SPENCER Literally and figuratively, North Rowans 6-foot-6 Daniel Moore stands
head and shoulders above the high school crowd.He
pitched yet another one-hitter thats five of them this season as North
whipped Southwestern Randolph 4-1 Friday in the Western 2A finals in front of what had to
be the biggest baseball crowd in Cavs history. And he pitched it as effortlessly as
most of walk down the driveway to pick up the newspaper.
Once we got three runs in the second inning, we sat
back and got comfortable, said always candid North coach Bill Kesler. I
wasnt worried that theyd beat Daniel after that. At 3-0, we (Kesler and
pitching coach Paul Benfield) went on cruise control.
And why not? Moore hasnt allowed more than two runs
in any game this season. Yeah, its never over til its over, but when
Kesler insisted this one was in the icebox the minute that 3 lit up on the
Cavs side of the scoreboard, it was hard to argue with him.
Kesler wasnt just blowing smoke when he said he never
fidgeted not even once. He was Joe Cool on Friday compared to his nervous,
pins-and-needles performance in Tuesdays 7-6 pressure-cooker win.
Well, I knew two of Southwesterns best hitters
were lefties, said Kesler, referring to leadoff batter Squeaky Warren (.438) and
Lane Hunt, who had hammered homers in five straight games. And lefties wont
usually do much against Daniel. Once Daniel went through their lineup one time, I could
see there wasnt that much to worry about. Their guys with big swings werent
going to catch up to him, and their guys who were just poking at the ball, trying not to
strike out, werent going to hit it very far.
A prime example of Southwests Poke-mon
style came right away. Southwesterns second hitter, Taylor Browne, simply stuck his
bat out and spoiled a half-dozen Moore deliveries. The visiting crowd whooped it up on
each and every weak foul ball as if it were as good a run, but Moore just kept staring at
catcher Brad Canipes glove. Moore wound up walking Browne, but didnt get
flustered. He just shrugged, got the next two guys and strolled to the dugout.
Asked if Kesler had given him a scouting report on the
opposition, Moore smiled and shook his head.
No, I was just going to go after them, he said.
I wasnt going to worry about who any of their guys were. You worry about a
hitter and you mess up trying to get too perfect. I just let it all loose.
Boy, did he let it loose.
Southwestern managed to hit one ball out of the infield
a soft, looping single by Warren in the third that fell just out of the reach of
diving centerfielder Nick Childers.
Moores fastball had to be nearing 90 mph in the later
innings and his darting curve was mission impossible for Cougar hitters. They had no
chance.
It was one of his best outings, said Benfield.
He worked out front and was very consistent. His curve was accurate. His fastball
had a lot of pop. Just overpowering.
Moores demeanor impressed even more than his heat. He
was responsible for some wacky occurrences during the course of the game his first
balk of the year, a couple of wild pitches, an error on a pickoff throw and a wild
baserunning blunder but through it all, he was stone-faced. Expressionless. Even
with that monstrous crowd watching his every move and bellowing to beat the band.
Thats just how Daniel is, said Benfield.
Calm and relaxed. His teammates feed off that calm. It helps all of them.
Its like, said shortstop Nate Woodburn,
trying to find just the right words, that Daniels got a job to do and he just
goes out there and does it.
For Moore (12-2), the season has been a non-stop highlight
reel. He has 161 strikeouts after piling on 11 more last night. In 83 and one-third
innings, hes allowed a ridiculous total of 27 hits. Thats just a shade more
than two hits per seven innings.
And last night, he was even Moore than usual.
The importance of the game and the packed house brought out the very best he had to offer.
It was an outing that people will talk about for the next decade.
This was my last game on this field, said
Moore. I didnt want anyone to leave here disappointed.
They didnt.
In the locker room after the game, Moore, not even
breathing hard, showed little outward evidence that hed just manhandled one of the
hottest teams in the state.
To be honest, he said with a grin, I
could go out there and pitch again tomorrow.