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Philadelphia Baseball Review | Phillies News, College Baseball News, Philly Baseball News
Eastern baseball - Philadelphia Baseaball Review
ST. DAVIDS, Pa. — The number matters.

Not just because it’s 22. But because of what it represents.

Eastern University hadn’t reached this mark in more than three decades. Now, after Tuesday’s 13-3, mercy-rule victory over Delaware Valley at The Yard, the Eagles are in territory the program hasn’t seen since 1995 — and doing it with an offense that doesn’t just produce, but overwhelms.

Tied 3-3 in the fifth inning, Eastern didn’t so much pull away as it did avalanche, scoring 10 unanswered runs to turn a tight game into a statement win. Five of those runs came in the seventh, ending it early and pushing the Eagles to 22-10 on the season.

This is what they look like when everything clicks.

Ten different players contributed to a 15-hit attack. JJ Matos set the tone early and never let up, finishing with two hits and three RBIs, including a first-inning single that gave Eastern an immediate edge. Thomas Kozlusky, Leyton Bamesberger, Trevor Harris, and Amauri Gonzalez combined to keep the pressure constant, while Luke Meehan added two RBIs and Lane Heuer delivered the finishing touch with a two-run single in the seventh.

By the end, it felt less like a rally and more like inevitability.

The turning point came quietly. After Delaware Valley answered twice and eventually tied the game in the fifth, Eastern capitalized on defensive cracks — four Aggies errors in total — to reclaim control. Trent MacDougall scored the go-ahead run on one of those miscues, and from there, the Eagles kept stacking quality at-bats.

They’ve done that all season.

MacDougall enters the stretch run hitting .423 with a 1.160 OPS, setting the pace for a lineup that features multiple high-impact bats. Kozlusky (.380, .972 OPS) and Meehan (.333, 1.030 OPS, 34 RBIs) give Eastern balance, length, and the ability to generate offense in different ways — power, patience, and pressure on the bases.

It’s not just the lineup, either.

On the mound, Brady Maerz (3-1) earned the win in relief Tuesday, allowing just one hit and one run. He was backed by a bullpen that delivered four scoreless innings, continuing a trend that has quietly stabilized this group behind frontline starters like Brennan Moloughney (1.38 ERA, .194 BAA) and Graham Adams.

All of it is converging at the right time.

Because what comes next will define everything.

Eastern enters the final stretch of MAC Commonwealth play sitting fourth — the last team currently in the conference playoff picture — with six conference games remaining. Three come this weekend against Messiah, the league’s top team and a program that has already secured its postseason spot. The final three? Against Widener, a local rival sitting just one game ahead of the Eagles in the standings.

There’s no easing into it.

There’s only proving it.

And if Tuesday was any indication, Eastern isn’t just chasing a postseason berth. They’re building toward something that hasn’t been seen here in a long time.

Something that now has a number attached to it.

Twenty-two — and counting.




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Philadelphia Baseball Review | Phillies News, College Baseball News, Philly Baseball News