San Jose – In baseball, an error can be the difference in a game.
So it was Friday at Bellarmine College Prep. The bells of the house organized St. Ignatius in a confrontation of West Catholic Athletic League in San José.
At the bottom of the second entrance, Bellarmine had Nate Bateman first when Dash Knight cut a ground ball in the middle. The ball was lost in the central box, and the bells were sagües had two runners and without outs.
They took advantage of two more hits and a double race score game, and that was all she wrote. Those two races were all those needed in a day of excellent launch and defense, and the Bells beat themselves 2-0.

“Whoever blinks first or makes the first mistake in the types of thesis games in a usalea way losing the game,” said Bellarmine coach Nate Sutton. “Especially in our League. It seems that the launch is quite dominant as a whole.”
It was certainly Friday afternoon. Bellarmine combined for a bleached, since the Apollo Lapiz starter launched 4 innings without 2/3 score before giving way to Persa Persa, who closed with 2 1/3 paintings of relief without score.
The opener of Si Chase Gordon was just as good, launching a complete game with six job tickets and only a career allowed. It may have allowed some without the error behind him in the field.
It was just that child or afternoon. Everything Tok was a small daylight in a game determined by a splinter.

“I thought our pitcher did a great job,” said the coach of Si, Brian Pollzzie. “Chase was really efficient. They hit a couple of balls, a couple of touches, and we didn’t make a play or two. I thought their pitcher did a great job. They are a difficult team.”
Gordon was also the best hope of whether for an opportunity to produce execution. He reached the dish at the top of the third with the bases loaded and agreed a line to the deep right center, but Luke McNeil de Bellarmine put him to end the threat.
Gordon came up with the bases loaded again in the fifth and aligned with the central gardener of Bells, Evan Tavarez. It was that child of the night to himself, and another validation victory for a Bellarmine team that has accumulated some print results in recent weeks.
The bells (10-7, 4-5 Wcal) began playing Wcal 0-5 this year, but since then they won their last four against the Wcal schools, including a victory of 12 tickets over St. Francis and a sweep of the cathedral of the Sacred Heart.

“While we take the mistakes we have made and learn from them, then we are improving,” Sutton said. “Those losses are not necessarily losses if we can get something out of that. Our goal is at the end of the year to play our best baseball. That was the message all the time. Taking the first of the road, learn to win.
“Especially last year, we made a great season. We are learning to win games this year.
Not everything is lost to himself (8-5-2, 5-3 Wcal). The Wildcats will now be prepared to travel to Sacramento for Boras Classic, a prestigious tournament called by the super agent of the MLB Scott Boras that faces some of the best preparation teams in northern California with each other.
“You will see a good release, and we will definitely learn a lot about our team during the next week,” said Pollizzie. “We are excited. We are happy to have been invited to that, and now we are only trying to play as well as possible.”









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