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DISTRICT BASEBALL: Fifth-seeded Joplin falls to second-seeded Republic in the district title game

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — The postseason run came to an end for fifth-seeded Joplin after the Eagles fell to top-seeded Republic 13-3 in six innings on Thursday in the Class 6 District 6 title game at Central Ballpark.

Joplin and Republic traded runs in the first inning before the Tigers took command with a six-run second frame. Joplin trimmed the lead to four after scoring twice in the top of the sixth inning but Republic answered with six runs in the bottom of the sixth to put the game away.

“If you take this game as a snapshot, it obviously didn’t go our way,” Joplin coach Kyle Wolf said. “That’s baseball. Sometimes you just have to wear it a little bit. That’s a good baseball team over there. They are the district champs for a reason. They took advantage of some opportunities in the second and sixth innings. That offense can ambush you pretty quick, and they did. In the long run, when you see the big picture of what these guys accomplished, I am very proud of their efforts.”

SAYING GOODBYE

Joplin graduates seven seniors from this year’s squad—Fielding Campbell, Carson Wampler, David Fiscus, Kirk Chandler, Josh Harryman, Alex Curry and Kohl Cooper.

“That is the first group that has been with us for four years,” Wolf said. “When you spend that much time with a group of young men over the course of four years, you develop strong relationships. I am proud of them and what they’ve accomplished as a baseball team, but I am really looking forward to seeing the great things they’re going to do with their futures. They are going to go out and do good things for people in this world.”

“I love this team,” Cooper said. “I have never been a part of a team (like this), honestly. I have dealt with injuries and missed seasons. Finally, just being a part of a family, I have never experienced something like that.”

BITTERSWEET ENDING

Joplin closes the 2021 season with a 20-11 overall record, while garnering a 6-3 Central Ozark Conference record. It was the first 20-win season for the Joplin program since 2013-14.

“There have been some ups and downs, and some adversity that you go through as a team,” Wolf said. “These guys have fought through a lot of things. I guess my catchphrase is ‘find a way.’ We’d get knocked down sometimes, but we always got back up and I am proud of them for that.”

“Twenty wins in a season is something that hasn’t been done in a long, long time in Joplin,” Cooper said. “We beat some really good teams this year — we beat Webb City, we beat Kickapoo — we beat some teams a lot of people never thought we could come close to beating.  It didn’t go our way today. (Republic) is just flat-out a great team.” 

ON THE MOUND

Gavyn Beckner earned the win after allowing three runs on 10 hits, three walks and 5 1/3 innings. Cole Iles pitched 2/3 of an inning and didn’t allow a run while giving up one hit and walking one.

Ethan Guilford started on short rest and took the loss after allowing six runs, five earned, on five hits and three walks in one-plus inning. Campbell allowed one run on one hit and four strikeouts over four relief innings. Harryman allowed three runs on two hits and Chandler allowed three runs on one hit and two free passes.

GAME ACTION

Joplin struck first in the district championship, pushing across a run in the top of the first when Alex Curry drove in Bodee Carlson from second with a line drive to left-center field. Carlson singled to lead off the inning.

Republic answered right back in the bottom half of the first when Jared Hughes singled to left field with two outs to score a run and tie the game at 1-1.

Republic took command of the lead in the bottom of the second after plating six runs for a 7-1 advantage. The Tigers saw their first six batters of the inning reach base. Republic took the lead when Vincent Pyeatt drew a bases-loaded walk. Beckner singled in the next at-bat with the bags full to score two runners. Ryker Harrington followed with an RBI single to push the lead to 5-1. The Tigers used a two-base sacrifice fly on a diving catch by Joplin’s Brady Mails in left-center field to plate a run, and Hughes wrapped the scoring with a sac fly.

Joplin loaded the bases with two outs in the top of the third before Carlson was called out trying to take home on a wild pitch on a bang-bang play to end the threat.

The Eagles scored twice in the top of the six to trim the lead to 7-3. Guilford drove home a run with an RBI single to right-center before Carlson picked up an RBI with a sac fly to center.

Beckner highlighted the Tigers’ sixth inning with a two-run double. 

IN THE BOX

Beckner led the Tigers at the plate with three hits, including a double, a game-high four RBI and a run scored. Richard Potter had two hits and scored two runs, while Hughes had one hit and three RBI. Pyeatt had three RBI and two runs scored.

Fiscus and Campbell led Joplin with two hits each, with Campbell scoring a run. Carlson had one hit, scored a run and drove in a run. Curry and Guilford each had hits and tallied one RBI apiece.

“I am proud of our young guys for stepping up into some roles and situations that at the beginning of the year, none of us would have thought they’d be in,” Wolf said when asked about the future of his program. “They stepped into it and found a way to compete for us. At the end of the day, you can’t learn to play in these kinds of games if you don’t find a way to get into these games. We found a way to get to it today. Hopefully, there are some lessons that are learned and we can continue to progress so we can get back here next year.”

PREP BASEBALL: Seneca tops Nevada for district crown, advances to Class 4 sectional

 

The Nevada Tigers had beaten the Seneca Indians twice during the regular season. 

With the season on the line, the Indians won the third and most important matchup. 

Seneca defeated Nevada 10-1 in the championship game of the Class 4 District 12 tournament on Wednesday night at Joe Becker Stadium.

The Indians (16-11) advanced to the sectional round of the state tournament, where they’ll meet either Aurora or Hollister on May 25.

The Indians led 4-1 when they added four runs in the sixth and one more in the seventh for the final margin.

Seneca had 11 hits. Lucas Marrs went 3-for-5 with four RBI, while Sebastian Middick, Titus Atkins and Lincoln Renfro had two hits apiece.

Lance Stephens was the winning pitcher. He limited the Tigers to one run on four hits and struck out four.

Nevada’s Case Sanderson allowed five runs on seven hits in 4 1/3 innings, striking out six.

Lane Wilson and Eli Cheaney pitched in relief.

Recording one hit apiece for the Tigers were Sanderson, Elijah Nadurata, Lane Wilson and Drake Ketterman. 

Nevada finished the season with a 19-7 record.

DISTRICT BASEBALL: Third-seeded Glendale knocks off second-seeded Carl Junction 8-0 in district semifinals

Third-seeded Glendale pushed across three runs in the first inning and scored four times in the seventh on the way to an 8-0 win over second-seeded Carl Junction in the Class 4 District 12 semifinals on Wednesday.

With the loss, the Class 5 fifth-ranked Bulldogs end their season with an 18-10 record. Carl Junction graduates seniors Keaton Johnston, Cole Stewart, Carson Johnson, Jaxson Mackney, Alex Baker, Lance Smith, Noah Southern, Dylan Eck, Drew Beyer and Brendyn Downs.

Glendale’s Zack Beatty led the game off with a triple before Brooks Kettering followed with a shallow single to left-center field to score Beatty for a 1-0 lead. An error by Carl Junction in the next at-bat allowed the second run of the inning to score. Kent Lockhart drove home the third run later in the inning on a ground out.

Beatty picked up an RBI on a sacrifice fly in the second inning. 

Isaac Wells led off the seventh inning with a triple to center field before scoring on a Bulldogs’ error in the next at-bat to push the lead to 5-0. Carter Lewis highlighted the inning with an RBI double to right field, and the Falcons scored two more runs later in the frame on a CJ error.

Caimon Kufahal earned the win for Glendale after pitching a complete-game shutout, scattering three hits and striking out one in seven innings.

Beyer was saddled with the loss after allowing five runs, three earned, on nine hits, two walks and six strikeouts in six innings. Eck allowed three unearned runs on two hits in one relief inning.

Beatty had two hits, including a triple, scored a run and drove in one. Wells tripled for one of his two hits and scored twice while driving in one. DJ Cofield finished 2-for-4.

Dalton Mills went 2-for-2 at the plate to lead Carl Junction. Baker added one hit in three at-bats.

Glendale will face top-seeded Webb City at 1 p.m. on Saturday at Chuck Barnes Field in the district title game.

NO EXCUSES: Fifth-seeded Joplin beats first-seeded Kickapoo 7-1 in rain-soaked district semifinals

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — No excuses. That was the message Joplin coach Kyle Wolf had for his team before they stepped off the bus on Monday to open district play. 

After defeating fourth-seeded Lebanon on a rain-drenched field in the opening round, the fifth-seeded Eagles once again battled the elements on the way to defeating top-seeded Kickapoo 7-1 in the Class 6 District 6 semifinals on Wednesday at Central Ballpark to earn a trip to the district championship round.

“We’ve said all year that we wanted to be playing our best at the end of the year,” Wolf said. “These have probably been two of our more complete games. I can’t speak enough about the toughness those guys have shown in the elements against good baseball teams. There have been no excuses. We said it at the beginning and that’s the way they’ve played this week. No excuses, and we are just going to get after it to try to stay and play another day.”

Playing in a steady downpour for much of the game, Joplin (20-10) broke through on the scoreboard first with a single tally in the second inning before the offense erupted for six runs in the top of the third inning to take a stranglehold on the lead, 7-0. With senior Kohl Cooper dealing on the mound, Kickapoo (24-9) was held off the scoreboard through the first six innings. The Chiefs scored a run in the bottom of the seventh and had the bases loaded with one out before senior Josh Harryman closed the door on any comeback attempt with a punchout followed by a lineout on the infield to end the game.

CHAMPIONSHIP BOUND

Joplin will take on second-seeded Republic in the district title game at 5 p.m. on Thursday at Central Ballpark. Republic defeated Ozark 6-3 in the other semifinal game.

ON THE MOUND

On a day where getting a grip on the baseball was nearly impossible because of the constant rain, Cooper was dominant on the bump for Joplin after tossing 6 ⅓ innings of one-run baseball to earn the win. He scattered five hits, walked three and struck out five in perhaps the strongest start of his career, which couldn’t have come at a better time.

“Well, that’s a senior that stepped up in a big game and flat got it done, man,” Wolf said of Cooper’s outing. “I couldn’t be more proud of that kid. I have seen him be really good this year and I just felt like if he was that guy, he had the stuff to come out and beat a really, really good team in Kickapoo. He had his stuff today in really tough conditions and just competed his tail off.” 

Harryman pitched 2/3 of an inning and allowed two hits, walked one and struck out one.

Zach McKinnis took the loss after allowing seven runs on five hits and three strikeouts in 2 1/3 innings. Cross Kubik didn’t allow a run in 4 2/3 relief innings. He surrendered three hits, walked three and struck out one.

GAME ACTION

After a scoreless first inning, Joplin senior Alex Curry led off the top of the second with a single on a line drive past the third baseman. Two batters later, sophomore Justin McReynolds singled to right field to move Curry to second. A groundout from senior Fielding Campbell advanced both runners 90 feet. With two outs, junior Ethan Guilford hit a chopper to the left side that turned into a Kickapoo fielding error, allowing Guilford to reach and Curry to score for a 1-0 lead.

Joplin took all of the momentum in the third inning. Junior Bodee Carlson singled to right and senior Carson Wampler reached on a fielder’s choice. Two batters later, Curry singled up the middle to plate Carlson and push the lead to two. Senior David Fiscus reached on another Chiefs’ error, which scored the Eagles’ third run of the game. McReynolds followed with an RBI single through the left side of the infield to score Curry and extend the lead to 4-0. After Campbell loaded the bases with a single to center, Guilford cleared them with a line-drive double to right field to score three runs and push the advantage to 7-0.

“That early first run to take the lead was huge,” Wolf said. “To go put a six spot up in the third, that is a great job by our guys. Just a lot of really good at-bats and executing. We have been working with (Ethan) all year on the understanding you have to hit the ball the other way and he comes up and laces one down the right-field line to score three. That was a huge at-bat.”

Looking to strike back and steal some momentum away, Kickapoo loaded the bases with one out in the bottom of the third inning. Cooper had other plans, striking out back to back hitters, the second looking, to end the inning and the Chiefs’ only real threat of cutting into the deficit until the seventh frame. 

“It’s such a game of momentum sometimes,” Wolf said. “The same as getting those early runs gives us a little momentum, keeping them from scoring right there gives us a lot of confidence moving forward. And, we’ve got a little bit of momentum that we are carrying onto the offensive end.”

“It was a magical moment for me today,” Cooper said of his back to back punchouts. “I knew God was on my side today. He always is, but I felt the presence of Him today in a situation like that against an amazing team.”

Working quickly in the rain, Cooper relied heavily on the fastball in the third inning to get himself out of the jam, and continued that usage throughout the remainder of his outing.

“It started in the third,” Cooper said when asked at what point the moisture prevented him from finding the grip on his breaking ball. “It started to get a little loopy. … When the water gets on the ball like that it just spins out of my hand. The fastball, I was just spotting it up. That was the key today.”

Kickapoo got on the board in the seventh when Cole Murrel singled with the bases loaded to plate Shane Cummings, trimming the Eagles’ lead to 7-1. Harryman struck out Luke Quackenbush and got Carter Vienhage to line out to end the game.

IN THE BOX

McReynolds led Joplin at the plate with three hits, including a double, an RBI and a run scored. Guilford doubled in one of his two hits and drove in a team-high three runs. Curry had two hits, scored a team-high two runs and drove in one. Campbell and Carlson each had a hit and scored a run. 

Vienhage and Murrell had two hits each to lead Kickapoo.