March 20, 2013
Hurricane holds off Winfield 5-2
Chris Dorst
Players in the Winfield dugout try to distract Hurricane pitcher Austin Hensley, to no avail.
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WINFIELD, W.Va. -When his heavy-hitting Hurricane teammates reached the fence - or as close as you could get on this blustery day - Austin Hensley was on his way to outpitching Winfield ace Mason Dillon.

Hensley went the distance Wednesday, giving up six hits and two runs (one earned) in the Redskins' 5-2 win over the Generals. He escaped tough situations in the second and fourth innings.

He didn't have much problem in the fifth, sixth and seventh, though, allowing no Winfield runners past first base.

"He's a bulldog. He wanted [to pitch all seven]," said Hurricane coach Brian Sutphin. "The best he threw all game was in the seventh."

As Hensley got stronger, so did the Hurricane bats, equaling Winfield's six hits in the fifth and seventh alone in breaking a 2-2 tie. All the damage came with two outs, with four big hits supplied by Ace Estep and Riley Metz.

The fifth was looking like any other Dillon-pitched inning, especially when the Generals turned their third double play. But Estep launched a long triple to right-center and Metz singled him in to give Hurricane a 3-2 lead.

In the seventh, Dillon was one out away from keeping Winfield's deficit at a run when the batting order got back around to the No. 2 spot, where Estep was hitting. He belted a long double to center, which Metz duplicated for another critical RBI. Tate Brock followed with a double to set the final score.

Dillon had gotten Estep to hit into a double play in the first inning and limited Metz to a strikeout and a grounder in his first two at-bats.

"I came up to the plate and said, 'He got my number twice, and I'm not going to let him do it a third and fourth time,' " Metz said. "Baseball's a game of repetition, but I just got him on the curveball."

Sutphin pointed out that Metz had a tough day fielding at third base, but didn't let it affect him at the plate.

"He's a mentally tough kid. He had some really big at-bats," Sutphin said. "He's worked really hard in the offseason, this is the best shape he's ever been in and we're happy he's part of our team, that's for sure."

The only question about those extra-base hits is how many would have cleared the fence without that biting wind, blowing at 20 mph with gusts to 30 or more. It came in from left field most often.

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