
Santa Margarita baseball shocks Huntington Beach in second round of CIF playoffs
It all went wrong on Tuesday.
The third-seeded Oilers, behind sophomore left-hander Jared Grindlinger's gorgeous slider, were cruising through five innings toward an impressive second-round victory over Santa Margarita. Then the landscape shifted, and the dream was over.
The visiting Eagles (18-12) tore into Huntington Beach's bullpen in the sixth inning, rode four innings of ace Brennan Bauer's savvy relief work, then pushed home the winning run in the seventh to reach the quarterfinals for the third successive year with a 6-5 upset.
Santa Margarita, which will be home Friday against Los Alamitos (18-9-2), parlayed two hits, three walks, an error on the front end of a would-be inning-ending double play, and two devastating wild pitches to score four runs in the sixth to make it 5-5. The Eagles won on Chase Marlow's two-out single to bring home No. 9 hitter Lucas Owens, who walked and stole second base.
'That hurts,' Medure said. 'You just feel kind of like a train going downhill. You just couldn't stop it, you know? They battled back. Obviously, we issued some free passes, but then they took advantage of them, you know. ... Just couldn't stop the bleeding.'
The Oilers (24-5) outhit Santa Margarita, 10-4, Trevor Goldenetz and Jayton Greer with two apiece, and scored in each of the first four innings, twice in the fourth to take a 5-1 lead. Three of the runs were unearned, three came on sacrifice flies — from Ryan Porter in the first, Cole Clark in the third and Grindlinger in the fourth — but seven runners were stranded on base in that span, four of them in scoring position.
'We had an opportunity to bust it wide open,' Medure said. '...You have to put good things away.'
Grindlinger was masterful, aside from a second-inning Carter Enoch homer to left field that answered Huntington Beach's first run. He struck out six, walked one and another Eagle reached on an error, but that was it.
'You might watch that kid on TV one day,' Santa Margarita head coach Chris Malec said.
Things fell apart in the sixth, once Grindlinger left the mound. Neither Tyler Bellerose nor Otto Espinoza, who brought a combined 10-2 record and 1.78 ERA, were sharp, but the Oilers would have exited surrendering a lone run if they turned a routine double-play ball. Then Espinoza came on, walked the bases loaded, threw a wild pitch (with Marlow out on an appeal at the plate, a call bitterly argued by Malec and galvanizing for his team).
Another walk, another passed ball — Gavin Spiridonoff emphatically stomping on the plate — and it was 5-3. Warren Gravely's two-run double left tied it up.
'I told them, like, 'All right, we're going to throw our four best guys, and they're going to beat us?'' Medure said. 'Then tip the cap to them. When you don't have a great day, that's how it's going to be.'
Bauer, a senior right-hander with 21 career victories for Santa Margarita, gave up four hits and two unearned runs in 4⅓ innings, shut down the Oilers in the fifth and sixth, then closed the seventh after surrendering one-out singles to Grindlinger and C.J. Weinstein.
Senior catcher Trent Grindlinger, Jared's brother, thought the Oilers became 'complacent.'
'We didn't have our foot on the gas the whole time, and that's what happens,' he said. 'We were always trying to take it one game at a time, but definitely in the back of our minds, we were expecting to make it all the way. Every good thing comes to an end, but I love these boys.'
In other second-round games Tuesday, Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa, Estancia and Pacifica Christian Orange County all advanced to the CIF quarterfinals.
Fountain Valley 7, Trabuco Hills 0: Josh Grack threw a two-hit complete game shutout to lead the Barons in the second round of the Division 2 playoffs at Fountain Valley High.
Grack walked two and struck out five for the Barons (17-13). Mikey Patterson and Anthony Zamora were each two for four with a pair of runs scored and an RBI for Fountain Valley, while Miles Hiskey was two for three with a pair of runs batted in.
Fountain Valley plays at Torrance on Friday in a Division 2 quarterfinal game.
Costa Mesa 5, San Juan Hills 4: Wylan Rottschafer was three for three with a double and run scored for the Mustangs, also earning the win in relief Tuesday in the second-round Division 3 game on the road.
Aiden Comte was two for four with an RBI, and Mateo Navarro was two for two with a triple and three RBIs.
Costa Mesa (24-6) will host Glendora in a Division 3 quarterfinal game on Friday.
Estancia 11, Foothill Tech 1: Nico Viramontes pitched the complete game for the Eagles, improving to 8-0 as Estancia won the Division 6 second-round game on Tuesday at Estancia High.
Sawyer Atkinson and Athan Perez each had a pair of hits for Estancia (17-13), which will remain at home when it hosts Pacifica Christian Orange County in an all-local Divison 6 quarterfinal game on Friday.
Pacifica Christian Orange County 5, Muir 0: Johnny Coopman and Jon Stone combined for the shutout for the Tritons in the Division 6 second-round game on Tuesday.
John Peterson scored a pair of runs while Scout Escobedo, Taisen Morishita and Stone all had RBIs for Pacifica Christian (14-11).
— Staff writer Matt Szabo contributed to this report.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
a day ago
- New York Times
Why the Edmonton Oilers should sign Mattias Ekholm to an extension
The Edmonton Oilers will be looking to extend several free agents over the next few weeks, led by captain Connor McDavid. The second most important name on the re-sign list is defenceman Mattias Ekholm, Edmonton's rock on the top pairing. Ekholm has been money since arriving with the team from the Nashville Predators in February 2023. It was one of the best trade deadline deals in Oilers history, with the veteran solidifying the defence instantly. Those calm feet suffered some wobble during this year's postseason, though, and his performances late in the final are the lingering memory for many fans today. Advertisement As contract talks should be heating up, it's worth looking at why signing Ekholm is the right play for general manager Stan Bowman. Ekholm's consistent level of play has been a calling card since he arrived in Edmonton. The only worries are injury and age. Injury had an impact in the postseason, as the coaching staff ran Ekholm when he was clearly less than 100 percent. A month-by-month tracking of his 2024-25 season highlights where he was unable to perform at previous levels. All numbers five-on-five, via Natural Stat Trick Ekholm was playing at a high level until February, when playing hurt caught up with the defenceman. He played six of the 14 March games, with a recovery in expected goals, but his playoff run shows a below-average expected goals for the postseason. He played one game against the Dallas Stars and then the entire final, missing earlier series against the Los Angeles Kings and the Vegas Golden Knights. Despite the statistical recovery in the playoffs, visually, Ekholm's performance was well off his own established ability. Single events can have enormous importance in a game, series and season while also being single events. There is no doubt that injury contributed greatly to Ekholm's lack of effectiveness in the final. He is an older player (35), so there is some risk in running him on the top pairing next year and beyond. Puck IQ offers us guidance about deployment against elites for each defenceman. Kris Knoblauch doled out the five-on-five versus elites, favouring Ekholm in 2024-25 (5:44 per game, 57 percent Dangerous Fenwick, 50 percent goal share) over Darnell Nurse (4:41 per game, 56 percent Dangerous Fenwick) and Brett Kulak (4:32 per game, 58 percent). When Jake Walman arrived, Knoblauch used the newcomer 3:44 per game, getting a 50 percent goal share against elite opponents. Advertisement All four lefties were quality during the regular season, but the Ekholm-Bouchard combination has delivered exceptional results versus elites over parts of three seasons. In 777 minutes versus elite competition, the pairing produced a Dangerous Fenwick of 58 percent and an actual goal share of 55 percent. The Nurse, Walman and Kulak numbers against the league's best were strong a year ago, and the team boasts a capable, veteran blue line. However, even with his injury problems, Ekholm with Evan Bouchard represents the best available option for the Oilers. During the period from late March through the end of the regular season that Ekholm was on the shelf, Knoblauch deployed Nurse, Kulak and Walman (in that order) against elites. Philip Broberg was the plan for the Oilers at left defence, but he now plays for the St. Louis Blues. He performed well in significant minutes versus elites relative to the other St. Louis defencemen, but would not have been placed in a feature role with Edmonton. Edmonton is vulnerable on the left side of the defence because Ekholm, Walman and Kulak are all free agents after this season. Ekholm's current contract has a cap hit of $6.25 million. If the Oilers walk him, Nurse ($9.25 million AAV, free agent 2030) would slide in and play top pair with partner Bouchard. That's less than ideal, and is made especially difficult because the Oilers have very little bubbling up from the minor leagues on the left side of the defence. Riley Stillman (age 27, 163 NHL games) and Cam Dineen (also 27, with 38 NHL games) are the veteran left-handed defencemen ticketed for the AHL Bakersfield Condors in 2025-26. Bowman has added talent with some NHL promise over the last 12 months. The team acquired Notre Dame defender Paul Fischer in the Broberg deal, and he is showing promise. Fischer will play his junior college season in 2025-26. Advertisement Atro Leppanen was an exceptional offensive player from the defence position in Finland's top league, but the chaos in his game excludes him from anything but third-pairing NHL work. There is no guarantee he'll play in Edmonton this season. College grad Damien Carfagna also shows promise, but is not on the NHL radar this season. Nikita Yevseyev has plenty of KHL experience at a young age, but is unsigned and will play another year in Russia. The Oilers have three defencemen heading for unrestricted free agency next summer. Ekholm plays at the top of the depth chart, and despite being an older player, has shown consistent quality against the opposition's best. Bowman could look to next year's free-agent pool, but there's every chance Ekholm will be one of the prize names on July 1, 2026. As shown above, his performance levels were strong before the injury, and his expected goals in the playoffs showed signs of rebounding. The Oilers are between a rock and a hard place at left defence if Ekholm is allowed to walk. Signing the team's top left defenceman to a two- or three-year deal has real risk, but not signing him means compromising the depth chart and weakening an important area of a close-to-championship roster. Bowman needs to sign Ekholm. The math of last season suggests the key is to get the top pairing to the Stanley Cup Final healthy enough to have the torque to win the day. There isn't another available player who can deliver Ekholm's level of play. It's extremely unlikely the team will be able to upgrade at the position next summer. NHL teams don't let their best defencemen get to free agency.


New York Times
3 days ago
- New York Times
Projecting Edmonton Oilers' opening-night defence pairings, goalies for 2025-26
In a look at the Edmonton Oilers' projected opening-night forward lines last week, it became clear fans will see some tweaks on the skill lines. Entering the period leading up to training camp, the defensive pairings and goaltending depth charts appear more settled. There is some room for speculation, especially on defence. However, the top two pairings should be easy to predict based on past performance. Here's a look at what works, what should work and a wild card on defence and in goal. Advertisement The Oilers benefit from the consistency and high performance of Evan Bouchard and Mattias Ekholm on the top pair. The two men showed well again in 2024-25. Bouchard's exceptional outlet passing is a key to the duo's success. Ekholm's veteran savvy and instincts at both ends of the ice make the two players a complete tandem. All numbers five-on-five, via Natural Stat Trick These are exceptional outscoring totals, and the expected goal share is even more impressive. At five-on-five, the two men performed well during the regular season and did so while often playing against elite competition. Puck IQ tells us that Bouchard saw more minutes versus elites at five-on-five than any Oilers defenceman, and Ekholm saw more minutes as a percentage of overall ice time than the rest of Edmonton's blue. When the two men faced elites (a total of 321 minutes) together, the Oilers enjoyed an edge in Dangerous Fenwick (55 percent), which is similar to expected goals. At five-on-five, Ekholm-Bouchard are exceptional. Bouchard helped the Oilers' power play to 9.59 goals per 60 a year ago; the club managed just 6.63 goals per 60 when the No. 2 unit was on the ice. He also showed well in a very small penalty-killing sample. Ekholm played two minutes per game when the Oilers were short-handed and was effective when used on the power play. The answer to the question 'Can the Oilers win a Stanley Cup with Ekholm-Bouchard as top pair?' is a resounding yes. The team might have won it in the spring if both men were at something close to full health. Darnell Nurse and Jake Walman didn't play much together during the regular season, but there was enough chemistry to suggest that coach Kris Knoblauch would be wise to run the two men as the No. 2 unit in 2025-26. All numbers five-on-five, via Natural Stat Trick The numbers with Nurse and Walman together come with a small sample warning, but they are impressive all the same. The gap between actual goal share and expected suggests some luck, but even with regression (experts recommend 200 minutes for a pairing in order to be more sure of the numbers), the results would have been above average overall. Advertisement The coaching staff would be deploying two lefties on a unit that would see a lot of action versus elite competition. However, the results should overwhelm the bias in this case. Nurse on the power play averaged about one minute per game, but was not a difference-maker. He averaged 1:45 short-handed in 2024-25, a significant total. However, he has struggled in the last two seasons on the penalty kill compared to the Oilers' success when he is off the ice. An interesting fact that came in a small sample: After the deadline, Nurse-Walman were above average on the penalty kill when paired together. Knoblauch may want to use this duo in a similar way to Ekholm-Bouchard, playing them together all season. Fifty years ago, NHL teams deployed only five defencemen in a game. The fifth defenceman was often a utility player who could be deployed as a forward, on defence, and (usually) as a penalty killer. Those days are long gone, as NHL teams dress six defenders, enough for three pairings, every game. Brett Kulak qualifies as a utility defenceman because he can play anywhere on the depth chart. This past season, he was used (all numbers five-on-five) in all situations. His most common partners were Ty Emberson (574 minutes, 42 percent goal share), Nurse (399 minutes, 44 percent), Bouchard (202 minutes, 43 percent) and Troy Stecher (151 minutes, 40 percent). Unfortunately, none of the duos proved effective at five-on-five, and the organization may approach this fall's training camp with the idea of finding a third-pairing right-handed option to fit Kulak's style. He is a mobile defender who can help in the offensive zone, but as his career developed, Kulak spent more time taking care of his own end. Oilers general manager Stan Bowman plucked young defenceman Alec Regula off waivers in December from the Boston Bruins. Regula was injured at the time and was unable to play in any games (NHL or AHL) during the 2024-25 season. Advertisement His skill set lends itself to Edmonton's needs and was the reason Bowman grabbed him when available. Regula hasn't seen much action in the NHL (just 22 games for the Chicago Blackhawks after Bowman traded for him in 2019), but his passing ability and plus shot could play well next to Kulak. Regula is 6-foot-4, 208 pounds, so his size should be a plus should the Oilers use him alongside Kulak. Edmonton's third pairing is at least somewhat up in the air. Bowman may cast about for solutions higher up the depth chart, and the coaching staff might settle on Emberson or Stecher. The name to keep in mind as we approach August is Regula. He's under the radar now, but if he's healthy, Regula should get a full chance at training camp this fall. Oilers fans are laser-focused on a goaltending upgrade, but management did not make a change. Bowman kept his powder dry through the heart of summer trade season and appears content to return last year's tandem of Stuart Skinner and Calvin Pickard. Bowman may want to see what new goaltender coach Peter Aubry can do to improve Skinner's technique in net. The organization was burned a decade ago when Devan Dubnyk was overwhelmed by a coaching strategy ('the swarm') and a management group that was not supportive ('if you have to ask the question') to the point he was eventually flushed by the Oilers. He took about six months to regain his previous form and became the starter for the Minnesota Wild for several seasons. If the club can find a way to get Skinner mid-pack in five-on-five save percentage (he was there in 2022-23), the problem can be solved internally. It appears to be the way forward at this time. (Photo of Mattias Ekholm and Evan Bouchard: Steph Chambers / Getty Images)
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Yahoo
Blues Have Big Move To Make With Breakout Forward
The St. Louis Blues' decision to tender an offer sheet to forward Dylan Holloway this past off-season undoubtedly proved to be a great decision. After the Edmonton Oilers elected not to match the Blues' two-year, $4,580,914 offer sheet for Holloway, he broke out in a major way in his first season with St. Louis.