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Not this time: Mikes’ suffer season-ending loss in third meeting with Avella

By Jonathan Guth 5 min read
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AvellaĢƵ Isaiah Bradick slides into third base ahead of the throw to Carmichaels’ Aydan Adamson during WednesdayĢƵ WPIAL Class A third place consolation game at Ross Memorial Park.
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Carmichaels third baseman Colin Andrew throws to first base for the out after fielding an Avella ground ball during WednesdayĢƵ WPIAL Class A third place consolation game at Ross Memorial Park.
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Carmichaels’ Dayton Reynolds bunts the ball against Avella during WednesdayĢƵ WPIAL Class A third place consolation game at Ross Memorial Park. Reynolds reached second on a two-base error on the play.
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Carmichaels coach Dickie Krause calls on Aydan Adamson to relieve Liam Lohr during the fourth inning of WednesdayĢƵ WPIAL Class A third place consolation game against Avella at Ross Memorial Park.
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Carmichaels’ Liam Lohr grounds out against Avella during WednesdayĢƵ WPIAL Class A third place consolation game at Ross Memorial Park. Lohr had the Mikes’ lone hit in a 6-2 loss to the Eagles.
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Carmichaels’ Aydan Adamson pitches against Avella during WednesdayĢƵ WPIAL Class A third place consolation game at Ross Memorial Park. Adamson tossed 2 ⅓ scoreless innings in relief but the Mikes lost, 6-2.
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AvellaĢƵ Westley Burchianti follows through on an RBI groundout during the Eagles’ three-run third inning against Carmichaels in WednesdayĢƵ WPIAL Class A third place consolation game at Ross Memorial Park. Avella won, 6-2.
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Carmichaels coach Dickie Krause returns to the third base coachĢƵ box after giving signs to a Mikes batter during WednesdayĢƵ WPIAL Class A third place consolation game against Avella at Ross Memorial Park.
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Avella players celebrate after a 6-2 win over Carmichaels in WednesdayĢƵ WPIAL Class A third place consolation game at Ross Memorial Park.
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Avella coach Jason Fogg gives a pep talk to an Eagles batter during WednesdayĢƵ WPIAL Class A third place consolation game against Carmichaels at Ross Memorial Park.

WASHINGTON – ItĢƵ hard to beat a good team three times.

Avella lost the regular-season series to section rival Carmichaels by a combined score of 20-5 in two games, but behind a strong pitching performance from Bryce Wright and some clutch hitting, the Eagles clinched a spot in the PIAA Class A baseball playoffs with a 6-2 victory over the Mikes on Thursday at Ross Memorial Park.

Avella (12-6) will play District 10 champion West Middlesex (10-11) Monday in the first round of the state playoffs. The site and time have yet to be determined.

Eagles coach Jason Fogg believes his team is the first in program history to qualify for the state tournament.

“I have been at Avella for 20 years, and I can tell you it hasn’t happened in 20 years, but I’ve been talking to my friends, and I don’t think itĢƵ ever happened,” Fogg said. “They did some damage to us in the middle of the year, but thatĢƵ a really good baseball team, and I think that was a little extra motivation for the boys.”

Avella won its first two games in the playoffs, including a victory over section champion Fort Cherry in the quarterfinals, but lost in the semifinals to Eden Christian that set up WednesdayĢƵ third-place game.

“That was a huge win (against Fort Cherry), and to be honest with you, that was kind of our Super Bowl,” Fogg said. “We were a little spent there for that semifinal game, but we had a week to recharge, and they came out great today and played really great baseball.”

The Mikes’ season comes to an end at 13-6.

“We didn’t hit,” Carmichaels coach Richard Krause said. “We knew them well, we played them twice during the regular season, and things do change over the course of a season.

“They beat Fort Cherry. Fort Cherry is a really good baseball team. That makes them a really good baseball team, so we knew that going in. We had a lot of respect for them, but to come in and get one hit… We didn’t pitch well, we didn’t hit, we didn’t do much of anything.”

Wright, a sophomore, yielded two unearned runs on one hit over 6⅔ innings. He had seven strikeouts and walked three. Wright was pulled after reaching 105 pitches while facing the Mikes’ Dom Colarusso. Per the pitch-count rules, Wright was able to finish the at-bat against Colarusso, and the righty did it in style with a strikeout.

“I think the atmosphere is what was different in this game,” Wright said. “Everyone came to play, was hitting the ball and that kept me up on the mound. I kept hitting the outside corner and was throwing a lot of sliders and a few fastballs. The slider is my favorite pitch.”

Isaiah Bradick finished the game with a strikeout.

Carmichaels took a 1-0 lead in the top of the first as Colarusso reached on a two-base error, moved to third on a wild pitch and scored on Robbie-Wilson Jones’ groundout.

“It started the way we wanted with a guy at third and nobody out,” Krause said. “We got the guy in, but we got him in on a ground ball. We got the bare minimum instead of having the chance of a big inning and sparking something. You have to give him (Wright) a lot of credit. The young man threw a great game. Credit to Avella and Jason.”

Avella responded with two runs in the bottom of the first on back-to-back singles by Chuck Rush and Brian Martos, who scored on wild pitches for a 2-1 advantage. Rush and Martos had three hits apiece.

The Eagles extended their lead to 5-1 in the third with three runs on three hits. Wright hustled into second base with a double after hitting a ball to right field before advancing to third on a single by Rush.

Wright scored on Martos’ single that dropped between the center and right fielders for a two-run advantage.

Bradick was hit by a pitch to load the bases and Rush scored on Westley BurchiantiĢƵ groundout. Martos raced home on Brayden FullerĢƵ groundout for a 5-1 lead.

Avella scored its final run in the fourth as Wright scored on a two-out single by Martos. Wright and Rush had back-to-back singles to set the stage for Martos.

The Mikes cut the deficit to four in the fifth when Colarusso walked, stole second, moved to third on an error and scored on Liam LohrĢƵ groundout. Lohr, who started on the mound for Carmichaels, had his teamĢƵ lone hit.

Lohr had five strikeouts and no walks.

Aydan Adamson pitched well in relief for the Mikes with 2 ⅓ scoreless innings, allowing just one hit while striking out four.

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