The name says “Fightin,” and that’s exactly what the Quakers did — right from the jump.
Philly Fightin Quakers erupted for five runs in the top of the first inning and never looked back, rolling to a 10–3 win over the Philly Mummers on Tuesday in Ambler. The fireworks came early and often, sparked by a Mikey Amrhein double that plated two, a Nick Moyer single that brought home two more, and a Luke Hardnock triple that finished off the first-inning damage.
And just like that, the Quakers were off and running.
They tacked on another run in the second, then added four more in the fourth to put things out of reach. The bats piled up 10 hits on the night, with Stone Powell and Moyer each collecting two. Both drove in three runs apiece.
On the mound, Matt Herbert gave the Quakers four solid innings, while Pat Dougherty tossed a clean frame in relief. The Mummers managed just three runs, all off Herbert early, but couldn’t capitalize late.
The Mummers got two RBIs from Connor McCloskey and a hit each from four players, but it wasn’t nearly enough. They did turn a slick double play and played error-free baseball — but by the time they settled in, the scoreboard already belonged to the Fightin Quakers.
Bandits ride one big inning, one smooth arm to victory
Sometimes, all you need is one inning. And sometimes, all you need is one pitcher to keep the lid on things.
That’s the story for Philly Bandits, who squeezed all their scoring into the third inning and let their arms take it from there in a tidy 3–1 win over Bucks County Ghost on Tuesday.
Three hits. Three runs. One inning. That was the math in the third as Patrick White, Charlie Cordisco, and Joseph Lifsted each delivered RBI knocks — one to left, one to center, one to right. That’s spreading the wealth.
Owen Wheeler got the start and cruised through three scoreless innings, allowing just two hits. He handed things off to the bullpen, which held up its end with Braden Kelly logging a clean frame and a carousel of relievers keeping the Ghosts in check.
Leor Kedar did a bit of everything for the Bandits — two hits, four stolen bases, and the kind of chaos that rattles any defense. In total, the Bandits swiped six bags and turned a double play for good measure.
Bucks County Ghost got their lone RBI from Jalen Soberal, and they showed discipline at the dish, drawing seven walks. But they struggled to string anything together and managed just three hits all game.