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Arcadia Turns Duel at Hoover Into Rout With an 11-Run Fifth

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<i> Times Staff Writer </i>

In the fourth inning of Friday’s game, after Hoover High pitcher Paul Derrick struck out two Arcadia batters and got a third to pop up, Apache Coach John Meiers loudly predicted the course the game would take--it would be a “pitchers’ duel.”

Unfortunately for Hoover, the Arcadia players didn’t listen to their coach’s prophecy.

The Apaches batted around in the fifth inning, scoring 11 runs, and cruised to a 17-5 Pacific League win at Hoover.

Hoover (7-3, 2-2 in league play), ranked No. 8 in The Times’ Valley poll coming into the week, lost its third game in a row and dropped into third place in league standings behind Pasadena and Arcadia (12-3, 4-1).

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Bob Richter led off the fifth with a single to right field, then Derrick walked the next four batters.

Jon Graves and David Heflin singled and Bubba Woodall doubled before another walk. Then Richter pounded a home run over the left-field fence. The next batter, Mike Gerken, followed with a shot over the fence in right.

Before Bryan Day stepped in to staunch the bleeding, Arcadia held a 15-0 advantage.

Hoover mounted a four-run rally in the sixth inning. Jose Robles, Mickey Moreno, Adam Wiggins and George Trejo each singled and David Berkey and Reggie Mercado reached base on errors.

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Although Arcadia held a comfortable lead, Meiers still chided his players for allowing Hoover to rally.

“I’ve just stopped worrying right now,” he said, leaning back against a pole as the teams went through the postgame handshakes. “I’ve seen some big leads vanish pretty quick here.”

Robles did his best to further shrink the Arcadia advantage by hitting a home run to lead off the seventh inning. The next three batters went quietly, however, to end the game.

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Arcadia scored twice in the second inning as Graves stole home and Erich Trapp scored on a Woodall fly ball. Jim Awaisian padded the lead, 4-0, with a two-run home run in the third inning.

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