Rice Baseball saw a five-game winning streak over Sam Houston snapped on Tuesday, falling in Huntsville by the score of 6-2.
The first two Rice baseball hitters reached base on Tuesday against Sam Houston, but only one of them came in to score with the second stranded at third base. That inability to push runs across despite having chances would prove to be the theme of the night in a game that was low-scoring until the home team broke things open in the middle innings.
Rice led 1-0 after one inning. It wasn’t until the fourth frame that Sam Houston was able to tie the game on a throwing error on a dropped third strike. Things slowly began to unravel from there. The Bearkats scored two in the fifth and three in the sixth, doing the bulk of their damage against Garrett Stratton and Tom Vincent after start Robert Fernandez was charged with three unearned runs in 4.2 innings of work.
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Trailing 6-1 after six, the Owls didn’t have much of a response. Brendan Cumming tacked on an additional run in the ninth to narrow the deficit by a slim margin but the result was the same, a loss, which snapped a five-game winning streak for Rice in their all-time series against Sam Houston.
What it means | Converting Opportunities
It’s hard to boil an entire game down to one statistic, but on Tuesday night there was one glaring gap in the numbers that had an outsized impact on the game. Sam Houston hit .143 on the night, but a staggering .429 (3-0f-7) with runners in scoring position. Two of those three big hits came in the sixth inning when Sam Houston hung a three spot on the board, doubling their lead and putting Rice away.
In comparison, Rice hit an equally uninspiring .188 for the game but just .143 (1-of-7) with runners in scoring position. Looked at another way, Sam Houston converted two more run-scoring opportunities than Rice did and Sam Houston won the ball game. Rice stranded seven base runners, including two in the sixth, two in the eighth and one in the ninth.
Both sides had their chances. The one that took advantage of them won.