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CROSS COUNTRY: After gritty district performance, Joplin once again taking full boys team to state

In the days leading up to the Class 5 District 2 cross country meet, Joplin coach Dustin Dixon wasn’t sure if his boys squad had enough firepower to finish in the top four of the team standings.

Simply put, the district was loaded with some of the state’s best squads, including conference rival Nixa, who beat the Eagles just 10 days earlier at the Central Ozark Conference Meet.

But on Saturday at Nixa’s Inman Intermediate School, Dixon’s Eagles got the job done.

Joplin finished fourth in the team standings, advancing the full team to the state championships. The state-qualifying teams were Kickapoo (49), Raymore-Peculiar (79), Rockhurst (82) and Joplin (98). 

“That was the best district in Missouri and it wasn’t close,” Dixon said. “There were six teams in that district that are ranked in the top 10 in the state of Missouri.”

Joplin edged Lee’s Summit West (103) and Nixa (104) for the final spot.

“Nixa was the fifth-best team in Missouri on paper and Lee’s Summit West was the 10th best team in the state on paper,” Dixon noted. “We didn’t have a great day, but we beat both of those teams. Nixa kicked our behinds at the conference meet, but I think that refocused us. On Saturday, we didn’t run great, but we ran good enough. And that’s a testament to our kids. It shows that we’ve got a pretty solid group here.” 

Dixon added he was proud of his team’s gritty performance.

“It’s so easy to say that if we can get everyone to have a great race on the same day then we’ll achieve our goals or we’ll win the meet,” Dixon said. “But more often than not, you simply just need to have a bunch of B-pluses and you can still have a great team score. If you coach long enough, you know that rarely will you have five, six or seven runners run at an A-plus level on the same day. Honestly, we just didn’t run that well. Every one of our boys, except for Grey Edwards, was slower than they were at the conference meet. We’ve talked about what it means to raise the floor so that the program and the team is still pretty darn good on bad days. That’s where we were on Saturday.” 

Chance Tindall

It’s the third straight season Joplin is taking a full boys team to the state championships.

“We’ve gone from never qualifying for the state championships to qualifying in three straight years,” Dixon noted. “I think this year’s team is the best of the three that have qualified, and they were on the fringe of not making it to state because the district was so tough this year. That speaks to what this team has worked to do.” 

Joplin senior Hobbs Campbell finished fourth at the district meet with a time of 15 minutes, 36 seconds. A Kansas commit, Campbell finished 14th at last year’s state meet. Campbell is seeded fifth in this year’s Class 5 race. 

“If Hobbs gets fifth, we’ll be very pleased with that,” Dixon said, noting the strong competition. “Hobbs is stronger on the track than he is on the grass. Don’t get me wrong, Hobbs is a hell of a cross country runner, but there are four boys in the state of Missouri that have separated themselves from the field. We’ll see what happens.”

Three members of the JHS team have a shot at state medalist honors (top 25) — Campbell, sophomore Chance Tindall and junior Ian Horton.

“I really think we have a shot at having three medalists, so that’s our goal,” Dixon said.

Cylee Gilreath

At the district meet, Tindall finished 10th, while Horton was 13th.

Rounding out Joplin’s top seven are juniors Parker Durham and Aidan Koch and sophomores Grey Edwards and Coby Sampson. Edwards took 25th at the district meet, while Durham was 46th, Koch was 53rd and Sampson was 75th.

“The highest team finish we’ve ever had at the state meet is ninth and I think we’re going to be better than that this weekend,” Dixon said. “We’ve raised the floor. Even on our bad days, we’re still pretty good. If we want a shot at a state trophy, we’ll have to beat at least two of the teams that beat us on Saturday. But this year was never about getting a state trophy. Last year we graduated three boys who are now running in college and this team is still going back to Columbia. That’s something to be proud of.”

Joplin has two qualifiers on the girls side — junior Allie Keizer and senior Cylee Gilreath.

“Allie has battled some injuries, but she’s going to state for the third year in a row and that’s awesome for her,” Dixon said. “Cylee set really high goals at the beginning of the year. She’s run great this season and it’s really special to see her qualify for the first time as a senior.”

At the district meet, Keizer finished 12th and Gilreath was 18th. 

The MSHSAA Class 5 Cross Country Championships will be held on Friday at Gans Creek Cross Country Course in Columbia. 

The girls race is scheduled for 9 a.m., with the boys to follow at 9:45. 

 

Pictured is the Joplin High School cross country team. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

 

SOFTBALL: Area players named to Class 4 all-region team

Listed below is the all-region softball team for Class 4 District 7 & 8. 

 

Class 4 – District 7/8 All-Region Team 

1st Team

Pitchers

Neveah Dodson – McDonald County

Peyton Eaton – Nevada

Katelynn Landewee – Kearney

Catchers

Ella Heathman – Nevada

Morgan Shields – Platte County

Infielders

Jadyn Barnes – Kearney

Jacie Frencken- McDonald County

Avery Davis – Smithville

Reece Anderson – Willard

TaKayla Lawson – Platte County

Outfielders

Lilly Wornson – Smithville

Macy Morrow – Kearney

Kara Phillips – Nevada

DP/UT

Mackenzie Shields – Platte County

At-Large

Brooke Paalhar – Kearney

Madi Olds – Carl Junction

BOYS SWIMMING: Local squads compete at SWMO Championships

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Local boys swim teams fared well at the SWMO Championships on Saturday.

In a field of 19 teams, Carthage finished fifth in the team standings, while Webb City was eighth and Joplin was 10th. 

The top three teams were Glendale (486), Kickapoo (347) and West Plains (278).

 

CARTHAGE HIGHLIGHTS

Carthage’s 200-yard medley relay team of Kellen Frieling, Braxton McBride, William Wright and Eli Cox placed third in 1:44.

The Tigers were fourth in the 400 freestyle relay, with McBride, Cox, Wright and Frieling competing.

McBride placed sixth in the 50 freestyle with a time of 23.07 seconds.

Wright took eighth in the 200 IM and was also ninth in the 500 free.

The Tigers finished 10th in the 200 freestyle relay

 

WEBB CITY HIGHLIGHTS

Webb City’s Micah Brouwer took third in the 100-yard breaststroke with a time of 1:03.

The Cardinals placed fourth in the 200 medley relay, with Judah Ritchie, Brouwer, Emiliano Vasquez and Cody Herndon recording a time of 1:46.

Brouwer placed seventh in the 200 IM and Ritchie took eighth in the 100 backstroke.

The Cardinals were 10th in the 400 free relay and 11th in the 200 free relay.

Maddox Wood finished fourth in the diving competition. 

 

JOPLIN HIGHLIGHTS

Nathan Wardlow finished third in two events, the 200 IM with a time of 2:04 and the 500 freestyle in 4:58.

The Eagles finished fifth in the 200 medley relay, with Parker Hinman, Wardlow, Ian Vermillion and Zane Newman competing.

Joplin’s 400 freestyle relay finished eighth, with Newman, Vermillion, Hinman and Wardlow swimming.

Hinman placed fifth in the 100 backstroke, while Newman took ninth in the 50 free.

 

CROSS COUNTRY: McAuley makes history, both teams advance; TJ, CHC athletes qualify for state

HERMITAGE, Mo. — It was a historic day for the McAuley Catholic cross country program.

By finishing in the top four of the team standings at the Class 1 District 2 meet at Lake Pomme de Terre, McAuley’s boys and girls both advanced full squads to next weekend’s state meet in Columbia.

“It was neat to see,” Warriors coach Andy Youngworth said of both teams celebrating state berths. “When I came to McAuley, my goal was to go to the state meet. I didn’t know what the timetable would be. I didn’t expect it with the girls in the second year. I thought the boys could do it this year because I knew we had some really good pieces. The most important thing is the kids have bought into trusting the process. The kids really had a good summer. I don’t know how we’ll do next week, but we made it to state, so the pressure is off.”

Pictured is the McAuley Catholic boys cross country team. Courtesy photo.

McAuley’s boys finished second in the team standings with 88 points. Hermitage was the team champion with 27 points, while Blue Eye (100) and Galena (103) also advanced full teams by finishing in the top four.

“We have run enough against some of these schools, so I kind of knew where we could be,” Youngworth added. “On paper, we had a chance, but you still have to run the race. Hermitage is a really tough course.”

Sophomore Michael Parrigon led the McAuley boys by finishing 11th with a time of 18:21. Freshman Trae Veer placed 16th (18:50) and senior Phillip Motazedi was 18th (18:55). 

McAuley seniors Joe Staton and Drew Zeb finished 32nd and 33rd, respectively. Also competing for the Warriors were Alex Bohachick (55th) and Connor Taffner (65th).

“Michael has been battling a knee injury from soccer, so he’s not where he was before he got hurt,” Youngworth said. “Other teams had better up front runners, but we just had more depth. Michael and Phillip ran well, and Trae has been so consistent. Joe Staton and Drew Zeb both ran great races. I can’t say enough about our seniors, including Kable Reichardt. They’ve all been great leaders.”

The McAuley girls finished third in the team standings with 76 points. Liberal (39), Fordland (48) and Wheatland (96) also qualified full teams.

“The girls race was held first, so our girls team is actually the first team ever in school history to qualify for the state cross country meet,” Youngworth said. “In Class 1, it’s really hard to fill a girls team. This is the first year we’ve had enough girls to field a full girls team. I always thought if we could get five girls who would work really hard, especially with someone as good as Kendall Ramsey is, we could eventually get there.”

McAuley junior Kendall Ramsey finished third with a time of 22:49.

Also for the Warriors, Marbellie Villanueva finished 18th, Brooke Righter was 38th and Samantha Perrin and Miriam Kramer were 41st and 42nd, respectively.

“Kendall ran great,” Youngworth noted. “We had a big surprise with our No. 2 runner (Villanueva). She was the only kid on either team who ran their best time of the year. Where our other three girls (Brooke, Samantha and Miriam) finished was beneficial. None of those girls ran during the summer. We did everything from ground zero, some of our girls played volleyball and missed some time, so I’m really happy for our girls. All of these girls will be back next year, too.”

McAuley Catholic wasn’t the only local school to have athletes qualify for state, as Thomas Jefferson and College Heights also had individuals advance.

Pictured is the McAuley Catholic girls cross country team. Courtesy photo.

ATTEBERRY WINS BOYS RACE

Thomas Jefferson senior Kip Atteberry used a strong finish to win the Class 1 District 2 boys race. Atteberry toured the 5K course in 16:49 and Hermitage’s Justin Horn was second in 16:54.

In addition to Atteberry, the Cavaliers had two other individual state qualifiers.

Thomas Jefferson freshman London Rodriguez finished ninth in 18:01 and Braden Honeywell-Lynch was 15th in 18:41.

College Heights Christian had one qualifier, as freshman Colton McMillan finished 30th, earning the final state berth. 

On the girls side, Thomas Jefferson’s Sarah Mueller and Samantha Seto both advanced to state by finishing eighth and 23rd, respectively. 

 

CHC GIRLS ADVANCE IN CLASS 2

HERMITAGE, Mo. — Competing in Class 2 due to the championship factor related to recent success, the College Heights Christian advanced its full girls team to the state meet by finishing fourth at the district meet.

The qualifying girls teams in Class 2 District 2 were Stockton (61), Mansfield (66), New Covenant (80) and College Heights (83).

College Heights’ Jayli Johnson (21:55) and Marla Anderegg (22:07) placed ninth and 10th, respectively, in the girls race to earn all-district honors. 

Also for the Cougars, Madelynn Jordan finished 33rd, Jesalin Bever was 37th, Madi Carson took 50th and Emmy Carson was 55th.

 

STATE MEET IS NEXT SATURDAY

The MSHSAA Cross Country Championships will be held on Nov. 5 for athletes in Class 1-3 at Gans Creek Cross Country Course in Columbia. 

 

FULL RESULTS: MSHSAA Class 1 – District 2 2022 – Meet Results (milesplit.com)

MSHSAA Class 2 – District 2 2022 – Complete (milesplit.com)

CROSS COUNTRY: Joplin boys advance full team, local individuals qualify for state in Class 5

NIXA, Mo. — The Joplin Eagles will be taking a full boys team to the state championships.

The Eagles finished fourth in the team standings at the Class 5 District 2 meet on Saturday at Inman Intermediate School.

At each district meet, the top four teams and the top 30 individuals advance to the state meet.

The qualifying teams were Kickapoo (49), Raymore-Peculiar (79), Rockhurst (82) and Joplin (98).

It’s the third straight season the Joplin boys have qualified a full team to state under the direction of coach Dustin Dixon.

Joplin was once again led by senior standout Hobbs Campbell. A future Kansas Jayhawk, Campbell finished fourth with a time of 15:36.

Kickapoo’s Tyler Harris was the district champion with a time of 15:14. 

Joplin’s Chance Tindall finished 10th in 16:06, while Ian Horton was 13th in 16:11.

Also competing for the Eagles were Grey Edwards (25th), Parker Durham (46th), Aidan Koch (53rd) and Coby Sampson (75th). 

On the girls side, the qualifying teams were Ray-Pec (28), Kickapoo (116), Lee’s Summit West (129) and Nixa (142). 

There were five local individual qualifiers.

Neosho’s Chloe Wood finished fifth, Joplin’s Allie Keizer placed 12th, Carthage’s Maggie Boyd was 17th, Joplin’s Cylee Gilreath finished 18th and Neosho’s Riley Kemna placed 22nd.

Raymore-Peculiar’s Ashlyn Smith was the medalist with a time of 18:40.

The MSHSAA Cross Country Championships will be held on Nov. 4 for athletes in Class 4-5 at Gans Creek Cross Country Course in Columbia.

 

FULL RESULTS: MSHSAA Class 5 – District 2 2022 – Meet Results (milesplit.com)

CROSS COUNTRY: Webb City advances full squads to state meet

NIXA, Mo. — Led by a pair of individual district champions, Webb City is sending two full squads to the state cross country championships.

Webb City’s boys and girls both finished in the top four of the team standings at the Class 4 District 2 meet on Saturday at Inman Intermediate School.

At each district meet, the top four teams and the top 30 individuals advance to the state meet.

Webb City’s boys finished third in the team standings with 122 points. West Plains (61) and Willard (77) were first and second. Rolla finished fourth with 129 points.

It’s the fourth straight season the Webb City boys are taking a full squad to state. 

Webb City junior Evan Stevens was the individual medalist with a time of 15:57. 

Also for the Cardinals, Mason Hedger took 12th to earn all-district honors, while Andrew Dawson was 31st, Spencer Kendall finished 33rd and Ricardo Arrieta was 45th. 

As far as local individual qualifiers, Monett’s Julio Cruz placed sixth (16:43) and his teammate Victor Salas was 24th. Carl Junction’s Isaac Willoughby finished 25th and McDonald County’s Hunter Leach was 27th. 

The Webb City girls placed fourth in the team standings with 101 points. The top three teams were West Plains (49), Rolla (91) and Bolivar (101).

Webb City senior standout Abi Street won the girls race with a time of 18:53. 

Webb City’s Brooke Hedger placed ninth and Rachel Miller was 25th. Both earned all-district recognition. 

Also competing for the Cardinals were Holly Capron (33rd), Emily Countryman (36th) and Kristina Bundy (52nd).

Nevada’s Avery Morris placed 15th and her teammate Allie Rains was 29th. Monett’s Mary Jastal finished 30th. 

The MSHSAA Cross Country Championships will be held on Nov. 4 for athletes in Class 4-5 at Gans Creek Cross Country Course in Columbia. 

 

FULL RESULTS: MSHSAA Class 4 – District 2 2022 – Meet Results (milesplit.com)

 

DISTRICT SOCCER: Webb City blanks Ruskin in district quarterfinals

WEBB CITY, Mo. — The top-seeded Webb City Cardinals took care of business and dispatched Kansas City Ruskin 6-0 in the district quarterfinals on Saturday at Cardinal Stadium.

Webb City started out slowly against Ruskin with the Cardinals’ first goal coming with 16 minutes, 7 seconds remaining in the first half on a penalty kick from senior Alex Flores.

Flores scored his second goal late in the first half and sent the Cardinals into halftime with a 2-0 advantage.

The Cardinals scored their last four goals over a 14-minute stretch of the second half with two more from Flores, including his second penalty kick, and goals from junior Josh White and sophomore Ryan White.

“We expected a tough game, and credit to Ruskin,” Webb City coach Nick Harmon said. “They were prepared, defended really well, and covered the space really well and made it tough for us. Luckily, we were able to get a couple in the first half. We made some adjustments at halftime, then got a few more in the second half. Proud of the boys.”

Webb City wore down Ruskin in the second half, and the Cardinals were able to give their entire varsity roster a chance Saturday.

“We were able to rotate a lot of our depth guys in and they performed well,” Harmon said. “We were able to keep the tempo up in the game. That’s critical looking forward to next week in the semifinal round.”

After shutting out McDonald County 1-0 on Thursday and Ruskin 6-0 on Saturday, the Cardinals accumulated nearly 180 minutes of scoreless soccer for their last two opponents.

“Connor (Black) didn’t have a whole lot of work to do in the back today, but when we needed him, he was there,” Harmon said. “The back line defended pretty well and contained the speed Ruskin had on the counterattack. Proud of the boys for the clean sheet and hopefully we can keep it up.”

Webb City improved to 11-11 overall entering Tuesday’s district semifinal match against Grandview (12-8).

Grandview defeated Bolivar 2-1 in the second quarterfinal of the day Saturday, and the Bulldogs enter the semifinals on a hot streak with wins in seven of their last eight matches.

Webb City and Grandview kick off in the first semifinal at 5 p.m. Tuesday.

DISTRICT SOCCER: CJ pushes No. 2 Willard hard in district quarters

WEBB CITY, Mo. — Over the span of a few days in late October, Central Ozark Conference schools Carl Junction and Willard played a pair of matches with a similar final score.

In their second match, Willard defeated Carl Junction 2-1 Saturday to advance to the district semifinals on Tuesday against Belton and end the Bulldogs’ season at 5-19 overall.

“That’s the second time we played them this week,” Carl Junction coach Ed Miller said. “We lost to them 4-3 on Tuesday, then we turn around tonight and lose 2-1. We had some chances again to score tonight. I thought we had a better first half, as far as possession and momentum, as far as putting pressure on them. In the second half, they came out and passed the ball and neutralized us a little bit. We got a couple chances, but we couldn’t finish.

“Proud of the guys’ effort. They did a good job today, and a good job finishing the season. I thought we improved as the season went on, and we just needed to score some more goals.”

Willard senior forward Caleb Kuchta opened the scoring with a goal 7:43 in the match and Carl Junction sophomore Gavin Cowger earned the Bulldogs a 1-all score at halftime with his penalty kick goal 14:46 remaining before the half.

Willard junior Marseli Popesku scored the winning goal with 28:35 remaining in regulation.

The Bulldogs made their efforts for an equalizer, but Willard senior goalkeeper Chris Massey and the Tigers managed to keep Carl Junction at bay for the victory.

Carl Junction’s seniors played their final games Saturday.

“We have seven guys and I think four or five of them have played quite a bit all four years,” Miller said. “They’re good kids. They came out and worked hard, and they’ve put the time in to try and improve the program and make it better.

“It has got better each year as we’ve progressed through, but it’s not showing in the win column so much. We have five wins this year, but we were on the short side of a lot of 1-0, 2-1, 3-2 games. Just trying to find the back of the net. I thought we outplayed some of those teams. We just didn’t come up with some goals. We’ve improved on the field and as a possession team.”

Willard (15-10) plays Belton (9-9) in the second semifinal Tuesday. Belton defeated McDonald County 2-0 in the fourth and final match of quarterfinal Saturday.

STATE VOLLEYBALL: Seneca falls to Eldon in quarterfinal round

SENECA, Mo. — This historic season for Seneca volleyball came to an end on Saturday in the quarterfinal round of the Class 3 state tournament after suffering a 3-1 loss to Eldon.

The Indians opened the contest with an opening-set win before the Mustangs rattled off victories in the following three sets to knock off Seneca 27-29, 25-20, 25-10 and 25-18.

“I thought that we played very, very well,” Seneca coach Rachel Ayo said. “This deep into the postseason, you’re not going to see a bad team. Eldon is a very good team. We played really well in the first set. But, in the second, third and fourth set, we just made a lot of errors. A lot of errors that we normally don’t make. Honestly, that is what decided the match tonight—who errored more than the other team.”

Seneca’s season ends with a 23-12-1 record, with the Indians accomplishing a lot of firsts in a year they finished as one of the eight best teams in Class 3.

“They won the program’s first conference title since 1976, won the first district title ever and was the first team to make it out of the sectional round,” Ayo said. “They just continued to make history. It would have been nice to go to Cape Girardeau and continue that history, but I told the girls in the locker room that there is nothing to hang your heads about. We worked our butts off this year and did what no other team here has been able to accomplish in the past. They need to hold their heads high because they had a great season.”

The Indians graduate five seniors from this year’s team—Brylee Sage, Tatum White, Parker Long, Braxton Raulston and Amber Garrison.

“We will definitely miss them,” Ayo said. “We had five great seniors this year who were great leaders on the floor. Those are going to be some big roles to fill and not just the volleyball skill level.”

Eldon moves on to the Class 3 Final Four with a matchup against Blair Oaks (31-3-1) on Thursday in Cape Girardeau, Missouri.

Long finished with 20 kills and 20 digs to lead Seneca, while Raulston added 11 kills, 11 digs and five aces in service. Sage had 44 assists, while Jera Jameson closed with 13 kills and Ella Graham finished with nine digs.

The opening set started in favor of Seneca after a seven-point service run from Raulston, which included three aces as well as two kills from Jameson and a kill from Long, gave SHS an 11-3 advantage. Eldon scored 12 of the next 18 points to trim the lead to two, 17-15, off the back of a kill from Audrey Dinwiddie and a block by Hannah Opie. Long earned kills on six of the next seven points for the Indians to push the lead back to 24-20. The Mustangs rallied hard on Dinwiddie’s service, scoring four straight to take a 25-24 lead. Seneca took the advantage on a kill from Raulston followed by a kill from Jameson to go up 27-26 before closing it out off a kill from Jameson and an attack error.

Opie went on an early five-point run in service early in the second set to give the Mustangs a 7-2 advantage. Seneca chipped away at the lead before tying things up at 12s on an ace from Raulston, gaining the lead on a Mustangs’ error and building a 14-12 advantage on another ace by Raulston. Eldon scored the next five points to go up 17-14 and held onto the lead through the remainder of the set.

Seneca trailed 9-8 in the third set after a kill from Garrison and an ace from White, but a six-point service run from Dinwiddie followed up by an eight-point run from Haley Henderson ended the third set abruptly with the Mustangs taking a 2-1 advantage. Emily Davis had three kills to fill out Henderson’s run.

The Indians held a 7-4 lead in the fourth set after an ace from Jameson, but a sideout kill from Jaci Mueller sent Mueller to the service line for a three-point run filled out by a kill from Dinwiddie, an ace and a kill from Corin Davis to give Eldon the 8-7 advantage. The Mustangs were up four before a kill from Jameson and a kill from Long ultimately trimmed the deficit to one, 16-15. That was as close as Seneca got to the lead, with Mueller adding a kill and an ace, and a tip kill from Dinwiddie, to push the lead back to four, 19-15. Eldon scored nine of the last 12 to clinch the win in advance.

FINAL FOUR BOUND: Webb City wins five-set thriller, advances to state semifinals for first time

WEBB CITY, Mo. — The Webb City Cardinals wouldn’t be denied.

Webb City started fast and finished strong en route to a thrilling and hard-fought 3-2 victory over Helias Catholic on Saturday afternoon in a quarterfinal contest of the MSHSAA Class 4 state volleyball tournament inside a packed Cardinal Dome.

The Cardinals beat the Crusaders 25-11, 24-26, 17-25, 25-21, 15-10 to advance to the Final Four for the first time in school history. 

“This is incredible,” Webb City senior outside hitter Brenda Lawrence said while her teammates celebrated with family and friends close by. “We made history today. I think from the very beginning of the season we’ve wanted this so bad. The unity was there, the team was ready and we were in the right mindset today. We knew it wasn’t going to be easy and we knew they wanted it just as bad as we did. We knew we had to win it as a team, not as individuals.” 

Webb City senior Brenda Lawrence serves against Helias on Saturday. Photos by Shawn Fowler.

Webb City (32-4-2) will meet Incarnate Word (28-12) in the Class 4 semifinals at 2 p.m. on Thursday at the Show Me Center in Cape Girardeau. 

“I’m super excited and I can’t be more grateful to the kids for buying in,” Cardinals coach Rhonda Lawrence said. “I’m so proud of them. From the time they’ve been little, they bought in and they wanted to be here. I’m so happy for them to get the chance to show out. They deserve it. They’ve put in a lot of years of work. We’ve been supported by the community all season long. They continue to push us. Our student section today…you couldn’t ask for more.”

A trip to the state finals has been a longtime goal for this year’s group, Coach Lawrence noted.

“From the beginning of the season, we talked about goals,” Coach Lawrence said. “We wanted to win the conference, but we stumbled against Nixa. We had to use that to get better. Every loss has made us better this year. But the Final Four was the ultimate goal from Day 1.”

In order to advance, the Cardinals had to overcome a 2-1 deficit, as the visiting Crusaders appeared in control of the match after winning the second and third sets. 

“I thought we had the momentum after the second and third sets, but Webb City just would not be denied in their home gym,” Helias coach David Harris said. “They served very tough, their serve-receive was really good and their hitters didn’t make many unforced errors. We had some missed serves and some unforced errors. In the fifth set, Webb City came out on fire and they kind of served us off the court. That’s the best serving team we’ve faced all year.”

Backed by a raucous home crowd, Webb City stormed out of the gates in the opening set. The Cardinals, who never trailed in the first set, held leads of 4-0 and 8-4. A kill from junior outside hitter Aubree Lassiter and a pair of service points from senior setter Kyah Sanborn gave the Cardinals a 17-9 advantage.

Brenda Lawrence served three aces late in the opening set before senior outside hitter Kate Brownfield slammed a kill on set point.

Webb City wasn’t able to hold on to the momentum, however, as Helias stormed back and won the second and third sets to take a 2-1 lead.

The Crusaders led 21-11 in the second set before the Cardinals rallied. Webb City used a 12-2 run to tie the set at 23. A kill from Brenda Lawrence briefly gave the Cardinals the lead, but the Crusaders rattled off three straight points to take the second set, with Chapel Dobbs serving an ace and Josie Morasch slamming a set-ending kill. 

The Crusaders led 11-3 and 20-12 en route to winning the third set. 

Trailing 2-1 in the match, Webb City had to win the fourth set to keep the season alive. And the Cardinals did just that.

“We knew if we played our game and went to our strengths, we really had a better team and a better overall balanced attack,” Coach Lawrence said. “We had to get back to doing that. We needed to play with more aggression.” 

In the fourth set, Webb City never trailed after taking a 5-4 advantage. The Cardinals took a 15-11 lead after kills from freshman Jaeli Rutledge, Brownfield and Sanborn. Late kills from Sanborn and Brownfield sent the match to a deciding fifth set.

In the final set, Webb City took the lead for good on junior libero Sophia Crane’s ace that made it 4-2.

Webb City libero Sophia Crane had 23 digs in Saturday’s match against Helias.

Brenda Lawrence came alive at the net, hammering home three kills to extend the hosts’ cushion. An ace from Sanborn gave the Cardinals a 10-3 lead.

The Crusaders (29-7-3) didn’t go down quietly, but the Cardinals were the first team to 15. With that, the Cardinals were also the team celebrating a historic win.

“In the fifth set, you know you need to get on it quick,” Coach Lawrence said. “You’ve got to be on your game. Brenda got real ticked off in the fourth set. She went off in the fifth set. That was one of the toughest games we’ve had all year. I think it made us better.”

Brenda Lawrence compiled 15 kills, 10 digs and six aces, while Brownfield had 19 digs and nine kills.

Lassiter contributed five kills, six digs and four solo blocks, while Rutledge had six kills and two blocks.

Sanborn compiled 33 assists, 12 digs, five kills, three aces and two blocks. Crane recorded a team-high 23 digs and three aces, while senior Jenna Noel chipped in 11 digs and sophomore Kirra Long had two solo blocks.

Kate Brownfield hits at the net against Helias.

The Cardinals, who won a second straight district title and the third in four years, are now guaranteed two more matches this fall. 

On Thursday, a spot in the state championship game will be up for grabs. 

“If we can keep on getting better and if we can keep pushing ourselves, great things are going to happen,” said Coach Lawrence, who is assisted by Jason Brown, Olivia Lewis and Mollie Keene.

Thursday’s other Class 4 semifinal will feature Platte County (26-9) vs. Westminster Christian (30-2-5).

The semifinal losers will play for third place at 8 on Thursday night. The state title match is scheduled for 2 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 4. 

 

Webb City’s players and coaches celebrate after Helias called a timeout during Saturday’s Class 4 quarterfinal at the Cardinal Dome. Photos by Shawn Fowler.

 

Kyah Sanborn sets up a teammate during Saturday’s match against Helias Catholic.

 

Brenda Lawrence lunges for a dig attempt on Saturday.

 

Webb City freshman Jaeli Rutledge goes up for a kill attempt during Saturday’s match.

 

Aubree Lassiter serves against Helias Catholic during the Class 4 quarterfinal.

 

Webb City’s student section is pictured during Saturday’s match. Webb City won the quarterfinal matchup 3-2 to advance to the Final Four in Cape Girardeau. Photos by Shawn Fowler.

 

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: College Heights ends inaugural season with loss to Osceola

A postseason victory was within striking distance for the College Heights Christian Cougars.

But it slipped away.

College Heights Christian suffered a 53-44 setback to Osceola on Friday night in an 8-man football playoff game at Joplin High School. 

College Heights’ inaugural season ends at 1-8.

The back-and-forth game was tied at 22 at halftime and the Indians led 37-36 at the end of the third quarter.

Osceola outscored the Cougars 16-8 in the fourth quarter for the final margin.

In the first quarter, CHC’s Logan Decker completed a pair of touchdown passes to Caleb Quade, a 27-yard strike and a 50-yard completion.

Decker’s 34-yard touchdown pass to Quade in the second period, along with a 2-point conversion, allowed the Cougars to tie the game at 22 late in the first half.

The Indians scored the first two touchdowns of the third period, but the Cougars responded with a pair of scores of their own, as Decker scored on a 15-yard run and Cannon Miller hauled in a 13-yard TD pass.

Osceola took a 45-36 lead in the final frame, but Decker completed a 14-yard touchdown pass to Quade, cutting his team’s deficit to 45-44.

But the Indians scored on a 3-yard run late in the game.

The Cougars had 374 yards of offense, 311 passing and 63 rushing.  

A sophomore, Decker completed 18-of-30 passes for 311 yards and five touchdowns.

Quade caught eight passes for 156 yards and three scores, while Miller had eight receptions for 133 yards and a TD. Bo Sitton and Levi Durling also had receptions.

Decker ran for 34 yards on four attempts, while Miller ran four times for 18 yards and Durling had two carries for 11 yards.

Osceola (2-8) meets Drexel/Miami (8-1) next Friday in a district quarterfinal.

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Neosho suffers season-ending loss to Willard

NEOSHO, Mo. — For the second season in a row, the previously winless Willard Tigers came into Bob Anderson Stadium and defeated the Neosho Wildcats in a Class 5 District 6 quarterfinal contest 43-29 on Friday night.

The Tigers’ offense found the end zone on their first five possessions, while the Wildcats had three first-half possessions fizzle out with an interception and a pair of turnover-on-downs.

Neosho’s Jared Siler picks up a big gain on the ground against Willard on Friday night. Photos by Israel Perez.

Willard built a 35-15 halftime lead behind all 15 points in the second quarter and the Tigers finished the half with 21 unanswered as they scored three touchdowns and Neosho turned it over on downs twice in a row and punted after the Wildcats took a 15-14 lead with 3 minutes, 20 seconds remaining in the first quarter.

Neosho cut the gap to 35-29 halfway through the fourth, but Willard converted a critical fourth-and-1 near midfield with a tough gain by quarterback Russell Roweton and then running back Gary Walker closed out the scoring with a 38-yard touchdown run down the Willard sideline.

“Obviously not the outcome that we want, but our kids fought hard,” Neosho coach Brandon Taute said. “They got up big on us in the first half and we battled back. It would have been really easy to roll over there and our kids didn’t so I’m proud of our effort. In the end, they just out-executed us.”

Willard held the potent offense of the Wildcats to one of their lowest point totals of the season, and the Wildcats had five possessions end in Willard territory without points.

“Obviously, you’ve got to finish those drives in the red zone, especially in playoff football,” Taute said. “We weren’t able to do that tonight and they did most of the time when they got down there. That’s the difference in the game.”

Neosho’s defense showed much improvement in the second half Friday night from the first half and the first time Neosho and Willard played this season to a 79-72 final score — Willard punted three times and turned it over on downs another time, and two Isaiah Green interceptions ended Willard drives.

Their improved play gave the Wildcats’ potent offense a chance to get back into the game and make it a dogfight late.

“Our defense made good adjustments and the kids did a great job flying around,” Taute said. “They made some huge plays there in the second half. I’m extremely proud of the way they kept battling. We fought until the very end, and they just had a little more than us tonight.”

Neosho finished the season 4-6 overall, and the Wildcats’ talented group of seniors played their final games Friday night.

“They’re a great group of kids,” Taute said. “They’ve done a great job leading this group. They’ve done a great job the last two years buying into the culture that we’re building and being everything we’ve asked them to be. We’re going to miss them, and I told them the outcome of the football game doesn’t change the way I feel about them. I still love them, and we’ll move on from here.”

The Wildcats scored their first points on a 29-yard touchdown pass from Quenton Hughes to Green, a duo that connected with each other 109 times for more than 1,400 yards and 16 touchdowns in the regular season.

Outstanding senior running back Jared Siler scored the other three Neosho touchdowns Friday night, and he tallied 1,919 yards and 23 touchdowns on 293 carries in his first nine games. Siler surpassed 2,000 yards on the season with a 17-yard run late in the first quarter.

The Wildcats improved by three wins from Taute’s first season as their head coach.

Willard scored 115 total points in two games against Neosho and 114 in their other eight games so far this season.

The Tigers, 1-9 overall, earned their spot in the semifinals next Friday against district top seed, Central Ozark Conference co-champion, and the top-ranked team in Class 5, Carthage (8-1).

Carthage defeated Willard 55-14 in the final week of the regular season.

 

Neosho’s Isaiah Green looks to avoid the tackle from Willard’s Zach Franks on Friday night at Bob Anderson Stadium. Photo by Israel Perez.

 

Neosho suffered a season-ending setback to Willard on Friday.

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Joplin falls to Raymore-Peculiar in district opener

Fourth-seeded Joplin football’s season came to an end after the Eagles fell 56-42 to fifth-seeded Raymore-Peculiar in the Class 6 District 3 quarterfinals on Friday at Junge Field.

The Eagles fell down into a two-touchdown deficit early and were never able to recover and gain the lead. Joplin tied the game up at 14s but ultimately trailed 28-21 by the intermission. The Panthers scored out of the halftime break to push the lead back to two scores and never relinquished the advantage en route to the district-opening win.

Joplin WR Davin Thomas sprints to end zone during the Eagles’ loss to Ray-Pec on Friday in the district quarterfinals. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

“I thought they just made more plays than we did, honestly,” Joplin coach Curtis Jasper said. “The playmakers on both teams showed who they were. … They have good players. There is no doubt about that, and they are a well-coached team. I thought it was a pretty even matchup, they just made more plays than we did.”

The Eagles finish the season with a 7-3 record with Joplin graduating 22 seniors from this year’s squad.

“I told the seniors that I enjoyed the heck out of coaching them this year,” Jasper said. “I told them the sun will come up tomorrow and life goes on, all of those cliches, but I just loved being around those kids. They make coaching a joy every single day. It’s truly a blessing and a privilege to be their coach, and not just the seniors but the whole team.”

Ray-Pec improves to 6-4 and advances to the district sectional round with a matchup against Nixa on Friday. 

GAME ACTION

Ray-Pec halted Joplin’s opening drive in Panther territory and forced a punt before going to the air early to find success on offense, using a 43-yard reception from QB Zander Dombrowski to WR Jaden Reddell set up a 33-yard touchdown pass from Dombrowski to WR Jaidyn Doss with 8:46 on the clock in first quarter for a 7-0 advantage. 

Joplin again drove the ball down into Ray-Pec territory before a block-in-the-back penalty stalled the drive and forced the Eagles to punt again. Dombroski again found success in the air, completing a 41-yard pass to Doss before RB Thomas Fager ripped off a 16-yard rush and followed up with an 8-yard rushing score to push the lead to 14-0 with 1:49 left in the first quarter.

Joplin reached the scoreboard as the clock hit 0.0 in the first quarter on a 61-yard touchdown score on a flip-pass from QB Hobbs Gooch to WR Davin Thomas on the jet sweep to trim the deficit to 14-7.

The Panthers committed the first turnover of the game when a Dombrowski pass over the middle was tipped and picked off by Joplin DB Cordell Washington. The Eagles’ offense took advantage with Gooch finding Thomas over the middle for a 56-yard touchdown to tie the game at 14s with 10:12 to play in the first half.

The Eagles’ defense forced a Panther punt, but JHS muffed the return with Ray-Pec taking over at the Joplin 27-yard line. On third-down of the ensuing possession, the Panthers jumped back on top after Zombrowski kept the ball on an option on the way to a 21-yard touchdown to give the Panthers a 21-14 advantage near the midway point of the second quarter.

Joplin QB Hobbs Gooch drops back to pass during the Eages’ loss to Ray-Pec in the district opener on Friday. Photo by Shawn Fowler.

Joplin tied the game up on its next possession when Gooch hooked up with WR Terrance Gibson for a 40-yard touchdown pass to make the score 21-21 with 3:30 left in the first half, but it didn’t last long. Ray-Pec drove back down the field and got into the end zone with 8.4 seconds left in the first half on a 5-yard touchdown pass from Dombrowski to Reddell for a 28-21 advantage into the locker room.

The Panthers took possession first out of the intermission and marched down the field before Dombrowski found Fager on a short pass, with Fager breaking tackles on the way to the sideline and into the end zone on the far side of the field for a 35-21 lead with 8:34 to play in the third quarter.

“We were down one score and for them to get a twofor after scoring on the last possession before the half and then come out and score first is exactly what we like to do,” Jasper said of the momentum swing at the change of the half. “We needed a stop on one of those drives and didn’t get it.”

Joplin answered back when RB Quin Renfro hit the edge for a 38-yard touchdown run with 7:20 on the clock in the third period to make the score 35-28, but once again Ray-Pec responded instantly when Doss returned the ensuing kickoff 90 yards for a touchdown to push the lead back out to two scores, 42-28, with 6:43 to play in the third quarter. 

A 23-yard completion to Gibson set up a 3-yard touchdown for Renfro with 3:02 left in the third to trim Joplin’s lead to 42-35 before Ray-Pec used a 9-yard pass from Dombroski to Reddell for a touchdown to kick the lead to 49-35 with 11:43 left in regulation.

Dombroski added a late touchdown from 12 yards out to seal the win for the Panthers with 2:27 left.

Joplin got on the scoreboard for the final time this season when Gooch completed an 11-yard touchdown pass to Thomas.

STATS

Ray-Pec gained 543 yards of offense on 61 plays with Dombroski completing 18-of-23 passes for 308 yards, four touchdowns and an interception. He also added 86 rushing yards and two scores on the ground. Fager carried the ball 23 times for 139 yards and a touchdown. Doss caught eight passes for 149 yards and a touchdown, while Redell hauled in six passes for 121 yards and two touchdowns.

Joplin picked up 532 yards of offense on 60 plays with Gooch completing 16-of-25 passes for 303 yards and four touchdowns. Renfro gained 205 yards on 28 carries, while Thomas caught nine passes for 169 yards and three touchdowns. Gibson caught five passes for 101 yards and a touchdown.

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Carl Junction starts fast, pounds Grandview to advance

GRANDVIEW, Mo. — A fast start propelled fifth-seeded Carl Junction to a convincing 42-13 victory over fourth-seeded Grandview on Friday night in a quarterfinal contest of the Class 4 District 7 tournament.

With the win, Carl Junction (4-6) earned a semifinal date at No. 1 Center (9-0) next Friday.

After going through a rigorous COC schedule, Friday’s game was Carl Junction’s first contest against a Class 4 opponent this season. 

In a clash between Bulldogs, battle-tested Carl Junction scored 21 unanswered points in the opening quarter to take control of the game.

Carl Junction struck first on junior running back Johnny Starks’ 5-yard touchdown run with 9:37 left in the first quarter.

On the ensuing possession, Starks blocked a Grandview punt to give the visitors the ball on the 4-yard line. Starks ran into the end zone on the next play, giving CJ an early 14-0 lead.

Carl Junction took a 21-0 lead when junior QB Dexter Merrell completed a 27-yard touchdown pass to senior wide receiver Ayden Bard.

Grandview got on the board with 1:16 left in the opening frame on Calan Wright’s 18-yard touchdown sprint.

Carl Junction’s Starks blocked a punt for the second time in the first half, with Eli Zavala recovering the loose ball in the end zone. That score and Xavier Perkins’ PAT gave the visitors a 28-7 lead with 5:32 left in the second quarter. 

A 4-yard touchdown plunge by Starks made it 34-7 with just over a minute to play in the first half, as a 2-point conversion attempt failed after the TD. 

There was no scoring in the third period.

The Bulldogs extended their lead on the third play of the fourth quarter on Merrell’s 3-yard QB keeper. Merrell ran it for the 2-point conversion for a 42-7 advantage with 10:37 left.

Grandview’s Mason Johnson hauled in a long touchdown pass with just over a minute to play for the final margin.

 

OTHER DISTRICT ACTION: In other Class 4 District 7 quarterfinals, No. 3 Nevada beat No. 6 Harrisonville 42-21 and No. 2 Lincoln Prep topped No. 7 Warrensburg 35-25.

VOLLEYBALL: Class 1 District 11 team announced

Listed below is the all-tournament team for Class 1 District 11.

 

Class 1 District 11 Volleyball – All District Team

1st Team

  1. Crystal Smith – Jasper – Sophomore
  2. Addie Lawrence – College Heights – Senior
  3. Lauren Ukena – College Heights – Senior
  4. Maddy Colin – College Heights – Junior
  5. Livia Dumm – Jasper – Junior
  6. Ava Masena – College Heights – Senior
  7. Abby Barton – Liberal – Junior

2nd Team

  1. JoJo Wheeler – McAuley – Senior
  2. Lily Black – McAuley – Senior
  3. Shiloh Storm – Jasper – Sophomore
  4. Kloee Williamson – McAuley – Junior
  5. Laney Cawyer – Jasper – Junior
  6. Baily Couch – Liberal – Junior
  7. Nico Carlson – Thomas Jefferson – Senior

SECTIONAL VOLLEYBALL: Seneca sweeps Mountain Grove in state sectionals to keep historic season alive

SENECA, Mo. — Playing with the underdog mentality in front of the home crowd, Seneca added to its historical season as the Indians hosted 29-win Mountain Grove and walked away with a 26-24, 25-22 and 25-12 sweep over the Panthers in the sectional round of the Class 3 state tournament on Thursday.

Seneca seniors Brylee Sage and Amber Garrison defend the net in the Indians’ win over Mountain Grove in the Class 3 sectional round. Photo by Derek Livingston.

Seneca and Mountain Grove (29-8) played a seesaw first set that saw the Indians rally late to go up 1-0. Seneca jumped out to strong starts in the second and third sets, holding off Mountain Grove in the second set before pulling away down the stretch of the third and final set to clinch the first sectional win in program history.

“I don’t even know how much this means to the program because it’s never happened before,” Seneca coach Rachel Ayo said with a smile after the win. “We came in as the underdog. Mountain Grove came in probably thinking they were going to have an easy win because of what they have done this year, but we came out and played well all the way around the board. I wish this team would have shown up and played like this all season because we could have been undefeated.”

THE RIDE CONTINUES

With the win, the Indians’ record improves to 23-11-1 on the season. Seneca again will play hosts in the quarterfinal round of the Class 3 state tournament as the Indians welcome Eldon—who defeated Sullivan in the sectional round—at 3 p.m. on Saturday.

STATS

Senior Brylee Sage finished with 32 assists, three blocks and three aces, while senior Parker Long had 16 kills and 10 digs. Junior Jera Jameson had 12 kills and two aces, while junior Ella Graham had 10 digs and senior Braxton Raulson had nine.

“It means everything to us,” Long said after the win. “We love all of the support our community has given us so far. I can only hope that we keep on going and keep on winning. … This is amazing. I haven’t done anything like this before. It feels great to be the first team in school history to do this. The support our home crowd showed us tonight was phenomenal. I couldn’t ask for anything else.”

THE SWEEP

Seneca senior Parker Long earns a kill with a tip over the defense in the Indians’ win over Mountain Grove on Thursday. Photo by Derek Livingston.

The opening set was a back-and-forth affair from the first serve, with Seneca playing in front by a slim margin for much of the time. The Indians used a three-point service run from senior Tatum White, which was fueled by a kill from senior Amber Garrison and a block from Sage, and a three-point run in service from Long, which included an ace, to build a 13-9 advantage.

“This is the best she has pressed at the net,” Ayo said of Sage’s defensive play up front as the team’s setter. “We have been working with her on it in practice, getting her to press her block, and she showed tonight that she is able to press her block. It was such a huge momentum swing every time she was able to get her blocks.”

Mountain Grove scored eight of the next 11 points to rally all the way back for a 17-16 lead on a kill from junior Jozey MacPherson. Seneca responded with five of the next six points to take a 21-18 lead, but sophomore Raylee Stenzel earned three kills and a block and junior Kaily Wake added a kill over the next seven points to put the Panthers on top 24-22.

A sideout kill from Garrison gave Seneca the serve trailing one, with an attack error, a block by Sage and another attack error on Graham’s service clinching the set win for the Indians.

“That was huge because you want to use the momentum from the first set moving forward into the second and third,” Ayo said. “Being able to win that first set, and doing so on such a positive note, was huge for the momentum. We came out swinging in the start of the second set because of that.”

Seneca junior Jera Jameson earns a kill in the Indians’ win over Mountain Grove on Thursday. Photo by Derek Livingston.

Seneca jumped out to a 5-1 lead in the second set on the back of Sage’s service and ultimately took a 15-8 on back-to-back kills from Garrison and Jameson. After two points from the Panthers, Jameson swung for two more kills for a 17-10 lead and later made the score 18-12 with a sideout kill.

“Jera can dominate at the net in the middle whenever she is on,” Ayo said. “And when she is on, you want to feed her the ball because she is a big threat. She is very hard to defend.”

Raulston followed with five points in service, which included an ace, a kill from Raulston and kills from Jameson and Long, to push the lead to 23-12.

Facing set point following a Long kill, Mountain Grove refused to go down without a fight by rattling off seven straight points to trim the lead to two before another kill by Long ended the second set for the Indians.

“Parker is a great offensive threat and is able to get kills on balls that should have been hit into the net or out of bounds,” Ayo said. “She can strategically place the ball and find the holes in the court.”

The third set was controlled by Seneca from the onset. The Indians jumped out to an 11-3 advantage early with Sage and Jameson picked up aces and Long, Raulston and Jameson earning kills during the stretch. 

MacPherson used a three-point run in service to cut the lead to four, but that would be the closest Mountain Grove would get to the lead, as the Indians scored seven of the next eight points to take a commanding 19-9 lead. Long, Garrison and Raulston recorded kills, while Graham had an ace.

Seneca finished off the match shortly after, with Jameson scoring the final three points in service, capping off the Indians’ first-ever sectional victory with an ace.

“This is something new to this school and to this program,” Ayo said about her team continuing on in the state tournament. “I just want the girls to go out and enjoy it. I want them to have a great experience and I am excited to see what we get to do on Saturday. This was 100 percent the best atmosphere I have seen in this gym for volleyball and it had a huge effect on the game tonight.”

BOYS SOCCER: Webb City wins 1-0 in double overtime in finale

WEBB CITY, Mo. — The Webb City Cardinals and the McDonald County Mustangs were approaching 100 minutes of scoreless soccer when Webb City junior forward Joseph Wermuth connected with the perfect header past McDonald County junior goalkeeper Tomas De La Cruz in the 98th minute for the 1-0 victory in the regular-season finale for both teams at Cardinal Stadium.

Webb City and McDonald County each had their opportunities to score through 80 minutes of regulation, 10 minutes of the first overtime, and seven minutes of the second overtime.

“I think we wore them down,” Webb City coach Nick Harmon said. “They’re a strong team, very hard to play, but I think we have a lot more depth that we were able to rotate in and out of the game. In the end, I think that made the difference, it allowed our guys to still be going strong in the end and find a way to score.”

The Cardinals avoided going into penalty kicks for what would have been the fourth time overall this season and second time in a row this week after Tuesday’s road loss against Central Ozark Conference foe Republic.

“We’ve been through three shootouts already this year,” Harmon said. “Won two and lost one, and the one we lost was Tuesday night this week, so I think the guys were motivated to not let it go to chance again and get the job done in OT.”

The Cardinals played nearly 200 minutes of soccer in the final week of the regular season between their matches against Republic and Webb City.

“It’s a good way to end the season with two competitive matches,” Harmon said. “It feels good to come out on top (Thursday).”

Webb City finished the regular season 10-11 overall, and the Cardinals are both district host and top seed in the Class 3 District 6 tournament starting on Saturday.

“We’re confident,” Harmon said. “We’re excited to see the boys compete. We like our matchups and everybody’s healthy, so the ball’s in our court and we’ve got to go out and perform and work hard for each other and execute.”

Webb City opens against No. 8 Kansas City Ruskin (4-11) in the quarterfinals at 11 a.m.

The Mustangs (5-13) are the sixth seed, and they open Saturday against third-seeded Belton (8-8) in the fourth and final quarterfinal match of the day.

No. 4 Bolivar (9-11) and No. 5 Grandview (11-8) play after Webb City-Ruskin and No. 2 Willard (14-10) and No. 7 Carl Junction (5-17) play in the third quarterfinal match.

Neosho’s departure to Class 4 opens up this district to a new district champion.

VOLLEYBALL: Local players named to All-Ozark 7 Conference team; CHC’s Lawrence is POY  

The All-Ozark 7 Conference Volleyball Team has been announced.

College Heights Christian senior Addie Lawrence has been named the conference’s player of the year, while McAuley Catholic’s Sarah Nangle has been named the Ozark 7’s coach of the year.

 

OZARK 7 CONFERENCE VOLLEYBALL TEAM

Player of the Year: Addie Lawrence, College Heights

Coach of the Year: Sarah Nangle, McAuley Catholic

FIRST TEAM

Lauren Ukena, College Heights; Kyndall Scott, Golden City; Teagan Warner, Golden City; Lily Black, McAuley Catholic; Nico Carlson, Thomas Jefferson; Lily Ray, Wheaton.

SECOND TEAM

Maddy Colin, College Heights; Kylee Scott, Golden City; Aubrey Baker, Verona; Jianna Cha, Wheaton; JoJo Wheeler, McAuley Catholic; Lannah Grigg, Thomas Jefferson.

HONORABLE MENTION TEAM

Ava Masena, College Heights; Lindsay Griesemer, College Heights; Emma Sorensen, Exeter; Maggie Reed, Golden City; Reese Moore, Golden City; Kloee Williamson, McAuley Catholic; Gabbi Hiebert, Thomas Jefferson; Zoe Saylor, Verona; America Castillo, Verona; Allison Whitman, Wheaton. 

 

SOFTBALL: Area players named All-COC

Listed below is the All-Central Ozark Conference Softball Team for 2022.

 

ALL-COC SOFTBALL TEAM

First Team

Hannah Cantrell, Carl Junction; Jenna Calhoon, Carthage; Abby Lowery, Joplin; Autumn Kinnaird, Neosho; Harper Jane Simpson, Nixa; Sara Sweaney, Nixa; Maddy Meierer, Nixa; Jordyn Foley, Ozark; Kelsie Batey, Ozark; Emi Essary, Republic; Lily Hall, Webb City; Reece Anderson, Willard.

 

Second Team

Sierra Dailey, Branson; Madi Olds, Carl Junction; Landry Cochran, Carthage; Jadyn Pankow, Joplin; Bailey Ledford, Joplin; McKaylie Forrest, Neosho; Phoebe Gardner, Nixa; Audrey Carlton, Ozark; Natalie Morgan, Ozark; Jenna Belcher, Republic; Annabelle Gerhardt-Hobbs, Republic; Alyson Miller, Willard.

 

Honorable Mention Team

Ashlynn Jackson, Carthage; Beclynn Garrett, Neosho; Olivia Emery, Neosho; Chloe Krans, Nixa; Savannah Hughes, Ozark; Gracie Woods, Republic; Liz Rhuems, Webb City; Abby McMillin, Willard. 

BOYS SOCCER: Joplin beats Branson in regular season finale

Luciano Reyes and Ely Montanez scored two goals apiece as the Joplin High School boys soccer team defeated Branson 4-0 on Tuesday in the regular season finale.

Adam Montanez had a pair of assists for the Eagles, who finished the regular season with a record of 16-6.

Joplin is the No. 6 seed for the Class 4 District 6 tournament. The Eagles take on third-seeded Lee’s Summit West at 4 on Saturday in a district quarterfinal at Bud Herzog Stadium in Lee’s Summit.