close
close

Wells subdues Yarmouth in Class B South showdown, 5-1

Wells subdues Yarmouth in Class B South showdown, 5-1

WELLS — For most of the season, junior left-hander Keith Ramsey has been the top reliever for the Wells High baseball team, used to get the close out wins.

Wednesday in a 5-1 win against a potent Yarmouth lineup, Ramsey showed he can start and finish. Even in rainy conditions.

Ramsey gave up a leadoff hit by Matt Gautreau, then retired 18 straight, keeping his composure and maintaining his ability to spot pitches even after a persistent rain began just as the third inning ended. Yarmouth put together a pair of hits in the seventh inning to scratch across its only a run in a meeting of two of the top teams in the Western Maine Conference and Class B South.

“This was only my second start. I’ve been more coming in tight situations late in the game,” Ramsey said.

With the playoffs looming, Ramsey said he’ll be ready, “wherever they need me. If they need me to start and throw seven (innings), I’ll do that. If they need me to throw one to end the game, I’ll do that.”

Ramsey allowed three hits and no walks and struck out nine. Effectively spotting a lively fastball on the outside corner, he got a lot of soft contact. Yarmouth hit four pop-ups to the right side. Wells right fielder Nick Olsen made four routine putouts on high fly balls.

“He’s the ace. He picks his spots very well and finds them,” said Wells Coach Blake Pease.

Wells and Yarmouth are both 10-4 and battling for second place in the Class B South Heal point standings.

See also  Andre Savelio plays full game and on trial centre scores four in Hull FC Reserves' win

For the second straight game, Wells avenged an earlier loss against a top-rated team. The Warriors beat No. 1 Cape Elizabeth on Monday, 7-1, behind junior starter Spencer Carpenter.

Since an 8-1 setback at Yarmouth, Wells has won four straight, allowing just two runs.

“It’s learning. Seeing what they do, seeing what we can improve on,” said Wells senior catcher Caden Dufort, who helped his pitcher by blocking three third strikes in the dirt and then making the throw to first to finish the out.

Wells scored four runs in the second inning against Yarmouth starter David Swift. Ramsey, Dufort and Mike Lewinski started the outburst with consecutive singles. Olsen drew a bases-loaded walk to force in the first run. Dufort beat the throw home on a slow roller to first by Chase Trudeau to make it 2-0. The other runs scored on an RBI single by Ayden Collins and a groundout by Carpenter.

Ramsey helped his own cause with an RBI single in the sixth, driving home Carpenter, who walked and moved up on an error.

Yarmouth lost its second game in two days. On Tuesday, the Clippers had a 10-game winning snapped in an 11-0 loss to Class A Oxford Hills. In its 10 wins, Yarmouth scored 76 runs.

“We need to play better, hit better,” said Yarmouth Coach Marc Halstead. “Oxford Hills yesterday, down here today, and we should have scored more than one run in the last 26 hours, but no excuses. Good pitcher who had a good day. We just have to swing the bats better.”

See also  Gladstone’s Library restaurant team celebrate top honour |

 

 


Use the form below to reset your password. When you’ve submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.

« Previous

  • May 24, 2023