For Northridge, It’s Not Like Old Times
Cal State Northridge isn’t a Division II baseball team anymore.
The Matadors were painfully reminded of that when they lost to one Saturday in splitting a doubleheader with Cal State San Bernardino at Matador Field.
Northridge lost the first game, 4-3, and rebounded to win the second, 3-1.
But the split provided little solace for the Matadors, who moved up to Division I in 1991 and hadn’t lost to a lower-level team since a 7-3 defeat at UC Riverside in 1995.
“It’s tough to lose, especially when you’re playing a team that’s at a lower level,” Northridge Coach Mike Batesole said. “It’s expected that you’ll beat these kind of teams.
“We have a lot of advantages over them. A lot of Division I teams have a lot of advantages over us, and I think they come in expecting to beat us. And I think we’re expected to beat these [Division II] teams.”
The defeat ended a four-game winning streak that included victories over Hawaii and Long Beach State.
Northridge had leads of 1-0 and 2-1 in the first game before San Bernardino tied the score with a run in the fifth and went ahead, 4-2, on a two-run home run by Shawn Romprey in the sixth of the seven-inning game.
The Matadors rallied for a run with two out in the seventh, when Andy Wilson scored on a double to left by Adam Kennedy. But Kennedy was stranded when Mark Berrelleza relieved Pete Cuellar (5-3) and struck out Dan Pierce to end the game and earn his fourth save.
Northridge senior left-hander Nathan Rice (3-4) went the distance, giving up four earned runs and five hits.
The Matadors (27-15-1) got a masterful performance from little-used junior left-hander Carey Novits in the second game.
Novits (3-0) worked seven innings, his longest stint of the season, before he tired and was replaced by Bryant Fick to start the eighth. Novits limited the Coyotes (18-16-1) to four hits, struck out four and did not walk a batter. Fick earned his first save.
Novits allowed San Bernardino’s only run on Romprey’s second home run of the day, with one out in the seventh inning.
“It was just a matter of trying to make the most of the opportunity,” Novits said. “Every chance you get, you’ve got to do the best you can.”
Northridge scored a run in the first and two more on three hits and an error in the fifth.
On the day, Pierce was four for seven with a sacrifice fly and Kennedy was three for six.
Get our high school sports newsletter
Prep Rally is devoted to the SoCal high school sports experience, bringing you scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.