FAB 50 No. 4 Yucaipa upsets No. 1 Mission Viejo (6/6)

FAB 50 No. 4 Yucaipa upsets No. 1 Mission Viejo (6/6)

Jun 6, 2015 by Brentt Eads
FAB 50 No. 4 Yucaipa upsets No. 1 Mission Viejo  (6/6)

It’s hard in sports to beat a quality team three times in a season and that’s what Mission Viejo (30-1), the nation’s top rated team, learned the hard way Friday night in the CIF-Southern Section Div. II championship game as Yucaipa (31-3) won 1-0 and avenged two earlier one-run loses including the title game of the Bullhead (Ariz.) Tournament.

Brooke Bolinger of Yucaipa gave up only six hits while striking out seven in the win over top ranked Mission Viejo.
Brooke Bolinger of Yucaipa gave up only six hits while striking out seven in the win over top ranked Mission Viejo.

When the playoff brackets were announced several weeks ago, the expectation was that the two teams would meet in the finals at Bill Barber Stadium in Irvine, Calif. and that’s exactly what happened in a showdown between the two Southern Calif. powers.

The finals matchup also featured two of the top senior pitchers in the nation in Mission Viejo’s Taylor McQuillin, the 2014 National Gatorade Player of the Year who is headed to the Univ. of Arizona, and Yucaipa’s Brooke Bolinger, a Nevada signee who had led her team a No. 4 ranking and 17 game win streak going back to its April 4th 3-2 loss to Mission Viejo in the semifinals of the Michelle Carew Classic.

McQuillin would finish with 15 strikeouts Friday night and Bollinger seven, but the game looked like it would be anything but a pitcher’s duel in the first inning.

Taylor McQuillin threw 15 K's but took the 1-0 loss.
Taylor McQuillin threw 15 K’s but took the 1-0 loss.

Yucaipa’s first two batters, senior outfielder Annie Bakenhus and sophomore second baseman Megan Martin, led off with singles but McQuillin induced a pop-out to the catcher and then closed the inning with two strikeouts.

Bollinger also gave up two hits in her first inning and the Diablos loaded the bases with only one out, but the Thunderbird pitcher struck out the next two batters to escape the threat.

Both pitchers would settle down and scatter five hits each without allowing a run until the top of the fifth when McQuillin seemed to be cruising through another dominating inning.

She struck out the first two batters—giving her nine at that point–but Martin smashed a two-out double that hit the bottom of the fence.

Junior third baseman Jordan Green then singled to centerfield and Mission Viejo senior centerfielder Alyssa Palomino’s throw home beat Martin to the plate, but she was ruled safe due to obstruction as she was rounding third base.

That proved to be the only offense either team could muster despite Yucaipa totaling eight hits and Mission Viejo six.

Yucaipa fans had plenty to cheer about Friday night in Irvine, Calif.
Yucaipa fans had plenty to cheer about Friday night in Irvine, Calif.

Bolinger gave up a leadoff single in the bottom of the fourth and then retired 10 straight batters until a one-out walk in the last inning.

The season then came down to the a thrilling match-up between Bolinger and Palomino, an All-American who was selected in January to play for the USA Jr. National Team and will join McQuilling this fall at Arizona.

One of the top home run hitters in the country, Palomino ran the count full with the tying run on second and fouled off a few pitches before stroking a soft flair that junior shortstop Mallorie Cross easily corralled to set off the Yucaipa dogpile around Bolinger in the pitching circle.

Brooke Bolinger holds the championship plaque.
Brooke Bolinger holds the championship plaque.

“I was really hoping she would catch it,” the pitcher laughed after the game. “We were ready to win this game, we knew we would come out and play with fire, which we did.”

Bollinger admitted she pitched “the game of my lifetime, it was so much fun” and said her curve was the pitch that was working the best Friday night.

“It was our goal since Day 1 to make it to the finals and losing twice to Mission Viejo actually made us more determined to win tonight,” she added. “We know Taylor’s a great pitcher and her riseball was on. We were swinging and missing at a lot of outside pitches, but we found a way to win and get it done when it counted.”

Yucaipa head coach David Kivett said of the game-deciding play, the run scored in the top of the fifth, “It’s funny, that’s a play you see happen several times during the season and it’s not called. Tonight Megan had to go five feet out of her way and it was properly called. She did what we told her to do, put on the breaks but when the throw was up the line she went home. That play made all the difference in the world.”