Murphy hits his fourth grand slam, Newman strong in relief as Salem CC baseball climbs over .500 for first time this season
WEDNESDAY REGION 19 BASEBALL
Salem CC 10, Mercer 8
Morris 18, Bergen 7
RCSJ-Gloucester 12, Suffolk 0
Camden 18, Ocean 3
Brookdale 15, Monroe 13
RCSJ-Cumberland 22, Eastern JV 8
By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News
WEST WINDSOR – Don Mattingly is Salem CC coach John Holt’s absolute favorite player in baseball, so it was only natural his thoughts turned to man they call “Donnie Baseball” when Matt Murphy cleared the bases with another bomb – again.
Murphy is having a Donnie Baseball kind of year for the Mighty Oaks. Mattingly hadn’t hit a grand slam in his first five big-league seasons with the Yankees and then hit an MLB-record six in 1987 and didn’t hit one again.
Murphy hopes, of course, there are more to come. His slam in the sixth inning Wednesday put the Mighty Oaks ahead for good in an eventual 10-8 victory over Mercer that got them over .500 for the first time this season (18-17). It was his fourth slam of the season, third this month and second in two games – and his 99th career hit.
And just like Mattingly before that magical ’87 season, he had never hit a slam before – ever.
“I just know throughout the season I’ve done really well with bases loaded,” Murphy said. “I kind of joke that I can only hit with bases loaded because good things usually happen. I never hit one in my life before until this season and now I have four.
“I don’t know what it is. I just seem to have a clear mind when I get up to the plate with bases loaded. I really went up with a clear mind and just try to put the ball in play and good things happen.”
The sophomore from Vorhees now has five homers and 44 RBIs this season. It was his third homer in the eight games since Holt pulled him in the middle of Game 1 and sat him in Game 2 of their March 29 doubleheader with Montgomery to send a message. He’s batted .400 with 20 RBIs since. All five of his homers have come on the road.
His other slams have come against Atlantic Cape Monday, the eight-RBI game at Middlesex April 4 – his first game back in the lineup — and Northland on the team’s Florida trip. The Mighty Oaks don’t keep stats on how well a player hits with bases loaded, but suffice to say Holt likes the odds when Murphy comes to the plate in that situation.
“This is a first for me to have that many in a season,” Holt said. “He’s just putting together good at bats when he gets into those situations. Today he was aggressive early and got a fastball early in the count and was able to drive it.”
Tuesday’s slam came in his next at-bat after taking a pitch off the helmet. He said the homer was not an angry reaction to getting hit for the 12th time this season.
“It made me just clear my head, I’ll be honest,” he said. “I laughed about it because it didn’t hurt at all. Kind of just hurt my ears a little bit because it’s so cold out here.
“I didn’t have any thoughts out there. The only thing I told myself before I go out there is just relax, stay calm and stay up the middle. I was inside-outting myself the first couple at bats, so I was just trying to tell myself to get my bat out in front and be on time with the ball. I did that, saw a pitch I liked and connected on it.”
It gave the Mighty Oaks a 7-4 lead and made a winning pitcher of reliever Alex Newman, who pitched four strong innings before the Vikings reached him in the eighth after Holt extended him for the longest outing of his JUCO career.
Pitching into a 20-mph wind with 35-mph gusts, the Mighty Oaks’ newly named “Fireman” kept the Vikings off the board from the fourth through seventh innings while his hitters erased an early 4-0 deficit. He retired nine of the first 10 batters he faced, six by strikeout. He gave up only two hits and walked one over his first four innings.
“I definitely felt a little more unsure about today because of the wind and the mound, but I just stuck with it, rolled with it and just trusted what I got,” Newman said.
“We’re going to need guys down the stretch that are going to be able to give us innings,” Holt said. “I have a lot of faith that Al’s going to come in and he’s going to throw strikes and he’s going to do the job. If there was a situation the other day where we needed a fire put out he was the guy. He’s consistent around the zone, he works his off-speed in real well right now and that gives us a chance to compete.”
Holt lifted him in the eighth after a walk and three straight hits led the Vikings to close within 9-8 and put the tying run in scoring position with one out. Chris Laute finished the inning, then Tyler Hacker slammed the door on their 5-6-7 hitters with a little more velocity in the ninth.
Chris Kelly homered in the fourth to get the Mighty Oaks on the board and went 3-for-4 with three runs scored in the game.
‘We preach around here you’ve got to compete, got to go one inning at a time, and they did that,” Holt said. “They could have easily hung their heads and kind of packed it in for the day. The weather conditions were rough. Some teams might have packed it away. Those guys dug deep and figured out a way to put some runs on the board and win the game.”
| Salem CC (18-17) | 000 034 201- | 10 | 8 | 3 |
| Mercer CCC (26-12) | 310 000 040- | 8 | 9 | 4 |