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2005 Champion Nationals Dethrowned, 2006 Title Moves Across Town

Posted by Steve Elliott on Aug 06 2007 at 05:00PM PDT in 2019 Season
When a team beats you five times and you beat them zero times, that is a pretty good indicator of who the better team is. This is the case after saturday as the West Allis Nationals season ended at the hands of their cross-town rivals, the White Sox. Game 1 started promising enough with ex-National Tim Ustruck could not find the strike zone for his short-lived outing. The Nats got a 5 run lead going into the 4th off Ustruck, but the Sox never quit. Closing the gap as the game went along, the Sox finally tied the game at 6-6 and took the lead going into the 7th. With the score 7-6, in the top of the 7th, the Nats put a runner on 2nd with no one out, and P/Illegal player Jim Jungbauer grounded out to 2nd, moving the runner up to 3rd. After Sox coach Joel Meier came out to protest the runner was forced to go back to 2nd and Jungbauer was declared out. With 2 outs and a runner at 2nd Rookie 2B Mike Kenseth (UW-Whitewater) came up huge with a base hit to center off of Brian Long (Carthage), to tie the game up. CF Adam Karas reached base as did SS Andy Gerharz (UWM) after he was hit by a pitch. This loaded the bases with 2 outs and Long was replaced with eventual game 1 and game 2 winner Jeff Livek (Carthage). Livek recorded a strikeout to end the inning. In the bottom of the 7th Rookie 1B Paul Horvatin hit a deep fly-ball to left center off of reliever Alex Franson and it landed at the base of the wall, scoring the walk off run for the Sox.

Game 2, the Nationals jumped out to a 2-0 lead off of Livek, when Rookie 3B Jeff Donovan (UW-Whitewater) drove in 2 with a single through the right side. This was all that the Nats could get off Livek, who didn't have his best stuff, but had enough to get through the game without any other major threats. Lost in the game was a great pitching performance by Tim Spata, who more than kept his team in the game, but it wasn't to be. The White Sox came back and took the lead 4-2 and didn't ever relinquish it.

The season concluded with a 14-15 record, surprising considering the sub-.500 record came from a team that almost won the league. It just goes to show that the future is bright for the Nats, who have a young core of players, along with valuable veteran leadership. I guess the champaigne, the blatz and hammes and the baseball are at rest for another calander year. 2007 is the year to again dig it up, so everyone get right back to the cages, hit the track and start drinking your protein shakes, the season is only 9 months away!

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