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PREP TRACK & FIELD: College Heights captures team titles at Ozark 7 Conference Meet; Thomas Jefferson second in both divisions

 

Winning a combined 24 events, College Heights Christian’s girls and boys both captured team championships at the 2021 Ozark 7 Conference Track Meet on Wednesday at Thomas Jefferson’s J.P. Humphreys Track and Field Complex. 

The College Heights girls compiled 234 points and host Thomas Jefferson was second with 133. 

College Heights’ boys topped the standings with 193 points, while Thomas Jefferson was second with 109. 

 

COLLEGE HEIGHTS GIRLS HIGHLIGHTS

College Heights Christian’s Grace Bishop is all alone as she crosses the finish line first in the 1600. Bishop won three events for the CHC girls.

The College Heights girls won 13 events, including all four relays.

Grace Bishop won three events—the 800-meter run, the 1600 and the 3200.

Allie Lawrence took first in both the 100-meter dash and the 400, while Allie Fiscus won both hurdle races. 

Other individual event winners for the CHC girls were Jayli Johnson (200) and Maddy Colin (discus).

Finishing second in their respective events were Johnson (100), Lauren Ukena (200, 400), Colin (300 hurdles, high jump), Riley Peterson (triple jump) and Layne Jackson (javelin). 

Taking third place in events were Katie Moss (800), Sophia Moore (triple jump) and Bishop (discus), while Moore (3200), Avery Parker (800, 1600), Sue Choe (200) and Peterson (long jump) all earned fourth-place finishes.

 

COLLEGE HEIGHTS BOYS HIGHLIGHTS

The College Heights boys won 11 events, including all four relays. 

Derrick McMillan took first in both the 800 and 1600, while Gatlin Bender won both the triple jump and the shot put. 

Other individual event winners for the CHC boys were Colsen Dickens (400), Jace Edwards (3200) and Caleb Quade (high jump).

Finishing second in their respective events were Corban Thomas (400) and Taegan Fink (javelin).

Taking home third-place were Matt Wililams (100, 200), Rolen Sanderson (800, 1600), Steven Calandro (300 H), Brayden Youngberg (3200) and Bender (javelin).

Finishing fourth in their respective events were Calandro (110 H), Edwards (300 H), Calandro (3200) and Thomas (LJ). 

 

THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGHLIGHTS

Thomas Jefferson’s Sydney Stamps won three events—the high jump, the long jump and the shot put.

Avery Hocker took first in the triple jump and was the runner-up in the long jump, while Lainey Edmondson was the runner-up in the discus.

Sarah Mueller took second in both the 800 and 1600 and also finished third in the 3200.

Alivia Beard finished second in the 200 and third in the 100, while Nico Carlson was third in both the high jump and long jump. 

Also for the Thomas Jefferson girls, Mia Grubbs was third in the 300 hurdles, with teammate Tannah Cassatt fourth. 

The TJ girls placed second in both the 4×100 and the 4×400 relays. 

Leading the Thomas Jefferson boys was Elias Rincker, the champion in both the 300 hurdles and the long jump.

Benji Carroll won the discus and placed third in the shot put. 

Kip Atteberry finished second in both the 800 and 1600, while Kelsey Atteberry was the runner-up in the 3200 and placed fourth in the 400. 

Desi Hix took second in the 200 and was fourth in the 100, while Levi Triplett was second in the high jump. 

The Cavaliers took second in both the 4×100 and 4×400 relays. 

 

MCAULEY CATHOLIC HIGHLIGHTS

McAuley’s girls were fourth (42 points) in the standings, while the Warriors were fifth in the boys standings (49 points). 

The McAuley girls were second in the 4×200 relay and third in the 4×100. 

For the McAuley girls, Kendall Ramsey finished second in the 3200 and was third in the 1600, while Kloee Williamson was fourth in the 100, JoJo Wheeler was fourth in the shot put and Jennifer Archer was fourth in the discus.

The McAuley boys finished second in the 4×200, third in the 4×800 and fourth in the 4×100. 

Jacob Bracich finished second in the long jump and teammate Joe Lupicki was third. 

Thomas Black took third in the 400 and Bracich was fourth in the 200. 

 

WHEATON HIGHLIGHTS

Wheaton’s Monica Hinajosa won the girls javelin, the only girls event that wasn’t won by a College Heights or Thomas Jefferson athlete. 

Wheaton’s Chad Meyer won the boys 100, 200 and the javelin, while teammate Fernando Gonzalez won the 110 hurdles. 

 

OZARK 7 CONFERENCE MEET
Girls team standings: College Heights Christian 234, Thomas Jefferson 133, Wheaton 43, McAuley Catholic 42, Verona 28, Golden City 2.
Boys team standings: College Heights Christian 193, Thomas Jefferson 109, Wheaton 95, Verona 62, McAuley 49, Golden City 7.

 

College Heights’ Derrick McMillan, Thomas Jefferson’s Kip Atteberry and CHC’s Rolen Sanderson were the top three finishers in the boys 1600 at Wednesday’s Ozark 7 Conference Track Meet at Thomas Jefferson. All photos by Jason Peake.

 

Thomas Jefferson’s Sarah Mueller and McAuley Catholic’s Kendall Ramsey finished second and third in the 1600.

 

Runners compete in the 400-meter run. CHC’s Colsen Dickens won the race.

 

McAuley’s 4×200 relay team is pictured.

 

College Heights Christian’s Addie Lawrence and Jayli Johnson and Thomas Jefferson’s Alivia Beard were the top three finishers in the girls 100-meter dash.

 

McAuley’s Kennedy DeRuy hands off the baton to Kayleigh Teeter during the 4×100 relay.

 

Thomas Jefferson’s girls compete in the 4×100 relay.

 

The CHC girls compete in the 4×100 relay.

 

 

Runners compete in the 100-meter dash. Wheaton’s Chad Meyer took first.

PREP TENNIS: Carthage upends Neosho in COC play

CARTHAGE, Mo. Carthage’s boys tennis team earned a 9-0 win over Neosho on Wednesday in Central Ozark Conference action.

In singles play, Carthage’s Silas Smith beat Kuhio Sohl 8-1, while Colby Tandy defeated Christian Williams 8-5 and Ryan Phillips knocked off Melvin Lopez 8-3.

In other singles matches, Carthage’s Charles Snow defeated Ryno Lee 8-3, Silas Laytham topped Caden Kelly 8-1 and Danilo Lopez-Gramajo beat Israel Ezra 8-0.

In doubles, Smith-Phillips beat Neosho’s Sohl-Williams 8-4, while Tandy-Snow defeated Lopez-Lee 8-0 and Tyler Howard-Lopez-Gramajo handled Kelly-Ezra 8-0.

Both teams hit the road on Thursday, as Neosho (1-8) travels to Branson (4-2) and Carthage (4-3) is at Willard (5-1). 

PREP SOFTBALL: College Heights uses nine-run sixth to blow past Jasper

College Heights ballooned a 2-1 lead with a nine-run sixth inning to earn an 11-2 win over Jasper in six innings on Wednesday. 

The Cougars (12-2, 3-0 Ozark 7) broke a scoreless tie in the bottom of the fourth when Addie Lawrence singled to left to plate Aaliyah Perez. College Heights doubled the lead an inning later when Jayli Johnson scored on a passed ball.

Jasper cut the lead to 2-1 in the top of the sixth when Courtney Spear singled home Livia Dumm, but College Heights added insurance in a big way.

College Heights started the bottom of the sixth inning with a batter reaching by error before the first out was made on a strikeout. The next eight Cougars reached base with seven runners scoring in the process. Lawrence started the scoring with an RBI single to center before Perez singled home a run two batters later to make the score 4-1. After a bases-loaded walk by Johnson forced home a run, Kloee Williamson came up with a two-run single before Layne Jackson doubled home a run to push the lead to 8-1. Maddy Colin singled in the hole at short to plate another run before Avery Good made the score 10-1 with an RBI groundout. Lawrence wrapped the scoring with an RBI double to left to end the game via run rule.

Maddy Colin earned the win in the circle after allowing one run on three hits, a walk and 11 strikeouts in six innings.

Lawrence had three hits and a team-high three RBI as well as a run scored to lead CHC. Williamson had two hits, two RBI and scored a run, while Sarah Painter had two hits and scored a run. Johnson had a hit, an RBI and scored a team-high two runs.

College Heights is at Liberal on Thursday.

PREP BASEBALL: Curry’s walk-off single sends Joplin past Carthage in 9 innings

One of the most rewarding and mentally demanding experiences that comes with playing the game of baseball are the moments of dealing with success and failure.

On Wednesday, Joplin’s Alex Curry experienced both in the Eagles’ Central Ozark Conference matchup with Carthage at the JHS Athletic Complex. 

In the bottom of the seventh, Joplin (12-6, 4-1 COC) had the bases loaded and one out with the game tied at 3-3 when Curry hit a ball up the middle that looked like it might drive home the winning run. Instead, Carthage was able to turn a double play to end the threat and force extra innings. Fast forward to the bottom of the ninth with a runner on second and two outs and the game still tied, Curry came through with a single to right field to plate Bodee Carlson to give the Eagles a 4-3 walk-off win in extra innings over the Tigers (5-10, 0-4 COC).

“I really just learned from the last couple of at-bats,” Curry said. “He was throwing me a bunch of curveballs. I sat on one and hit backside like I always do. It’s a real confidence booster for everybody. … I think we will fly from here and do what Eagles do—win.”

“Alex has been really good for us all year,” Joplin coach Kyle Wolf said. “What you saw in his last at-bat, driving the ball backside, not trying to do too much, is what he has been able to do all year. … It is big on him to step up in that situation after three pretty tough at-bats and come through. That shows a lot of toughness on his part. There was a lot of focus and confidence right there to get the job done.”

GAME ACTION

Joplin took the initial lead of the game after Justin McReynolds crossed home on an infield hit with two outs by Kyler Stokes in the bottom of the second.

Carthage answered back right away, scoring three times in the top of the third. After a walk and an error allowed the first two Tigers to reach base and end up in scoring position, Wil McCombs grounded out for an RBI to tie the game. Caden Kabance scored later in the inning on a first-and-third double steal to put Carthage on top 2-1. Clay Kinder came around to score with two outs on a wild pitch to push the lead to 3-1.

Carthage’s Caden Kabance steals home in the Tigers’ loss to Joplin on Wednesday. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

The Eagles cut the lead to one in the bottom of the fourth inning after McReynolds, who reached on an error, came around to score on a groundout from Stokes. Joplin tied the game in the next at-bat, as Carlson singled to short to allow Carson Wampler to touch home.

“I told them that this game is hard enough and we are putting a lot of pressure on ourselves trying to do too much,” Wolf said about his team battling back from a two-run deficit. “We just have to do enough. Just be good enough. We were able to get guys to second and third and scored a couple of runs without hitting the ball out of the infield. Sometimes, that’s baseball. We just had to grind that game out.”

Carthage had a runner on second with two outs in the top of the eighth but failed to push across the go-ahead run.

Joplin had a chance to end the game in the bottom half of the eighth inning when McReynolds singled to center field with a runner on second with one out only to see the Tigers come up with a game-saving play by throwing the would-be winning run out at home plate.

“I told my guys that we’ve lost to two of the top teams this week in the COC (Joplin and Nixa) on a walk-off,” Carthage coach Luke Bordewick said. “It’s frustrating, but the overall message is we are right there with anybody if we play the ball we want to play. The negative note is eventually we have to start winning some of these one-run baseball games.”

Joplin’s Josh Harryman delivers a pitch to the plate in the Eagles’ COC win over Carthage on Wednesday. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

ON THE MOUND

Kohl Cooper started for Joplin and took a no-decision after allowing three runs, one earned, on two hits, a walk and three strikeouts in three innings. Josh Harryman earned the win after tossing six dazzling relief innings without allowing a run. He scattered two hits, walked one and struck out three in his longest outing of the season.

“As long as he was throwing up zeros he was staying out there,” Wolf said with a laugh about Harryman’s outing. “That’s huge for him to come into that situation when we’re down. He came in and was able to hold them at bay and give us a chance to win. He made some really big pitches. … He was really efficient and pounded the zone.”

Mason Utter started and took the no decision after allowing three unearned runs on four hits, three walks and two strikeouts in 3 2/3 innings. Kaden Arr took a tough-luck loss after allowing one run on four hits, three walks and two strikeouts in 5 2/3 innings.

“Getting out of that bases-loaded jam in the seventh was huge,” Bordewick said of Arr’s outing. “They put pressure on us in the eighth, too. He was just, time and time again, locating his fastball, curveball and changeup. You can’t ask much more out of your reliever.”

IN THE BOX

Stokes led Joplin at the plate with two hits and two RBI. McReynolds had a hit and scored twice. Carlson and Wampler each had one hit and scored one run and Carlson drove in one. Curry had one hit and an RBI.

Kaden Kralicek had two hits in four trips to the plate to lead Carthage, while Kanen Vogt and Micah Lindsey also added base hits. McCombs drove in one.

UP NEXT

Joplin is at Kickapoo on April 26.

Carthage hosts Republic at 4:30 p.m. on Thursday.