Category: Sports

Sounds Shut Out Zephyrs, Win Third Straight

Sounds5Three pitchers combined to shut out the New Orleans Zephyrs in a 7-0 win for the Nashville Sounds Monday night in New Orleans.

It’s the third shutout for the Sounds in their last six games. Three consecutive wins has pushed their record to 14 games over .500 at 62-48. The record is just one win shy of matching their high-water mark of 15 games over.

Daniel Mengden, fresh off of being optioned from Oakland, started for Nashville and delivered five scoreless innings. He scattered five hits, walked one and struck out five in his fourth win of the season with the Sounds. The scoreless performance lowered his Triple-A ERA to a minuscule 1.25.

Aaron Kurcz followed Mengden with three scoreless frames of his own before handing off to Patrick Schuster who tossed a scoreless ninth to preserve the shutout.

Newcomer Brett Eibner wasted little time making his mark with the Sounds. Playing in his first game since being acquired by the Athletics in a trade with the Royals, Eibner belted a solo homer in the second inning to give Nashville a 1-0 lead.

The center fielder walked in his final four plate appearances. The four walks matched a franchise record that has been accomplished only 15 times with the last occurring in 2008.

Back-to-back triples by Arismendy Alcantara and Jaycob Brugman increased the Sounds’ lead to 2-0 in the fifth.

They scored in four of the final five innings to break the game open. Alcantara manufactured a run in the sixth, an error by Zephyrs third baseman Matt Juengel brought in three runs in the eighth, and Colin Walsh knocked in a run with a groundout in the ninth.

Alcantara, Brugman and Joey Wendle had multi-hit games for the Sounds who will attempt to sweep the series Tuesday night.

Since starting the month of July 1-8, the Sounds have won 14 of 20 games to open a sizable lead in the American Southern Division. They opened play on Monday with a nine game lead in the division.

The series finale in the four-game set is scheduled for Tuesday night at Zephyr Park. Right-hander Raul Alcantara (1-0, 0.00) starts for the Sounds against right-handed pitcher Dylan Axelrod (7-5, 3.93) for the Zephyrs. First pitch is scheduled for 6:00 p.m. CST.

The 2016 season is the Sounds’ 19th year in the Pacific Coast League and their second as the Oakland Athletics’ top affiliate. Tickets are available now by calling (615) 690-4487 or by visiting www.nashvillesounds.com.

Sounds Playoff Tickets Go On Sale August 15

Sounds7Tickets for the 2016 Pacific Coast League playoff dates at First Tennessee Park will be available for purchase beginning on Monday, August 15 at the Nashville Sounds box office and online at www.nashvillesounds.com. Current season ticket members will have access to playoff tickets one week prior to the general public on-sale date.

Pricing for potential playoff games will be the same as regular season ticket pricing, although fans who purchase a playoff strip to reserve the same seat for all six potential playoff games will receive a discounted rate of up to 28% off day of game pricing.

Entering play on Monday, Nashville (61-48) currently holds a nine-game lead in the PCL American Conference Southern Division over Memphis with 35 games to play in the regular season. The Sounds last qualified for the postseason in 2007.

If the Sounds can capture the PCL American Conference Southern Division title, they would host the final three games (as necessary) of the best-of-five conference finals against the American Conference Northern Division champion on the weekend of Friday, September 9 through Sunday, September 11.

Should the Sounds advance to the PCL Championship Series, First Tennessee Park would play host to the final three games (as necessary) against the winner of the Pacific Conference on the weekend of Friday, September 16 through Sunday, September 18.
PCL American Conference Finals
Game 3 – Friday, Sept. 9 7:05 p.m.
Game 4* – Saturday, Sept. 10 7:05 p.m.
Game 5* – Sunday, Sept. 11 6:35 p.m.
(* if necessary, best-of-five series)

PCL Championship Series
Game 3 – Friday, Sept. 16 7:05 p.m.
Game 4* – Saturday, Sept. 17 7:05 p.m.
Game 5* – Sunday, Sept. 18 6:35 p.m.
(* if necessary, best-of-five series)

Tickets for all playoff dates may be purchased by calling the Sounds at (615) 690-HITS, ordering through the team website at www.nashvillesounds.com, or by visiting the First Tennessee Park box office.

If tickets are purchased for a playoff game that does not occur, credits will be issued toward the 2017 season. Rainout and/or unused tickets from the 2016 Sounds regular season will not be accepted.

The Sounds’ ticket office hours are as follows on non-game days (ticket office open on all home dates):

Monday-Friday 9 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday Closed

The 2016 season is the Sounds’ 19th year in the Pacific Coast League and their second as the Oakland Athletics’ top affiliate. Tickets are available now by calling (615) 690-4487 or by visiting www.nashvillesounds.com.

Motlow State Announces New Women’s Soccer Program

Motlow Lady BucksMotlow State Community College will add a new sport to its athletic department for the first time in over 20 years with the debut of a women’s soccer program in the fall of 2017, according to Scott Shasteen, Motlow director of athletics.

The last time Motlow added a new sport was in the mid-1990s when fast-pitch softball joined the existing baseball and men’s and women’s basketball programs. Baseball and men’s basketball began when the college opened in 1969, and women’s basketball played its first season in 1974-75. Motlow has also offered slow-pitch softball, golf and tennis in the past, although all three sports had short lifespans and are no longer offered by Motlow.

“Adding women’s soccer is a natural evolution for an athletic department that is quickly becoming the statewide leader among community colleges in Tennessee,” said Shasteen. “Motlow State, under the leadership of Dr. Tony Kinkel, is setting the pace for investing in athletics and creatively using athletic programs to encourage student attendance and retention.”

Motlow will become the first community college in Tennessee to offer soccer, either men’s or women’s, although Shasteen expects others to give serious consideration to the sport once Motlow gets its program up and running.

“Women’s soccer is exploding in popularity and we are thrilled to be able to offer the opportunity for high school soccer players to continue playing on the community college level,” added Shasteen. “The addition of soccer expands our student population and increases interest in Motlow athletics throughout our 11-county service area.”

Details of the program’s evolution from concept this fall to fielding a team next fall are still being determined. The College will announce its first women’s soccer head coach in the coming weeks. The location for home games and potential opponents are yet to be determined.

“I’m confident we will hire a head coach who can handle building a program from the ground up,” Shasteen continued. “From uniform design to schedule creation to recruiting student-athletes who will graduate from Motlow and help us build a winning soccer program; these are all challenges the new coach will face.”

Like the other four sports at Motlow, the new soccer program will participate in the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) Division I level. The Lady Bucks soccer team will be the only representative from Region VII, and will likely be paired with a geographically-close region for playoff purposes.

The NJCAA women’s soccer regular season is held during the fall, with practice beginning the first of August and the regular season stretching from late August to November. Teams are allowed a total of 22 games, including scrimmages. Teams are allowed to play four unofficial spring dates as well, beginning in early February and ending in late April.

Visit the official website of Motlow Athletics at <www.motlowsports.com> for rosters, schedules, stats and more. Interact with Motlow Athletics at <Facebook/MotlowSports> and <Twitter@MotlowSports>.

Bats Break Out After Rain Delay in Braves’ Win

Braves5A 24-minute rain delay cut Jerad Eickhoff’s impressive start short on Sunday at Turner Field, and the Phillies ultimately paid the price, as Jeff Francoeur’s two-run homer in the seventh inning propelled the Braves to a 2-1 win and a series split.

“It was nice,” said Francoeur about his homer. “I got a pitch up in the zone. I put a couple good swings on the first few. The first one, if I’m in Philly, I’ve got a homer. But this was a good win for us. When you have an opportunity to split the series, you want to, but especially when you’ve got [Joel] De La Cruz going 50 pitches.”
Eickhoff picked up right where he left off in his start against the Marlins on Tuesday, allowing no runners to reach base until Jace Peterson broke up the right-hander’s perfect outing with a leadoff single in the fourth inning. Eickhoff didn’t allow the base hit to deter him, however, as he retired five of the next six batters he faced before the rain delay in the middle of the sixth ended his day after just 51 pitches.
“It was definitely unfortunate,” Eickhoff said. “I was looking to get right back out there. I had some quick innings. I think I had a relatively low pitch count. It was frustrating. But you can only control what you can control.”
With Eickhoff out of the game, Atlanta took advantage. Nick Markakis reached base on a one-out single in the seventh before Francoeur hit his seventh home run of the season in the ensuing at-bat to give his team a 2-0 lead. Jimmy Paredes led off the top of the eighth with his third homer of the year, but the Braves held on to improve to 5-8 vs. Philadelphia this year.
With his two-run homer on Sunday, Francoeur notched his fourth home run in his previous 45 at-bats. The blast marked his only hit of the contest, as the outfielder is batting just .196 (9-for-46) with 19 strikeouts over his past 14 games. Despite his average, though, Francoeur’s recent knack for the long ball and his leadership skills could still make him a possible trade target before Monday’s non-waiver Trade Deadline.
“[It was] a big hit,” said Peterson about Francoeur’s homer. “He’s a guy who comes to the clubhouse every day the same guy. He keeps the energy up, and we know in those situations he’s the guy we want at the plate. He’s down 0-2 there, [Andrew Bailey] leaves one over the middle and Frenchy was able to poke it out.”
The Phillies managed just five hits against the Braves, and it was a rough week for the middle of their lineup. Odubel Herrera, Maikel Franco and Tommy Joseph batted 2-3-4 for most of the four-game series, but they hit a combined .149 (7-for-47) with two home runs and six RBIs. They were a combined 2-for-11 on Sunday.
In his first start since July 4 vs. the Phillies, Joel De La Cruz pitched 4 1/3 solid innings, surrendering only three hits and two walks. The Atlanta starter entered the day with an 0-2 record and a 5.25 ERA in his first two Major League starts, but he gave his team exactly what it needed in the wake of Lucas Harrell being traded to the Rangers earlier in the week. Having pitched 2/3 innings of relief on Thursday night, De La Cruz became just the fourth Braves pitcher since 2000 to go at least 4 1/3 shutout innings in a start on two days’ rest or less.
“He did a really good job,” Atlanta manager Brian Snitker said. “He was out on the attack and his stuff was live, I thought. [He had] a really good sinker, was on the attack and was very aggressive. He made the most of the opportunity and kind of came up big for us.”
Phillies right-hander Bailey allowed the two-run homer to Francoeur in the seventh. Bailey has a 10.43 ERA (17 earned runs in 14 2/3 innings) in his last 15 appearances after posting a 3.06 ERA in his first 18.
“I’m battling some things, obviously,” Bailey said. “I felt like I made some good pitches that inning. It’s just kind of the way it’s going for me right now. Clearly, I’m struggling. It’s frustrating to be going through this, especially when Eick’s start gets cut short. They needed me to step up and throw a zero. There’s nothing to do but keep working and grinding it out. Got to finish strong for sure.”
Following an off-day on Monday, Atlanta will welcome the Pirates as well as new addition Matt Kemp to Turner Field for a three-game series beginning on Tuesday. Mike Foltynewicz will receive the start for the Braves, looking to rebound from his most recent outing, in which he surrendered a season-high seven runs (six earned) on 12 hits vs. the Twins. First pitch is set for 6:10 p.m. ET.  Thunder Radio will bring you the broadcast as we join the Atlanta Braves Radio Network at 6 PM.

Walsh And McBride Homer In Sounds Win

Sounds2The Nashville Sounds (61-48) racked up 11 hits in a 6-2 win over the New Orleans Zephyrs (50-56) Sunday afternoon at Zephyrs field.

The Sounds got on the board first with a three-run third inning and never looked back. Colin Walsh led off the frame with a solo home run to left, it was only Walsh’s second home run of the year as a Sound. Jaycob Brugman then sent a two-run double to right field scoring Arismendy Alcantara and Tyler Ladendorf to give the Sounds a 3-0 lead in the third.

The Zephyrs then answered back with a lead-off solo home run of their own in the bottom of the third by Isaac Galloway to make it a 3-1 Sounds lead after three.

A two-run homer in the fourth by Matt McBride extended the Sounds lead to 5-1. The two-run shot was McBride’s sixth home run as a Sound. The Sounds catcher plated Joey Wendle who singled to lead off the fourth for the Sounds.

Wendle then roped an RBI double to right in the fifth scoring Chad Pinder from second, who singled then stole second earlier in the inning, to give the Sounds a 6-1 lead.

Sounds Starter Chris Jensen (2-4, 3.76) made just the one mistake in the third inning giving up just his fourth home run as a Sound. Jensen tossed six innings while allowing just the one run on three hits and struck out a batter. The right-hander picked up his second win as a Sound.

Jensen then gave way to Nashville native Andrew Triggs in the seventh inning and Triggs made quick work of the Zephyrs retiring them in order.

Angel Castro then pitched a scoreless eighth and gave up just one run in the ninth on a RBI single by Destin Hood scoring Xavier Scruggs from second.

The Sounds continue their four-game series with the New Orleans Zephyrs Monday night with game three of the series. Nashville will send right-hander Daniel Mengden (3-1, 1.39) and the Zephyrs have yet to announce their starter. First pitch is scheduled for 6:00 p.m. at Zephyr field.

The 2016 season is the Sounds’ 19th year in the Pacific Coast League and their second as the Oakland Athletics’ top affiliate. Tickets are available now by calling (615) 690-4487 or by visiting www.nashvillesounds.com.

Braves Can’t Catch Up After Phils’ Crazy Eighth

BravesIn a matchup between two of the top pitchers who could potentially be moved before Monday’s non-waiver Trade Deadline, Jeremy Hellickson outdueled Julio Teheran on Saturday night at Turner Field, as the Phillies defeated the Braves, 9-5.

Philadelphia jumped out to a 1-0 lead in the second on an RBI single by Cameron Rupp, but Atlanta quickly stormed back. Nick Markakis drove in Jace Peterson with a single to tie the game in the third before Adonis Garcia handed the Braves their only lead with an RBI single in the next at-bat.
Teheran appeared to settle in after the second inning, retiring eight straight batters before running into trouble in the fifth. With runners on first and second, Hellickson provided his own support, doubling down the left-field line to score both and give the Phillies a lead they wouldn’t relinquish. Opposing pitchers were 3-for-34 vs. Teheran this year before the at-bat.
“The big hit for me was Hellickson’s double after he couldn’t get a bunt down,” Phillies manager Pete Mackanin said.
After the Phillies scored two more runs in the sixth, the Braves cut the deficit to 5-3 and knocked Hellickson out of the game on Anthony Recker’s RBI single in the bottom of the frame. After surrendering four runs on no hits to the Phillies in the eighth, Atlanta couldn’t mount a comeback despite scoring two runs in the bottom of the frame. It fell to 8-4 against Philadelphia this season.
“[Until that inning], we were right there,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “It just didn’t happen in that inning, pretty much. We could have kind of kept the game right there in the eighth, but there were just a couple of tough plays that didn’t go our way.”
Scouts got a final look at Hellickson before Monday’s non-waiver Trade Deadline. Hellickson did not pitch his best, allowing nine hits and three runs in just 5 2/3 innings, although he doubled down the left-field line in the fifth inning to score two runs and give the Phillies a 3-2 lead, but he also bruised his pitching hand during the same at-bat. The bruise made it difficult to grip his curveball and cut his outing short.
“Still not really sure what it is,” Hellickson said. “A bruise. Or I popped something in there. But I felt fine, though, after I did it.”
After going only four innings in his start vs. the Rockies on July 22 because of a tight lat muscle in his back, Teheran struggled with bouts of inconsistency in his first outing since the injury. The right-hander bounced back after giving up a run in the second inning, but he labored through the Phillies’ two-run fifth, throwing 32 pitches. The long inning ended Teheran’s night after 86 pitches, marking the first time since April 17 and 23, 2015, that he pitched five innings or fewer in back-to-back starts.  Teheran said. “But just the one mistake I made [on the pitch to Hellickson] — I think I was doing well until that point.”
Nine up, four runs, no hits: The Phillies scored four runs in a most unusual way in the eighth inning. They sent nine batters to the plate, but nobody got a hit. Here’s how they fared: Tyler Goeddel (walk), Freddy Galvis (fielder’s choice), Taylor Featherston (walk), Cesar Hernandez (walk), Odubel Herrera (walk), Maikel Franco (error), Ryan Howard (error), Aaron Altherr (hit by pitch) and Rupp (grounded into double play).
With his 2-for-4 effort on Saturday night, Ender Inciarte extended his hitting streak to a season-best 11 games. Since the All-Star break, the Atlanta outfielder is batting .321 (18-for-56) and has recorded two or more hits in a game four times after doing so on three occasions in his final 25 games before the break.
Phillies right-hander Jerad Eickhoff (6-12, 3.83 ERA) pitches the finale of a four-game series Sunday at 12:35 p.m. CT against the Braves at Turner Field. Eickhoff has been inconsistent lately, but he allowed five hits and one run in seven innings last week against the Marlins in Miami. He is 2-1 with a 1.73 ERA in four career starts against the Braves.  Atlanta will turn to Joel De La Cruz to assume Lucas Harrell’s spot in the starting rotation for Sunday’s series finale. De La Cruz has made his past seven appearances out of the bullpen — most recently pitching 2/3 of an inning on Thursday vs. the Phillies — after going 0-2 with a 5.25 ERA in his first two career starts.  Thunder Radio will bring you coverage of that game beginning at noon.

Pinder and Nunez Homer, Lead Sounds to Win

SoundsThe Nashville Sounds got two solo home runs from Chad Pinder and Renato Nunez in route to their 2-0 series opening win over the New Orleans Zephyrs Saturday night at Zephyrs field.

Renato Nunez and Chad Pinder each sent solo home runs to lead the Sounds to the win. Pinder launched his 14th home run of the season in the top of the first to center to give the Sounds the early 1-0 lead. Nunez then got in on the fun in the sixth inning as he led off the frame with a solo shot of his own to left to double the Sounds lead to 2-0. The Nunez home run was the 22-year olds team leading 17th home run of the season.

Sounds starter Ross Detwiler pitched 6.1 shutout inning and allowed just four hits and struck out seven and earned the win. The win notched Detwiler’s third win as a Sound since being traded by the Cleveland Indians on July 7.

Detwiler retired 19 of the 23 batters he faced before leaving in the seventh inning after giving up two singles in the frame. Ryan Brasier came on in relief of Detwiler and inherited the two runners and allowed a Pedro Ciriaco base hit to load the bases with one out. Brasier then got Austin Nola to pop up to Matt McBride and Carlos Carporan to ground out to Joey Wendle to end the Zephyrs threat in the seventh.

Brasier then pitched a perfect eighth inning to preserve the Sounds 2-0 lead.

Tucker Healy would come on to pitch the ninth and try for his seventh save. Healy made quick work of the first two batters he would see in Justin Bour and Destin Hood. Matt Juengel then hit a base hit to left-center, however Healy shut the door on any potential Zephyr come back striking out Pedro Ciriaco to end the game.

The Sounds continue their four-game series with the New Orleans Zephyrs Sunday afternoon with game two of the series. Nashville will send right-hander Chris Jensen (1-4, 4.15) to face off against New Orleans left-hander Justin Nicolino (4-4, 3.00). First pitch is scheduled for 4:00 p.m. at Zephyr field.

The 2016 season is the Sounds’ 19th year in the Pacific Coast League and their second as the Oakland Athletics’ top affiliate. Tickets are available now by calling (615) 690-4487 or by visiting www.nashvillesounds.com.

Braves Top Phils with Early Runs, Young Arms

Braves Star logoWhile Vince Velasquez auditioned for the crowd of scouts that came to see him at Turner Field on Friday night, Tyrell Jenkins provided a more encouraging glimpse of his potential as a starting pitcher and helped the Braves claim a 2-1 win over the Phillies.

Gordon Beckham and Nick Markakis recorded RBI singles during a two-run second inning that doomed Velasquez and proved sufficient for Jenkins, who allowed just one unearned run over six innings en route to claiming his first career win. The Phillies had won each of the past five games played against the Braves.
“[Velasquez] was tough, and our guys hung in there pretty good against him,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “You’re not going to get a whole lot, and thank God we didn’t give up a whole lot. It was a good ballgame.”
Velasquez escaped multiple threats as he surrendered two earned runs and seven hits over six innings. The Dodgers and Rangers were among the teams that had scouts in the stands to watch the Phillies right-hander, who has allowed two earned runs or fewer in 12 of his 18 starts. Philadelphia’s only run was tallied in the third inning, when Cesar Hernandez scored from first base after Jace Peterson bobbled Odubel Herrera’s single in left field.
“Their guy was effectively wild, let’s put it that way,” Phillies manager Pete Mackanin said. “We had him on the ropes early.”
Markakis highlighted his three-hit game with a pair of doubles, but it was his two-out single in the third inning that proved to be the game’s decisive blow. Erick Aybar began the third with a single and scored on the single by Beckham, who entered Friday hitting just .143 (6-for-42) since the All-Star break. Markakis has been trending the other way, hitting .347 since the break.
“It’s all about having good at-bats,” Markakis said. “You go up there with a plan and stick to it and try to execute. Once you hit the ball, you can’t do much about it. You just have good plans and good approaches and try to hit it where they’re not.”
The Phillies acquired Velasquez from Houston in December as part of the Ken Giles trade, so would they really trade him less than eight months later? It is unlikely, but the presence of scouts, particularly three from the Rangers, is noteworthy and the rebuilding Phillies certainly will listen to what teams have to say. After all, what if they get an offer they can’t refuse?
“Am I aware of it? Yeah,” Velasquez said about the trade speculation. “I can’t control anything. If they trade me, they trade me. I can’t do anything about it. What am I going to do? The only thing I can do is pitch. That’s my job.” More >
Jenkins rebounds: Coming off an ugly start at Coors Field, where he allowed seven earned runs in 3 1/3 innings, Jenkins issued a walk to begin the game and then retired each of the next five batters he faced. The rookie right-hander, who has made two of his four starts against the Phillies, pitched around Cody Asche’s one-out double in the second inning and got Herrera to fly out with the bases loaded and two outs in the fourth inning. He retired each of the final seven batters he faced.
“It’s a special night,” Jenkins said. “I was just glad I was keeping the guys in the game. It was a close game, and luckily we pulled away with a [win].” More >
Howard makes things interesting: Ryan Howard hit a pinch-hit double to center field with two outs in the ninth inning to put the tying runner on base, and Hernandez worked a walk to put the go-ahead run at first. But Herrera grounded out to shortstop Aybar, who threw to third to end the game.
“The play to end the game was a good play,” Mackanin said. “It just worked out perfect, going to his backhand. There’s nothing [pinch-runner Tyler] Goeddel could have done. Just a [heck] of a play.”
Right-hander Jeremy Hellickson is scheduled to start the third of a four-game series on Saturday at 6:10 p.m. CT against the Braves at Turner Field. Hellickson (7-7, 3.65) is the mostly likely Phillies player to be traded before Monday’s non-waiver Trade Deadline and talks could pick up with Andrew Cashner traded Friday to the Marlins, which removed one more starter from the board.
Atlanta will counter with Julio Teheran, who will be making his first start since exiting his July 22 outing at Coors Field with tightness in the upper right portion of his back. Teheran has held opponents scoreless in four of his past six starts.  Thunder Radio will bring you the broadcast as we join the Atlanta Braves Radio Network at 6 PM.

Sounds Lose Early Lead, Fall In Series Finale

Sounds2016The Nashville Sounds surrendered an early lead and fell to the Colorado Springs Sky Sox 3-2 Friday night at First Tennessee Park in front of 9,402 fans.

Garrin Cecchini and Eric Young Jr. had back-to-back one out singles in the seventh to put the tying run on base. After a Michael Reed line out to short, Yadiel Rivera then saw a first pitch fastball and sent it over the left field fence to take a 3-2 lead for the Sky Sox.

The Sounds had a chance to tie or take a commanding lead in the bottom of the eight after three straight singles loaded the bases. Billy Burns, Arismendy Alcantara and Chad Pinder each singled to start a potential Sounds rally in the eighth inning. Alcanatara’s single extended his hitting streak to 13 games, tying with Andrew Lambo for the team’s seaon-high hit streak.

Renato Nunez then stepped to the plate with the game on the line and launched a 1-1 changeup that hooked left of the left field foul pole at the last minute. Nunez then struck out swinging two pitches later. Matt Olson and Matt McBride then both popped out to Sky Sox shortstop Orlando Arcia to end the Sounds threat.

The Sounds then had yet another opportunity slip through their fingers in the ninth inning. Joey Wendle led off the frame with a base hit to left field to put the tying run on. Colin Walsh then walked and was replaced by Tyler Ladendorf at first to pinch run. Rangel Ravelo then attempted a bunt to move both runners, but Sky Sox closer Damien Magnifico fielded the bunt and threw out Wendle at third and Ravelo was thrown out at first as well. With Ladendorf at second, Burns struck out on a foul tip to end the game.

The Sounds took an early lead in the first when Pinder just missed his 14th home run of the season; instead the shortstop roped a RBI triple off the left-center wall scoring Burns who walked to lead off the inning. Nunez then followed with an RBI groundout to second to score Pinder from third to put the Sounds up 2-0.

Sounds starter Jesse Hahn (1-6, 3.66) was sharp threw the first six innings, not allowing a run and keeping Sky Sox batters in check. That came apart in the seventh with Rivera’s three-run home run of the right-hander who was tabbed with his sixth loss of the season.

Hahn gave way to Eduard Santos out of the Sounds ‘pen in the eighth. Santos kept the Sounds in it pitching a 1-2-3 eighth. After giving up a single and a walk in the ninth, Santos retired the next three batters to keep the Sounds alive.

Sky Sox starter Josh Hader was just as good but ended up with a no decision on the night. The left-hander tossed five innings and allowed just two first inning runs and struck out nine batters.

The Sounds begin a 12-game road trip Saturday night as they travel to New Orleans for a four-game series with the Zephyrs. Nashville will send left-hander Ross Detwiler (2-0, 4.09) the Zephyrs have yet to announce a starter for the series opener. First pitch is scheduled for 6:00 p.m. at Zephyr field.

The 2016 season is the Sounds’ 19th year in the Pacific Coast League and their second as the Oakland Athletics’ top affiliate. Tickets are available now by calling (615) 690-4487 or by visiting www.nashvillesounds.com.

Alontae Taylor to be an Early Enrollee at Tennessee

Alontae Taylro back to pas during a spring scrimmage with Franklin County

Alontae Taylor back to pass during a spring scrimmage with Franklin County

Coffee County quarterback Alontae Taylor announced on Twitter on Wednesday that he will be an early enrollee to the University of Tennessee in January of 2018. Taylor, a junior, will have all of his requirements completed to earn his high school diploma after the 1st semester of his senior year. The opportunity to enroll early will allow Taylor to participate in spring workouts at Tennessee prior to his first season of eligibility. Taylor, who is rated as a 4 star recruit by ESPN and 247Sports, has been listed as high as the 69th overall player in the US in the Class of 2018.
Taylor will enroll at Tennessee in the spring of 2018 after Coach Ryan Sulkowski helped him put together the required information. Alontae will be allowed to return to Manchester to participate in the graduation ceremony with his classmates in May of 2018. After his early enrollment, Taylor will be the first known Coffee County athlete to report to college early for athletics. Additionally, Taylor is the first Coffee County athlete to receive a football scholarship to Tennessee out of high school in more than 30 years.
When asked about what was attractive about enrolling early, this is what Taylor had to say:

The opportunity to train at the college level early also means that Alontae will have to begin a college curriculum in the classroom early as well. When asked if he was worried about jumping into the classroom, Taylor had this to say:

Taylor projects to play wide receiver or defensive back at the college level. Taylor officially committed to the Vols on June 18th.