A rocky start was too much to overcome as Rice Baseball fell at home to defending champion LSU who scored early and often.
To beat championship-caliber teams you have to play championship-caliber ball. Wednesday night fully encapsulated the degree to which Rice baseball isn’t on the same level as the reigning national champions. And it all came to bear in the span of two half-innings that made all the difference.
Left field Brendan Cumming lost a ball in the lights in the second inning. A few at bats later, he came up inches short of a diving play in the outfield. Had both balls been caught, Rice very well could have been out of the inning with a zero on the board. Neither were. LSU got three.
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An inning later, Rice got the first two outs. Instead of retiring the next batter though, reliever Jake Melvin hit him. The next man hit a home run. LSU proceeded to tack on four additional two-out runs. After coming so close to putting up back-to-back zeroes, Rice trailed LSU 9-0 through three innings.
Rice put together four runs of their own, but another large crooked number in the seventh — courtesy of another mammoth home run blast from LSU catcher Brady Neal, his second of the night — ended any illusions of a comeback. Rice fell 16-4.
What it means | Bright lights, strong winds, bad mix
The lights in the outfield were replaced the week before the season began. The new lights are bright. Someone on staff from a visiting team at Reckling Park this season mentioned they’d seen players struggle with similar lighting setups, particularly in the outfield. The first four games proceeded without notice. Then came Wednesday night.
What the scorebook shows is not fully indicative of what really happened in the field. Both left fielders misplaced balls in the air. Multiple balls dropped in between the triangle formed between the left fielder, third baseman and the shortstop. Officially these were ruled as hits because no fielder directly misplayed the baseball. But for those watching the game it was more than evident the field was playing tricks on everyone.
Rice baseball head coach Jose Cruz Jr. was more concerned with the wind that the lights.”I don’t think it was lights at all the lights were great. It’s it’s as bright as it’s ever been here at Rice,” he said. “But we were both playing on the same field.”