Sean Paul’s ‘Imperial Blaze’ fizzles quickly
Big beats and barely discernible lyrics have long been Sean Paul’s signature.
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Big beats and barely discernible lyrics have long been Sean Paul’s signature.
After the Hoosiers’ 2009 Big Ten Championship and NCAA Louisville Regional appearance, two feats IU baseball had not accomplished since 1996, it’s safe to say IU coach Tracy Smith’s project has begun.
Vanderbilt would go on to score five runs in the bottom of the fifth inning, extending its lead beyond IU’s reach. The exchange led to a premature end to IU’s first trip to the NCAA Regional since 1996.
IU's season ended in the fifth inning of the Louisville Regional. The Hoosiers lost 10-0 to Vanderbilt, eliminating them from the NCAA tournament. The Commodore team the Hoosiers faced had lost by one run against Middle Tennessee in its 5-4 opening game at Jim Patterson Stadium. The Hoosiers were 32-26 on the season and gained their first Big Ten tournament win and NCAA Regional since 1996. IU had the bases loaded in their 10-0 elimination game loss to Vanderbilt, no outs. Three batters then came up to bat; they were all immediately sent back to the dugout, ending the inning and stranding three base runners. The scenario would prove IU's most threatening and it would never score in the contest. Tyler Rogers, Jake Dunning and Brain Lambert represented the three tying runs as Vanderbilt had a 3-0 lead. The inept stint at the plate squandered IU's first and only offensive opportunity of the contest. IU would tally a total of nine hits without any runs. Vanderbilt found itself in a similar fifth-inning situation. However, they ended the session with five runs and added two insurance runs in the final three innings for a 10-0 victory. Vanderbilt posted 13 hits and 10 runs, leaving only three innings unblemished. Junior pitcher Matt Bashore had one of his worse days on the mound and only lasted four and a-third innings. He allowed eight runs, with seven of them earned and struck out seven. A home run he allowed to Brain Harris, the first batter he faced, sent Bashore reeling toward the hitter-friendly day. Four other pitchers would touch the mound and allow two more runs.
IU’s season ended in the fifth inning of the Louisville Regional.
IU rushed the mound in jubilation after its first Big Ten win since 1996. Now, it is facing the realities of postseason play.
IU allowed four unearned runs in their loss to Louisville, 8-2.
The third and fourth innings were dominated by the pitchers who didn't allow scores. However, it was the bottom of the fifth inning where IU faltered.
The first inning saw only one hit tallied, as both pitchers controlled the action from the mound.
Standing in a crouched position, his hands tickling the air, Evan Crawford’s eyes are fixed on the opposing pitcher. Crawford takes off after he sees the pitcher’s high-arching leg, a sign of an imminent thrust into his delivery. Within an instant, he safely slides into another stolen base.
Matt Carr made it into the fifth inning before the seams ripped off a makeshift midweek pitching lineup.
IU played catch-up once again and the offense was forced to work its way back from a 5-2 fifth inning deficit.
Visitors to the Indiana baseball locker room are greeted by a nearly bare casing – one in which only two teams are honored. The more prominently placed of the two displays is the Hoosiers’ 1949 Co-Big Ten Champions, providing a window into IU’s past in more ways than one.
Down 0-1 against Michigan, the IU baseball team seemed destined to relinquish a Big Ten series in Ann Arbor, Mich.
IU finished its series in Ann Arbor with another Big Ten series win, surrendering its only loss in a 6-1 game to Big Ten Pitcher of the Year candidate Chris Fetter (6-1).
The IU baseball team was unable to hold onto an 8-3 lead against Louisville on Tuesday, falling 10-8 to the Cardinals. The loss was the Hoosiers' second to Louisville in the month of April.
The Hoosiers will get another shot at the Cardinals at 4 p.m. today on Sembower Field at their most stable point in the season.
With team members’ fingers collectively waving a No. 1 in the air, the IU baseball team made its way down Fee Lane, halting traffic after a 2-1 series win against Penn State.
Hi all,
Jake Dunning stepped up to bat with the bases loaded, the tying and game-winning runs represented on first and second base.