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No. 11 Oregon Baseball sets program record in 35: 1 victory against Columbia

Yes, you read this heading correctly.

For the first time in three games, No. 11 Oregon Ducks did not hit several Grand Slams, but they achieved more than 15 runs for a game with the fourth day in their 35-1 win against Columbia.

The Ducks (8-2, 0: 0 big ten) achieved a program record of 35 runs with 25 goals against Thump Columbia (1-4, 0: 0 Ivy League) in a demoralizing victory. The Ducks had seven players with several RBIs and three players with three or more.

Oregon scored two in the first, four in the second, nine in the third, three in the fourth and fifth, eight in the sixth and six in the eighth.

That is the condensed summary. Read on to the full breakdown of abuse in the PK Park in the first game of the Doubleheader on Saturday.

The ducks were on the board before Columbia recorded an out on Saturday in the first game of the Doublehead. The first four batteries in Oregon reached the base. Mason Neville (2-4) scored in the middle on a Jacob Walsh Rbi-Single and Maddox Molony (3-4, six RBI) with a victim flying when the ducks used an early 2-0 lead.

The starter of Oregon, Jason Reitz, was incredible. He had a deserved run in the second crossing of an Anthony Temesvary victim flying, but that would be the extent of the damage he had confronted in his 68-year excursion.

Columbia Righty Thomas Santana was pulled in the second inning after going home a few runs and giving a two-RBI single to Burke-Lee Mabeus (3-6, three RBI, three runs), which continues to live one of the hottest hitter. He threw 69 parking spaces into his 2.1-in-end trip, while he allowed six runs on four goals while he was three and hit three more. His catastrophic excursion brought him his first loss of the season.

Just a few hours after his performance by two grandchildren Slam, Dominic Hellman (3-5, 4 RBI, four runs) had the bases loaded in the third inning. This time, however, he reached the choice of a mass field player, but two more runs came up with two mistakes from the third Baseman of the Lions. Ryan Cooney (4-4, 6 RBI, four runs) changed his first Homer of the season on Tafel three as part of a third inner with five goals, the Oregon gave the lead with 15: 1.

The ducks received a few runs from a molony home as part of a three-run fourth. The fourth of the shortstop season traveled over the scoreboard of PK Park and added the injury. He took fifth place for his fifth and recorded his fourth, fifth and sixth RBIs of the day again.

The day of Reitz ended after four innings with three hit one run ball. He played six and went two in his really solid excursion. As long as the competition was on Saturday, he did everything he could to accelerate it.

Walsh (2-5, 5 RBI, four runs) achieved his fourth Homer of the season as part of a sixth frame with eight runs. The Lions used four jugs and it didn't matter in the slightest. They went with 10 goals while they fell seven more. The ducks exceeded eight in the sixth eight when the competition became more and more weird.

Carter Garat reached seven times on his 2-2 day (four RBI), drew two walks and was placed three times. JAX GMENENEZ, who only entered a 2-3 day day for the sixth inning. Oregon appeared on the day .532, 0.541 with runners, 462 with two outs and .586 with men in the goal position. Columbia threw 245 parking spaces.

Michael Meckna came in fifth for Reitz. He threw three goalless frames and only allowed two runners on 32 parking spaces, but both led to double game balls that ended the successive frames. Tanner Bradley and ISACC Evaniew both threw goalless frames to ward off the victory.

Oregon emptied the bank in the final innings. 14 different ducks took bats in the clouds and played music chairs defensively.

The ducks have now achieved 55 runs in the last two games. The second game of the Doubleader begins in a little less than an hour.