AUGUST 14, 2015, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A9 SPLIT: Cool bats lead to three-game slump Hanging with Crater (Continued from Page A8) sixth inning, when Salem- Keizer went ahead by a run. Then came the eighth. In the eighth, the Volca- noes came to bat 14 times and scored seven runs. They went through three Emerald pitch- ers for a rally that featured two stolen bases by Ronnie Jebavy and one by Jose Viz- caino Jr., who had hit a two- run homer in the sixth. Eight Volcanoes had at least one hit, with John Ri- ley getting three and Miguel Gomez two. Andrew Suarez, Salem- Keizer’s starting pitcher, went four innings, allowing three hits and one run and striking out three. He was removed because of his pitch count limit. Rayan Hernandez, the fi rst of four relievers, got the win, his fi rst. Eugene starter Jose Paulino took the loss. Aug. 8: Eugene 1, Volcanoes 0 It was a series win but no sweep. Emerald pitchers silenced Salem-Keizer bats, with start- er Oscar De La Cruz striking out seven and allowing only four hits in his six innings, running his record to 6-4. Pe- Submitted by Mary Holt Volcanoes’ mascot Crater ventured out from his hideaway at Volcanoes Stadium to hang out with members of the Keizer Boys & Girls Club at the Keizer Heritage Center Wednesday, Aug. 5. SERIES, continued from Page A8 KEIZERTIMES/Eric A. Howald Ronnie Jebavy is congratulated as he exits the fi eld after scor- ing the Volcanoes’ fi fth run in two innings Tuesday, Aug. 11. dro Araujo got his fi rst save. Logan Webb had one of his best starts for the Volcanoes, giving up the one run and allowing six hits but striking out six in his six innings. Jaret Leverett pitched the last two innings. Eugene’s run came in the second inning. Alberto Mineo tripled and scored on a single by Adonis Paula. For the Volcanoes, CJ Hi- nojosa had one of his best games of the season with three hits, two of them dou- bles, in addition to fi elding expertly. There were no errors in the game. Aug. 9: Hillsboro 4, Volcanoes 2 Salem-Keizer pitchers gave up only one earned run, and the Volcanoes’ Shilo McCall hit a home run, but it was not enough for a home series- opening win. Both Volcano runs came in the third inning. John Riley singled,and McCall knocked the ball over the fence. Salem- Keizer was ahead 2-0 then, but the Hops scored twice in the fi fth and twice in the sixth. In the fi fth, Sergio Alcan- KEIZER CLASSIFIEDS CLEANING SERVICE SERVICES A+ CLEANING SERVICE. Residential maintenance cleaning, Move-In/out, Remodel Clean up. Over 20 years experience. Registered and Bonded. $25/hour all supplies provided. www. aplusclean.net. Call Lorie 503-580- 0298 0828 DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills division. No court appearances. 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Bong, MD City of Keizer Gilgamesh Brewing Company Allie Kehret Keizer CERT Keizertimes Loren’s Sanitation Keizer Men in Action for Keizer McNary Air Force JROTC NW Natural George Goesch, State Farm Sam Goesch, State Farm Clint Holland Mary Sasaki Schoolhouse Square Shari’s Cafe and Pies Shelter Management, Inc. Skyline’s Keizer Ford Doug Tookey The UPS Store riverfairkeizer.com tara singled Nate Robertson home and scored on a sacri- fi ce fl y by Fernery Ozuna. By then there had been two outs and an error by Steven Dug- gar in right fi eld. Josh Anderson reached fi rst base on an error by shortstop CJ Hinojosa in the sixth. Trevor Mitsui singled, and with two outs both scored on a single by Alcantara. Hillsboro starter Carlos Hernandez was the winning pitcher with a 4-1 record, and Cameron Gann had his fi rst save. Nathanael Santiago was the losing pitcher in re- lief. Aug. 11: Volcanoes 7, Hillsboro 0 The Volcanoes decided they preferred a third shutout win for the season to getting swept in a series. Salem-Keizer’s big inning was the four-run fi rst. Steven Duggar singled and was on base when Miguel Gomez hit his fourth home run of the season. The second out followed, and then CJ Hi- nojosa hit his third homer of the year. Fernando Pujadas doubled, went to third base on a wild pitch by Hillsboro starter and loser Tyler Mark, and scored on a single by Ju- nior Amion. Hinojosa had three hits for the night. Nolan Riggs, the Volca- noes’ starting pitcher, went six innings and allowed the Hops their total of three hits, running his record to 3-1. Rayan Hernandez pitched in relief. to center and scored as Jebavy doubled to left. Sim held the Hops score- less in the second inning, and in the bottom of the second the Volcanoes tied the score. Pujadas doubled to center and, with Hinojosa at bat, reached third on a wild pitch. Hinojosa then hit his second home run of the season over the left fi eld wall. Reed struck out John Riley, but then Julio Pena homered to left. Jaret Leverett took the mound to start the third, walked Dezzi and gave up a bad-hop single to center to Irving. Peevyhouse hit into a double play, Hinojosa to second baseman Amion to fi rst baseman Chris Shaw, but Dezzi scored on the play to give the Hops a 5-4 lead that they never lost. Leverett be- came the losing pitcher, and Will Landsheft, who pitched the Volcano third, got the win. The Volcanoes’ David Owen pitched the next three innings, striking out two and allowing only one hit. In the Salem-Keizer fi fth, facing pitcher Kirby Bel- low, Shaw led off with a long single to right. However, the next batter, Jose Vizcaino Jr., grounded into a double play. Pujadas then grounded out. Hinojosa’s triple, hit to center, started the bottom of the sixth. However, Bellow struck out the next three bat- ters. Cory Taylor pitched the seventh and eighth innings for Salem-Keizer and Ryan Halstead the ninth. In the bottom of the ninth, Steven Duggar led off with a walk but was picked off at fi rst base on a close play that manager Kyle Haines disput- ed so vehemently that he was ejected from the game. Ricky Ward, the pitching coach, re- placed him in the third base coaching box. The Hillsboro pitcher, Brody Greer, walked Amion but retired the next two batters to get his second save. “We let their bullpen shut us down,” Haines said. “We can’t be happy with just a few runs.” Riley, after a long struggle with the bat, has been hitting very well lately. “Both Ricky Ward and Kyle Haines have helped me out by showing videos,” he said. Amion, asked what was keeping the Volcanoes down the last three games, said, “We just need to get hits in a timely manner.” SKSB accepts 4 grants By HERB SWETT For the Keizertimes Four grants to the Salem- Keizer School District re- ceived school board approval at a 15-minute meeting Tues- day. The largest, for $2,629,899, was from the Oregon Depart- ment of Human Services and was a continuation grant for the Head Start Oregon Pre- kindergarten program. It will allow the district to serve 300 students in nine Head Start classrooms. Also from DHS was a $30,000 grant for My Future My Choice, providing profes- sional development and train- have years of experience in EXPERIENCE We design, carpentry, and engineering. won’t stop until the job is PROFESSIONALISM We fi nished and you are content. long list of satisfi ed TRUSTWORTHINESS Our clients attest to our ability to get the job done right. 503.393.2875 remodelkeizer.com CCB#155626 ing for health teachers to sup- port implementation of state standards. The other two grants were from the Oregon Depart- ment of Education. One, for $60,000, was for the McKin- ney Homeless Education Pro- gram. The other, for $27,189, was to provide fresh fruits and vegetables for Four Corners Elementary School students to eat during the school day, outside the regular meal pro- gram. Other business included a monitoring report on emer- gency superintendent succes- sion. Superintendent Christy Perry told the board that Kelly Carlisle, assistant superinten- dent, or Michael Wolfe, chief operating offi cer, could sub- stitute for her. She added that John Beight, director of hu- man resources, who is new to the district, eventually would be so qualifi ed. The board approved per- sonnel changes that included the following in the McNary High School attendance area: • Employment as a less than half-time McNary and ele- mentary band teacher of Tessa Welterlen. • Employment as a fi rst-year probation part-time teachers of Miguel Campos, orchestra, Whiteaker Middle School; Erin Keck, kindergarten, Keiz- er Elementary School; Mary Anna Haviland, fourth-grade, English for speakers of other languages, Weddle Elementary School; Billie Crane, fourth- grade, ESOL, Clear Lake El- ementary School; Melissa Miller, counselor, McNary; and Nicole DeBiasi, learning resource center, McNary. • Resignations of Coral Walker, second grade, bi- lingual, Keizer; and Andrea Lockard, instructional coach, McNary. Winners at RIVERfair 2015 Golden Bone Awards Sponsored by Copper Creek Mercantile President’s Award Timber, Alicia Rose, owner Mayor’s Award Belle, Jack, Sadie and Jackson (The Wizard of Oz costumes) Jacque Kuchinski, owner Funniest Sparky, Kitty Moller, owner Best Look-a-like Lulur, Dina Muniz, owner Most unusual Frankie the rabbit, Rachel Campbell, owner Pie Eating Contest Sponsored by Shari’s Cafe & Pies Willamette Valley Pie • The UPS Store Kid’s category: Adam Ellis, Josie Wampler Salvadore Vital, Caitlin Kester Ford Whitehouse, MacKenzie Ruffner Adult category Chris Boone, Toni Hirbeck Keizer Police vs. Keizer Fire Cadet Giancarlo Marcelo, KPD