CARY, N.C. -- Harvard-Westlake (Calif.) pitcher Hans Hansen didn't expect to be pitching in the ninth inning of the USA Baseball National High School Invitational semifinals, at least not this way.
Hansen, who had been the Wolverines' closer all season, was pressed into being a starter Friday against American Heritage (Fla.) at the USA Baseball National Training Complex. Rehab for an elbow injury kept teammate Lucas Giolito, ranked the nation's No. 7 prospect by MLB.com, home, leaving the Wolverines short.
Nine innings and 97 pitches later, Hansen was a 1-0 winner, putting Harvard-Westlake in Saturday's 9 a.m. ET championship game against Mater Dei (Calif.).
"I was hoping to go seven," Hansen said. "Heck, I was hoping to go five. I would have been happy with five. I just wanted to do the best I could for my team.
"I don't throw too fast, as you probably saw, but I can locate. And that works."
It did Friday, for as long as it had to.
Harvard-Westlake (12-2-1) finally pushed across a run in the bottom of the ninth for the victory.
Jack Flaherty bunted for a hit with one out, and catcher Arden Pabst followed with a walk. Flaherty took third on a wild pitch and scored on Max Fried's grounder to short.
But Fried knew where the credit belonged.
"Today was Hans' day," he said. "He was a closer and he became a nine-inning guy."
American Heritage coach Bruce Aven was frustrated by his team's performance at the plate. The Patriots had 14 outs on popups or fly balls in the game.
"We were trying to hit balls out of a big league ballpark with high school kids who think they have more power than they have," he said. "We did the same thing over and over again, didn't make any adjustments."
That approach played to Hansen's favor, Wolverines coach Matt LaCour said.
"Playing in a big park and watching a team hit fly balls is really conducive to his game," he said.
For a while, both pitchers dominated. Through six innings, neither team had advanced a runner to third base.
Then came the top of the seventh, and the theater of the bizarre.
Brandon Diaz led off for American Heritage with a bunt single and took second on a sacrifice by Brandon Zacco.
David Villar then bounced a grounder to Harvard-Westlake shortstop Brian Ginsberg, who tried unsuccessfully to throw Diaz out at third.
Then, it appeared the Wolverines had caught Diaz wandering off third with the hidden ball trick, but after initially calling Diaz out, the umpires consulted. After a conference with LaCour, returned Diaz to third.
Home plate umpire Steve Sanders said after the game that a timeout had been called before the hidden ball trick, and that he had put the ball back in play in error, before the pitcher was on the rubber with the ball.
"We didn't see a timeout called or we wouldn't have run the play," LaCour said. "They called him out and then all of a sudden they came back and said, 'We called timeout.' I found it rather bizarre."
The oddity didn't end there. With runners at first and third with one out, an attempted squeeze rolled foul.
"We wanted to come back with another squeeze after that, but we weren't sure if they would pitch out or not," American Heritage coach Bruce Aven said. "When you have a chance to get the job done, you have to get the job done."
Before another pitch could be thrown, Kevin Williams, pinch-running for Villar, took off for second and got caught in a rundown. But Diaz wandered too far off third, and Wolverines first baseman Joe Corrigan threw across the infield to third baseman Jack Flaherty, who threw Diaz out at home for the second out. Diaz suffered an injury to his left arm on the play.
Gabe Aurrecoechea grounded out to the pitcher to end the wild inning.
Hansen and American Heritage starter Shaun Anderson, a junior who has committed to Florida, dominated until the bottom of the ninth.
"Our guy [Anderson] really commanded the strike zone all night," Aven said. "Threw a curveball, threw a fastball, mixed inside and outside. It's unfortunate we didn't get a win for him."
Hansen did get a win for Harvard-Westlake, and LaCour was appreciative.
"You feel good about being a coach on a day like today," he said.
He wasn't the only one feeling good. Hansen, who has not even had a discussion with a school about a scholarship yet, was pretty happy, too.
"It's huge," he said. "It's big for my future. It's big for my self-confidence. It's a big day for me."
Notes: Harvard-Westlake leadoff hitter Joe Corrigan had two singles, but he was picked off by Anderson in the first and caught stealing in the sixth. ... American Heritage has two players named Brandon Diaz. The junior infielder was injured at home plate on the rundown play in the seventh. The senior pitcher replaced Anderson on the mound to face Fried on the game's final at bat. "Our pitcher pitched eight innings and was still at 83 pitches, but he was exhausted, mentally tired, so we had to come get him," Aven said. ... After the injury to Diaz, Aven put in an eighth-grader, Jose Natera, at second base. ... Senior Brandon Deere will start the championship game against Mater Dei for Harvard-Westlake. "It's his turn to kind of step up," LaCour said. "I'm interested to see how he handles it. It's gonna be a good stepping stone for him. He's been dying for an opportunity and a stage like this. It's gonna be fun to watch him." ... LaCour on the matchup of California teams in the NHSI final: "Let's go. We kinda feel like in Southern California we play the best brand of baseball in the nation. There's other great teams out there, and I'm not taking anything away from them, but on a daily basis you get tested in Southern California. It will be neat playing somebody from our backyard, here across the country."
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