THE MONDAY HIVE: Dunnwald Wants To Add To Championship Feeling

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Cedric Dunnwald is back for his second full season with the Burlington Bees, but this summer he brought a championship feeling with him.

Dunnwald was part of the Mount Mercy team that won the program’s first Heart of America conference tournament championship and the first team to make it to the NAIA national tournament.

It’s a feeling that Dunnwald isn’t about to forget, and it’s one he wants to build on for next season.

“It’s a step I think a lot of people dream of, for sure,” Dunnwald said. “I don’t think I ever thought I would have a conference championship, holding a trophy in my hands. Winning the entire thing, dog-piling after winning the championship, tt’s something very few get to experience. And I think it’s awesome. You want to play more, you want that feeling again. That’s the determination, what you strive for. It was awesome, but I want to do that again. It’s such a good feeling.”

Dunnwald went just 3-of-14 this season for the Mustangs, but he has started the Prospect League season strong for the Bees, leading the team with a .333 batting average after the first week of the season.

It’s Dunnwald’s third season overall with the Bees — he played three games on a temporary deal at the end of the 2022 season — but it’s an opportunity he appreciates.

“My coach always said playing is how you get better,” said Dunnwald, a redshirt junior outfielder from Iowa City. “Whether you hit .500 or .100, seeing pitches is what you need. I think you can only get better. You see top arms from top schools, really good competition overall. Whether you’re playing or not, you get to witness 60 days of baseball. And I think it carries over to the fall. It slows the game down.

“Being able to play every day makes you enjoy it, makes you embrace it. Not a lot of people get to do that. So it definitely is a big plus.”

“That kid works harder than 95, 99 percent of the people I’ve been around,” said Bees manager Owen Oreskovich, who is also one of Dunnwald’s coaches at Mount Mercy. “He lives for the weight room, he lives for eating right, working hard.

“He’s an incredibly hard worker, and he wants to do good, just give his best at anything he does. I couldn’t be more excited to have him here. He only got a few at-bats this year, so I think it will be huge for him.”

Dunnwald hit .239 in 35 games with the Bees last season, but a full summer schedule helped him mature as a player.

“It’s just the summer-ball atmosphere that Coach O puts on,” Dunnwald said. “He lets the guys play. It’s a good atmosphere. When you’re playing 60 games, when you’re giving up your whole summer as a college athlete, you want to make sure it’s fun. We want to win, of course, but you also want to enjoy it. I think he does a really good job with that.”

“It brings a different sort of confidence to them when they get back in the fall,” Oreskovich said. “You can see it’s different than kids who didn’t play in the summer, or play in a league like this. It’s a tough league, and there’s good players all over. It’s good for him to bring that confidence up, and that brings the best out of everyone.”

Dunnwald also knows the relationships he has made are important.

“Our teammates can also be our coaches, so you can get different perspectives,” he said. “Different players from different schools, how they view things. It’s interesting to hear other viewpoints.

“Last two years, I’ve met so many guys that I stay in contact with almost every day. Which is awesome, because you can never have too many friends, too many connections around baseball. And that’s what makes it fun. Hearing their stories, their experiences, why they came here. It’s why we’re in the same spot.”

The confidence that Dunnwald has, though, increased with getting a chance to make a postseason run at Mount Mercy.

“It was amazing,” he said. “We wanted to focus on one thing at a time. It was first making the conference tournament, then winning it. We were able to do both. Our whole thing was, ‘Leave a legacy behind.’ So we wanted to keep pushing and accomplish one goal at a time. Once we made the national tournament, it really felt like we were leaving a legacy.

“We all had a blast. We were super thankful to be there, and I do think it meant a lot to our program. We never had a conference championship, we had never made it to a regional. We did a lot of things that had never been done there. It was really fun to be able to accomplish that. It’s awesome that I’m so young, that I have more years to play there. My plan is to keep that legacy going.”

Photo: Cedric Dunnwald is back for another full season with the Burlington Bees. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

BEES 11, PISTOL SHRIMP 9: Walk-Off Win Starts A New Week

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Joe Evans got the Burlington Bees to a spot where they could win the game.

Merrick Mathews finished the victory.

Mathews’ two-out two-run home run in the 10th inning gave the Bees an 11-9 win over the Illinois Valley Pistol Shrimp in Sunday’s Prospect League game at Community Field.

The Bees (2-3) snapped a three-game losing streak, coming off a road trip in which they were outscored 19-4 in two losses to the O’Fallon Hoots. They took a wild ride in this one — they rallied from an early 5-1 deficit to take the lead, let that lead get away, tied the game in the eighth inning, squandered a bases-loaded opportunity in the ninth inning, then finally finished the win with three runs in the 10th.

“After that road trip, we needed that one pretty bad here,” Oreskovich said. “We got it done.”

The Bees trailed 9-8 in the 10th, but tied the game when Landon Akers’ ground out scored Scotty Savage, who opened the inning at second base under the league’s extra-inning rule.

Cooper Donlin followed with a double, and then advanced to third on a passed ball. But Illinois Valley reliever Anthony Solis (0-1) struck out Cedric Dunnwald for the second out.

Mathews, a junior infielder at Iowa this season, was 0-for-9 with the Bees, 0-for-3 on the day, when he came to the plate.

“I know no one is going to believe this, but I had a feeling he was going to come up with a big hit,” Oreskovich said. “It was just something I had in my head throughout the game. He was on some good pitches earlier in the game.”

Solis missed with a slider to Mathews to open the at-bat. Mathews then pounded a fastball over the left-field fence.

“I was watching the guys in front of me,” Mathews said. “I knew he wasn’t really hitting with his off-speed. He threw me a first-pitch slider that he missed, so I was pretty much dead-red heater after that. I got what I was looking for.”

Mathews was mobbed at home plate as he scored.

“It was pretty cool,” he said. “It was my first walk-off home run, so it was pretty cool.”

“That was huge for him,” Oreskovich said. “It was good to see him come up and get a big hit in a big spot.”

Evans (2-0) has become a reliable reliever for Oreskovich. The left-hander, who was a starter at Morton (Ill.) College this season, has thrown seven innings in two appearances, striking out six and allowing just one earned run.

Evans entered this game in the seventh after Illinois Valley scored three runs to take an 8-7 lead. He allowed just three hits in four innings, striking out three.

“Obviously, when you first get in there, the jitters are there a little bit,” Evans said. “Once I throw that first pitch and get it over with, it’s smooth sailing from there.

“Coming from a junior college, the competition isn’t as great over there. Coming here, going out and throwing strikes and getting ahead, it’s huge. It gave me confidence.”

“That kid is a competitor if I’ve ever seen one,” Oreskovich said. “Phenomenal competitor. He just goes out there and does his thing. That’s what we talked about earlier in the year — being who you are. And that’s who he is. That was huge. That was just as big as everything else.”

The Bees trailed 5-1 going into the bottom of the sixth inning, but scored six runs to take the lead. Ty Plummer, another player from Iowa, singled to drive in the go-ahead run.

It’s only the beginning of the second week of the season, but everyone understood the importance of the win.

“It was huge, for sure,” Evans said. “We had a few ballgames where our pitchers struggled a little bit. It was really huge for us to get in the win column.”

“Hopefully we can get some things rolling,” Mathews said. “Hopefully it kick-starts us into a new week, and we can get on a roll.”

Box score

Photo: Merrick Mathews watches his game-winning home run in the 10th inning. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

BEES 8, RIVER DRAGONS 6: Speed Keeps The Traffic Moving

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Owen Oreskovich knew he had some speed when he put together the Burlington Bees roster for the Prospect League season.

The manager put it to good use in Wednesday’s 8-6 win over the Alton River Dragons in the home season opener at Community Field.

The Bees had six stolen bases, consistently putting pressure on the River Dragons. Alton also had two throwing errors on pickoff throws to first base, which kept traffic moving on the bases.

“Yeah, that helps,” Oreskovich said of the speed. Some guys I knew were going to be running. I like to run, we run at Mount Mercy, too (where Oreskovich is the team’s hitting coach). It puts pressure on the defense, it puts pressure on their pitcher to make pitches. I enjoy that, being an offensive coach.”

“I think everybody tries to stay in their approach,” said center fielder Cooper Donlin, who had one of the stolen bases and scored three runs. “Put the ball in play, put in play hard, use the tools you have.”

The speed was apparent in the first inning, and although it didn’t lead to a run, it set a tone for the rest of the night.

Jackson Rooker led off the game with a walk and then stole second and third. After Jackson Lindquist walked with one out, Oreskovich tried a double steal. Lindquist was safe at second, but Rooker was thrown out at the plate on a close call.

Donlin had an interesting trip around the bases in the Bees’ three-run third inning. He was hit by a pitch, went to second on a wild pitch, advanced to third on a passed ball, then scored on another passed ball.

“I look at myself as someone who’s fast, so I try to use those tools — use my speed, put the ball in play, get on base as much as I can,” Donlin said.

There was a little pop to the Bees’ offense. Kinnick Pusteoska hit a two-run home run off the scoreboard in the second inning, and Cedric Dunnwald and Scotty Savage each had doubles.

“I don’t know if we’re going to be a team that’s going to hit a lot of home runs,” Oreskovich said. “So I think we’re going to be a team that runs a lot.”

Every Burlington hitter got on base at least once.

“I think we’ve got a gritty group of hitters,” Oreskovich said. “I don’t know how many strikeouts we had hitting (the Bees had nine), but it didn’t feel like much.

Oreskovich got quality innings out of the three pitchers he used. Jackson Wohlers allowed just one hit in three innings to start the game. Joe Evans (1-0) allowed three hits in three innings. Bobby Helt pitched the final three innings for the save.

“I thought our pitchers did a good job of pounding the zone,” Oreskovich said. “Wohlers settled in after the first inning. First real game at home, it’s a little nerve-wracking. But I think he’ll be good for us this summer. Joe pitched well after he settled in, and Bobby gave us three really good innings.”

UP NEXT: The Bees play host to the O’Fallon Hoots in a 6:30 p.m. game on Wednesday. Jacob Zahner will be the starting pitcher for Burlington.

Box score

Photo: Burlington’s Cooper Donlin steals second base as Alton shortstop Cooper Howell looks for the call in Wednesday’s game at Community Field. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

Bees’ Roster Starting To Fill As Season Approaches

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Six NCAA Division I players are among the 23 who have signed so far to play for the Burlington Bees in the Prospect League this season.

The list includes seven players from the state of Iowa, and three players — outfielder Cedric Dunnwald and pitchers Preston Kaufman and Zach Leuschen — who played with the Bees last season.

Prospect League teams can carry as many as 40 players on their roster for the 58-game season. The Bees open their season on May 28 at Clinton.

Owen Oreskovich is back for his third season as the Bees’ manager. 

A look at the Bees’ roster, including current statistics:

CATCHERS

Michael Carrano (Parkland College) — Batting .300 with three home runs and 16 RBIs.

Jacob Schindler (McHenry County College) — No stats this season.

INFIELDERS

Skyler Agnew (Hawaii Pacific) — Hitting .298 with two home runs and 26 RBIs.

Landon Akers (Bellarmine) — No stats this season.

Carson Bittner (Phoenix College) — Hitting .317 with 10 RBIs.

Jackson Lindquist (Rock Valley College) — Hitting .416 with six home runs and 45 RBIs.

Merrick Mathews (Iowa) — Hitting .333 in seven games, with one home run and six RBIs.

Ty Plummer (Iowa) — No stats this season.

Kinnick Pusteoska (Tennessee Tech) — No stats this season.

Jackson Rooker (Tennessee Tech) — No stats this season.

Ryan Skwarek (McHenry County College) — Hitting .410 with one home run and 29 RBIs. Also has pitched five innings with 10 strikeouts.

OUTFIELDERS

Luke Bragga (Tennessee Tech) — No stats this season.

Cooper Donlin (Hawaii Pacific) — Hitting .313 in 24 games.

Cedric Dunnwald (Mount Mercy) — Hitting .214 in 21 games. Hit .239 for the Bees last season.

Jackson Reid (Chandler Gilbert CC) — Hitting .179 in 12 games.

Scotty Savage (Milwaukee Area Tech) — Hitting .339 with six home runs and 35 RBIs.

PITCHERS

Shea Blanchard (Hawaii Pacific) — 3-0 with a 6.44 ERA in nine appearances with five starts. Has 17 strikeouts in 29 ⅓ innings.

Nathan Chapman (McHenry County College) — 0-1 with one save. Three strikeouts in 3 ⅓ innings

Noah Harbin (Maryville University) — 1-2 with a 4.19 ERA. Has 25 strikeouts in 19 ⅓ innings.

Preston Kaufman (Marian University) — 1-1 with a 4.35 ERA in two appearances this season. Had a 6.63 ERA in 14 appearances with the Bees last season.

Zach Leuschen (Southeastern CC) — 1-0 with a 4.73 ERA in 11 appearances this season. 1-0 with a 7.40 ERA with the Bees last season.

Michael Schaul (Mount Mercy) — No stats this season.

Jackson Wohlers (Rock Valley College) — 2-3 with four saves. Has 27 strikeouts in 18 ⅔ innings.

Photo: Pitcher Preston Kaufman is one of three former Burlington Bees returning to the team for this season. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

Brauer Wants More Visibility For Prospect League

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

David Brauer looked at his first season as the Prospect League’s commissioner as “Year 0.”

“Maybe it’s cliche,” Brauer said. “But your runway is short in the lead-up to the season. You’re trying to evaluate, trying to look at what you can implement quickly, and still have everything moving forward.”

That’s why this year in the college summer league will be the first step in what Brauer plans to be the continued progression of the league.

The league now has 18 teams in seven states with the addition of the Dubois County Bombers of Huntingburg, Ind., and the Full Count Rhythm of Hendersonville, Tenn. The 56-game schedule begins on May 28 and runs through July 31, with the postseason set for August 1-8.

There were 17 teams in the Prospect League, which meant there was at least one team with an off-day every day.

“We’re back to 18, which is good for scheduling,” Brauer said. “It makes sense. Certainly much easier. You don’t have that team that has the rotating off day. It works well for football, but for baseball it’s a little awkward.”

The 56-game season is down four games from last season, but Brauer said it’s a good number.

“That aligns with the college season,” he said. “It’s a good number. You want to be in that middle.”

Brauer noted how the Coastal Plains League plays a 48-game schedule, while the Northwoods League is at 70.

“I don’t think you want to go to either extreme, you want to be more in the middle,” Brauer said.

Brauer noted that in conversations with college coaches, the idea of a shorter season was one that appealed to them.

“They are most adamant about the calendar,” he said. “The game schedule is important, considering how condensed it is. We’re playing 56 (games) in probably 65 days. That was really the focal point for the college coaches, like, ‘Hey, let my kids get back on campus, or give them a little time to decompress.’ You’ve got to remember that these kids are 18 to 21 years old, so give them a little time to relax.”

Brauer pointed out how the league’s season starts within days after the end of the college season.

“When you come to our league, without much of a break, you’re really at game 56, game 57,” he said. “I don’t think people realize that. They think you walk into this league and it’s a whole new season, but it’s really not. It’s really just a continuation.”

The league set an attendance record with 575,294 fans last season. Ten teams in the league had increased average attendance, including the Burlington Bees, who drew an average of 1,026 fans last season, up from 1,011 in 2022 and 896 in 2021.

“To me, the biggest thing was our attendance record,” Brauer said. “There was tremendous support around the league. We were above 500,000 for the first time. You could easily point to it and say, ‘Well, you had two new teams,’ and doing the math like that. But realistically, the average attendance was up more than 200 fans in each ballpark, on average. That’s really encouraging.”

Brauer wants to build on that with increased marketing within the league.

“Now, it’s how can we tap into that and really engage the fans more, build the brand more, get the visibility out there,” he said. “I think social media engagement is what we want to focus on more this year, get our teams visible, not only in their market, but league-wide and nationally, so people know who the Prospect League is. I think there are a lot of great selling points.”

There are challenges in a league that has such a wide footprint.

“There are some holes out east,” Brauer said, noting travel for some teams is the biggest challenge. “How we fill that in in the future is something under consideration, something our directors talk about frequently. You want to make sure that you have the right markets, the ones that can be successful.”

Brauer knows the lure of the league to players is to get into markets that have been part of professional baseball in the past.

“I think, top to bottom, we’re a good league,” he said. “This league, I think you can get that game-day experience you can’t get at other places.

“We’re a college baseball league, but we’re wrapped up in minor-league packaging. You’ve got the Bees and the Clinton LumberKings with minor league backgrounds. You’ve got cities that were in independent leagues, cities with professional baseball histories. The more we can showcase the fan experience and the ballparks and what you see in the league talent-wise, then the reputation grows. It’s not an overnight fix, but it’s something you can keep stacking over the years.”

Photo: The Burlington Bees celebrate Caleb Wulf’s walk-off hit in a game last July. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

Bees Open Season At Clinton

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

The Burlington Bees won’t have to travel too far in the first two weeks of the 2024 Prospect League season.

Eight of the Bees’ first 13 games will be at Community Field, according to the schedule released by the league on Thursday.

The Bees open the season on the road against the Clinton LumberKings on May 28, then open the home portion of their schedule the following night with a 6:30 p.m. game against the Alton River Dragons.

The Bees play a three-game series against the O’Fallon Hoots — at home on May 30 and then on the road May 31 and June 1 — then play five of their next eight games at home.

Among the games on the schedule:

• The Bees have four Sunday home games — June 2 and June 23 vs. Illinois Valley, June 9 vs. Clinton, and July 7 vs. Normal.

• Five home games during the week around July 4 — July 2 vs. O’Fallon, July 3 and 5 vs. Clinton, July 6 vs. Springfield and July 7 vs. Normal. The Bees play at Clinton on July 4.

• The longest road trip of the season is a six-game trip from June 25-30 that includes two games against the Cape Catfish, three with the Jackson Rockabillys and one with the Springfield Lucky Horseshoes.

• The Community Basket Extravaganza is set for July 21 at 2 p.m.

• The home regular-season finale is July 30 against Clinton. The Bees close the regular season the following night at Clinton.

Eighteen teams will play in the Prospect League this season, the largest number in the league’s 61-year history. Two new teams join the league — the Dubois County Bombers of Huntingburg, Indiana, and the Full Count Rhythm of Hendersonville, Tennessee.

The Bees have 16 players committed for this season:

Pitchers — Noah Harbin (Maryville University), Zach Leuschen (Southeastern CC), and Jackson Wohlers (Rock Valley College).

Catchers — Michael Carrano (Parkland College) and Jacob Schindler (McHenry County College)

Infielders — Skyler Agnew (Hawaii-Pacific), Landon Akers (Bellarmine), Carson Bittner (Phoenix College), Ty Plummer (Iowa), Kinnick Pusteoska (Tennessee Tech), and Ryan Skwarek (McHenry County College)

Outfielders — Luke Bragga (Tennessee Tech), Cooper Donlin (Hawaii-Pacific), Cedric Dunnwald (Mount Mercy), Jackson Reid (Chandler-Gilbert CC), and Scotty Savage (Milwaukee Area Tech).

Photo: Cedric Dunnwald slides into second base during the Burlington Bees’ season opener against Quincy last season. Dunnwald is among the players committed to play for the Bees in the 2024 Prospect League season. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

Holland Commits To Rice

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Tanner Holland, who played for the Burlington Bees last season, announced on social media on Thursday that he was committing to play baseball at Rice.

Holland batted .255 with a .729 OPS in 38 games with the Bees. He had three home runs and 19 runs batted in, and had 11 stolen bases in 12 attempts.

Rice is coached by Jose Cruz Jr., who played 12 seasons in Major League Baseball.

Holland, who plays at Central Arizona College, joins Kooper Schulte and Caleb Wulf as NCAA Division I signees/commitments off last season’s team. Schulte and Wulf signed with Iowa during the fall signing period. Mason Schwalbach will play for Kansas State in the upcoming season.

Photo: Tanner Holland watches a home run during a game last season with the Burlington Bees. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

Wulf Commits To Hawkeyes

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Caleb Wulf built on a big season with Southeastern Community College’s baseball team with a strong summer with the Burlington Bees.

Now the infielder has committed to one of the top NCAA Division I programs.

Wulf announced on social media on Saturday that he had committed to Iowa beginning in the 2024-25 season.

Wulf hit .367 with an .800 OPS for the Bees last summer and was named to the Western Conference all-star team. That followed his freshman season at SCC, when he hit .384 with a .964 OPS.

Wulf is the second Bee to commit to Iowa, joining infielder Kooper Schulte.

PROSPECT LEAGUE TEAM CHANGES: The Prospect League added two teams last week — the Dubois County Bombers of Huntingburg, Ind., and the Full Count Rhythm of Hendersonville, Tenn.

Both of those teams played in the Ohio Valley League. Dubois County will replace the West Virginia Miners, who did not play last season in the Prospect League, while the Rhythm will replace the Quincy Gems.

“The Prospect League is thrilled to add two organizations the caliber of Dubois County and Full Count to its membership,” said Prospect League commissioner David Brauer in a statement. “Both have demonstrated success both on and off the field and are poised to be thriving members of the Prospect League. There is no doubt that adding these teams will further enhance this league’s reputation.” 

Dubois County played in the Prospect League from 2005-12. The Bombers were members of the Ohio Valley League from 2013-2023 and were the 2021 OVL champions, and play at historic League Stadium in Huntingburg. Originally built in 1894, the stadium was featured in the movies “A League of Their Own” and “Soul of the Game.” 

The Rhythm, founded by Full Count Ministries in 2020, was a member of the Ohio Valley League for each of its three seasons, winning the league title in 2022 and 2023.

Photo: Bees second baseman Caleb Wulf throws to first in a game last season. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

Bees’ Wulf Named To Western Conference All-Stars

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Burlington Bees second baseman Caleb Wulf was named to the Prospect League’s Western Conference all-star team on Thursday.

Wulf was the only Bee named to the 16-player team.

Wulf, who plays at Southeastern Community College, hit .367 in 36 games. Wulf had 51 hits and scored 22 runs. He drove in 19 runs, finishing with a .404 on-base percentage and a .396 slugging percentage.

The Cape Catfish led the team with five selections — shortstop Justin Carinci, outfielders Chris Hall and Brody Christian, and starting pitchers Jorge Romero and Noah Gadberry.

The Western Conference team included Illinois Valley reliever Sebastian Gonzalez, who was named the league’s pitcher of the year and pro prospect of the year.

Photo: Bees second baseman Caleb Wulf was named a Western Conference All-Star on Thursday. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

THE MONDAY HIVE: A Summer Of Stories

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

I had a college baseball coach tell me that he always recommended to his best players that they play a season in a summer league.

The chance to play, he said, was invaluable, even in leagues where the competition wasn’t so good. More at-bats and more innings makes for a better player.

But there was a bigger reason to play, he told me. It’s a chance to get a simulation of what it will be like if a player becomes a professional.

It’s long bus rides, it’s building a bond in a clubhouse with a team of players you’ve never met before. It’s playing in quirky ballparks, being embraced by a community, learning to manage your time in a schedule that’s all about baseball.

It’s about memories.

I thought about that this year in watching the Burlington Bees in the Prospect League.

The Bees played 57 games this season, each one having its own story. And so many of the games had stories inside the story.

The Bees endured rain, heat, nights in the smoky haze that covered the Midwest. They pulled tarp, their bus broke down somewhere on an Ohio highway during a seven-games-in-six-days-in-four-states odyssey.

What was fascinating was the clubhouse dynamic never changed throughout the season even when the roster did. The common theme of the newcomers was, “There’s a great group of guys here.”

It was something pitching coach Jack Gray predicted at the Bees’ winter banquet in February.

A good chunk of the roster had already been signed, the last couple of months before the season would be about filling the final spots.

Gray, though, said the signed players already had a group text message going. “I don’t know how good we’re going to be, but these guys really like each other,” Gray said.

It showed during the season.

Go back to the loud cheer from the dugout on Connor Laeng’s single in the second inning of the June 25 game against O’Fallon. It was Laeng’s first hit of the season, on his 36th at-bat.

A few weeks later, Laeng went 3-for-5 in a win at Normal, capping a three-game run of six hits in 11 at-bats.

There was the behind-the-scenes recruitment of outfielder Corey Boyette by pitchers Drew Martin and Jake Jakubowski when the Bees had some roster holes because of injuries. Boyette, Martin and Jakubowski were teammates at Heartland Community College, and the two pitchers convinced Boyette to come to Burlington.

All Boyette did was hit .286 and post a .950 OPS.

It was that kind of chemistry that kept the Bees in the playoff chase until the final week, and kept them in most games.

There were plenty of standout performances. Mason Schwalbach hit .335 and had a league-high 21 doubles. Keanu Spenser hit .304 with 14 doubles and 10 home runs. Caleb Wulf hit .367 in 36 games. Kooper Schulte was batting .373 before a broken hand ended his season.

It was a season in which the Bees had their first player in their three seasons in the Prospect League selected in the Major League Baseball draft, when Spencer Nivens, who played with the team last season, was selected by the Kansas City Royals in the fifth round.

Three Bees — Schwalbach (Kansas State), Lincoln Riley (Arkansas) and Coy Sarsfield (Iowa) — will be on the rosters of Power-5 conference teams in the upcoming college baseball season.

The game of the year was the 10-9 win over Alton, when the Bees rallied from an 8-0 deficit to win in 10 innings on July 28.

It was the hottest night of the season — a heat index of 108 degrees at game-time — and in the moments after the win the smothering humidity of the night was mixed with the fog of the comeback, a feeling of that-was-cool-but-what-the-hell-just-happened.

Outside the Bees’ clubhouse, relief pitcher Preston Kaufman was on the phone with his mom, telling her about the game, when a man walked by and said to Kaufman, “Hell of a game.”

Kaufman stopped his conversation, and shook the man’s hand.

“Thanks for coming,” he said.

Kaufman was one of those stories-within-the-story. He had allowed just one run in four innings of relief in the game, keeping the River Dragons in check to help set up the rally.

I interviewed Kaufman when he got off the phone, and when we were done talking I said, “Hell of a game.”

Kaufman just smiled.

“I won’t forget it,” he said. “Ever.”

Photo: Caleb Wulf (middle) is mobbed by teammates after his game-winning hit against Quincy on July 17. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)