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BASEBALL: Serra Stunned by Homestead

Mistake-prone Padres can't recover from quick 4-0 hole, suffer first opening-round exit since 2005.

 

Defensive miscues hurt the Serra High baseball team throughout the regular season. On Wednesday afternoon, errors played a leading role in the Padres’ surprisingly quick exit from the Central Coast Section Division I playoffs in Cupertino.

Sixth-seeded Homestead capitalized on a pair of two-out errors in the first inning and batted around to score four unearned runs, and No. 11 seed Serra never recovered. The visiting Padres’ deficit ballooned to seven runs two innings later, and soon enough Serra was handed a 7-2 defeat that marks the program’s first opening-round ouster since 2005.

“I’m spinning right now—sort of numb,” Padres second-year coach Craig Giannino said. “Hard to believe.”

Serra (17-12) hadn’t played an error-free game all season, and it didn’t take long for that streak to continue. With Homestead’s Gordon Deacon (2-for-4) at second with two outs in the first, Padres starter Orlando Razo seemed poised to get out of the inning by inducing a grounder from cleanup batter Owen Price. But a throwing error allowed Deacon to score and Price to take second, and then Scott Torres (2-for-3) promptly followed by dropping an RBI single into shallow left field to make it 2-0.

After a Carl Gutekunst single, Homestead first baseman Jeff Hardy delivered the big blow with a two-run double to deep center that put Serra in a 4-0 hole.

Another error on a tough-hop grounder gave the Mustangs runners at first and third, but Razo induced a force play to end the inning.

“It’s pretty much been a pattern consistently,” Giannino said when asked about Serra’s defensive lapses. “We’re talking about fundamental plays, playing catch, groundballs.”

That lead proved plenty for Homestead starter Graham Gage, who allowed two runs in 5 1/3 innings, striking out eight and walking none.

Serra’s Razo, a sophomore who has impressed, exited after allowing an RBI single to Gutekunst with two outs in the third that made it 5-0. Then Homestead (18-13-1) scored twice more before reliever Thomas Cox could end the threat, effectively putting the game out of reach.

After Serra’s Chris Lewis (2-for-3) led off the sixth with a single off Gage, Michael McEntee hammered a two-run, opposite-field home run over the 369-foot sign in right-center. But that marked the only inning in which the Padres managed multiple hits—another sluggish showing for a lineup that has had its fair share of meager days.

In recent years, Serra had routed Homestead in CCS openers—prevailing 8-0 in 2008 and 11-0 a year later—but the Mustangs decisively turned the tables on Wednesday.

Serra center fielder Andre Mercurio, who doubled and drew a walk, said the disheartening ending seemed about par for the course for a season that included a 7-7 finish in the West Catholic Athletic League and a first-round loss to St. Ignatius in the league’s tournament.

“It didn’t seem like this year our team wanted it, wanted to work hard enough in practice,” the San Jose State-bound senior said. “It seems like in the dugout, sometimes we didn’t really care. It’s definitely frustrating. … It’s frustrating for sure.”

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Carlmont pulled off another Division I shocker in defeating top-seeded St. Francis 4-3. Click here to see Patch's coverage.

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Homestead 7, Serra 2

S – 000 002 0 – 2 7 2

H – 403 000 x – 7 10 3

WP: Gage. LP: Razo.

HR: McEntee (S). 2B: Mercurio (S); Hardy (H). 2 hits: Lewis (S); Deacon, Torres,

2 RBI: McEntee (S); Hardy (H).

Records: Serra 17-12. Homestead 18-13-1.

Why did Serra never appear in sync this year? Tell us in the comments.

Jim Smith

10:18 am on Thursday, May 19, 2011

What's so Stunning about Homestead beating Serra, No. 6 beats No. 11 seed? The WCAL is weak this year, the De Anza is a better league. 3 of the 8 teams remaining in Div 1 are from the De Anza, Homestead, Palo Alto, and Wilcox.

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Greg Lydon

2:35 pm on Thursday, May 19, 2011

Very good analysis Jim. The top half of the De Anza, including Los Altos and Los Gatos all have very solid teams. I think it was more of the way Serra lost that was surprising. The team had very high expectations coming into the season. The Palo Alto-Homestead game on Saturday will be a dandy.

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Big Hurt

4:28 pm on Thursday, May 19, 2011

You guys have got to be kidding! Anytime a WCAL school loses to a public school in the playoffs, that qualifies as at least a mild upset. Serra was flat-out humbled by a solid Homestead team. Yes, the Pads have been down all year -- and were more vulnerable to an early loss than at any point in recent memory. But losing by that margin and looking lifeless in the process? Big-time reality check. Anybody who follows CCS sports knows playoff seeds mean NOTHING. No argument here that the WCAL is down this year ... but unless a De Anza team wins the Div. I title, the WCAL is still tops.

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bill

8:49 am on Friday, May 20, 2011

Big hurt WCAL is the best league. BUT the De Anza is better this year Serra Only had 47 ccs points and was the 11 seed Homestead had 59 points thats a big differance so im sorry but no upset. BTW intresting FACT the last time Serra was out in first round was 2005 agianst Santa Clara Who was a 15 seed the funny thing is that Chuck Blair was the coach of Santa Clara and now homesteads head coach.

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