David Draayers trotting home after rounding third on a homerun, his third base coach out of focus in the background, the home plate umpire out of focus in the foreground
Doug Pfeiler/Corban Warriors
10
Winner British Columbia UBC 16-9
3
Corban (OR) CRB 6-19
Winner
British Columbia UBC
16-9
10
Final
3
Corban (OR) CRB
6-19
Score By Periods
Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
British Columbia UBC 3 0 1 0 2 4 0 0 0 10 14 1
Corban (OR) CRB 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 7 4

W: Anderson, Will (2-1) L: C. Shaffer (1-4)

10
Winner British Columbia UBC 17-9
9
Corban (OR) CRB 6-20
Winner
British Columbia UBC
17-9
10
Final
9
Corban (OR) CRB
6-20
Score By Periods
Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
British Columbia UBC 0 1 0 2 1 4 1 1 0 10 16 0
Corban (OR) CRB 2 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 12 0

W: Myttenar, Dylan (1-0) L: I. Bateman (0-1) S: Brock, James (1)

Game Recap: Baseball | | Warriors Communications (with notes from Thunderbirds Communications)

T-Birds sweep doubleheader with massive comeback win

KEIZER, Ore. – The first two of four matchups between the UBC Thunderbirds (17-9, 12-3) and Corban Warriors (6-20, 2-13) over a three-day span went the Thunderbirds' way on Saturday afternoon and evening at Volcanoes Stadium. The T-Birds jumped out to an early lead in game one that finished 10-3 then completed an eight-run comeback in the second with a 10-9 final score to harsh the Warriors' dreams of snapping their losing skid.

Game 1 – (RV) UBC 10, Corban 3

A three-run top of the first for the Thunderbirds set the tone early for UBC and despite a three-run offensive inning of their own for the Warriors in the third, British Columbia added runs in both the fifth and sixth and rode a quality start from southpaw Will Anderson to their 10-3 series opener victory.

Corban senior starting pitcher Chris Shaffer went 5.0+ innings and allowed seven earned runs off 12 hits and three walks while striking out three batters along the way. Junior relief pitcher Casey Henderson tossed the final 4.0 frames and saw just a single run scored off two hits and a walk while inducing five groundball and six flyball outs.

A T-Birds left-handed pitcher coiled in his windup and about to explode toward the plate and deliver a pitch

Anderson picked up his second win of 2025 with a 6.0 outing, allowing all three Corban runs to score on six hits, two walks, and three punchouts. Reliever Adam Khan kept the Warriors in check the remainder of the contest with just two base runners permitted in 3.0 innings of action.

The Corban offense was led by junior shortstop Isaac Bateman and junior designated hitter Peyton Rickard in game one, as the duo tallied two hits apiece while each recording an RBI. Senior third baseman Ryan Clay, sophomore leftfielder Lucas Mertlich, and redshirt sophomore second baseman Ethan Ammerman each secured a base hit as well.

British Columbia rightfielder Mitchell Middlemiss was unstoppable at the plate in game one for the T-Birds, as he was 4-for-4 with four RBI and a pair of runs scored from the No. 5-overall spot on the UBC lineup card. First baseman Trent Lenihan and catcher Kyle Yip each tallied three hits apiece and at least one RBI.

Trent Lenihan turned and watching the ball he hit as he follows through on a power swing
 
Game 2 – (RV) UBC 10, Corban 9

Game two was all Navy and Gold early as the Warriors jumped on Thunderbirds' starting pitcher Ryan Beitel over the first three innings, as three different Corban student-athletes launched home runs, beginning in the first when Clay blasted his fifth longball of the year to give his program a 2-0 lead.

After UBC earned a run back in the second, Rickard kickstarted a seven-run frame for Corban in the third with a bases-clearing double to deep center field, followed by a three-run bomb by Mertlich two batters later. On the very next at-bat, junior centerfielder Chase Elliott pelted his second home run of the season to end the massive offensive showcase for the Navy and Gold with a 9-1 lead through three innings.

However, the offense was unable put any more runs on the board for the remainder of the contest and slowly but surely, the Thunderbirds chipped away at their eight-run deficit, putting at least one run on the scoreboard every inning from the fourth through the eighth frames to turn a 9-1 shortfall into a 10-9 lead entering the bottom of the ninth and representing Corban's final opportunity to reverse their shortcomings on the mound. Clay would single to right field with two outs in the inning, yet a fielder's choice on the next at-bat wrapped up the doubleheader sweep for UBC.

Warriors' redshirt junior starting pitcher Josephan Gonzalez fanned four T-Bird batters yet saw six runs scored against his average in 5.0+ innings, with ten hits and a pair of walks stacking up against the NCAA DIII transfer. A quartet of relief pitchers all tossed a single frame for Coach Harris surrendering various sums of runs, with Bateman eventually taking the loss in his first trip to the mound this season. Rickard was the only pitcher in game two with a scoreless outing as he pitched the top of the ninth and allowed just one runner to reach base.

Ryan Beitel in the midst of his delivery, leg kicked up high as he is about to push off the rubber toward home plate

Beitel received the no-decision after allowing all nine runs for Corban in 2.2 innings off an equally impressive nine hits, with two free passes issued and a single strikeout. Relief pitcher Dylan Myttenar picked up the win after holding the Warriors to just two hits and no runs with six strikeouts and a pair of walks, while closer James Brock worked a two-inning save with two strikeouts and just the single from Clay representing his only blemish.

Redshirt junior designated hitter Joshua Miyazawa went 2-for-3 from the leadoff spot of the Corban lineup and scored two of his team's nine runs, while Clay matched his four-year teammate with two hits, two RBI, and two runs scored. Rickard and Mertlich both tied for the game-high in RBI with three apiece on their bases-clearing double and three-run homer, respectively.

In his first start of the weekend, British Columbia shortstop David Draayers was the catalyst for the UBC offense, as he finished 4-for-5 with three RBI and a pair of runs scored from the seven-hole in the lineup. The second, third, and cleanup batters in the T-Birds' lineup, represented by leftfielder Jonny McGill, Lenihan, and third baseman Aaron Marsh, were a combined 6-for-12 with three RBI and four runs scored.

The Warriors and Thunderbirds will play a pair of single morning contests over the next two days, with game three of the four-game slate scheduled for a 9am first pitch on Sunday back at Volcanoes Stadium.
 
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