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STATE HOOPS: Mount Vernon girls set for semifinal showdown with Vashon

 

MOUNT VERNON VS. VASHON  

What: Class 4 girls semifinal 

When: 6 p.m. Friday

Where: JQH Arena, Missouri State University

Moving on: The winner advances to the state title game at 4 on Saturday against either Boonville or Benton. The loser plays for third place at 10 a.m. Saturday.

Records: Mount Vernon 27-3, Vashon 17-1

Quarterfinal results: Mount Vernon def. Blair Oaks 46-45; Vashon def. Central (Park Hills) 70-44.

THE MOUNTAINEERS: Mount Vernon is in the semifinals for the first time since 2012. The Mountaineers have won 14 straight games since a loss to Class 6 Ozark on Jan. 20. Mount Vernon scores 62 points a game and allows just 36. 

Mount Vernon senior point guard Lacy Stokes was named the 4-States Basketball Coaches Association’s player of the year this week. A Missouri Southern recruit, Stokes is averaging 25.7 points, 6.7 rebounds, 6.2 steals and 5.1 assists per game. She’s shooting 51 percent from the floor and 83 percent from the foul line

Like Stokes, senior guard Elllie Johnston is a four-year varsity performer.  Juniors Cameryn Cassity, Raegan Boswell and Jolie Prescott are Mount Vernon’s other probable starters. Lisa Kruger, Allie Schubert and Kadence Krempges are other key performers.

THE WOLVERINES: Vashon is in the semifinal round for the first time in school history. The Wolverines, who are on a nine-game winning streak, forced 28 turnovers in their quarterfinal victory, STL high school sports reported. Vashon’s lone loss came to undefeated Incarnate Word, a team in the Class 6 final four. Vashon is scoring 65 points per game and giving up 34. 

A player to watch for Vashon is 5-8 guard Marshaun Bostic, an Auburn recruit who compiled 16 points, six assists, five rebounds and four steals in the quarterfinals. Other Vashon players to watch include Raychel Jones, Kiyah Cooper and Nariyah Simmons. All four players are scoring in double figures. Vashon is ranked first by the Missouri Basketball Coaches Association, while Mount Vernon is ranked fourth. 

QUOTABLE: “I am super proud of our kids. Since Lacy and Ellie were little kids, they’ve talked about doing this. A lot of them were in the stands watching the 2012 team go all the way and win it. We broke through this year. We had to claw and scratch to do it, but it is an unbelievable feeling.” — Mount Vernon coach Grant Berendt.

 

HOW TO WATCH: https://www.mshsaa.tv/?B=247238

 

HOW TO LISTEN: http://mtneers.com/

PREP BASEBALL PREVIEW: Early-season experience will be key for Joplin in 2021

The good news for Joplin baseball is the 2021 squad will be filled out primarily with upperclassmen. The downside is very few of them have varsity experience.

The Eagles boast a roster with seven seniors and seven juniors for the upcoming campaign. The problem is only a handful of them have seen playing time at the varsity level with last season being lost to the COVID-19 pandemic. And while everyone felt for the seniors missing out on their final season, the three classes below them were impacted in several ways as well.

“There are just a lot of unknowns,” Joplin coach Kyle Wolf said. “As guys progress through a program, they pick up on situations and it just becomes natural. These guys lost a year of that. I said at the time, as much as I felt for the seniors losing their last season, I also recognize the guys below them lost a year, too. They lost a year of experience and development and you can only catch up on so much in that amount of time.”

Two seasons ago, Joplin closed its second year under Wolf with a 15-11 record, finishing with an above .500 record for the first time in five seasons. The Eagles were returning five starters from that team, which meant there were several spots up for grabs for new players to step into larger roles prior to the cancelation.  

Of course the players have put in their own work in the extended offseason, but it’s the little nuances of baseball that players learn with live-game repetitions that Coach Wolf believes will be the biggest learning curve early in the season. 

“I think the catching, throwing and hitting part of it, they’ve done a lot of,” Wolf said. “It’s the situational things like making sure we are recognizing the flow of the game. With two outs, maybe I can deepen up a little bit. In baserunning, making sure we are checking the outfielders’ positioning. Just getting into the rhythm and the flow of the game are the things that come with that experience that gives you confidence and recognition of those types of situations.

“That is what you will see a little bit with some of these guys. They don’t have that in-game experience and feel for the rhythm of the game.”

Wolf was quick to mention, however, that nearly everyone in the area is going through the same situation. So, with this season setting up for a lot of teams to be learning on the fly, it is going to be even more important to make sure they are getting the proper coaching needed to develop the right way as the season progresses. 

“I have to remember that some of those guys who are juniors were freshmen the last time that we really got into the meat of a season,” Wolf said. “I have to do a better job, quite honestly, to make sure I am helping them with those little things and not just assume that we are going to understand that. I have to make sure to take a look across the field to see if we have a deep enough infield with two outs, or whatever the case may be. I think that is something I am taking from this a little bit. I need to teach them a little better in practice and help them more in games with some of those things.”

The early results have been promising. Though the inexperience has shown in certain areas through the first several weeks of practice, Coach Wolf was more than pleased with the response and attitude he got from his players. The Eagles are ready to get the 2021 season underway.

“I’ll be honest, and I have said this a number of times, I felt like we had as good a two weeks of practice as we’ve had since I’ve been here,” Wolf said. “That doesn’t mean we weren’t making mistakes, it just means I felt like the kids have enjoyed being around one another, they’ve taken to coaching really well and they’ve worked hard on the little things. That’s exciting.

“The process of getting to where you want to be has to happen,” Wolf said. “I felt like we’ve had a really good process up to this point. Now, we kind of have an idea after (the jamboree) of where our bar is, what things we need to work on and where we need to improve. It’s all about getting better game by game as the season goes on and be playing our best by the end of it.”

STRENGTHS IN FUNDAMENTALS

The main focus for Joplin, particularly in the early portions of the season, is making sure they are playing the game the right way and not developing any bad habits. Going through the trials and tribulations of inexperienced players growing on the field subsides much quicker if the effort is maxed out. 

“We just have to go out and do a good job of earning the ultimate compliment—your team plays hard,” Wolf said. “We are going to make mistakes, but we have to fight for each other and pick each other up as a family. There is going to be adversity as the year goes on, and there are going to be wins and triumph. We just have to stay even and keep getting better.”

Coach Wolf believes the Eagles’ defense will be one of the team’s strengths this season. Once the offense finds its identity and is comfortable with it, the consistency from at-bat to at-bat will be the biggest key. 

“I think the biggest thing right now after watching (the jamboree) is we just need to have some confidence in ourselves,” Wolf said. “We just need to believe we can play this game confidently at a high level.”

FILLING OUT THE LINEUP

Senior IF Fielding Campbell and junior IF Bodee Carlson project to start the season near the top of the order as table setters. 

“If they can get on base, they are instinctive baserunners who will put pressure on the defense,” Wolf said.

Senior OF Kohl Cooper, senior OF Kirk Chandler and senior 1B Alex Curry figure to fill out the meat of the batting order. Senior C David Fiscus, IF Carson Wampler, sophomore UTL Byler Reither and junior OF Kyler Stokes will be names to look for near to fill out the card. 

“Those are guys who can handle the bat well and do some things at the back end of the lineup,” Wolf said. “They have the ability to hit the ball in the gap, or they can lay down a bunt, can run and can do some other things, too. There is a lot of flexibility in the lineup … and I think as the season progresses, we will be tough to pitch to.”

RELIABLE ARMS

Joplin will be relying on Chandler, junior Ethan Guilford, Campbell and senior Josh Harryman to provide most of the innings on the bump in 2021. 

“We have to be able to throw them out there with them having the confidence they can keep us in the game to compete,” Wolf said.

Junior Joe Jasper, Reither and sophomore Justin McReynolds are slotted as possible relief options for Joplin this season as well, with the opportunity to grow into expanded roles given the needed progression. 

SEASON OPENER

Joplin opens the season at home on Saturday with two games. The Eagles host Parkview at noon before taking on Hollister with a 4 p.m. matchup. 

COLLEGE BASEBALL: No. 3 Missouri Southern hosts UCO this weekend

The third ranked Missouri Southern baseball program will be back at home this weekend as the Lions will play host to Central Oklahoma in an MIAA series at Warren Turner Field.

Southern (13-2, 7-2 MIAA) sits a game out of first place in the MIAA and is ranked third in the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Division II poll and tenth in the baseball coaches poll. The Lions are coming off a series win at Missouri Western when Southern won two-of-three games.

The Lions lead the MIAA in doubles, doubles per game, ERA, hits allowed per nine innings, home runs, shutouts, strikeout to walk ratio, strikeouts per nine innings, walks and hits per inning pitched (WHIP), and walks allowed per nine innings. Southern ranks seventh nationally in shutouts, while ranking eighth in ERA, ninth in both strikeout to walk ratio and home runs and 10th in doubles and walks allowed per nine innings. The Lions rank 12th in WHIP and 19th in strikeouts per nine innings.

Will Bausinger leads the MIAA in complete games, while ranking second in strikeouts. Zach Parish leads the league in strikeouts, while Zac Shoemaker is third. Troy Gagan leads the MIAA in home runs and total bases, while Bausinger, Parish and Shoemaker leads the MIAA in games started. Tommy Stevenson is second in the MIAA in doubles. Cole Woods leads the MIAA in saves, while Parish is second in ERA.

Parish leads Division II in wins, while ranking fourth nationally in strikeouts. Bausinger and Shoemaker rank 8th and 16th in strikeouts, while Gagan ranks 12th in home runs and 20th in total bases.

This season, Gagan leads the Lions with a .362 batting average, six home runs and 16 RBIs. Jordan Fitzpatrick (.321) and Henry Kusiak (.302) are both hitting over .300 while Kusiak has ten RBIs and Dexter Swims has driven in 11 of his own. The Lions are hitting .264 as a team this season.

Parish is 4-0 this year with 44 strikeouts in 31 innings, while Bausinger is 3-1 with 41 k’s in 32 innings. Shoemaker is 3-1 with 35 k’s in 27 innings, while Woods has three saves and Chase Beiter has two.

UCO (7-4, 4-2 MIAA) comes into the series after a midweek win at home over Oklahoma Christian. The Bronchos took two-of-three from both Fort Hays State and Emporia State this year in MIAA play. Ryan Harrell leads the offensive attack for the Bronchos with a .400 batting average, while Kyle Crowl has a team-high three home runs and Garrett Takamatsu has 12 RBIs. Braydon Nelson has a 3-0 record out of the bullpen this year, while Luke Anderson has a team-high 24 strikeouts.

All three games will be broadcasted live on the MIAA Network, as well as have live stats with links to both above in the story links. Friday’s game will be broadcasted live on Fox Sports Joplin with Kevin Welch bringing you the play-by-play.