Freshman pitcher Austin Teixeira came in for two scoreless innings of work, both involving stressful situations after allowing runners to get into scoring position. The freshman picked up his first career win in his first career appearance for the Rainbow Warriors by stranding a pair in the eighth and ninth. ASU's Graham Osman got tagged for the loss.
Hawai'i scored it's first run of the game in the fifth inning on a solo home run from Baeza. The first baseman scored the second run of the game in the seventh inning after working a walk and then moving around the diamond on a bunt single from catcher Dallas Duarte and a fielder's choice by second baseman Aaron Ujimori.
A wild pitch plated Baeza to tie the game. In the ninth inning, Baeza led off by reaching on a ground ball to first in which the first baseman decided to flip to the pitcher instead of take the out himself.
The pitcher missed first base and Baeza beat the pitcher to the bag on his second attempt. A sacrifice bunt by Duarte moved Baeza into scoring position and right fielder Tyler Best singled to move Baeza to third. The two teams face off Saturday at a.
HT in the first of a doubleheader. Print Friendly Version. Search Button. Ad Blocker Detected. Her first story for the magazine was The Hash Knife Outfit , published in June under her maiden name.
Sketches by Ross Santee accompanied the story, and the opening paragraph typified Baeza's plain-spoken, yet vivid writing style:. There were bigger cattle companies in North America. But big or small, none will be remembered longer than the old Hash Knife outfit of the s and s, whose infamy has been spread in campfire legends throughout the West.
It wasn't just the size of the property, nor its value, nor its gun-toting cowboys that earned the outfit its reputation. What distinguished it from all other cattle companies in history was just where and when it flourished. It was a product of the times, and the Hash Knife brand is a symbol of that stormy period in northern Arizona. At a gathering of Arizona Highways "old-timers," Baeza recalled, her story was the subject of a good-natured debate with former editor Don Dedera over which of them had been first to contribute to the magazine.
Also in , she married cattleman Cooney Jeffers, and her time living with him on a ranch south of Holbrook inspired her book, Ranch Wife. Later works included 's Eagles at Noon , a collection of poetry, and 's Arizona: The Making of a State , timed to coincide with the state's centennial.
The couple divorced in , and she moved to Pinetop-Lakeside, where she resided until her death. After an eight-year marriage to Western author J. Brown another Arizona Highways contributor , she was married to horse trainer Luis Mario Baeza for six years before the marriage ended amicably.
Baeza's writing won her fans among generations of readers of Arizona Highways and the White Mountain Independent , for which she began writing in Her most recent work for the newspaper came in September, when she marked the passing of Senator John McCain. Arizona Highways has published numerous stories by Baeza, most recently Not So Lonely , which originally ran in the magazine in It's a look at what it took to be a fire lookout in the White Mountains:.
A lookout's days are long and confining, but different, every one. He notices cloud patterns, birds' songs, light and shade playing in the green forest.
He smells dry, dusty leaves; brittle, cold morning air; moist pine needles; and sweet, wet oak leaves. A lightning storm charges the air with sharp purity. Rain on Arizona's red soil is sour and mineral. Always in the air is the clean, sharp fragrance of the ponderosas. They stand with dignity and patience in their God-given places. You wait for July and August, when the clouds will swell and darken in the southeast and come rolling over Baldy to bring rain to the thirsty land.
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