in the fifth, crushing it over the trees that line the left-field wall of Klein Field at Sunken Diamond to break a 3-3 tie.

The Cardinal went on to celebrate Senior Day with an 8-5 win over the Bears. But Cal pulled out victories on Friday and Saturday to break a different streak-recording their first weekend series win in Stanford since 1995.

"There were some opportunities lost," coach David Esquer said. "We haven't been good enough to finish it off with a great third day performance. And that's what takes. Good's not good enough against someone scrambling to avoid a sweep."

It was still a big improvement on the previous two road series that Cal (32-16-2, 11-10 in the Pac-10) had played, when they went a combined 1-5 against Arizona State and USC. But the opportunity to make a huge statement against the Cardinal (29-18-2, 11-7) disappeared on the vapor trail left by Milleville's grand slam.

Cal jumped out to an early 3-0 lead in the second inning on a bloop RBI double by Jeff Kobernus and a two-run double from B.J. Guinn.

Bears starter Chris Petrini actually held Stanford hitless through 3 1/3 innings, but things began to unravel for him in the fourth when, with one out and a 2-2 count, Cardinal catcher Jason Castro check-swung at a high pitch. The entire Cal bench jumped up looking for the strikeout call, but the umpires ruled that Castro had held up.

"Obviously I think that was a bad call, and then he walked (Castro)," Esquer said. "It was unfortunate. You hate to turn on that, and I probably didn't do as good a job as I could have settling him down after that call."

Petrini didn't record another out. Stanford tagged him for back-to-back RBI singles and Miller gave up a sacrifice fly in relief to tie the score at 3-3.

After Stanford loaded the bases against Miller in the fifth, Milleville belted the second grand slam of his career.

Stanford starter Jeffery Inman settled down after the three-run second to improve his record to 7-2 and hand Miller (6-1) his first loss of the season.

Friday night, Tyson Ross kept the Cardinal lineup in check through eight, retiring 14 straight hitters at one point while the Bears built a 3-1 lead. But Stanford finally got to him in the bottom of the ninth with Randy Molina's RBI single tying the score at 3-3.

Cal then hit back in the 10th, as Charlie Cutler's single drove in Michael Brady to make the score 4-3, and Matt Gorgen pitched a scoreless 10th for the win.

"It was an amazing feeling," Cutler said. "I'm just glad that he didn't make the play. My initial reaction was that I hit it right at him, and when I saw it get by I was thrilled."

The Bears received another quality start on Saturday from Craig Bennigson, who allowed just two runs in six innings.

Down 2-1, the Bears finally broke through in the seventh for three runs on a two-run single by Kobernus and a squeeze play from Brady. Cal tacked on another run in the eighth to make it 5-2, and Gorgen survived a scare in the ninth by retiring Austin Yount-the potential tying run-on a flyout to the warning track to notch his ninth save of the year.

Tags: STANFORD


Contact Matt Kawahara at mkawahara@dailycal.org.



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