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FOOTBALL: PSU’s Brian Wright thankful to get abnormal first season underway

Even though his first season as the Gorillas’ head coach was thrown into flux with the COVID pandemic, Pittsburg State’s Brian Wright couldn’t be more thankful for the opportunity to be coaching his players this Saturday when PSU hosts Nebraska-Kearney at 12:05 p.m. at Carnie Smith Stadium.

“I can’t explain how truly grateful we are because on Saturday, we are going to be one of only five Division II games that will be played,” Wright said. “We’re pretty fortunate to have the administration, to have Jim Johnson, our athletic director, really work hard for us to get us some football games this year. 

“We’ve learned from all of this that you have to be thankful and grateful for the opportunities that you get because it might be stripped away from you. We’ve learned to really focus on the process and daily routine of trying to get better, making constant improvement on getting better as a human being, as a student and as a football player.”

Pittsburg State’s Brian Wright makes his head coaching debut against Nebraska-Kearney on Oct. 31. Photo by Reid Williams/PSU.

Wright’s first offseason as the PSU head coach was halted just two practices in when the MIAA canceled the remaining schedule for spring sports in the middle of March because of the COVID outbreak, which included spring practice for football. In early August, news broke that the NCAA Division II Presidents Council decided to call off the fall sports championships because of the pandemic. About a week and a half later, the MIAA followed suit, suspending conference athletics until Jan. 1.

Suddenly, the Gorillas’ 2020 season was in serious jeopardy of not happening. That was until it was announced by Pittsburg State in September that the Gorilla football team would return to the gridiron for a shortened season. Pittsburg State will play a five-game schedule, with two home games (UNK on Oct. 31 and Western Colorado on Nov. 21) and three road games (at Missouri Western on Nov. 7, Stephen F. Austin on Nov. 14 and West Texas A&M on Nov. 28).

“You have all the practice and you do all the homework, but you don’t really know where you are at until you take the test,” Wright said. “We need to go out there and take the test to see what we know and how we execute when the lights are on, there is another team across the ball and it’s live. Sometimes, guys really thrive when it’s game day, and I am really looking forward to seeing who that is.”

“We are building our program, so any games we get at this time are going to help us build and get better for the future,” Wright continued. “We want to teach our guys how to prepare to win. We need games in order to do that. We need to teach them what a Tuesday practice or a Thursday walkthrough looks like during a game week. They need to learn how to take a game plan and go execute it, and we just need to get guys reps and game experience.”

It was crucial for Pittsburg State to fill out some sort of a schedule for the fall season if possible. Though the option of playing in the spring was there, that never really sat well with Coach Wright for a couple of simple reasons: You are risking players’ health in terms of injuries when playing a spring schedule and then turning around with little recovery time to play again in the fall. It also allows the team to hopefully revert back to a standard routine and schedule.

“I really wanted no part of spring,” Wright said. “I wanted to get anything we possibly could this fall. We want to get back to a normal recruiting calendar and a normal spring ball calendar. And hopefully, get back to normalcy in the fall of 2021. We were trying to build more for that than just playing games in the spring.”

The Gorillas have a new offensive and defensive scheme under Wright and his staff, and not having any significant spring practice time put them behind the eight ball in terms of evaluation. 

“We watched them in the weight room, but we didn’t get the actual football side of things,” Wright said. “That was very difficult because typically you would take your spring practice and really dissect it at the end, evaluate it and get a really good grip and handle on where you are at as a football team and as a program. You would get a sense of where we need to recruit, what schemes we may need to change to adapt to what we have. We lost that time, and usually you have that time throughout summer as well. 

“We had to get going right in September, start practicing and really kind of go on the fly with what we have. We tried to install at a pretty fast pace and get as much in early on as we could. We have kind of trimmed it from there after six weeks or practice to what our guys are good at.”

As far as the new offensive scheme goes, the Gorillas will be working uptempo out of a spread-based offense predominantly with a single-back look in 3-by-1 or 2-by-2 sets. The goal is to spread opposing defenses out to open up running lanes, then using play action to stretch the field. 

Of course, when it comes to the spread offense, the quarterback is always the topic of conversation heading into the season. Sophomore Mak Sexton, who saw action in 11 games last season, freshman Chad Dodson Jr. and junior Matt Harman, who played in 10 games a year ago, are all in the mix. 

“All three of them have done a good job for us,” Wright said. “Really Mak and Chad have kind of led that group. We will probably see both of those guys playing for us.”

Pittsburg State senior linebacker Morgan Selemaea practicing ahead of the start to his final season with the Gorillas. Photo by Reid Williams/PSU.

On defense, Pittsburg State is based in a three-man front, playing multiple formations from there. The goal is to pressure offenses off the edge while remaining stout in stopping the run.

Without a conference crown or postseason championship to play for, it’s obvious what the motivation is for the Gorillas and every other Division II team in action—the opportunity to play the game they love. And for the Pittsburg State senior class of 10 — whose leadership during all of the uncertainty was invaluable — that especially rings true.

“They’ve been instrumental in us getting through this time,” Wright said. “We’ve needed them for sure, there is no doubt about that. I think they’ve gotten the team’s respect because the team understands what they’ve had to go through. Those (seniors) had to make some really tough decisions on whether they were coming back or not. I think the team respects that a lot of these guys have given everything they have even though it’s five games. They are playing because they have the opportunity to play the game they love with no championship or no playoffs. That can be difficult.” 

Of course, the cherry on top of getting to finally make his debut with Pittsburg State, Wright opens his career against the Lopers just after noon in front of the home crowd on the sidelines of Brandenburg Field. 

“It’s pretty cool to think that our first opportunity here as a new staff is right here at home,” Wright said. “The Gorilla Walk probably won’t be quite the same, but I just think the fact that we get to open up here is pretty special.”

Webb City set for state title game, change to batting order helps Cards finish strong

A recent change to the batting order has helped the Webb City Cardinals put together a strong finish to the fall softball season.

Now, the Cardinals are all set to play for a state championship. 

Webb City (27-5) takes on Webster Groves (15-2) at 10 a.m. on Friday in the championship game of the Class 4 state tournament at Killian Softball Complex in Springfield. 

It’s Webb City’s first title game appearance since 2013, and the Cardinals will look to secure the program’s third state championship (2004, ’07). 

“It’s been several years since Webb City’s been in the Final Four, so we’re excited about that step we’ve made,” Webb City coach Shauna Friend said. “The goal is always to get to the championship game and win it. The girls are excited, full of energy and full of intensity. They’re ready.”

Webb City advanced to the title game with last Saturday’s dominant 10-2 semifinal win at Platte County, while Webster Groves advanced to the finale with a 4-3 win over Rockwood Summit in nine innings.

It’s the first title game appearance for the Statesmen, who have won 10 of 11 games ahead of Friday’s showdown. 

“Anyone that gets this far is going to be a solid team,” Friend said. “We’re going to have to come ready to play. We just have to play the way we’ve been playing all season. The girls are upbeat and have a lot of energy. Unfortunately, the weather this week has kept us indoors. But they’re definitely ready for Friday.”

SWITCHING THINGS UP

Coach Friend switched up her team’s batting order ahead of the district championship game with McDonald County. The move has jumpstarted the team’s offense. 

Peyton Hawkins was moved from the leadoff spot to the No. 3 position, while Haidyn Berry was moved up to No. 2 from the three-hole. Emma Welch was inserted into the table-setter role as the leadoff hitter. 

“Haidyn was starting to get intentionally walked, so we wanted to move her up in the lineup,” Friend said. “Peyton’s been hitting the ball really well all year long, with contact and power. She’s providing good protection behind Haidyn. Emma hasn’t missed a beat at leadoff. She’s great there.” 

Simply put, if teams attempt to pitch around Berry, they have to immediately deal with Hawkins and cleanup hitter Alyssa Jennings with a runner on-base. 

“We thought the change would benefit us, and it’s worked out real well for us,” Friend said. “You can’t go wrong with those top three in the lineup and Alyssa at cleanup. They’ve been hitting the ball well all year.”

A junior outfielder, Welch is hitting .413 with a .479 on-base percentage. She’s recorded 43 hits, scored 31 runs and driven in 31. A senior two-way standout, Berry is hitting .452 with a .529 on-base percentage. Berry has recorded 47 hits, with 18 home runs and 48 runs batted in. The home run total is second-best in state history for a season (Carlie Sanders of Hillsboro hit 21 in 2017). 

A junior shortstop, Hawkins owns a .444 batting average and a .528 on-base percentage. She’s recorded a team-high 48 hits and scored a team-best 44 runs.  A senior center fielder, Jennings is hitting .365 with 31 hits, nine homers, 27 runs and 23 RBI. Junior catcher Kaylyn Gilbert bats fifth or sixth. She’s hitting .337 with 33 hits and 23 RBI.

Junior infielder Emalee Lamar hits fifth or sixth and owns a .408 batting average with 40 hits, 29 RBI, 26 runs scored and seven homers.  Junior outfielder/designated player Hannah Wells bats seventh in the order and has a .405 batting average with 32 hits and 19 RBI. 

Junior second baseman Shea’lee Key and senior infielder Bri Batson hit at the bottom of the order. Key is batting .349 and Batson is hitting .247.  Juniors Brynna Cupp, Maggie Crossley and Ripley Shanks are other players who could start in the outfield.

Berry has been dominant in the circle all fall. Berry is 25-5 with a 2.14 ERA. She’s struck out 226 in 186 innings. 

She tossed a no-hitter in the district championship game against McDonald County and earned the pitching win against Bolivar in the quarterfinals and Platte County in the semifinals. 

A CLOSER LOOK AT WEBSTER GROVES 

Webster Groves’ ace in the circle is senior Maddie Buske, who has a record of 11-1 this fall. A 5-foot-4 right-hander, Buske gave up three runs, one earned, on eight hits in the semifinals, striking out six. In her team’s 5-1 quarterfinal win over Farmington, Buske struck out 12 and gave up just two hits. She’s struck out 103 batters in 75-plus innings this season. 

Leading hitters for Webster Groves are Hannah Jansen (.609 BA, 39 hits, 39 RBI), Kelly Collins (.537 BA, 36 H, 16 RBI), Myah King (.483 BA, 29H, 25 RBI), Ivy Clark (.411 BA, 23 H, 19 RBI), Carissa Castro (.375 BA, 18 H, 11 RBI) and Ava Fitzgibbon (.357 BA, 15 H, 10 RBI). 

In the semifinals, King hit a walk-off single in the ninth after blasting a home run earlier in the contest. Shortstop Collins and catcher Jansen had three hits apiece, while King and Taylor Knapp added two hits apiece. 

STATE NOTES

Webb City is ranked first in Class 4 by the Missouri Fastpitch Coaches Association, while Webster Groves is ranked fifth. The Cardinals have already beaten four other ranked opponents—Platte County, Bolivar, McDonald County and Neosho. 

The Statesmen average 11 runs per game, while Webb City has scored 8.3 runs per game. Both teams are only allowing three runs per contest. 

Friday’s start time was moved up from noon due to Thursday’s games being postponed due to poor field conditions. The earlier start time eliminated a planned send-off for the Cardinals.

One of Webb City’s late-season losses came to Rock Bridge. The Bruins (28-0) face Lee’s Summit North (28-3) in the Class 5 title game.

WEBB CITY’S STATE HISTORY

Webb City last appeared in a championship game in 2013, a 7-1 loss to Lee’s Summit for the Class 4 crown. 

Kaitlin Beason was Webb City’s starting pitcher in the game. Desirea Buerge had three hits, while Lacy Resa and Beason added two hits apiece. 

Webb City won the Class 3 title in 2007 with a 2-1 win over North Callaway, with Kylie Jones hitting a go-ahead homer in the top of the seventh. The Cardinals beat previously undefeated Cape Notre Dame 3-0 in the semifinals, as Nicole Hudson struck out 15. 

The Cardinals won the 2004 championship with an 8-0 win over Kearney, capping an undefeated season. Webb City was the runner-up in 2000, falling to Pleasant Hill 2-1. 

 

WEBB CITY (27-5) VS. WEBSTER GROVES (15-2)

What: Class 4 championship game

When: Friday, 10 a.m.

Where: Killian Softball Complex, Springfield

How to listen: www.kneo.org

How to watch: https://www.mshsaa.tv/

Tickets: Fans can check ticket availability by going to: https://www.mshsaa.org/Activities/Tickets.aspx