— — ili BY JACOB THOMPSON w ^hottt bjEMSt i n Boit? i 1 SPORTS EDITOR <3 SPORTSEDTHCMOS After one of the roughest starts in recent memory, the Clackamas C o m m u n ity C o lle g e b a se b a ll team put to geth er a fa n t a s tic Js weekend of baseball to improve to 4-8 in league play and fifth of fbg South ■!.-¥ v-s Comiriig imio?|he w ^ e ^ n ^ ^ g ^ t^ ^ m a ^ w a ^ n a i5-gartf^4e«jftg | streak and it looked like the Cougars were de stined for a last pla$e fih is lf in the South R egion. Their destiny changed ir^ Si l i - i n n f i g Hm ^ a th o n 1. ; The Cougars quickly jhm ’ped out to a 2-0 lead after the first inning on ado u b le by freshm an third baseman JaeleniBradley. Southw estern Oregon Com m unity College,scored a run in thg, third ° n 3n err° r by freshm an second baseman Jordan Kendig in the third inning but were held scoreless after that until the ninth in n in g u n til freshm an. fir s t basem aA Jo rdan Craw ford;- cranked a home run that tie's the game at-2 -2 ." v ¡J- It looked like Clackamas might lose again as momentum shifted SW OCC’ s way, but not this tim e. In th ^fb o tto m o f the eleventh 4 in n in g w ith two outs and a f',xh€ snowball e ffe ct h as'taken o ff, but there,w as a special fype of confidence flow ing from me d iiiw gm the ^ Q t^ a ffa r r f^ ^ u ig g o o u u i t datura Saturday ^ t | | ^ o n * a s the C o u g a r ^ a ^ e ? back from a fou r-run d e f ic it !” W.. In the sixth inning Clackam as sclre d three ru n sT T n a rro w the lead to 4 -3 , and in th e Je i|h th irkning they ta c fe d on two 4-3,^ ' R t h e le a ~- m t J axon «« more f runs to take d 5^4. H o If,b a ttin g .134 on the season, came in clutch giving the Cpugars three of their five ? , sasss ?« ■ In the final game o f the four-gam e serles^thecpm eback Cougs struck again after trailin g 3-2, Clackam as mounted three runs j K looks > to ■ continue • -