Rortvedt's walkoff hit in 12th brings relief, 7-6 win over Smokies
Ben Rortvedt felt just like everyone else who remained late Wednesday night through nearly four hours into the 12th inning at Blue Wahoos Stadium."I just wanted to go home," said Rortvedt, the Blue Wahoos catcher, laughing.So he made it happen.Rortvedt scorched a pitch from Christian Donahue, a Tennessee Smokies second
"I just wanted to go home," said Rortvedt, the Blue Wahoos catcher, laughing.
So he made it happen.
Rortvedt scorched a pitch from
The Blue Wahoos (37-29) were coming off five consecutive road losses against the Biloxi Shuckers and a season-high losing streak. It put them on brink of elimination in the Southern League South Division first-half race.
A win, any kind of way, brought a welcome reaction among Blue Wahoos teammates and brief on-field celebration.
"We went on the road and kinda got our teeth kicked in, actually, so it was nice to come home and come out with a W," Rortvedt said. "Even though it lasted a little longer than it should have. Getting back in the win column was nice."
The Shuckers lost Wednesday against the Jackson (Tenn.) Generals, so their lead is now three games with four left in the first half schedule. Because the Shuckers now also hold the head-to-head matchup, the only wild scenario in the Blue Wahoos favor would be sweeping their series and Biloxi getting swept.
What mattered most Wednesday with the Blue Wahoos was finding a way to win a game and smile again.
They thought they had sealed things in the ninth inning. But with two out, Tennessee's
Each team spent the 10th and 11th unable to score, as both teams' relievers handled the minor league rule where a runner is placed on second base to start the inning at-bat.
The Blue Wahoos'
"That is the first time I've seen us start with a man on second and go that many innings without us scoring," Rortvedt said. "It was really impressive (Weiss' relief pitching) and it was good to be part of it.
"(Weiss) kept the hitters off balance and got ahead of the guys. He was able to throw strikes and put pressure on them. So it was a really good job by him.
With their bullpen out of viable options, the Smokies used Donahue in the 12th. The second baseman barely topped 60-mph with his pitches. But it presented a challenge.
"It's BP (batting practice), but BP extended about 30 more feet, so it's a different look," said Rortvedt, referring to the big difference in velocity. "The second pitch (Donahue) threw me was slowed even more…. It was like 57 mph, so it kinda threw me off a little bit, but I was able to wait back and send us home."
Hours earlier, both teams score a run in the second inning.
After the Smokies regained the lead with three runs in the sixth, the Blue Wahoos came right back.
Blankenhorn followed with an RBI single and
It stayed that way until the 12th.
"Coming up in that moment, it kinda gives you some adrenalin," Rortvedt said. "My jersey I know as about four pounds heavier. Our bullpen has been kinda spent, so going extra innings didn't help at all.
"It was good when (hit) went fair to send us home."
BALLPARK MEMORIES
The Blue Wahoos'
The autograph session was part of the team's Wine And Sign Wednesdays. For adult fans, there were specials on wine drinks.
Pensacola police officer Amanda Davis was honored during the game for her service in law enforcement and recognized atop the Blue Wahoos dugout.
The National Anthem was performed by Sydney Burkey, who was discovered during the Pensacola's Got Talent event in March.