Story Poster
Jim Schlossnagle
Ali Camarillo
Texas A&M Baseball

Late rally sends #7 Aggies past Prairie View to remain undefeated at home

March 20, 2024
6,276

Game #21: No. 7 Texas A&M 11, Prairie View A&M 9
Records: Texas A&M (19-2, 1-2), PVAMU (11-12, 3-0)
WP: Isaac Morton (1-0)
LP: Leonardo Bravo (3-1)
Box Score


It wasn’t always pretty. At times it was ugly, but a win is a win.

No. 7 Texas A&M battled through some rough outings from its pitchers and scored five runs in the eighth inning to pull off the 11-9 comeback victory over Prairie View A&M.

“Super proud of the level of competitiveness and maturity that our team showed throughout the course of the game,” A&M head coach Jim Schlossnagle said. 

The Aggies started the eighth-inning comeback with a pair of walks by the first two batters, Braden Montgomery and Ted Burton. The next batter, Hayden Schott, doubled down the left field line to decrease the Panthers lead to 9-7.

Ali Camarillo tied the contest two at-bats later with a single up the middle. 

“I was just trying to put a good swing on a good pitch to hit, and everything took care of itself,” Camarillo said. 

“Super proud of the level of competitiveness and maturity that our team showed throughout the course of the game.”
- A&M head coach Jim Schlossnagle

With two outs, Jackson Appel drove home a run with a double before Gavin Grahovac followed him up with an RBI single. 

Issac Morton finished the job, pitching a 1-2-3 inning in the final frame. He was one of the lone bright spots in the Aggie rotation, pitching the final 2.2 innings without giving up a run and striking out four batters. 

“He looked nasty today,” Camarillo said of his teammate Morton. “Slider, sinker, cutter, everything was on. They couldn’t touch him, and that’s what he does.” 

A&M’s comeback in the eighth might not have been possible if it weren’t for the early fireworks from Jace LaViolette. 

LaViolette smashed a two-run home run in the bottom of the first, before following it up with a solo shot in his next at-bat in the second inning. 

With the two homers tonight, LaViolette is now up to 12 on the season. 

Montgomery also added to his home run total in the game, smacking his tenth long ball of the season to center field in the sixth inning. 

“I feel like at-bats for the most part of the game were good,” Schlossnagle said. “We hit a ton of balls hard. A ton that could have been more homers hit into different parts of the park.” 

The pitching efforts from Morton also played a big role in the comeback for A&M as he kept the Panthers from ballooning the lead even more.

“He did a great job of throwing strikes,” Schlossnagle said of Morton. “That’s a really good thing for us, so hopefully that’s a big step forward. I know it is for him and for our team.” 

Other than Morton, it wasn’t a good night for Max Weiner’s bunch. 

Montgomery got his first start on the mound in the Maroon & White. However, it left a little more to be desired. 

“We felt like we needed to get [Montgomery] some mound time,” Schlossnagle said. “I wanted to try and get him or [LaViolette] off their feet a little, but before a four-game stretch. It was just kind of the perfect way to do it.” 

Zoe Kelton, TexAgs
Jace LaViolette now ranks eighth all-time in career home runs at A&M with 33.

However, Montgomery had trouble finding the strike zone, and of his 35 pitches, only 17 were for strikes. 

In the first inning, Montgomery walked a pair of batters who ultimately scored on a three-run home run from Tyran Norris. 

Montgomery was pulled in the second inning before recording an out as he walked the first two batters of the inning. He was charged with four earned runs on one hit and four walks. 

Zane Badmaev came in relief of Montgomery, tossing 1.2 innings and allowing a run on two hits. Brett Antolick followed Badmaev as he came into the game with two outs in the third inning. 

Antolick was charged with a pair of runs in his one inning of work, thanks to a two-run blast from the Panthers' leadoff hitter, Michael Smith, in the fourth inning. Smith’s homer put the Panthers up 7-5. 

Brock Peery was solid for two innings in relief but tired down as the game reached the seventh inning. He walked the first batter, gave up a single to the next and then hit Lee Allen. Peery forced a groundout, which scored a run before he was relieved by Morton.

Nonetheless, the Aggies found a way to get the job done.

“A win, no matter how it looks, always feels good, and we always celebrate it a little bit,” Camarillo said. “Then tomorrow, we’ll come back out for ‘Opening Day.’”

Tomorrow, the Aggies will begin its first home conference series of the season, barring bad weather, as Mississippi State comes to town. 

“They were in a funk for a couple of years after winning a national title, and now, they’re swinging the bat really, really well,” Schlossnagle said of the Bulldogs. “They’re pitching at a high level and have a lot of big arms. We’re going to see a lot of high-end velocity this weekend.” 

Discussion from...

Late rally sends #7 Aggies past Prairie View to remain undefeated at home

3,322 Views | 5 Replies | Last: 1 mo ago by Detmersdislocatedshoulder
Detmersdislocatedshoulder
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i like the makeup of this team. baseball and collegiate sports in general is about finding ways to win when you don't have your best stuff. this team does a nice job of that and it should carry them throughout the season.
Dr. Tinkle
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This team I has issues. Long ball or bust is not a great way to play in. This team letting fastballs down the middle pass and swinging at bad pitches is not a good formula for success long term. Pounding the strike zone isn't happening.
Baron de Bastrop
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AG
Scored 5 runs in the 8th through singles and doubles not long ball.

Leads country in walks and runs through patience, but swung away when pitcher is strike thrower.

Scored 18 runs against Florida and averaging near double-digits.

We can improve but I'm not convinced we have major problems on offense.

This team has several ways to win…
you moran
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AG
This. Scoring hasn't been an issue so far. We do need to find a DH. It would be nice if a bomber would be that guy like I thought we would have early on (either Binderup/Targac or both). But maybe Sorrell will be the guy to at least hit at a decent clip. Rotate all of 'em (among the group we've tried to date) until someone steps up. Hopefully Chestnut is back soon to give us a speed option (he or Sorrell in left with Schott DH for example).

Morton has great stuff. Strike out stuff. If he throws with control consistency like he did against PV, he'll help us a lot. Montgomery couldn't find the plate and gave them 4 right out of the chute. Antolick struggled also. That's what made it a game. Badmaev and Peery were fine. We were giving Peery maybe one batter at a time at the beginning of the season and have progressively stretched him out. He had 2 strong in this one before finding trouble.
Detmersdislocatedshoulder
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Dr. Tinkle said:

This team I has issues. Long ball or bust is not a great way to play in. This team letting fastballs down the middle pass and swinging at bad pitches is not a good formula for success long term. Pounding the strike zone isn't happening.


we are 22 games into the season and we are averaging over 10 runs a game. even against one of the best pitching staffs in collegiate baseball/ florida we averaged 6 a game. baseball is a long season i don't have any issue with the approach at the plate but we have to throw strikes. that has been the biggest development over the last 6 games. our pitching has hit a rut but that's baseball and even under those circumstances we have gone 4-2 while giving up an average of 8 runs a game. we will be fine as long as our pitchers can find their mojo again.
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