HAWK TALK

May 2018

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15 T yler Cropley got the celebratory walk-off treatment twice April 29 in the series finale against No. 7 Michigan at Duane Banks Field. With the score tied 5-5 in the bottom of the ninth inning, Cropley hit a major league pop up a mere 10 feet from home plate. e ball hit the turf just inside fair territory between Michigan catcher Harrison Salter and reliever Jeff Criswell, then took a hard skip to the right, caroming into foul territory. Jeff Stidham, the home plate umpire, initially ruled the ball fair and sophomore Ben Norman was the beneficiary, scoring from second base to send the Hawkeye bench into a frenzy. "I didn't know what was going on," said Cropley. "I thought it was fair, and I thought the game was over. " Not so fast. e original fair call was correctly overturned, Norman returned to second, and Cropley went back to the batter's box. "e umpire signaled it was fair," said Iowa head coach Rick Heller. "at's why everyone reacted the way they did. He made a mistake. It didn't touch anybody, I saw that myself. He signaled it fair, then he tried to fix it. "ere was no need to holler about that. It was clear he didn't touch it, I was confident and so was (Stidham). He made the wrong call, which set everybody off. " Aer being mobbed in right field by his teammates, Cropley returned to the plate with a 2-2 count, moments aer his heart was beating a 100 miles per hour. "Coach called me over, put his hand around me and said, 'Get your heart rate down, you're going to do it again,'" said Cropley. "I guess I did it again." On the next pitch, Cropley fouled a 93 mile-per- hour fastball into the netting behind home plate. He didn't miss what came next. Cropley barreled up a Criswell breaking ball for a two-run home run that sailed over the fence in le field. "I felt good when it came off the bat," said Cropley. "I knew the wind was going to push it a little. I kind of knew it was going to go." His Hawkeye teammates were waiting at home plate for celebration No. 2. "What happened to him, where he had that celebration and we had it called back and to have to go back to the batter's box with two strikeouts against a guy like that," said Heller. "To get your heart rate back down and then do that… that's phenomenal and shows you a lot about the toughness and makeup of Tyler and his physical ability. " e walk-off home run was Cropley's second of the season and his sixth overall. He hit a walk-off grand slam in Iowa's 13-9 victory over Bradley on March 28. Sunday's home run completed a come-from-behind victory that saw the Hawkeyes trailing 5-0 through 1 ½ innings. It was Iowa's 11th come-from-behind win this season and the fih coming in walk-off fashion. "It's something coach talks about; we're going to battle adversity all year, it's just another day," said Cropley. "It seemed like getting down five early with the wind blowing out, something was going to happen. "We kept getting good swings and having quality at-bats and things came around." e win gave the Hawkeyes their fourth Big Ten series victory of the season with three weeks remaining in the regular season. It came on a weekend where nearly 6,000 fans ascended upon Duane Banks Field. "It was good to see all the fans out," said Cropley. "Hopefully they come back next weekend because we have Oklahoma State coming in and they are playing well." MAY SCHEDULE May 4-6 Oklahoma State May 11-13 at Northwestern May 15 at Western Illinois May 17-19 Penn State May 23-27 at Big Ten Tournament Omaha, Nebraska

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