Burdick delivers Barons a 1-0 victory
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Mike Sciacca, Independent
Colleen Burdick delivered a Fountain Valley High a key Sunset
League softball victory Thursday, but it was pitching ace Natalie King
who keyed the Barons’ 1-0 triumph over host Marina.
Burdick came up with a one-out RBI single to right field in the top of
the seventh inning, scoring Inez Vasquez from third base with what turned
out to be the winning run.
Although it was just the second league game for both teams, the
implications of the outcome carried a lot of weight.
Both coaches knew it, too.
“This was a big game, no doubt, but it’s the first of many to come in
league play,” Fountain Valley Coach Cary Baker said. “This is a big, big
win for us, not only in the standings, but because it came on their
(Marina’s) home field.”
The contest figured to be a showdown between a pair of standout pitchers,
and it didn’t disappoint.
Fountain Valley’s right-handed senior, Natalie King, time and again felt
the heat from Marina but, time and again, managed to escape the wrath of
the Vikings.
King, in improving to 11-3 overall, struck out 14 and allowed just three
hits.
She came into the ballgame with 154 strikeouts, second best in the
county.
King’s counterpart, Marina’s Steffany Stenglein, was equally impressive,
striking out 12 to go along with four hits and a walk.
The loss was the first of the season for the right-hander, who fell to
8-1.
“I really feel sorry for Steffy, because I thought she pitched a great
game,” Marina Coach Shelly Luth said. “I thought she was in control all
game, but our offense just couldn’t give her the lead. That’s a shame,
because we wasted a great pitching effort.”
Marina (11-2, 1-1) threatened to put King in the hole in the first three
innings, but King came up with some magician-like work to escape
unscathed each time.
The Vikings had their best chance to score first in the bottom of the
third inning, when lead-off hitter Bree Boyer drew a walk, and Heather
Saltarelli laid down a bunt single. On the bunt, Fountain Valley third
baseman Tiffani Miller overthrew first base, sending Boyer to third base.
With nobody out, King preceded to strikeout Stenglein, Marina’s clean-up
hitter, Tina Klingzing, and Sara Pagano, to get out of the jam.
King faced similar situations in both the first and second innings and
each time, came up with the same solution.
In the Vikings’ first at-bat, Hagan was hit by a pitch and Boyer drew a
walk on four consecutive balls to put runners on base. Saltarelli
successfully bunted the runners to second and third base, but King fanned
Stenglein, then got Klinging on a full-count fastball.
King also was in the hole in the second inning when Marina’s Nelsie
Zaragoza reached base on an infield error and Cara Congelliere beat out
an infield grounder with one out. But with runners at first and second,
King struck out No. 9 hitter Brooke Crouche, then took care of the top of
the Marina order when she got Hagen on a 2-2 fastball.
“It’s really frustrating when you waste (scoring) opportunities such as
those, and you need to score early on a pitcher the caliber of King,”
Luth said. “We just couldn’t put the ball in play when we needed to. We
tried to squeeze (Stenglein was unsuccessful in the third inning) and
hit-and-run, but nothing worked. We couldn’t manufacture anything. She
(King) did a real nice job of moving the ball around and keeping us
guessing.”
Baker agreed.
“If it wasn’t for Natalie, we wouldn’t be leaving here with a 1-0 win,”
he said. “She was fantastic, finding her way out of those first three
innings. “I thought we had a terrible beginning, but we just kept
swinging away. Colleen (Burdick) had the big hit, but it was Natalie who
got the job done.”
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