From Deseret News archives:

TRAPPERS HANG ON TO DEFEAT GIANTS SALT LAKE TEAM SQUANDERS 13-0 LEAD IN 13-9 VICTORY

Published: Saturday, July 2, 1988 12:00 a.m. MDT
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The crowd of 6,236 was really waiting for the fireworks display scheduled for after the ballgame.

Silly crowd.The Trappers and Giants pulled enough multi-colored tricks out of the cannister Friday night at Derks Field to render the fireworks ineffective in a 13-9 Trapper victory.

Unfortunately, they both made it look like rookie-league ball - definitely not Streak material. When was the last time you saw a professional ballplayer hit by a batted ball on the basepaths? Or saw a pro pitcher handle a chopping ground ball that is going foul when he has no chance to make a play, while bases are occupied, no less? When was the last time you saw a pro team with a 13-0 lead give up nine runs in the next inning? Or use four pitchers in one inning?

"We can't be up 13 runs and give up nine and go through four pitchers. It's ridiculous. It's just mental, not physical," said Trapper reliever Michael Gibbons, who finally put out the fire and got the Traps through to the win. "They read in the papers about the Japanese pitchers coming and Van (chley) saying he's going to make a move, and they think they're going to be released, and as a coincidence, they don't throw strikes."

Just part of the early season charm of this year's Trappers.

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"It was a nightmare," said Trapper Manager Barry Moss. "Never in my 14 years of coaching have I ever seen pitchers who can't get outs like this," he said, directing accusations at the middle relievers again, noting that starter Willie Ambos, responsible for six runs, developed a blister and that he left him in the game for a few runs.

"Sitting between (ong) innings is very tough on a pitcher, and he has a shoulder that stiffens," said Moss, absolving Ambos.

Things were sailing. Ambos had himself a two-hit shutout for six innings, and the Traps had scored two in the fourth, six in the fifth with three doubles being the big plays, and five in the sixth on four singles, a double and an error.

Then came the seventh. Kerry Shaw hurt a knee going for a ground ball and couldn't make the play. He left the game. Ambos followed six runs later after striking out the second batter of the inning, giving a single to Jack Penrod and seeing Penrod get hit by Dave Slavin's grounder for a second out.

Ambos then surrendered two singles, a double, a single. Ed Ramirez came in, and it didn't help him when the second baseman wound up like a center fielder for a short throw to first and missed Greg Ehmig's range. Ramirez walked the next two and was relieved by Blaine Reber, who walked in a run and gave up a single and left in favor of Gibbons, who got a grounder to end the inning.

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