Old Town claims first baseball state championship in school history – Bangor Daily News
BANGOR, Maine — Any successful baseball team will tell you that you have to experience heartbreak to achieve championship success.
The Old Town Coyotes have had their share of postseason misfortune the past two postseasons, but with a chance to win the program’s first state championship Saturday, coach Brad Goody’s club didn’t disappoint.
The Coyotes blitzed Southern Maine champion Freeport with a 13-hit attack and an efficient pitching effort from Ethan Stoddard en route to a 12-2 Class B state championship victory at Mansfield Stadium.
Austin Sheehan’s two-run double in the bottom in the fifth inning created the 10-run mercy rule and set off a wild celebration that could’ve been heard back in the Canoe City.
Old Town wraps up the season 19-1 while Freeport, the No. 7 seed in the south, which upset three top seeds to reach the state final, finishes 14-7.
Things didn’t start off too swimmingly for Old Town, as the Falcons strung together a pair of first-inning runs on Colby Wagner’s RBI single and a sacrifice fly by Josh Burke.
That didn’t sit well with Stoddard.
“I get kind of mad when we get down in the first inning,” said Stoddard, who scattered five hits and didn’t allow a runner to reach third base the remainder of the game.
The Coyotes responded in the bottom of the first, as Ryan Hoogterp, Drew Coulombe, Ethan Stoddard and Cole Daniel strung together four straight base hits, with Coulombe and Sheehan each driving in runs with base hits, Daniel stealing home on a double-steal and Jacob Ketch lifting a sacrifice fly to left.
The aggressive Coyotes scored four more times in the second and twice more in the third. Before the Falcons could settle in, they were down 10-2.
“We’re tough one through nine,” Goody said, praising his team’s depth. “When we’re hitting, we’re all very good.”
Goody’s offense certainly came out aggressive, scoring more than three runs for the first time in the postseason, more than enough for Stoddard and a defense that committed just one error.
“These guys believe in each other; they prepare very well,” Goody said. “We just stayed to ourselves, we stayed loose and we had a lot of fun.”
The Coyotes had at least one baserunner in every inning.
“They weren’t trying to do too much,” Freeport coach Bill Ridge said. “They were spraying singles all over the place, just hard-hit singles.”
Old Town’s lone extra-base hit of the day, a drive to the right-center field gap by Sheehan, wound up ending the contest.
“We just let them swing and go for it, and it seemed to work,” Goody said. “Our last game, that was our approach and we didn’t really change it today.”
Old Town also took advantage of four Falcons errors and three walks and scored twice on double-steals.
“When they got a pitch to hit, they took advantage of it,” Ridge said. “They didn’t let us get away with anything.”
Hoogterp and Daniel each scored three runs for the Coyotes while Stoddard had two hits, two RBIs and three runs. Ketch also drove in a pair of runs.