Quiet bats plague Salem-Keizer JULY 3, 2015, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A11 By HERB SWETT For the Keizertimes The struggling Volcanoes showed signs of improvement but not enough to have a win- ning week. June 24: Hillsboro 7, Volcanoes 2 Jared Miller’s pitching and Stephen Dezzi’s bat led the Hops to their second straight win over Salem-Keizer. Hillsboro led all the way, starting with three runs in the fi rst inning. The runs came on two singles, two walks and two sacrifi ce fl ies. In the fourth, a double and three singles gave the Hops three more runs. They scored in the seventh when Dezzi singled Zach Ne- hrir home. Miller got his second win against no losses. He and two relievers scattered seven Vol- cano hits. In the Volcano fourth, Chase Compton doubled, went to third base on a single by Miguel Gomez and scored on a sacrifi ce fl y by Shilo Mc- Call. Salem-Keizer’s other run came in the eighth, when Richard Amion, who had reached fi rst on an error and stolen second, came home on a Gomez single. June 25: Hillsboro 4, Volcanoes 1 Salem-Keizer suffered its fi rst series sweep of 2015, tak- ing a 1-0 lead into the bottom of the third inning only to give up four runs in the Hops third. The Volcanoes’ run came on a third-inning homer by a newcomer, center fi elder and leadoff batter Ronnie Jebavy. Starting and losing pitcher Nathanael Santiago gave up all four of the Hillsboro runs. Doubles by Quinton Veras and Nate Robertson were the big blows of Hillsboro’s rally. Eric Sim, who had been only a late-inning pitcher, replaced Santiago with two out in the third. Then Nolan Riggs took the mound for the Volcanoes for the rest of the way, striking out six in his fi ve innings and allowing no hits and only one walk. Cody Reed was the Hops’ starting and winning pitcher. Myles Smith had a save. June 26: Spokane 4, Volcanoes 1 This home series opened with a game that was scoreless through fi ve innings. KEIZERTIMES/Eric A. Howald The Volcanoes’ Ronnie Jebavy rounds third and starts for home before getting held up in the game Monday, June 29. Andrew Leenhouts, Salem- Keizer’s starting and losing pitcher, gave up Spokane’s fi rst two runs in the sixth with a two-run homer by Jamie Potts, but the blow came af- ter two outs and an error, so Leenhouts had no earned runs for his six innings, in which he had fi ve strikeouts. The Indians added two runs in the eighth. LaDari- ous Clark reached third base on two errors and a steal and scored on a double by Leon Byrd. Byrd moved to third on a single and stole home. The Volcanoes’ only run came on an eighth-inning home run by Mark Nelson. Joe Palumbo was the win- ning pitcher in relief. Jason Hoppe had a save. Saturday: Volcanoes 12, Spokane 3 The Volcanoes lived up to their name, using 15 hits to erupt from a slump to beat their visitors from Spokane. Salem-Keizer led all the way, starting with three runs in the second inning. CJ Hino- josa and Jose Vizcaino singled, and starting and losing pitcher Nick Green hit Fernando Pu- jadas with a pitch, loading the bases. A wild pitch scored Hino- josa. Steven Neff grounded out but drove in Vizcaino. Ju- lio Pena singled Pujadas home. The Volcanoes hit two home runs, one by Ronnie Jebavy with two on base in the sixth inning and a bases- empty shot by Miguel Gomez in the seventh. Michael Connolly was Salem-Keizer’s starting and winning pitcher, going fi ve innings, allowing four hits and one unearned run, and strik- ing out four. Armando Pa- niagua, EJ Encinosa and Caleb Smith pitched in relief. Sunday: Spokane 8, Volcanoes 0 The Indians, smarting from Saturday’s pounding, retaliated by giving Salem-Keizer its fi rst shutout loss of the season. Spokane outhit the Vol- canoes 11-5, with TiQuan Forbes getting three of the Indian hits and Connor McKay scoring two runs and driving in two. Starter Cody Palmquist pitched fi ve innings for his fi rst win of the season. Half of Spokane’s runs came in the second inning. Ask Mr. Trash ©1986 Q. Is it true that I can put all food waste into the big green Mixed Organics cart? A. It’s true! All food wastes may now be combined with yard debris! Include these: Meats, Dairy, Bones/Shells, Breads/Grains, Fruits, Vegetables, Coffee-Tea Bags/Filters, Food-Soiled Paper Napkins/Towels, Cardboard Pizza Boxes, Grass Clippings, Yard Pruning’s, Leaves, Pine Needles, Pumpkins and Christmas Trees. Layer the food waste with yard debris in the big green Mixed Organics cart for bi-weekly collection in Keizer. Call us today for more information on this and other great services in Keizer! Serving Keizer for Nearly 50 years! LOREN'S SANITATION & RECYCLING SERVICE, INC. 503.393.2262 Member spotlight Bank of the Cascades The mission and values of Bank of the Cascades are not words on pa- per. They are ideals and standards to which they hold themselves and live by every day, through every customer and company-wide inter- action. The bank is dedicated to deliver- ing the best in banking for the fi - nancial well-being of their custom- ers and shareholders. Bank of the Cascades is guided by honesty, Chris Ray loyalty, fairness and trust. They de- vote time, talent and resources to Relationship Banker their customers and the communi- ties they serve. Chris Ray is a senior relationship banker, where he has worked since 2013. When asked what makes Bank of the Cascades special, he said, “We are nimble in responding to our customers’ needs, and build rela- tionships through one-on-one conversations as they get to know their banker.” “We are not a cookie cutter bank. As an Oregon-based community bank, we can help fi nd solutions to help make you or your business more successful and fi nancially sound,” said Ray. Married for 18 years, Chris’ wife is a Keizer native and McNary grad- uate. The couple have two children, ages 4 and 10, and are very active in their church. Mr. Ray is active in community organizations, especially non-profi ts. He is proud of Bank of the Cascades where the profi ts stay in Oregon and support our local economy. Chris talks about the impor- tance in fl exibility in knowing your bank on a personal basis and works to accommodate his customers’ needs, helping them to make sound fi nancial decisions, and impact his community. Chris would appreciate a visit from you. Chris Ray, Relationship Banker Direct -503-540-6901 Cell - 503-766-BANK (2265) cray@botc.com botc.com 6075 Ulali Dr. N.E. Suite 102 | 503-393-9111 | keizerchamber.com Ad space donated by the Keizertimes VA L L E Y RECYCLING & DISPOSAL, INC. 503.585.4300 Starting and losing pitcher Nick Gonzalez, who lasted only 1-1/3 innings, gave up a double and three singles in the inning, walked one batter, hit another and made a wild pitch. Of the Volcanoes’ four re- lief pitchers, Jaret Leverett was the most effective, allowing no runs on three hits in 3-1/3 in- nings and striking out two. Tuesday: Spokane 9, Volcanoes 7 Ouch! Salem-Keizer blew a 7-1 lead after six innings to give the Indians a series win. In the top of the seventh, the Volcanoes gave up three runs to narrow their lead. Spokane scored fi ve more in the eighth and stayed on top. The fi rst Spokane run came in the fi rst inning, on a walk, a force out and a single. Starter Nolan Riggs held the Indians scoreless for the rest of his 5-2/3 innings. The Volcanoes scored three times in their half of the fi rst, with Steven Duggar hitting his fi rst professional home run, with Chris Shaw and Miguel Gomez on base. Two more Volcano runs came in the fourth, on two singles, a fi elder’s choice and a ground out. Two more came in the sixth as Fernando Pu- jadas hit his second homer of the season with Jose Vizcaino Jr. on base. In the Spokane seventh, with Nathaniel Santiago pitching, LaDarious Clark doubled and Dylan Moore was hit by a pitch. Both ad- vanced on a wild pitch and scored on a single by Jamie Potts. Armando Paniagua took the mound in the eighth gave up two doubles, two singles and a sacrifi ce bunt. Eric Sim replaced him, and a run charged to Paniagua scored before Sim retired the side. The Volcanoes threatened twice in the next two innings, once on a long fl y by Shaw that was caught just by the fence, but that was all.