THE MONDAY HIVE: Evans Becomes Key Reliever For Bees

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

It didn’t take long for Burlington Bees manager Owen Oreskovich to gain confidence in pitcher Joe Evans.

And even when Evans struggled a bit, Oreskovich’s confidence hadn’t wavered when the Bees set out on a six-game road trip last week.

“He’s still going to pitch in big spots moving forward,” Oreskovich said.

So it was Evans on the mound to get the save in Sunday’s 2-0 win at Springfield, a victory that broke the Bees’ 12-game losing streak.

Evans allowed a hit and a walk, but struck out two, including Kyle Tyler to end the game as Burlington closed the first half of the Prospect League season with a victory after two weeks of struggles.

Evans, a left-hander, is 2-2 with one save in nine appearances this summer. He had a 4.50 earned run average, with 23 strikeouts in 24 innings.

Evans opened the season by allowing just two earned runs in 13 ⅔ innings over four appearances. He then allowed 10 earned runs in 9 ⅓ innings over his next four appearances before closing Sunday’s game.

“He’s still doing his job, and that’s what I like about him,” Oreskovich said. “He’s a competitor. He’ll go out there and give you his best every single night.”

The summer has provided some lessons for Evans, a Chicago native who was a starting pitcher at Morton College this season, going 3-1 with a 5.73 ERA in nine appearances, with 35 strikeouts in 37 ⅔ innings.

“I’ve been somewhat successful,” Evans said. “My last couple of outings have been rough, but it’s been very fun, for sure. For the most part, I’m having a good time. I’ve been getting ahead of guys and getting outs.”

Evans, who is headed to t St. Ambrose University in the fall, has gained experience with the Bees from facing players from different college levels.

“I’ve definitely learned a lot, seeing (NCAA) Division I guys, seeing guys from different schools at a higher level than I played at this spring,” he said. “I’ve definitely learned how to attack hitters at a higher level, rather than guys I can just attack with fastballs all of the time. I’ve definitely learned how to pitch a little bit more, and it’s prepared me to play at a higher level next year.”

Evans is a fast worker on the mound, something that has been a characteristic of his career, he said.

“I’ve always been a guy who’s not going to be overpowering, so I have to find any way to take advantage of a hitter, get him uncomfortable,” he said. “Usually batters like to take their time getting in the box, so I give them as little time as possible.

“I feel like even at a young age, I just got back up there and threw the ball. I noticed it started to make guys uncomfortable.”

“He works quickly,” Oreskovich said. “And that makes hitters uncomfortable. That’s something I enjoy seeing, seeing him work quickly.”

Evans said it wasn’t much of an adjustment going from starter to reliever — he came out of the bullpen in his first college season.

“It’s less of a workload on my arm, for sure,” he said. “Being a starter, you have a bit more of a schedule. You know when you’re going to pitch, so you schedule around that — your lifts, your throwing schedule on the side. Being a reliever, it’s a little bit different because it’s on short notice. Usually I’ve been on every third day or so.”

Evans said he has enjoyed his time being in a smaller town than where he grew up.

“I’m definitely not used to the smaller-town vibes,” Evans said, laughing. “I’m used to traffic, trying to find parking, stuff like that. It’s been a bit of adjustment. It’s very relaxed here, very calm.”

He has become a calming influence out of the Bees’ bullpen.

“Coming here, and being able to show him that I can be put in high-level moments, that I can be trusted, it’s an honor,” Evans said. “It’s something I’ve worked a lot on to get to this point.”

Photo: Joe Evans has two wins and a save coming out of the bullpen for the Burlington Bees this summer. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

THE MONDAY HIVE: Bees’ Donlin Gains Respect As One Of League’s Best Hitters

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

First base was open and there were two outs when Burlington Bees right fielder Cooper Donlin came to the plate in Saturday’s game against the Alton River Dragons.

Alton manager Noah Suarez stepped from the first-base dugout at Community Field and motioned to plate umpire James Cottrell that he wanted to intentionally walk Donlin.

It was a strategic move — it was a tie game, there was a runner in scoring position, Donlin came into the game as the Prospect League’s leading hitter, and he had already hit a run-scoring triple in the game.

It was also the fourth inning.

“Wasn’t that funny?” Bees manager Owen Oreskovich said. “I didn’t think that was going to happen. That’s something I haven’t seen in a little bit.”

“I mean, it was kind of annoying,” Donlin said, smiling. “It’s summer baseball, everybody is here to get reps. But yeah, I guess they have respect for me as a hitter, and it’s something that makes my confidence grow.

It’s the respect that Donlin has earned in his first month in the summer league.

Donlin is hitting .423, second in the league after Sunday’s games. He is second in the league with a .565 on-base percentage, carries a 1.180 OPS, and takes a nine-game hitting streak with him when the Bees start a six-game road trip on Tuesday.

“I just keep telling myself that every day is an opportunity,” said Donlin, who just finished his junior season at Hawaii Pacific University. “And I’m going to come every day to compete.”

It’s that kind of mentality that has Donlin batting fourth in the Bees’ lineup. He has just one home run this season, but Oreskovich knows why he wants Donlin in that spot in the batting order.

“He has an approach every single time he goes up to the plate,” Oreskovich said. “If we’ve got runners in scoring position, he’s trying to do a job. He’s got a ‘team’ approach, and he’s got that approach every single time in the box.”

Donlin is batting .500 in his current hitting streak, including his 2-for-3 night in Saturday’s 12-7 loss in which he reached base in all five trips to the plate.

“I keep telling myself I’m going to win every at-bat,” Donlin said. “And I’m going to catch every ball, get every hit. It’s a game of failure, so you’ve got to be greedy, take your opportunities, get what you can get.”

Donlin is in his third summer of baseball — he’s played in the Texas Collegiate League and the Hamptons Collegiate Summer League.

“It’s helped me a lot — traveling all around the country, seeing different places, meeting different players,” he said. “It shows you can compete at this level, and it shows you who’s out there and the competition you’re going against.”

Donlin hit .313 in 25 games for Hawaii Pacific this season. Since arriving in Burlington, he has impressed Oreskovich with his work off the field.

“He locks in on everything he does,” Oreskovich said. “When we go in the batting cages, he’s doing different things that maybe a lot of other people aren’t doing.”

Donlin has just eight strikeouts with the Bees this season, and he had six in 48 at bats during the spring at Hawaii Pacific.

“He’s got a great eye, too,” Oreskovich said. “He’ll fall into two-strike counts quite often, and he finds a way to work a walk or get a hit or put the ball in play. Not many times is he going to look stupid up there. Pitch recognition, for him, is a giant thing. And he’s really good at it.”

“I’ve always had a good eye, stuff like that,” Donlin said. “But this last year, I’ve tried to take that to the next level with my approach. Keep telling myself over and over, ‘Battle, battle, battle,’ and ‘I’m going to win this.’”

It’s a consistent battle that Donlin knows he has to bring.

“It’s a long summer,” he said. “If you have a bad day, you show up the next day and try again. You just keep showing up.”

Photo: Burlington’s Cooper Donlin hits a triple in Saturday’s game against Alton. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

RIVER DRAGONS 12, BEES 7: A Mountain With No Peak

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

It’s as if the Burlington Bees are climbing a mountain that doesn’t have a summit.

The 12-7 loss to the Alton River Dragons in Saturday’s Prospect League game at Community Field was the Bees’ sixth consecutive defeat, and it was just as frustrating as all of the others.

The Bees (5-17) led 1-0 after the first inning, then spent the rest of the game chasing the River Dragons (11-11), who kept stacking runs every time there was a Burlington rally.

The Bees had eight hits, six coming from the top four hitters in the lineup, and had runners on base in every inning except the ninth.

And when Burlington got to within 8-7 heading into the top of the ninth, it appeared as if there was a chance for a final rally.

Instead, the River Dragons opened the inning with back-to-back singles from Cooper Howell and Justin Santoyo. Jordan Aguallo followed with a bunt that pitcher Kyle Looper fielded, but his throw to first sailed into right field and Howell and Santoro scored. Alton would add two more runs, then reliever Harrison Dubois retired the side in the ninth to finish the win.

Cooper Donlin continued his hot hitting for the Bees. Donlin extended his hitting streak to nine games by going 2-for-3. Donlin, who leads the league in hitting with a .423 batting average, reached base in all five plate appearances.

Merrick Mathews had two hits and drove in a run for the Bees.

Aidan Adams (1-1) was the winning pitcher. Jacob Sjuts (0-2) took the loss.

The Bees play host to Illinois Valley in Sunday’s 2 p.m. game before going on a week-long road trip.

Photo: Burlington’s Cooper Donlin slides into third base with a first-inning triple in Saturday’s game. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

CORNBELTERS 16, BEES 7: A Long Night, And More Frustration

Somewhere in the almost four hours of nine innings of baseball at Community Field was a play that Burlington Bees manager Owen Oreskovich wants his players to remember.

It came in the fifth inning of the Bees’ 16-7 loss to the Normal CornBelters, when Burlington third baseman Skyler Agnew, chasing a foul ball that was heading toward the grandstands, made the catch as he crashed into the wall, tumbling over the railing.

Agnew was OK, and although Oreskovich said he didn’t get a good look at the play, he appreciated the play and he hoped his players did the same.

“I really love and respect that he’s giving his best effort, no matter what, and that was a hell of a play,” Oreskovich said. “That was a great catch and a great play and great effort.”

The Bees, though, are on a four-game losing streak. They have given up double-digit runs in three of those games.

So, getting back to Agnew’s play…

“It shows he cares,” Oreskovich said. “And that’s one thing I’ve been talking to the assistant coaches about is finding guys that care. Because this is unacceptable. Again, we have enough runs and enough hits to win a game tonight. We can’t get it done on the mound — we’re walking too many guys and letting too many guys get on base.

“That’s aggravating. It might be the most aggravating thing I’ve seen.”

The CornBelters had the leadoff man reach base in seven of the nine innings, and six of them scored. Bees pitchers walked nine hitters, and four scored.

“We’ve got to get ahead,” Oreskovich said. “Too many walks. I’d almost rather give up 10 home runs, because you’re throwing strikes.”

Five Bees pitchers combined to throw 210 pitches, with 122 for strikes.

“Make them earn it,” Oreskovich said. “Throw strikes, you’ve got seven guys behind you who can make plays.”

The Bees (5-15) had nine hits in the game, which lasted 3 hours, 59 minutes. Agnew had two hits, including a two-run home run, and drove in three runs. Cooper Donlin and Cedric Dunnwald each had two hits.

“We’re getting guys on base, and we’re scoring runs,” Oreskovich said. “And then there have been nights where we’ve gotten good pitching and not done that. I really don’t know what to say anymore. It’s tough.”

Logan Barnett (1-1) was the winning pitcher. Shea Blanchard (0-2) was the losing pitcher.

Photo: Skyler Agnew celebrates his two-run home run in the second inning. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

HOOTS 17, BEES 9: Too Many Errors, Too Many Mistakes

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

It was a hard game to watch.

The Burlington Bees’ 17-9 loss to the O’Fallon Hoots in Tuesday’s Prospect League game at Community Field was a struggle from the beginning.

The Hoots scored in every inning except the final two. The Bees committed five errors, had six wild pitches, and hit five O’Fallon batters.

“It’s pretty hard,” Bees manager Owen Oreskovich said when asked how he got through a game like that. “Our pitching was pretty bad today. Defense was bad too — every error we make, it seems we give up on a run on it. It’s pretty defeating to feel like that. It’s not a good feeling. It’s not enjoyable to watch games like that, it’s not enjoyable to be a part of games like that.

“It was just a bad game.”

It came after a crisp 7-4 win over Normal on Monday night, which led to even more frustration.

The Bees are tied for fourth in the league with 32 errors, a number that Oreskovich said has to change.

“It’s very concerning,” he said. “It’s getting to the point where it’s getting concerning. Routine plays, we’ve got to make them. There’s no excuse for it. I mean, you get a bad hop once in a while, I understand that. But there’s no excuse for some of the plays.”

The Bees almost matched O’Fallon run for run early — the Hoots led 6-5 after 2 innings. But O’Fallon kept adding runs, and seemed to be poised to win the game by the 10-run rule before the Bees got three runs in the sixth to cut the lead to 15-9.

Burlington had 12 hits. Merrick Mathews had three hits and drove in three runs. Boston Halloran had three hits and Jackson Reid had two.

“We scored nine runs,” Oreskovich said. “You should win a game scoring nine runs.”

Bees starting pitcher Jackson Wohlers gave up six runs in two innings. Kyle Looper gave up five runs in two innings. Vinny Mauro gave up six runs in three innings.

Erik Kiewiet then closed the game for the Bees with two scoreless innings.

“Kiewiet was really good the last two innings,” Oreskovich said.

Photo: Bees right fielder Scotty Savage (24) scores on a wild pitch in the sixth inning. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

BEES 7, CORNBELTERS 4: Meyer Steps In For A Grand Slam

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

It was a crazy story, Burlington Bees manager Owen Oreskovich said.

Oreskovich said that Bees pitching coach Tyler Richards had a prediction before Monday’s Prospect League game against the Normal CornBelters at Community Field.

“He says he thinks Nick Meyer is hitting a home run today,” Oreskovich said.

There was a problem, though.

Meyer wasn’t in the starting lineup.

“(Richards) said, ‘Pinch hit,’” Oreskovich said.

So, of course, Meyer gets into the game and hits a grand slam in the fifth inning to give the Bees a 7-4 win.

“When he hit, I pointed right to (Richards) in the dugout,” Oreskovich said, laughing.

Meyer’s first home run of the season came at the perfect time for the Bees (5-11), who had let a 3-0 lead slip away when the CornBelters scored two runs in the fourth inning and two in the fifth.

Meyer wasn’t in the game to start, but he came in after starting catcher Tucker Gibbar went out with a cramp after a single in the fourth inning. Meyer came to the plate with two outs in the fifth, and pounded a pitch from Normal reliever Zach O’Donnell (1-1) over the left-field fence.

“He got it good,” Oreskovich said.

“Just be ready to go and be aggressive early,” Meyer said of his approach. “I got my pitch and didn’t miss it.”

Oreskovich is Meyer’s hitting coach at Mount Mercy, so he knows what Meyer can do, although Meyer didn’t get too many chances this spring. He was a backup catcher behind starter Trent Hoogerwerf, and only had two hits in 17 at-bats.

“He just kind of sat back and learned and listened,” Oreskovich said. “I think it was the best thing for him and I think it’s a good thing for us going into school next year.”

“You’ve got to work really hard, earn everything, earn your spot,” Meyer said. “You’ve got to come out here and compete.”

Meyer is hitting .323 for the Bees this summer, but it’s not just his approach at the plate that Oreskovich likes.

“I just love the way he’s catching right now,” Oreskovich said. “The way he is back there, it’s huge.

“And then his at-bats. He’s not taking anything for granted. He’s going up there with a job-to-do mentality, just like if we were at school.”

“It’s amazing,” Meyer said. “I’m getting a lot of confidence. I feel good at the plate.”

The Bees took a 2-0 lead in the first inning. Cedric Dunnwald was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded to bring in the first run, then Boston Halloran added a sacrifice fly.

Reese Moore’s single in the second inning drove in Jackson Reid for a 3-0 lead, but the CornBelters (8-11) finally got to Bees starting pitcher Noah Harbin in the fourth inning.

Harbin had faced the minimum through the first four innings, but Normal got two unearned runs off him in a four-hit inning. Will Jesske’s double off Bees reliever Zach Leuschen in the fifth put the CornBelters up 4-3.

Leuschen (1-1) pitched 2 ⅔ scoreless innings after that, then Jack Duncan got his second save by pitching out of a bases-loaded situation in the ninth.

“Harbin did a great job,” Oreskovich said. “Leuschen did a phenomenal job after he settled in. Duncan was great — he pitched himself into a little jam there, and then he got his outs.”

The Bees have split their last four games after going through a four-game losing streak, but Oreskovich likes the way his team is developing.

“Guys are getting their at-bats, and they’re starting to get comfortable,” Oreskovich said. “I mean, it feels like it’s right there. Sometimes in games there are one or two things that don’t go your way, and that kind of decides what happens. It’s just the way it goes.

“Our guys are putting their work in — it’s not like they’re sitting at home and waiting to come to the ballpark at 3 o’clock. I like to see that.”

“We’re starting to have a lot more fun playing,” Meyer said. “We’re playing as a team now. We’re putting good at-bats together, good things are starting to happen, and we’re having fun.”

Photo: Nick Meyer makes contact on his fifth-inning grand slam. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

THE MONDAY HIVE: Hawaii Pacific Pipeline Helps Fuel Bees’ Roster

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Every manager of a summer baseball league has to build pipelines to college programs to help fill a roster.

Burlington Bees manager Owen Oreskovich has one pipeline that extends approximately 4,100 miles.

That’s the approximate distance between Community Field and Hawaii Pacific University, an NCAA Division II program that has provided players to the Bees the last three summers.

Three players from the program — pitcher Shea Blanchard, infielder Skyler Agnew and outfielder Cooper Donlin — are with the Bees this season. They follow pitcher Steven Escarcega, who was with the Bees in 2022, and catcher Ian Wolski, who was with the team last year.

“It’s awesome they want to come all of the way out here, which has been a big thing for me,” Oreskovich said. “Like Wolski last year, I don’t think he had been to the Midwest in his life. It’s awesome that they want to come out here and play baseball in this league, get experience with these guys, and see a little different part of the country that they’ve never seen in their life.”

It’s a relationship Oreskovich has built with Hawaii Pacific coach Dane Fujinaka that has made the difference.

“He texted me in October, when we started talking about players coming here,” Oreskovich said. “He said he loves the connection, loves what he gets from the guys when they come back. He has nothing but good things to say. And I really appreciate that.”

That was the same message Fujinaka gave to his players.

“He said guys get sent here all of the time, they come back better,” Donlin said. “And I guess that’s what Coach wants to see.”

“He said it’s a good league, and he wants us to go out to different areas, see different calibers of pitching,” Agnew said. “A lot of good players come here, and he said it would be a good way for us to step up our games more and come back.”

“He says Coach O is super cool, and I took his word for it,” Blanchard said. “I found that out right away. First day, he showed me he is a super cool dude.”

Shea Blanchard throws a pitch in Friday’s game against Jackson at Community Field. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

The three players come from different backgrounds. Blanchard, a freshman this season, is from Laguna Beach, California. Agnew, a junior, is from Riverside, California. Donlin has Midwest roots — he’s from Plymouth, Michigan, and played his first two seasons at Oakland University.

The chance to see somewhere new is what drew the players to come to the Bees.

“My dad and I talk about this a lot — baseball takes me a lot of places,” Blanchard said. “It will show you parts of the world you never thought you’d go to. I never thought I would be in Burlington, Iowa. You know what I mean? I think being in a different area is cool. It’s cool seeing how different people live.”

“I thought it was a great opportunity to get back to the mainland, go somewhere different other than California, because we play our games in either California or Hawaii,” Agnew said. “I thought it would be nice to get out of those states, venture out a little more, experience a different kind of environment.”

For Donlin, it was a chance to get back to the style of play he knew.

“I’m used to baseball on the mainland, because I’ve played it my whole life,” he said. “At Hawaii, it’s a little more speed-based. Here, it’s a little more fundamental. So what I want to bring is my speed, and the fundamentals.”

Donlin entered the NCAA’s transfer portal after his two seasons at Oakland, and it was easy to choose where he was going next.

“Basically I got an offer I couldn’t refuse,” he said, smiling.

The three players have had mixed results in the first couple of weeks of the season.

Donlin is batting .318 and leads the Bees with eight runs scored and seven hits — he scored three runs in the Bees’ first win of the season on May 30. Agnew is batting .200 in four games. Blanchard is 0-2 in two starts with a 14.29 ERA.

“It’s just getting comfortable in your own skin,” Blanchard said. “First outing, I was a little shaky. Second outing, it felt a lot better, a lot more grounded here. It felt like home.”

Skyler Agnew gets ready to throw to first base in a game at Community Field earlier this season. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

“I struggled a little bit at the end of this (college) season,” Agnew said. “I came out here wanting to improve on the things I was struggling in. I’m just taking it day by day.”

Agnew said having his teammates with him made the adjustment to a new team easier.

“I was kind of nervous coming here,” Agnew said. “The ‘not knowing’ is scary. But I was confident with having two of my good friends come with me. I didn’t really know what I was getting into out here. It was nice to see what it had to offer.”

Blanchard said Hawaii Pacific’s roster was “a melting pot” — the Sharks had players from Georgia, Washington, Utah, Texas and Japan as well as from Hawaii and California.

He’s finding a similar experience with the Bees.

“I like to ask questions a lot,” Blanchard said. “I’m a curious cat. I’ll ask guys about their experiences, what they do, how old they are, what they’ve been through, because I value that. Hearing someone’s experiences, that’s educational. It’s cool to meet people with different experiences.”

“I think that’s the best part of this.”

Photo: Cooper Donlin leads the Burlington Bees in runs scored and hits this season. He is one of three players from Hawaii Pacific on this season’s roster. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

BEES 15, ROCKABILLYS 14: A Wild Night Ends On A Wild Pitch

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Four hours and 14 minutes into the night, Jace Figuereo knew how it was going to end.

“He told me, ‘If the ball’s in the dirt, I’m going no matter what,’” Burlington Bees manager Owen Oreskovich said.

And when the pitch from Jackson’s Story Kimura hit in front of home plate and ricocheted toward the Rockabillys’ dugout, Figuereo raced home with the game-winning run in the Bees’ 15-14 victory in 10 innings in Saturday’s Prospect League game at Community Field.

The Bees (3-6) snapped a three-game losing streak on a wild night in which they trailed 4-0 after the top of the first inning, fought back to lead 10-4 after three innings, surrendered five runs in an inning twice, and then had to tie the game in the ninth inning.

“Winning’s fun,” Oreskovich said. “That’s awesome. It can turn some things around.”

“It means a whole lot,” said Figuereo, who played his first game on Friday. “I wasn’t here at the beginning of the losing streak, but I know what it’s like. Losing streaks can be a make-or-break for teams. But I think tonight showed this team has a lot of fight in it, that early in the season we’ve still got the fight.”

Oreskovich used 21 players — “I didn’t know how many, but I know it was a lot,” he laughed — including seven pitchers.

“It’s ‘next man up,’” he said. “We pulled out all of the stops, and some of those guys came up huge.”

The Bees let a four-run lead get away when the Rockabillys scored five runs in the eighth inning. But Burlington tied the game in the bottom of the ninth when pinch-hitter Scotty Savege singled to drive in pinch-runner Cedric Dunnwald.

Figuereo had a chance to win the game in the ninth with runners on second and third, but lined out to center field to end the inning. He started at second base in the bottom of the 10th inning under the league’s extra-inning rule, and he knew what he wanted to do.

“I wanted to be the one to put the game on my shoulders,” Figuereo said.

Landon Akers was intentionally walked to open the inning, then Reese Moore grounded into a double play, moving Figuereo to third. Kimura’s first pitch to Cooper Donlin got away, and Figuereo ran home with the winning run, his fifth run of the game.

Figuereo played baseball at West Burlington High School, a couple of miles away from Community Field, and got to play high school games in the ballpark.

Now he’s wearing a Bees uniform, wearing the same number his father Anibal wore in 2002 and 2004 when Burlington was a Midwest League affiliate of the Kansas City Royals.

“It’s great,” Figuereo said. “I always wanted to be like my dad growing up. Being in a Bees uniform, it’s great. It’s been something we’ve been able to bond over the last couple of days.”

The Bees had an ominous beginning to the game when pitcher Nathan Chapman left with an arm injury just five batters in, which meant Oreskovich had to push a lot of pitching buttons the rest of the way.

Bobby Helt pitched 2 ⅔ scoreless innings in relief of Chapman. David Theriot didn’t give up a run in 3 ⅓ innings, and Chase Golden (1-0) picked up the win by striking out three in 2 ⅔ innings.

Zach Leuschen, though, gave up five runs in the fourth inning. Kyle Looper gave up four runs and Jacob Sjuts gave up one in the eighth.

“Some guys had some tough nights tonight, but I know they’re capable of giving us good innings,” Oreskovich said. “Bobby gave us all he could. Dave did a ginormous job. And then Goldie? Come on. That was great. That was the Goldie we saw at the end of the year. I love that for him, because that kid is so appreciative of things.”

The Bees had 11 hits. Akers had three hits. Moore drove in four runs and Merrick Mathews drove in three.

“It’s a win and we’ll take it,” Oreskovich said.

Photo: Jace Figuereo scores the winning run in the Bees’ 15-14 win over Jackson. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

ROCKABILLYS 5, BEES 3: Still Searching For The Big Hit

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

There has to be a big hit somewhere in the bats of the Burlington Bees.

It’s something manager Owen Oreskovich has been wanting to see from his offense, but it hasn’t quite happened yet.

Sure, there was the walk-off home run by Merrick Mathews in last Sunday’s win over Illinois Valley, and the Bees did score seven runs in Wednesday’s loss at Illinois Valley.

But the 5-3 loss to the Jackson Rockabillys in Friday’s Prospect League game at Community Field was another source of frustration for Oreskovich.

“Our pitching right now is good enough to win,” Oreskovich said. “They’re giving us a chance. We’re not doing anything with any of our opportunities. We’re cold at the plate right now. We just need someone to step up with a big hit. Hitting is contagious, and once I think we get that I think it starts rolling. I’ve seen that plenty of times.”

The Bees (2-6) had just five hits and left seven runners on base. They had runners in scoring position in four innings and couldn’t get them in.

“The balls we’re hitting hard seem to be right at someone,” Oreskovich said. “It just seems like the ball is not falling our way right now.”

If there was something positive, the Bees were putting the ball in play, a night after they had 14 strikeouts in a 6-3 loss to Illinois Valley.

“I truly think once we get that big pop, something will start rolling.”

The Bees trailed 4-0 heading into the bottom of the third inning, then slowly carved out some runs.

Mathews’ RBI single in the third was Burlington’s first hit of the game. Cooper Donlin’s run-scoring single in the fifth inning cut the lead to 4-2, then Skyler Agnew’s triple in the eighth scored Donlin to get the Bees within 4-3.

Jackson (7-2) got an unearned run in the ninth inning for the final margin.

Oreskovich liked what he got out of relievers Joe Evans and Chase Golden. Evans allowed just one unearned run over 4 ⅓ innings, and Golden struck out two of the three hitters he faced in the ninth.

“Joe has just been really good for us, and Chase looked like he did from the middle of last season through the end of the year,” Oreskovich said. “The pitching is there. We’re just not giving them any help.”

Jace Figuereo, batting in the leadoff spot in his first game this season, had two hits for the Bees.

“I really like him at the top of the order,” Oreskovich said.

Matt Maloney (2-0) was the winning pitcher.

Photo: Jace Figuereo had two hits in the leadoff spot for the Bees. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

PISTOL SHRIMP 6, BEES 3: Duncan Gets A Solid Beginning To The Summer

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

It’s been a while since Jack Duncan has thrown a pitch in a game.

His first two innings in the Prospect League with the Burlington Bees were a good start.

Duncan, a pitcher from Western Illinois University, threw two shutout innings and struck out four in the Bees’ 6-3 loss to the Illinois Valley Pistol Shrimp on Thursday night at Community Field.

Duncan threw just 2 ⅓ innings for the Leathernecks this season and hadn’t pitched since March 13 after injuring his knee. But his command was strong — two of his strikeouts were on called third strikes — and he helped keep the Bees in position to battle back in the late innings.

“It was good to get back in the swing of things,” said Duncan, a Macomb, Illinois native who is making the 50-mile drive to Burlington every day.

It’s not the easiest drive — “A lot of back roads,” Duncan said — but it’s something he wants to do as he prepares for next season.

Duncan came to Burlington on the advice of WIU teammate Chase Golden, who is in his second season with the Bees.

“You know, I heard a lot of good stuff,” Duncan said. “Chase, he really enjoyed it, really enjoyed playing for (Bees manager Owen Oreskovich). And it’s close to home. It’s Prospect League baseball, too. So, there were a lot of things I liked about it, too.”

Oreskovich liked what he saw from Duncan.

“He got ahead, and he threw strikes,” he said. “That’s something I like as a coach, especially in summer ball. Made pitches when he had to, got his outs. That’s all you can ask from a guy.”

Duncan threw 36 pitches, 23 for strikes.

“It felt good to be in the zone,” he said. “Just getting ahead of the counts, getting that first strike. I was able to flip my curveball in there, just to keep guys off balance. And just trusting my defense, too.”

It was an otherwise frustrating night for the Bees, who committed three errors and allowed just one earned run.

The 14 strikeouts from Burlington hitters didn’t help, either.

“Strikeouts, booting two balls that led to four runs … yeah, those things happen, but it’s tough,” Oreskovich said. “Our pitchers gave up a few hits (14), but they worked their tails off to not give up more runs.

“That’s a disappointing game right there.”

The Bees were down 6-2 after Joseph Stagowski’s three-run home run in the fifth inning, but got a run in the eighth when Luke Bragga scored on a throwing error and had the tying run at the plate with one out. But Illinois Valley reliever Jackson Peeler struck out Scotty Savage and Kinnick Pusteoska to end the inning, then struck out the side in the ninth for his first save of the year.

“That was a momentum killer there in the eighth,” Oreskovich said. “You’re so close, everyone’s excited. And then nothing happens.

“They got their hits to fall, so tip the cap to them. But we never let anything happen to get something to fall. We’ve got to be better early in the count, ready to hit. If you hit balls at guys, and those are outs, that happens. But you’ve got to make them make a play. That many strikeouts, you’re not even making them make a play.”

Anthony Solis (1-1) was the winning pitcher. Jacob Zahner (0-2) took the loss.

Duncan hopes his first work was the beginning of a good summer.

“I want to get innings,” he said. “Just bettering my off-speed pitches, working on my command, be ready for next season.”

Photo: Burlington Bees pitcher Jack Duncan threw two shutout innings in the 6-3 loss to Illinois Valley on Thursday night. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)