Jarvis Steals Four Bases, Stripers Swipe Record 10 in 4-1 Win
Jim Jarvis stole four bases to set a Gwinnett single-game record as the Stripers swiped 10 total and got 7 dominant innings from JR Ritchie in a 4-1 win over Nashville.

Jim Jarvis jetted into the Gwinnett record books Monday night, stealing four bases to set a new single-game franchise mark as the Stripers swiped a club-record 10 total in a 4-1 victory over the Nashville Sounds at Gwinnett Field.
The performance was a masterclass in small-ball execution, with Gwinnett manufacturing every run through aggression rather than power. Jarvis finished 2-for-3 with an RBI and extended his on-base streak to 10 consecutive games, while right-hander JR Ritchie delivered the longest start of his Triple-A career to anchor a performance that gave Gwinnett its sixth win in seven games.
Ritchie was almost untouchable. Over seven innings, he surrendered just one hit, allowed one earned run, walked one batter, and struck out seven, picking up the win to move to 2-1 on the season. Nashville's only damage came via an RBI single from Jett Williams, but Gwinnett's pitching trio made sure it stayed that way. Tayler Scott earned the hold and Javy Guerra closed it out for his second save of the year.
The offense struck first in the second inning when DaShawn Keirsey Jr. singled home Jose Azocar, who had reached base and wasted no time testing Nashville's defense on the basepaths. The Stripers pushed the lead further with one of the night's most heads-up plays: Jarvis and Keirsey Jr. executed a double steal, with Keirsey Jr. stealing home to put Gwinnett up two.

The fourth inning added more cushion. Jarvis delivered at the plate with an RBI, then scored on a Rowdy Tellez sacrifice fly that gave the Stripers a comfortable enough lead for Ritchie to work efficiently through the late innings. Azocar, who reached base twice on the night, contributed a stolen base and a run of his own to round out a lineup-wide commitment to aggressive baserunning.
Ten stolen bases in a single game is a statement, and it reflects a deliberate identity the Stripers are building early in the International League season. With Jarvis setting franchise history and Ritchie posting the best start of his Triple-A tenure, Gwinnett's first week of April has positioned the club as one of the circuit's more complete teams through the early going.
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