Edenfield shines as Colonial 3 holds off Carmichaels
ROWES RUN — Steven Edenfield used his bat, glove and arm to help lift Colonial 3 over visiting Carmichaels, 4-2 in seven innings, in the opening game of the Fayette American Legion baseball playoffs last Friday evening.
Edenfield doubled to start a three-run second inning, made a key catch in center field to snuff out a Carmichaels rally and got the final three outs to earn the save as Colonial 3 moved into the second round of the winners bracket.
“He came up huge today,” Colonial 3 manager Don Bell said of Edenfield.
While Edenfield was the MVP of the game, the most valuable people before the game were the members of both coaching staffs who worked hard to turn what was a rain-drenched infield at Rowes Run Field into a playable surface.
The game began about 50 minutes late but once underway the field held up well.
“It was fun,” Carmichaels manager Andy Barrish said with a laugh of helping prep the field. “ItĢƵ baseball. You’ve got to do what you’ve got to do to play.”
Both teams were determined to get the game in.
“I have to thank Andy for waiting and helping us,” Bell said.
As it turned out, it was the only one of the four games on the Legion playoff schedule that wasn’t postponed by rain on Friday.
The pitching mound was one of the biggest concerns due to the muddy conditions but it didn’t stop either starter from twirling solid games.
Colonial 3ĢƵ Nik Gibson struck out 11 in 5 2/3 innings to earn the win. He allowed two runs on six hits and four walks.
“Nik did a nice job,” Bell said. “He really gutted it out out there.”
Losing pitcher Lane Zekir struggled in the first two innings before hitting his stride and wound up tossing a complete game, retiring nine in a row to finish up. He gave up four runs on six hits with four walks and seven strikeouts.
“Lane pitched great,” Barrish said. “HeĢƵ a gamer. I like all these kids because they never give up.”
Colonial 3 took a 1-0 lead in the first inning when Ricky Marucci walked, stole second, took third on a wild pitch and scored on Brandon BellĢƵ RBI ground out.
BellĢƵ squad put up three more runs in the second inning.
Edenfield drilled a lead-off double to left-center field and took third on Alec McLayĢƵ single to left. McLay stole second and Edenfield scored one out later on Owen MartinĢƵ infield single that shortstop Reed Long couldn’t corral after it was deflected by Zekir. Martin took second on MarucciĢƵ ground out and Silvio Urani then smacked a two-run single to left for what proved to be the winning runs.
“The key hit was SilvioĢƵ two-out single,” Bell said. “That was big for us.”
Gibson, meanwhile, breezed through the first two innings, allowing only a walk to Matt Barrish, but had to work out of a jam in the third.
Jacob Hair, who had two hits for Carmichaels, led off with a double and went to third on a bunt single by Brad Ruse, who then stole second. Gibson got two strikeouts and a ground out to squelch the threat, however.
Carmichaels broke through in the fourth.
Zekir and Jacob Knizner drew walks and Zekir scored on Reynolds’ RBI single to center. Hair followed with a run-scoring single to left to cut the margin to two before Gibson got a strikeout and a fly out to end the frame.
Colonial threatened to blow the game open in the bottom of the fourth when it loaded the bases with none out on a walk by Trevor Stewart and singles by Martin, who had two of his teamĢƵ six hits, and Marucci.
This time it was ZekirĢƵ turn to work out of trouble as he got a force out at home on a grounder to third baseman Yale Johnston, whose throw was scooped up by catcher Reynolds, then a strikeout and another force out to shortstop Long.
“We left some runners out there that we should’ve cashed in,” Bell said. “We had bases loaded, nobody out and didn’t get anybody home.”
Carmichaels mounted another charge in the fifth only to be rebuffed again by Gibson.
Barrish and Spishock led off with singles and after Gibson got a force out at third on ZekirĢƵ come-backer he walked Johnston and went to 3-1 on Knizner.
Bell called time out to try to settle his pitcher down and Gibson responded by coming back to get a strikeout for the second out.
“A couple times I told him you’ve got to put everything out of your mind and just focus on the next pitch,” Bell said.
The threat wasn’t over, though, as Reynolds laced a drive into right-center field but center fielder Edenfield tracked it down and made a fine running catch for the third out.
“That was huge,” Bell said. “Our outfielders have played well all year so thatĢƵ what I expect from them all the time.”
Barrish thought that was the key play of the game.
“If that ball gets down we score a couple, maybe three,” Barrish said.
Gibson struck out the first two batters in the sixth but his day ended at that point as he hit the pitch limit, so Bell called on Noah Mankin who got the third out on a grounder.
Mankin walked Barrish, who reached base three times, and Spishock also worked a walk to start the seventh, prompting Bell to call on Edenfield to close it out. He did just that getting a fly out, force out and strikeout to end it.
“Steven finished it well,” Bell said. “He had a great game. ItĢƵ nice to get the first one in a double-elimination tournament.”
Colonial 3 pitchers stranded 10 Carmichaels runners.
“We had our opportunities.” Barrish said. “We had runners in scoring position but didn’t get the key hit when we needed it.”
Bell was proud of his teamĢƵ performance.
“Our guys battle,” Bell said. “They came out and got after it. They’ve done this all year. They come ready to play. We’re not a full squad all the time but the guys that get here are ready to go.
“But a tip of the cap to both teams really.”
Barrish agreed.
“I thought we played well but hatĢƵ off to Don and his team,” Barrish said. “They hit the ball well, they played well, their pitcher threw a nice game.
“That was a very good baseball game.”

