Your online home for Joplin area sports coverage.

BOYS TENNIS: Thomas Jefferson’s Nagarajan advances to state tourney

Thomas Jefferson’s Prithvi Nagarajan has earned the right to compete at the MSHSAA Boys Tennis Championships.

Nagarajan was the singles champion at the individual district tournament on Friday. Thomas Jefferson was the host school for the Class 2 District 7 event.

The top two singles players and the top two doubles teams at Friday’s district tourney advanced to the individual state tournament.

A junior, Nagarajan was the singles champion and Barstow’s Liam Groden was the runner-up.

After an opening-round bye as the district’s No. 1 seed, Nagarajan defeated Ruskin’s Michael Titalangha 6-0, 6-0 in the quarterfinals.

Pictured is Thomas Jefferson’s Prithvi Nagarajan.

In the semifinals, Nagarajan defeated Webb City’s Jacob McDonald 6-1, 6-0.

In the bracket’s title match, Nagarajan defeated Groden 6-4, 6-1.

With the finish, Nagarajan earned a spot at the individual state tournament on May 18 in Springfield.

Barstow’s Groden advanced to the title match by beating Thomas Jefferson’s Devan Murali 6-2, 6-3 in the semifinals. 

In the bracket’s third-place match, Webb City’s McDonald defeated TJ’s Murali. 

The top four finishers in each bracket are considered medalists.

Also competing in the singles bracket were Webb City’s Lucas Lowery and Neosho’s duo of Christian Williams and Willis Jarvis.

Williams defeated Ruskin’s Aamer Hamdan 6-1, 6-1 before falling to Groden in the quarterfinals. Lowery and Jarvis both went 0-1. 

Barstow had the top two doubles teams.

Barstow’s Sankeerth Gandhari and George Colombo defeated their teammates Sanjeev Adma and Aaram Salam 6-3, 6-3 in the title match.

Two local doubles teams fell in the semifinals, thus falling short of a state berth.

Barstow’s Gandhari-Colombo defeated Webb City’s Tristan Lynch and Felipe Perez 6-1, 6-1 in the semifinals.

In the other semifinal, Barstow’s Adma-Salam defeated Thomas Jefferson’s Chengle Qian and Jack Goodhue 6-3, 6-1.

In the bracket’s third-place match, Qian-Goodhue defeated Lynch-Perez 8-5.

Also competing in doubles were Thomas Jefferson’s Sam Li and Nathaniel Curtis, Webb City’s Jacob Russell-Kaden Cox and Neosho’s Reid Snyder-Peyton Williams and Breckin McAffrey-Noah Schade.

Li-Curtis defeated Ruskin’s Abdulrehman Assaf-Abdallah Banialmarjeh 6-0, 6-3 before falling to Webb City’s Lynch-Perez in the quarterfinals, 6-1, 6-2.

Neosho’s McAffrey-Schade defeated Ruskin’s Zhuhair Abuasbah-Mateo Lopez 6-2, 6-0 in the opening-round before falling to Qian-Goodhue in the quarterfinals, 6-0, 6-0.

Russell-Cox and Snyder-Williams both went 0-1.

 

DISTRICT TEAM TOURNAMENT

The Class 2 District 7 team tournament will begin on Monday.

Fourth-seeded Neosho will host fifth-seeded Belton at 3:30 on Monday, while third-seeded Webb City will host sixth-seeded Ruskin, also at 3:30.

The Neosho-Belton winner will play at No. 1 Barstow at 3:30 on Tuesday in the semifinals.

Second-seeded Thomas Jefferson will host the Webb City-Ruskin winner at 3:30 on Tuesday in the other semifinal.

The district title match is scheduled for 3:30 on Wednesday, May 10 at Thomas Jefferson.

BOYS GOLF: McAuley Catholic takes second in districts to qualify as a team; College Heights sends one to state

McAuley Catholic took second place in the Class 1 District 3 golf tournament at the par-71 Schifferdecker Golf Course to qualify the entire Warriors team for the state tournament.

“It was a great day,” McAuley coach Tony Witt said. “I was worried we weren’t going to be able to get this in with all of the rain. The guys played well today. This was our best team total that we’ve had all year. Playing the best at the end of the year is what you want. For us to go to state as a team is a huge accomplishment.”

McAuley totaled 358 as a squad, finishing behind Lockwood (354) for the top spot. The Warriors also finished with three all-district golfers. Evan Damour was the top local finisher with a seventh-place showing after a round of 86. Rocco Bazzano-Joseph tied for eighth with an 87, while Bradley Wagner finished in 10th with an 88. Trey Martinez carded a 97 and Liam Buerge scored a 110.

“It’s really big,” Witt said when asked what it meant to qualify the entire McAuley team. “These guys have worked really hard to this point. For our two seniors (Damour, Martinez) to go out with a team trip to state, that is a huge accomplishment for them and their hard work. To make

Also earning all-district honors and qualifying for the state tournament was College Heights’ Logan Decker, who finished in a tie for 11th place with an 89. 

Pierce City’s Tyler Johnson also advanced after tying for 18th place overall with a 92.

Also scoring for the Cougars were Corbin Cronenwett (95), Hudson Clevenger (107), Gavin Doll (108) and Anderson Smith (121).

The Class 1 State Tournament will be played at the Country Club of Missouri in Columbia on May 15-16.

“I don’t want them to freak out and to enjoy the moment,” Witt said when asked what he wants to see from a team effort at the state tournament. “I don’t know when the last time a McAuley team has qualified for state, or if we ever have. We are going to enjoy it and take it one shot at a time.”

SOFTBALL: College Heights, Diamond end in a draw before districts

WEBB CITY, Mo. — Two days before the start of the Class 2 District 6 softball tournament, College Heights Christian (with McAuley Catholic) and Diamond ended in an 8-all draw in five innings of driving rain Thursday at Webb City High School.

College Heights took a 4-1 lead after three runs in the first and one in the second, Diamond went ahead 7-4 after pushing across six in the fourth, Diamond scored one in the fifth and College Heights scored two in the fourth and fifth before agreeing to call it a day.

At the end of the day, both teams came out winners in the sense that nobody got hurt and two good teams competed against each other two days before the start of the postseason.

“We talked earlier today about the pros and the cons of playing this game,” College Heights coach Mike Howard said. “The pros are that you’re playing a really good team that’s going to prepare you for districts. The cons are somebody gets hurt, and we definitely don’t want that going into districts.

“You know, it was just barely raining earlier in the day and so we thought we could come out here and play a little bit. I’m super proud of the way our girls came out and played with intensity from the very get-go. The girls were in it the whole entire time against a really good Diamond team. I’m just proud of our effort offensively, defensively … you take away one inning there and we have a really good game on our hands.”

“I feel like we both got good reps,” Diamond coach Kelsey Parrish said. “We both hit the ball well and I think going into districts it was a good game for both of us. Our district’s tough, so both teams needed as much confidence as possible … I think it just worked in our favor.”

The challenge of playing in driving rain conditions was especially felt Thursday by College Heights junior pitcher Maddy Colin and senior catcher Jayli Johnson and Diamond junior pitcher Caitlyn Suhrie and junior catcher Grace Frazier.

Colin and Suhrie combined for 14 walks over 10 half-innings, but they also combined to strike out 16 batters.

“It’s very, very difficult conditions to pitch in,” Howard said. “I wanted to get them to get the feel of pitching in this (weather). Maddy, she only had 18 walks the entire year and that goes to show how difficult it is to pitch in these types of conditions, especially against a really good hitting team. The umpire’s strike zone was pretty tight, so that makes it even more difficult. Hats off to her though for settling in and bearing down there at the end and limiting their runs.”

Parrish brought her experience working on getting her pitcher a dry softball from last Friday’s game against Mount Vernon at Neosho High School, when it rained for at least the first half of the third battle this season of the two top-ranked teams in Class 2.

“I thought both pitchers worked extremely hard and threw well,” Parrish said. “They couldn’t grip the ball well, so I was very proud of all four girls.”

College Heights’ Kloee Williamson led off the home first with an infield single, Johnson and Allie Stout each worked a walk, and they each scored a run to give the Cougars a 3-0 lead after one.

Williamson reached second on an error in the second and scored on a Colin RBI single.

Williamson led off the fourth with an infield single and scored on Johnson’s RBI triple. Johnson scored to cut the Cougars’ deficit to 7-6 after four.

Johnson delivered the final score in the fifth with a two-out, two-run double bringing home pinch runner Ava Lett and Williamson.

“I can’t say enough about our girls and their offense tonight,” Howard said. “How they hit the ball with timely hits scoring runs. We’re just super positive headed into districts right now.”

The Wildcats benefited from drawing four of their walks Thursday during their six-run fourth, including three straight walks with Frazier and Suhrie working consecutive bases-loaded walks for two of their six runs. Emilee Shallenburger hit a RBI single for the first run and Lauren Turner delivered a bases-clearing hit to close out the six runs.

Sara Roszell hit a RBI single in the second and Marrisa DeJager singled and came around to score the Wildcats’ final run in the fifth.

College Heights ends the regular season 18-5-1 and the fourth-seeded Cougars take on the fifth-seeded Pierce City in the district quarterfinals at 12:45 on Saturday at Spirit of ’76 Park in Mount Vernon.

Keep in mind Pierce City upended two of the top three seeds in last year’s district tournament, beating No. 3 seed Sarcoxie 12-0 in the quarters and No. 2 College Heights 7-5 in the semis before their 15-5 loss in the district championship against eventual state champion Diamond.

Diamond enters the postseason 25-9-1 and the second-seeded Wildcats play Lamar in the fourth and final game of the day at approximately 4:15 on Saturday.

Top-seeded and tournament host Mount Vernon and (8) Southwest open the day at 11 a.m. and they are followed by College Heights-Pierce City, (3) Sarcoxie vs. (6) East Newton at 2:30 and Diamond-Lamar.

Rain forced last year’s quarterfinals to be played on the all-turf surface in Neosho.