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CARDINALS CARAVAN: Nootbaar looks to build on breakout ’22 season

After a breakout 2022 season, Lars Nootbaar hopes to go one step further in ’23.

The star attraction of Saturday’s Cardinals Caravan at Missouri Southern State University in Joplin, Nootbaar strives to build on last year’s success by becoming a consistent impact performer this summer.

“I want to be an everyday starter, but I want to do much more than that,” Nootbaar said. “I want to play a pivotal role on the team. I don’t want Nolan (Arenado) and Goldy (Paul Goldschmidt) to have all the pressure in the world on them. I want to help them lead.

St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Lars Noobaar answers questions from local media on Saturday morning during the Joplin stop of the Cardinals Caravan at Missouri Southern State University. Photo by Jason Peake.

“I want to improve in every part of my game,” Nootbaar added. “I want to get faster, stronger and I want to hit the ball a little harder. I just want to get better in all facets of the game to benefit the team.”

A 6-foot-3, 210-pound outfielder, the 25-year-old Nootbaar became a fan favorite among Cardinal fans last summer not only because of his outgoing personality, but also because he flashed glimpses of being an all-star caliber player.

“It was really special,” Nootbaar said of becoming a fan favorite. “I didn’t know what to expect. I wasn’t a top prospect or anything like that coming in, so I didn’t know if the fans even knew who I was. My first at-bat at Busch Stadium I heard the crowd saying ‘NOOOOOT’ and I thought they were booing me. Once I realized what they were doing, it was great, and I couldn’t be more grateful for how I was embraced by the fans.”

Nootbaar, who has yet to play a full season in the big leagues, had an interesting 2022 campaign.

He made the big league roster out of spring training but was demoted to Triple-A Memphis before being recalled when the team was hit with injuries.

Nootbaar played in 108 games, starting 66 in right field, 11 in center and two in left. Overall, Nootbaar hit .228 with 66 hits, 14 homers, 40 RBI and 53 runs scored. He had an OPS of .788 and a WAR of 2.2.

In the second half of the season, Nootbaar recorded a .366 on-base percentage and a .480 slugging percentage with 10 homers. He showed great plate discipline with his 16.7 percent walk rate after the break, which ranked fourth-best in MLB.

Cardinals outfielder Lars Nootbaar signs an autograph for a fan after speaking with the media at MSSU on Saturday morning. The Cardinals Caravan was held on Saturday at Young Gymnasium.

His second half surge definitely opened a lot of eyes and has fans and experts alike optimistic that Nootbaar’s career will take off.

During 34 straight starts from July 24 to August 30, Nootbaar hit .279 and drove in 16 runs as the Redbirds went 24-10 during that span.

Nootbaar, who spent time in the leadoff spot in the batting order, also played elite defense in the outfield, making several highlight-reel catches along the way.

“I had a rough start, but once the all-star break came, I started working on things and I righted the wrongs of how I started the season,” said Nootbaar, who hit a 452-foot home run against Milwaukee on Sept. 14, the longest at Busch Stadium in ’22. “I had a decent second half and I’m looking to have more consistency this season. But yeah, last season was a little bit of a roller-coaster.”

Nootbaar acknowledged he feels fortunate he was able to learn from the team’s veterans, including Cardinals legend and future hall of famer Albert Pujols.

“Albert is a great guy and a great teammate,” Nootbaar said. “Being able to watch him and learn from him, I’m just so thankful for that opportunity.”

Before the ’23 MLB season arrives, Nootbaar will play for Japan in the World Baseball Classic. Nootbaar’s mother is Japanese.

“I think it’s going to be huge for me,” said Nootbaar, who made his MLB debut during the 2021 season after being drafted out of USC in the eighth round in ’18. “It’s going to give me a playoff environment in March. By the time the regular season arrives I should be prepared for whatever is thrown at me. The competition is going to be stiff. Hopefully we’ll make it out of our pool and get to play teams like Puerto Rico, Venezuela, the Dominican Republic and the US. All those rosters are loaded.”

And despite the retirement of both Pujols and Yadier Molina, Nootbaar said he’s confident the Cardinals have the pieces in place to put together a stellar ’23 campaign.

Of course, Nootbaar hopes to play a crucial role in the team’s success. 

“I think we have a good lineup 1 through 9,” he said. “And with the addition of Wilson Contreras, I think we have some guys who can take the pressure off Nolan and Goldy. I’m excited.”

 

CARAVAN NOTES

The Cardinals Caravan returned to Joplin after a two-year hiatus due to the pandemic.

The free event was held in Young Gymnasium due to a capacity crowd. 

Other current players who were in town to sign autographs and answer questions from fans were pitchers Zack Thompson and Gordon Graceffo.

Thompson enters the ’23 season rated as having the best curveball in the Cardinals organization by Baseball America.

Graceffo was the Cardinals Minor League Pitcher of the Year in 2022.

Also in attendance were former Cardinals Randy Flores and Alan Benes. 

Benes earned 13 wins as a Cardinal rookie in 1996.

Flores, who played for the Cardinals’ 2006 World Series championship squad, is currently the Cardinals’ assistant general manager and scouting director.

 

 

 

GIRLS HOOPS ROUNDUP: College Heights, Thomas Jefferson, McAuley Catholic all victorious on Friday

 

COLLEGE HEIGHTS 59, EXETER 19

EXETER, Mo. — The College Heights Christian girls basketball team improved to 8-6 overall and 1-0 in the Ozark 7 with Friday’s lopsided win over Exeter.

“We got off to a great start,” College Heights coach John Blankenship told SoMo Sports. “Our half-court trap was very effective in creating turnovers, leading to several fastbreak points. We shot the ball very well at almost 50 percent as a team tonight. Our starters saw limited minutes tonight but put up great numbers.”

CHC’s Libby Fanning had another double-double with 21 points and 10 rebounds, while Ava Lett went 3-for-5 from 3-point range and finished with 15 points.

Also for the Cougars, Jayli Johnson compiled seven points, five steals, four rebounds and four assists, while Maddy Colin contributed four points, three rebounds and three assists. 

College Heights’ Kinley Marsh had four points and five rebounds, Allie Stout had four points and three steals and Jesalin Bever chipped in four points and two steals. 

“We are hoping to get senior guard Lauren Ukena back late next week after suffering a wrist injury,” Blankenship noted. “She will bring back a lot of speed and increase our ball pressure immensely.” 

College Heights will take on the hosts at the Southeast Lancer Classic at 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday.

 

THOMAS JEFFERSON 46, SHELDON 42

The Thomas Jefferson girls secured a second close victory in as many nights.

One night after beating Wheaton 35-30, the Cavaliers took the lead early and held on.

The game was close all the way. 

The Cavaliers led 11-7 at the end of the first quarter, 18-13 at halftime and 31-25 at the end of the third period.

Gabbi Hiebert scored 16 points to lead Thomas Jefferson, while Sarah Mueller added 14 and Lannah Grigg had eight.

Nico Carlson and Macie Shifferd each added four points.

Mariam Lamb scored 19 points for Sheldon and Deborah Lamb added 12.

Thomas Jefferson is now 7-4.

The Cavaliers will meet Pierce City at 6:45 on Monday at the Liberal tourney. 

 

MCAULEY CATHOLIC 40, VERONA 32

The McAuley Catholic girls basketball team extended its winning streak to three with Friday’s homecoming win.

Up five at the end of the first quarter, McAuley extended its advantage to 21-12 by halftime.

The Warriors led 33-21 at the end of the third period. Verona outscored McAuley 11-7 in the final frame, but the Warriors held on.

Lily Black scored 15 points for the Warriors, while Kloee Williamson added 12 points. Kendall Ramsey added eight points for McAuley.

Jaicee Carasquillo scored 16 points for Verona. 

McAuley (4-11, 2-0) is at Miami (Mo.) on Monday.

 

HOOPS: Carthage boys, girls split against Ozark on ‘Super Night’

CARTHAGE, Mo. — The Carthage Tigers earned their first win in Central Ozark Conference play with a 73-67 victory over the visiting Ozark Tigers on Friday night.

Carthage successfully rebounded after Tuesday’s 50-48 heartbreaking overtime loss at home against Joplin, scoring 22 points in the first quarter and trailing just once early on Friday, 3-2 in the first minutes of the contest.

Carthage led 22-12 after one quarter, 33-29 at halftime as Ozark put together a 17-11 second quarter, and 49-44 headed into the fourth.

Carthage, 8-6 overall and 1-1 COC, won for the first time against Ozark since 2012 and ended a 11-game losing streak against their fellow Tigers.

“We had a talk on Wednesday about that Joplin game,” Carthage coach Nathan Morris said. “As much as it hurt, it was over, and it felt good to get back out on the court Wednesday and Thursday. We had a good practice leading into this one, understanding that if you linger on it, you could lose another one in the COC. I’m proud of our guys for how we started, then Ozark made a run, and they were able to stay in the game. To finish this one tonight, it’s huge.”

Senior guard Max Templeman especially answered the bell early on for Carthage scoring 13 in the first quarter and 19 by halftime on his way to a game-high 27 points.

“Max has kind of been a closer for us for four years,” Morris said. “Tonight, he had 18 in the first half. He really got us going and he put Ozark back on their heels.”

Fellow guard Justin Ray found his shooting touch early on Friday and finished with 18 points, highlighted by a four-point play that put Carthage up 12-5 only 2 minutes and 22 seconds in.

Templeman and Ray had 28 of Carthage’s 33 points at halftime, but senior Britt Coy, senior Clay Kinder, sophomore Trent Yates, and sophomore Kruz Castor made their offensive contributions in the second half as Carthage scored 40 second-half points.

“A huge contribution from Justin,” Morris said. “Britt scored 12 and Clay didn’t get to double-figures, but Clay’s fighting in the post with (Ozark’s 6-foot-6 junior) Jace Whatley was a huge factor in the game.”

Coy added 12 points with nine of them after halftime, Kinder finished with nine and seven of those were second-half points, Yates scored all five of his points in the fourth, and Castor made a pair of free throws in the third.

Carthage battled an Ozark team with a significant height advantage — 6-9 sophomore Cohen George in addition to the 6-6 Whatley — but this is not anything new for Carthage, especially in COC play.

“For years, we’ve been undersized,” Morris said. “Some nights, it’s hurt us, but these guys have truly embraced the underdog role in terms of size and they’re willing to fight, front guys in the post, be there to help each other, and their communication tonight to defend how many different sets that Ozark can run at you, it was key.”

Carthage returns to conference action Jan. 31 against Webb City, who currently stands at 11-3 overall and 1-1 COC.

“We’re going to see some teams knock each other off,” Morris said. “You’ve got to be willing to worry about your game one at a time and if you look ahead or skip a team, it’s going to hurt you and bite you in the rear end.”

Carthage plays again next week in the Ralph Miller Classic in Chanute, Kansas.

“I think this next week is good for us to step away from COC play for a little bit at 1-1,” Morris said. “We’re not taking any time off. We’re going to play in a really good Chanute tournament.”

Missouri schools Carthage and Springfield Parkview join Kansas schools Chanute, Coffeyville, Emporia, Andover Central, and Bishop Miege in the field.

Carthage finished second in the Ralph Miller last year.

Carthage’s win Friday night against Ozark gave the Tigers a win over both a conference and district opponent.

“After losing two to Joplin, this one was really good,” Morris said. “We want to stack up as many (district) wins as you can, just knowing that 1-8 it’s loaded and there’s no easy one in that district. You want to have some wins to go into voting with, though.”

Hudson Roberts led Ozark (4-11, 0-2 COC) with 19 points, Garrett Ballard added 16 points, Whatley finished with 14, Ryan Engel had seven and his early three provided Ozark’s lone lead of the evening, Jake Garner added five points, and the 6-9 George and the 5-10 Phin Scott provided the other six Ozark points with three each.

 

OZARK GIRLS 57, CARTHAGE 44

Basketball is often a game of runs, and Ozark’s first-half scoring run topped Carthage’s one that happened immediately before it.

Carthage led Ozark 14-7 late in the first quarter after seven unanswered points, but Ozark rattled off 19 straight points with the last two points of the first and the first 17 points of the second giving the visiting Tigers a 26-14 lead.

Kianna Yates’ basket ended the 19-0 run and provided Carthage with its first basket and first points in nearly a quarter’s time.

Ozark led 46-36 entering the fourth quarter, and the hosts were unable to rally late. 

“We played even with Ozark for three of the four quarters tonight,” Carthage coach Scott Moore said. “Unfortunately, a cold shooting second quarter coupled with foul trouble allowed Ozark to take a 10-point lead at halftime that we couldn’t seem to erase during the second half. The girls battled hard tonight, we are getting better. We just need to put four good quarters together to play our best game yet.”

Ozark senior Alexis Soloman scored a game-high 25 points, and she had nine of them during that decisive scoring run.

Jordyn Foley added 12 points with all of them scored from 3-point baskets, Macey Sult scored nine points, Sydney Hampton and Molly Rushing combined for another nine points with five and four respectively, and Abby Wofford’s only two points closed out Ozark’s scoring.

Yates led Carthage with 17 points, Maggie Boyd added 10, Lauren Choate nine, Ashlyn Brust and Jaidyn Brunnert three each, and Lexa Youngblood two points.

Carthage dropped to 6-6 overall and 1-1 COC, and the Tigers return to action Tuesday at home against Big 8 Conference opponent McDonald County.

BOYS HOOPS ROUNDUP: Thomas Jefferson, Neosho, Nevada all earn victories; McAuley falls short

 

THOMAS JEFFERSON 67, SHELDON 44

The Thomas Jefferson Cavaliers earned a second straight win in dominant fashion.

The Cavaliers led 19-10 at the end of the opening frame and extended their lead to 31-15 at halftime.

Thomas Jefferson outscored Sheldon 19-5 in the third period for a commanding 50-20 advantage.

“Once again, our defense set the tone tonight,” Cavaliers coach Chris Myers said. “Sheldon is having a great year, and to hold them to 20 points heading into the fourth quarter was a big deal. I’m proud of how the boys have bounced back after not playing well in back-to-back games after the Christmas break. I feel like we are back headed in the right direction.”

The Cavaliers improved to 9-3, while Sheldon slipped to 8-4. 

Tyler Brouhard poured in 31 points and also grabbed 12 rebounds, leading the Cavaliers to a convincing win. Brouhard made four 3-pointers in the game. 

Jay Ball added 19 points and 10 boards for Thomas Jefferson, while Levi Triplett had 12 points and Kip Atteberry contributed five. 

Shon Bogart scored 19 points for Sheldon.

Thomas Jefferson beat Wheaton 59-28 on Thursday. 

 

NEOSHO 54, WILLARD 30

NEOSHO, Mo. — The Neosho Wildcats picked up their second Central Ozark Conference win of the week with Friday’s 54-30 victory over Willard.

Three players scored in double figures for Neosho. Collier Hendricks led the way with 18 points, while Isaiah Green had 16 and Carter Baslee added 11.

Kael Smith added seven points and Carter Fenske had two. Hendricks connected on five 3-pointers for the Wildcats.

Neosho led 23-14 at halftime, and the Wildcats were up 43-20 entering the fourth quarter. 

Neosho (12-4, 2-0 COC) hosts McDonald County on Monday. 

 

NEVADA 59, EAST NEWTON 53

NEVADA, Mo. — Four players scored in double figures for the Tigers in Friday’s hard-fought win over the Patriots.

Jack Cheaney scored 14 points for the Tigers, while Cade Beshore had 13, Drew Beachler added 12 and Brice Budd contributed 11.

Marshall Renner led the Patriots with 16 points, while Robby McFarland added 12.

East Newton led 29-27 at halftime, but Nevada used a 20-12 third period to pull ahead. 

The Tigers are now 6-8 overall and 2-0 in the Big 8 West. East Newton fell to 6-10, 0-1 in the conference.

Nevada hosts Seneca on Tuesday. It will be a Super Night, with the girls game starting at 6.

 

VERONA 47, MCAULEY CATHOLIC 43

The Warriors led 26-24 at intermission, but the Wildcats won the third period 15-8 to take a 39-35 lead. The final period was even, 8-8. 

Alex Bohachick scored 19 points for McAuley and Noah Black added 11. 

Jacob Stellwagen scored 23 points to lead Verona, while Andrew Martinez added 15 points.

McAuley (5-12, 0-1) hosts Wheaton on Jan. 24.

BOYS HOOPS: Webb City rebounds with lopsided win over Branson

WEBB CITY, Mo. — The Webb City Cardinals bounced back nicely from Tuesday’s disappointing setback to Neosho by beating Branson 76-42 on Friday night in Central Ozark Conference action inside the Cardinal Dome.

Webb City junior guard Barron Duda soars to the hoop for a bucket against Branson on Friday night inside the Cardinal Dome. Photo by Derek Livingston.

“The response to Tuesday’s loss was great,” Cardinals coach Jason Horn said. “It started in practice. We broke the film down and we had two hard days of practice. The emphasis was that every game is important and not to take the game for granted. We stressed that every possession is important and playing with maximum effort. Tonight, I thought we did a great job of that.”

Webb City led from start to finish against the Pirates.

“We got the pace where we wanted it,” Horn said. “We were able to push the pace and get things in transition. The main thing is our kids were sharp in their focus and the preparation was really good. They did a good job of sticking to the scouting report. It was a 180 from where we were at on Tuesday, so I was really pleased with that. I saw a lot of growth. Defensively, they were recognizing what the other team was doing on their own. Offensively, they were hustling into their sets, cutting hard and setting good screens…the little things that make you good down the road.” 

The Cardinals took an early 11-2 lead after eight points from junior guard Barron Duda on two treys and a strong baseline drive and a 3-pointer from senior forward Alex Martin. 

Webb City’s lead was 17-7 at the end of the first quarter. Duda scored 14 points in the opening frame.

The Cardinals went up by 17 at 31-14 with just over three minutes to play in the first half after hoops in the lane from Eli Pace, Holton Keith and Duda. 

By the break, Webb City was up 43-20.

The Cardinals held a comfortable 55-32 advantage heading into the fourth quarter, and their lead was never in jeopardy in the final frame. 

The hosts took their biggest lead of 29 points with 4:53 remaining in the contest.

Webb City improved to 11-3 and 1-1 in the COC. 

Duda scored 23 points and grabbed eight rebounds, while Martin finished with 17 points and 12 boards.

Joe Adams also reached double figures with 10 points, while Keith scored nine and Pace had eight. Keith had five assists, while Adams had eight rebounds. 

Webb City coach Jason Horn gives his team instructions during Friday’s game with Branson. Photos by Derek Livingston.

Webb City made 27-of-70 field goal attempts (39 percent) and went 5-for-29 on 3-pointers.

The Cardinals out-rebounded the Pirates 40-27. 

Branson fell to 5-9 and 0-2 in conference action.

Justin Gill scored 11 points and had eight rebounds for Branson, while Peyton Bough added nine points.

The Pirates made 19-of-62 field goal attempts (31 percent), including just 2-for-22 from beyond the arc.

Branson had 15 turnovers to Webb City’s eight. 

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

Webb City will compete at next week’s Frontenac Tournament. The Cardinals are the defending champs.

“It’s always a good tournament, and we’d love to repeat,” Horn said. 

 

Webb City senior Alex Martin puts up a shot from in close against Branson’s Justin Gill on Friday night. Webb City defeated Branson 72-46. All photos by Derek Livingston.

 

Webb City’s Joe Adams shoots over Branson’s Tristen Bough on Friday night. Webb City defeated Branson 72-46 in COC play. 

 

Webb City’s Omari Jackson (20) puts up a shot inside against Branson’s Donovan Hardy (5).

 

 

Webb City’s boys basketball team hosted the Branson Pirates on Friday night inside the Cardinal Dome. Webb City won the game 72-46.

 

FULL STATS: Webb City HS (webbcitycardinals.com)