Beaver Falls, PA – Washington & Jefferson College visited College Hill to start the three game Presidents' Athletic Conference series. The visiting Presidents handed Geneva a 9-2 loss in the single nine inning game before hosting the Golden Tornadoes tomorrow in a doubleheader starting at 1 p.m. The loss lowers Geneva’s overall record to 13-25, 5-17 in the conference.
Geneva kept the game close scoring a run in the fourth making the game 2-1. Aaron Witman (Greencastle, PA/Shalom Christian Academy) doubled to right field and advanced to third base on JC Ackerman’s (Lewis Center, OH/Worthington Christian) ground ball. Shane Wingard (Clarksburg, PA/Apollo Ridge) stepped up for an rbi single bringing Witman home.
W&J pulled away for good in the seventh, tallying six runs to Geneva’s one. Geneva was only able to muster up a second run in the seventh off two W&J errors.
The freshman outfielder, Ryan Sciullo, homered for the Presidents in the ninth for two more runs for the post-season contenders ninth run.
Jeff Parker (Green Brook, NJ/Timothy Christian) was charged with the loss.
“Jeff pitched a very good game but we let them pull away in the later innings,” said Head Coach Alan Sumner.
“We did a lot of good things offensively against one of the best pitchers in the league.”
Tomorrow, Saturday, May 2 the Golden Tornadoes close out their 2015 season in Washington, PA to face the Presidents in a doubleheader starting at 1 p.m.
Geneva College invites students to step forward and leap ahead with an academically excellent, Christ-centered and affordable education. Offering nearly 40 undergraduate majors, Adult Degree Programs with fully online and campus-based options, and high-demand advanced graduate degrees, Geneva's programs are recognized for their high quality. U.S. News & World Report ranks Geneva as a Top 10 Best Value with one of the Top 100 engineering programs in the nation. Adhering to the inerrancy of Scripture, a Geneva education is grounded in God’s word as well as in a core curriculum designed to prepare students vocationally to think, write and communicate well in today’s world.