Another game that began at 8:30 a.m. continued on, pushing back top-seeded Lifestyle Caddy’s game because of extra innings.
“Wow! Thirteen innings,” Carroll said. “When are we going to play?”
Teammates asked the same question.
After seeing their game against No. 4-seeded Irell & Manella start 90 minutes behind schedule, little did they know they would also be involved in an extra-inning affair at Lincoln Elementary.
Carroll was responsible for it going past six innings. He also made sure this one didn’t last as long as the game before.
No 3-hour, 40-minute game. An hour shorter this time.
Carroll delivered a walk-off single in the bottom of the eighth, easily driving in the run from third base after pulling a pitch down the left-field line to lift Lifestyle Caddy to a 10-9 victory and a berth in the semifinals.
Carroll’s nickname is “Tiger” for a reason. He went three for three.
Lifestyle Caddy (13-5) celebrated, scoring twice in the eighth to end a long day on top. The wait was worth it to Carroll.
“Yeah!” Carroll yelled. “It’s been great [this season] because last year we didn’t have that good of a team.”
One more win and Lifestyle Caddy has a chance to be the league’s postseason champion after sharing the regular-season title.
Coach Dan Hess is just relieved his team got past this round. Irell & Manella (11-7) proved to be a formidable opponent.
Irell & Manella plays Monday against Corona del Mar Yogurt, which survived the 13-inning game with a 6-5 victory against West Coast Charters.
Lifestyle Caddy plays Tuesday against the winner of Irell & Manella and CdM Yogurt.
“Any time we needed a play to be made, [we] just couldn’t get it done,” Irell & Manella Coach Duane Hastings said.
“A very frustrating day for us.”
The umpire’s day looked just as bad. He called the previous marathon.
The second game headed in that direction after the sixth inning.