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DISTRICT VOLLEYBALL: College Heights will meet Jasper in district title match; Diamond to clash with Sarcoxie

 

JASPER, Mo. — Top-seeded College Heights Christian defeated fifth-seeded Liberal 3-0 (25-19, 25-20, 25-20) on Saturday in the semifinals of the Class 1 District 9 volleyball tournament at Jasper High School.

The Cougars will meet second-seeded Jasper at 7 on Monday in the district championship game.

The Eagles defeated third-seeded Thomas Jefferson 3-0 (25-13, 25-16, 25-7).

 

CLASS 2 DISTRICT 11

DIAMOND, Mo. — Diamond and Sarcoxie advanced to Monday’s Class 2 District 11 championship match with semifinal victories on Saturday.

Top-seeded Diamond defeated fourth-seeded Marionville 3-0 (25-5, 25-23, 25-15), while third-seeded Sarcoxie knocked off second-seeded Pierce City 3-0 (25-10, 25-20, 25-19).

Monday’s championship game is slated for 6:30 p.m. at Diamond High School. 

DISTRICT VOLLEYBALL: Joplin sweeps Belton in semifinals to advance to district title game

Second-seeded Joplin made quick work of third-seeded Belton with a 25-21, 26-24 and 25-18 win in the second Class 5 District 12 semifinal matchup of the night inside Kaminsky Gymnasium on Saturday.

“I feel like my girls played really hard tonight,” Joplin coach Desiree Felker said. “We set our sights really high at the beginning of the season. We’ve talked a lot about being all-in. I think that we did a good job of executing where we needed to at the net tonight. We knew Belton was going to do some good things, that they served aggressively and they had some pretty good hitters. I thought that we played pretty well defensively to handle that.”

With the win, the Eagles advance to the district title game where they will face top-seeded Carthage at 6 p.m. on Monday.

“They serve aggressively and they are very aggressive at the net,” Felker said. “We are going to have to bring our A-game defensively to handle that, but I think we are willing to do what it takes to get the job done.”

Joplin (14-11-5) was the first team to gain a cushion in the opening set, pushing a 14-13 lead to 18-13 thanks to a four-point service run by Kaya Cooper that included kills from Emma Floyd and Allie Lawrence.

Floyd earned a kill to make the score 20-15, with Lawrence following suit shortly after to push the lead to 22-17. Logan Bruggeman added a block before Lawrence closed the opening set with a kill.

“I think that she did a really good job tonight,” Felker said of Lawrence. “She plays with a lot of emotion and her teammates respond to that.”

The second set saw the Pirates hold a 12-11 lead before a kill from Bailey Owens forced a sideout before Paisley Parker came out with a four-point run in service to give the Eagles a 16-12 advantage and flip the momentum. Angelina Schramm and Owens each had kills in the run.

“Bailey Owens does a good job for us,” Felker said of her sophomore. “We trust her to put the ball away wherever we give it to her. She has done a really good job with that. … She did a good job tonight of putting the ball away and putting pressure on the other team at the net.”

Joplin didn’t relinquish the lead until a kill by Avery Caskey and a net violation put Belton on top 22-21. The Eagles tied it on a kill from Emma Floyd before a Pirate error and a block by Floyd gave Joplin the 24-22 advantage. Floyd earned a kill and Parker added an ace to close out the second set.

“Sometimes throughout the season, we have been on the other side of that where we didn’t maintain our composure through the adversity,” Felker said. “I think we are at a place right now where we can do that and push through that together.”

Lawrence swung the momentum in favor of the Eagles early in the third set with five points in a service run to make the score 12-6. Schramm added a block to force the sideout, while adding two kills in the run. Abby Edwards also had a pair of kills. 

Joplin held its multi-point lead before pulling away late before Schramm ended the set and match with a kill.

“I think it was huge for our confidence going into Monday,” Felker said about finishing the match in a sweep. “We knew they were going to be tough and I think that we were able to push through that and grind it out was big for our confidence.”

Floyd led Joplin with 10 kills and a block, while Lawrence and Schramm each had nine kills. Schramm added two blocks and two digs, with Lawrence adding nine digs. Owens had six kills, a block and a dig. Cooper had 20 assists and two digs, while Parker had 19 digs and three aces and Jayla Hunter had 17 digs.

DISTRICT VOLLEYBALL: Carl Junction, Webb City advance to title game

 

CARL JUNCTION, Mo. — For the third straight year, Carl Junction and Webb City will meet with a district championship on the line.

Top-seeded Carl Junction defeated fourth-seeded McDonald County 3-0 and second-seeded Webb City handled third-seeded Nevada 3-0 in semifinal matches of the Class 4 District 12 volleyball tournament on Saturday at CJHS. 

Both teams earned convincing wins, as the Bulldogs defeated the Mustangs 25-9, 25-9, 25-14 and the Cardinals topped the Tigers 25-13, 25-12, 25-19.

The district championship match is slated for 6 p.m. on Monday at Carl Junction. 

“It’s pretty exciting,” Carl Junction coach Cheryl Sharples said. “Our kids have been there before and they have that experience. We don’t have to worry about inexperience, so we like our chances. I think both teams have come to expect to meet in this game. That’s great because it’s always such a great rivalry. We’re ready for Monday. We’ll be ready to go.” 

The Bulldogs beat the Cardinals in last year’s district title game after Webb City topped Carl Junction in the 2019 championship match. 

Now, the rivals will meet again with the season on the line. 

“It’s always exciting to be in the district championship,” Webb City coach Rhonda Lawrence said. “The last few years it’s been us and CJ. We won two years ago and they won last year. So we hope it’s our turn this year. We’ll have to play well to do it. They have a solid team. I hope we play as well as we can.” 

The Bulldogs won two regular-season meetings with the Cardinals this fall. 

It will be the fourth straight season the two programs have met in the postseason, as Carl Junction knocked off Webb City in the district semifinals in ’18.

The Bulldogs are in a district title match for the sixth straight season, with titles in ’20, ’18 and ’17 and losses in ’19 and ’16.

 

CARL JUNCTION 3, MCDONALD COUNTY 0

The Bulldogs (24-10) gained all of the momentum early in each set against the Mustangs. The hosts never relinquished it either.

“I really challenged them to control the level of their play on the court,” Sharples said. “I felt like we were pretty crisp and clean tonight. That’s what we needed to do.”

Sharples noted the Bulldogs are close to peaking at the right time. 

“We’re getting pretty close to doing that,” Sharples said. “We’ve had some changes in our lineup and so we’ve been developing that lately. Now it’s time to peak.”

Junior outside hitter Destiny Buerge recorded 11 kills and eight digs for the Bulldogs, while sophomore middle hitter Kylie Scott added 10 kills. Freshman outside hitter Karissa Chase contributed six kills and two blocks. 

Junior setter Logan Jones handed out 30 assists and also contributed five aces and five kills. Senior libero Olivia Vediz had nine digs and five aces.

In the first set, the Bulldogs led 11-7 when they rattled off 10 straight points. Maggie Brown had three aces during the run.

Three aces from Vediz gave Carl Junction a 12-5 lead in the second set. Later, a pair of kills from Buerge gave the Bulldogs a 20-8 advantage en route to the set victory.

In the third set, the Bulldogs led 15-10 when they closed out the final set and the match on a 10-4 surge. 

Playing their final match for McDonald County (7-23-1) were seniors Lana Yang, Kirklyn Kasischke, Kloe Myers and Abby Wiseman. 

 

WEBB CITY 3, NEVADA 0

Like the Bulldogs, the Cardinals (18-12-2) simply took care of business. 

“We did not play well at Carthage on Tuesday, so it was nice to see us play the way we played today,” Lawrence said. “I’m proud of the way they played. They were a little more meticulous about things.”

Lawrence noted playing in the always-tough Central Ozark Conference pays off in postseason matches against non-conference opponents like Nevada.

“I think that’s obvious,” Lawrence said about being battle-tested. “Unfortunately, a lot of teams in our conference are in the same districts and we beat each other out in the postseason. But our matches in the COC are a notch higher than what some of these teams are used to seeing, and that always helps us this time of the year.” 

In the opening set, Nevada hung tough early, but Webb City led 15-9 and 20-11 en route to victory.

The Cardinals snatched the momentum right away in the second set, leading 15-4.

Webb City scored the first eight points of the third set and never looked back.  

Senior outside hitter Kearston Galardo and junior outside hitter Brenda Lawrence led Webb City’s attack at the net with 10 kills apiece. 

Senior middle hitter Makenzie Storm added nine kills and three blocks, while junior outside hitter Kate Brownfield contributed nine digs, six kills and three blocks. Sophomore Aubree Lassiter chipped in three kills, three digs and two blocks.

Junior setter Kyah Sanborn handed out 32 assists and had seven digs. Sophomore libero Sophia Crane had a team-high 15 digs. 

Seniors Grace Barnes, Hadley Bruce, Macy Cussimanio and Taylor Thompson played their final match for Nevada (12-17-1).

NOTE: The District 12 champion will meet the District 11 champion (Willard or Logan-Rogersville) in the sectional round on Oct. 28.

DISTRICT VOLLEYBALL: Carthage punches ticket to district championship with win over Ray-Pec

Top-seeded Carthage faced plenty of adversity in its Class 5 District 12 semifinal matchup against fourth-seeded Raymore-Peculiar, but the Tigers handled it in stride like the top seed should and earned a 25-23, 25-20, 24-26 and 25-21 win over the Panthers on Saturday.

“I don’t think we played our best, but we came out and knew that we could win,” Carthage coach Bradyn Webb said. “That is something that I have tried to instill in our girls’ minds. If you go out and have the mentality that you’re winning, it’s going to work out for you. I do think that they showed that tonight, so I am really happy with how everything worked out.”

Carthage and second-seeded Joplin will meet in the Class 5 District 12 championship at 6 p.m. on Monday.

“We’re going to play a great team no matter what, either Belton or Joplin,” Webb said after her team’s win to open the day. “We have beat Joplin before, but they are a good team. We played them last year in districts, too. I think that if we play them it will be a great game. Our girls are ready and prepared to play whoever we go up against.”

The Tigers (18-13-1) found themselves trailing the Panthers 23-19 late in the first set before rattling off the final six points to earn the come-from-behind win. Abby Holderbaum started the rally with a kill to force a sideout. Riann Schwartz took service for Carthage, with Sydnee Dudolski earning a kill to trim the lead to two before an ace from Schwartz cut the lead to 23-22. Three straight attack errors on the Panthers closed out the set in favor of the Tigers.

“We took it one point at a time and put the pressure on Ray-Pec,” Webb said. “It worked out in our favor.”

The second set played out much like the first, as neither team gained much separation until a kill by Dudolski and an ace by Olivia Bourgault put Carthage on top 15-11. The Panthers fought their way back to take a 17-16 lead on a kill from Isabel Bowen, but the Tigers responded with three straight points, including a kill from Sophia Shannon, to build a 19-17 advantage. A block from Holderbaum followed by a Panther error pushed the lead to 24-19, with Grace Pickering closing out the second set with a kill moments later.

Carthage trailed 21-17 late in the third set after a kill from Tia Storms and a block by Kylee Harris. An attack error forced a sideout and Carthage answered with a five-point service run by Raven Probert, which included an ace and kills from Holderbaum and Mia Camarillo, giving the Tigers a 23-21 lead. Ray-Pec used three Tigers’ errors to regain the momentum and earned their first set win after consecutive kills from Storms and Avery Lowe.

The Tigers didn’t let the defeat slow down their momentum. Ray-Pec led 13-11 in the fourth set when a kill from Pickering forced a sideout and Ava Bourgault followed with a three-point service run, which included a pair of aces, shifted the momentum with Carthage leading 15-13.

Ray-Pec picked up a point on a sideout before Dudolski hammered down a kill for an immediate sideout. With Pickering in service, Holderbaum earned back to back kills before a net violation put the Tigers on top 19-14.

“We have been working on serving,” Webb said. “We haven’t been very consistent with it in the past. Now, that is our focus—we may not be the most athletic team, but we can get a serve in and it can be aggressive.”

Kills from Dudolski, Shannon and Pickering pushed the lead to 24-19 put the game out of reach, with the Tigers finishing off the win minutes later.

Pickering had 13 kills and four digs, while Dudolski had 12 kills and 16 digs to lead Carthage. Holderbaum had eight kills and three digs. Olivia Bourgault had 16 digs, three aces and two kills, while Ava Bourgault had 12 kills and four aces. Schwartz finished with 11 digs and two aces.

“Abby Holderbaum did a really good job on the right side,” Webb said. “We knew that we could use her a lot against Ray-Pec, and she came to play. … Grace fills a huge role for us … She is a very good utility player that we can go to when someone else is struggling. Sydnee Dudolski probably played the best defensive game I have seen her play this whole year.”