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GIRLS TENNIS: Joplin tops Webb City in regular season finale

 

In a final tune-up before the postseason arrives, the Joplin High School girls tennis team defeated Webb City 6-3 on Tuesday night. 

At No. 1 singles, Joplin’s Mya Ndedi-Ntepe defeated Ally Ansley 8-5, while Izzy Zamanazdeh topped Webb City’s Ayla McDonald by forfeit at No. 2 singles.

Joplin’s Alex Carson defeated Bethany Brumit 8-1 at No. 3 singles and Julia Reyes beat Webb City’s Adeline Ragsdale 8-3 at No. 4 singles.

In other singles matches, Webb City’s Averey Terry defeated Gwenna Street 8-5 and Maecy Beverlin beat Lily Compton 8-2.

The Eagles won two of the three doubles matches.

Joplin’s Ndedi-Ntepe and Carson defeated Ansley-McDonald 8-2 and Zamanzadeh and Reyes beat Brumit-Ragsdale 8-5.

At No. 3 doubles, Webb City’s Terry and Beverlin defeated Street-Compton 8-4.

Joplin will compete at the individual district tournament on Saturday.

The Eagles will be the No. 5 seed for the Class 3 District 6 tournament and will meet No. 4 Raymore-Peculiar on Monday. 

Webb City begins the individual Class 2 District 7 tournament on Friday at Thomas Jefferson.

VOLLEYBALL ROUNDUP: Carl Junction tops Neosho; Republic beats Joplin; CHC falls to East Newton

 

REPUBLIC 3, JOPLIN 0

REPUBLIC, Mo. — Republic defeated Joplin 25-11, 25-17, 25-19 on Tuesday night in Central Ozark Conference volleyball action.

Senior outside hitter Bailey Owens led the Eagles with 11 kills, six digs, four aces and two blocks.

Joplin junior setter Adalynn Noirfalise handed out 20 assists.

Joplin (4-13) is at Ozark on Thursday for another COC matchup. 

 

CARL JUNCTION 3, NEOSHO 0

CARL JUNCTION, Mo. — Carl Junction continued its conference success with a 25-16, 25-21 and 25-8 sweep over Neosho on Tuesday.

The win improves the Bulldogs’ record to 16-4, 4-1 in the Central Ozark Conference.

Kylie Scott led the way for CJ with 13 kills, while Karissa Chase added 11. Abigail Wilson closed with 17 digs, while Miya Carnes had 37 assists. Aubreigh Fowler had six aces in service, while DeShaye Buerge had a pair of blocks.

No stats were made available by Neosho.

Carl Junction is at Republic on Thursday.

Neosho (7-13, 0-4 COC) is at Branson on Thursday.

 

EAST NEWTON 3, COLLEGE HEIGHTS 0

GRANBY, Mo. — College Heights went on the road and fell 25-20, 25-19 and 25-22 to East Newton on Tuesday.

The loss drops the Cougars’ record to 9-8-3.

Maddy Colin finished with 18 assists, 11 digs, nine kills and four blocks. Bailey Peeples had 10 kills, while Toryn Fink finished with six kills. Lilly Plassman had 28 digs and Christa Miller finished with 11 digs. Katie Moss added five aces and 11 digs. 

College Heights hosts Thomas Jefferson on Thursday.

 

CASSVILLE 3, SENECA 2

SENECA, Mo. — Seneca (2-9) hosted Cassville and fell to the Wildcats 25-16, 19-25, 22-25, 25-23 and 15-11 in a five-set thriller on Tuesday.

Anna Adkins finished with 42 assists, while Ella Graham had 35 digs and five aces for the Indians. Jera Jameson finished with 17 kills, 27 digs, four aces in service and two blocks. Olivia Leonard had 10 kills and a block, while Maddy Hembree had nine kills and two blocks. Danessa Macy finished with five aces. 

Seneca is at Nevada on Thursday.

 

THOMAS JEFFERSON 3, EVERTON 1

EVERTON, Mo. — Thomas Jefferson defeated Everton 26-24, 23-25, 25-23 and 25-12 on Tuesday. 

The win puts the Cavaliers at 15-3. 

No other information was made available.

Thomas Jefferson is at College Heights on Thursday.

BOYS SWIMMING: Joplin tops Nevada in dual

 

The Joplin High School boys swim team defeated Nevada 100-47 on Tuesday night at Missouri Southern State University.

Winning individual events for Joplin were Nathan Wardlow (200 freestyle, 400 free), Parker Hinman (200 IM), Ian Vermillion (50 free, 100 fly), Jordan Goins (100 free) and Owen Mordica (100 backstroke).

The Eagles won two of the three relays.

Joplin’s 200 medley relay team of Owen Mordica, Jackson Mordica, Connor Intessimone and Goins took first in 2:24, while the Eagles won the 400 freestyle relay in 4:17, with Hinman, Isaiah Thom, Wardlow and Vermillion competing.

The JHS team of Koel Haury, Matthew Goins, Vermillion and Gideon Speer finished second in the 200 freestyle relay.

Nevada’s Trace Gould won the 100 breaststroke and finished second in the 200 free. Kolton Evans was second in the 400 free.

The Tigers won the 200 freestyle relay in 2:37, with Matt Eaton, Peyton Weber, Michael Earnest and Jayden Thankamani competing.

 

SOFTBALL: Neosho earns gritty win over Joplin in conference action

 

NEOSHO, Mo. — There have been a plethora of Central Ozark Conference softball games this season that featured a bevy of runs crossing the plate, but Tuesday’s matchup with Neosho hosting Joplin was not one of them.

The Eagles and Wildcats found themselves in a pitcher’s duel, with Joplin taking the initial advantage before Neosho scraped back to take the lead and held onto it the rest of the way en route to a 4-3 win that had conference and district implications.

“I thought we could have been a little cleaner on defense, but I was really, really proud of how we just gritted our teeth and made some plays in the field,” Neosho coach Catie Cummins said. “Carleigh (Kinnaird) threw great and worked out a couple of jams. We did just enough to squeak by with those four runs. … At the end of the day, having these tough wins that make you kind of bow your neck at the end are what takes teams through the postseason. I would have loved to score more runs, but I am just pleased with how we finished the game. That puts us in a good spot to know that we have been in tough situations against one of the best lineups in Missouri.” 

IN THE CIRCLE

Neosho pitcher Carleigh Kinnaird delivers to home during the Wildcats’ win over Joplin on Tuesday. Photo by Jessica Geninger.

Carleigh Kinnaird earned the complete-game win in the circle for the Wildcats after allowing three runs, one earned, on seven hits, a walk and nine strikeouts in seven innings.

Caelyn Bobski started and took the loss for Joplin after allowing three runs, two earned, on five hits, a walk and two strikeouts in four innings. Ava Wolf allowed one run on three hits in two relief innings.

“I was very pleased with the pitching today from our sophomores,” Joplin coach Brenden Schneider said. “Bob did a great job. When you only give up two hard hits all game, that is credit to what our girls have done. The experience they have from pitching so many innings this year will put us in a great spot later on. They have done everything asked of them and I’ve been very pleased.”

GAME ACTION

The Eagles started the scoring in the top of the first when Jadyn Pankow picked up an RBI on a groundout with runners on second and third and no outs for a 1-0 lead.

Neosho tied the game up in the bottom of the second inning when Olivia Emery grounded out with runners on the corners to force home a run and make the score 1-1.

The Wildcats jumped in front in the third inning when Autumn Kinnaird led off the inning with a double to right field before scoring on a sacrifice fly from Beclynn Garrett.

“I will brag and brag and brag about the bottom of our lineup because 7, 8 and 9 were so clutch for us,” Cummins said. “We got bunts down and had some great at-bats. … When you look at the difference in the game, that was a huge part of it.”

Joplin pitcher Caelyn Bobski delivers to the plate during the Eagles’ loss to Neosho on Tuesday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

In the next at-bat, Carleigh Kinnaird gave herself some insurance when she smacked a ball to the opposite field over the wall in right-center for a solo homer and a 3-1 advantage. 

The Eagles cut the lead to one in the top of the fifth after Maria Loum, who reached on an error, came around to score on a wild pitch with two outs in the inning to make the score 3-2. Joplin had the tying run on third but failed to push it across.

“We missed some opportunities on offense and kind of shot ourselves in the foot on defense,: Schneider said. “Which has kind of been something that we have done this year. And in close games, you can’t do that if you want to win.”

Joplin’s Libby Munn led off the sixth inning with a sharp double to left field to get the tying run in scoring position but Kinnaird struck out the next three Eagles to end the threat.

“She did a great job,” Cummins said. “Since they have such a good lineup, we tweaked the game plan a little bit and I am really pleased with how she adjusted. She is gritty and tough as nails and wants to win so badly. … Overall, I am very pleased with her and the maturity she has shown on the mound.” 

Neosho’s Autumn Kinnaird earns a base hit during the Wildcats’ win over Joplin on Tuesday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

Avyn Blair singled in front of a double by Emery before Ashlyn Stevens reached on a bunt to load the bases with no outs for Neosho in the bottom of the sixth. Kynden Smith gave the Wildcats insurance with a one-out sacrifice fly to left field to plate a run and push the lead to 4-2.

Joplin refused to go away quietly, as Bailey Ledford reached with two outs in the seventh on a single to left before taking second on a heads-up play on the throw back in. Abby Lowery beat out an infield hit in the next at-bat, with Ledford coming all the way around from second to slide in safe at the plate and cut the deficit to 4-3. 

Kinnaird induced a groundout with runners on first and second to end the threat and the game.

“I was really pleased with how we gutted it out,” Cummins said. “ I was talking to my family after the game and I told them I feel like I’ve been hit by a train, and I am sure the girls feel that way, too. It was just gutsy. I am proud of our fight.”

AT THE PLATE

Autumn Kinnaird and Emery each doubled on the way to two hits and a run scored apiece. Emery added an RBI. Carleigh Kinnaird homered, drove in one and scored once. Garrett had a hit and drove in one for Neosho.

Ledford had three hits and scored twice for Joplin. Munn doubled and had two hits, while Lowery and Pankow each had a hit and an RBI.

ON DECK

Neosho (21-5, 6-1 COC) is at Willard on Thursday.

Joplin (13-11, 3-4 COC) is at Nixa on Thursday.

CROSS COUNTRY: Area squads gain experience at Lamar invite

LAMAR, Mo. — Local cross country squads competed at the Lamar Invitational on Tuesday at Jeremy’s Creek.

East Newton’s Chase Sorrell won the boys race with a time of 16 minutes, 37 seconds.

El Dorado Springs’ Wyatt Klaiber was the runner-up in 17:20. 

College Heights Christian’s Colton McMillan finished 12th in 18:26 and McAuley Catholic’s Michael Parrigon was 13th in 18:30.

Lamar’s Cameron Bailey was 14th, while Jasper’s Leland Harris took 15th and Carl Junction’s Jack Lawson was 16th. 

Also, Carl Junction’s Isaac Willoughby finished 24th, Thomas Jefferson’s Braden Honeywell-Lynch was 27th and CJ’s Luke Battagler was 29th.

McAuley’s Trae Veer finished 25th and CHC’s Connor Jordan finished 40th.

Carl Junction’s Chance Golden took 48th and teammates Nikash Yeary and Jacob Garrett were 56th and 59th. McDonald County’s Lane Pratt was 58th and McAuley’s Connor Taffner was 62nd.

The top four boys teams were St. Michael the Archangel (29), El Dorado Springs (88), Carl Junction (159) and Lamar (191). There were 23 full teams competing.

St. Michael the Archangel’s Elsa Henry won the girls race in 19:54.

Liberal’s Ally Barton finished fourth in 21:52, while East Newton’s Brooklyn Blanchard was eighth in 22:47. Cassville’s Jadyn Williams-Reed was ninth in 22:53 and Mount Vernon’s Rylee Simons took 10th in 23:10.

Carl Junction’s trio of Audrey Fletcher, Delaney Harris and Madilyn Dalton finished 11th, 15th and 19th, respectively. 

McDonald County’s Kate Cheney was 22nd, Thomas Jefferson’s Sarah Mueller finished 24th, Carl Junction’s Marissa Newman was 26th, Lamar’s duo of Abigail Diggs and Carly Dunham were 27th and 28th and McDonald County’s Kenzie Horton was 29th.

College Heights Christian’s Marla Anderegg finished 34th, while teammates Jesalin Bever and Lilly Royer were 39th and 41st, respectively. 

CHC’s Madi Carson finished 55th and McAuley’s Marbellie Villanueva was 67th.

The top four girls teams were Liberal (71), Chadwick (89), St. Michael’s (91) and Carl Junction (108).

SOFTBALL ROUNDUP: Carl Junction defeats Carthage; Webb City falls to Ozark

 

CARL JUNCTION 12, CARTHAGE 4

CARL JUNCTION, Mo. — Carl Junction rallied from an early 2-0 deficit after a five-run first inning ultimately led to a 9-2 lead after three innings to fuel a Central Ozark Conference win over Carthage on Tuesday.

Kiley Spencer earned the complete-game win after allowing four runs on nine hits, three walks and strikeout in seven innings.

Addie Wallace took the loss after allowing five runs on four hits, a walk and a strikeout in 2/3 of an inning.

A double from Ashlyn Brust and a single from Aven Willis to lead off the game turned into a sacrifice fly from Lottie Youngblood and an RBI groundout from Alexis Smith to give the Tigers a 2-0 lead in the top of the first inning.

The Bulldogs countered with five runs crossing the plate in the bottom half of the inning. After a one-out walk and consecutive singles from Madi Olds and Kadence Hunt loaded the basse, Spencer singled to left to bring home the first run. Two batters later, with the bases still loaded, Kinley Spindler put Carl Junction in front with a grand slam to center field for a 5-2 lead.

Ryleigh Palmer gave Carl Junction a 6-2 lead an inning later with an RBI single up the middle.

Elsa Dogotch tripled to right field in the the third inning to plate a pair of runs before Hannah Cole wrapped the early scoring with an RBI on a sacrifice bunt to push the margin to 9-2.

Carthage scored twice in the sixth on a CJ error and an RBI groundout from Brooklynn Dolon-Main to cut the deficit to 9-4.

CJ answered once again, scoring three insurance runs in the bottom of the sixth on a two-run double from Hunt and an RBI single by Spencer to push the lead to 12-4.

Carl Junction (7-12, 1-6 COC) is at Ozark on Thursday.

Carthage (14-11, 5-2 COC) is at Republic on Thursday.

 

OZARK 13, WEBB CITY 6

WEBB CITY, Mo. — Ozark rode three big innings to a Central Ozark Conference victory over Webb City. 

The Tigers plated four runs in the top of the first inning, as Audrey Carlton recorded an RBI double and Kaylee Linnebur hit a three-run double. 

In a three-run fourth, Natalie Morgan’s two-run double and Carlton’s RBI double gave Ozark a 7-0 lead. 

Webb City got on the board in the bottom of the fourth, as Abby Sargent doubled and Kylee Sargent singled before Karsyn Cahoon’s fielder’s choice allowed Abby Sargent to score.

Ozark added five runs in the fifth to blow the game open, with a grand slam off the bat of Carlton the main highlight of the big inning for the visitors.

The Cardinals scored four runs in the bottom of the fifth on Sydney Strickland’s RBI single and Alex Maturino’s three-run home run.

The Tigers added a run in the seventh on Carlton’s second homer of the game. The Cardinals scored once in the bottom of the seventh for the final margin.

Ozark’s Carlton drove in seven runs on four hits. 

Kendall McCoy was the winning pitcher. She went five innings and gave up five runs on six hits and struck out seven.

Webb City used four pitchers, and freshman Addie Burns took the loss after allowing four runs on four hits and a walk in the first inning. 

Webb City fell to 17-8 overall and 3-4 in the COC, while Ozark improved to 16-10 and 3-4 in conference play.

Webb City travels to Branson on Thursday.

GIRLS TENNIS ROUNDUP: Thomas Jefferson completes undefeated regular season; Neosho tops Carthage

 

THOMAS JEFFERSON 9, LAMAR 0

The Thomas Jefferson Cavaliers completed an undefeated regular season by beating Lamar 9-0 in a girls tennis dual on Tuesday.

Tom Brumfield’s Cavaliers are now 11-0 ahead of postseason play.

On Tuesday, the Cavaliers swept all six singles matches.

Alison Ding defeated Chelsey O’Sullivan 8-1, Jeanna Jeyaraj beat Elliana Griffith 8-3, Esther Yang topped Chloe Vaughan 8-3, Warda Morsy defeated Brenna Morey 8-3, Mayson Solum handled Emma Forst 8-0 and Kyla Yang beat Isabel Osborne 8-3.

In doubles, Ding-Jeyaraj defeated Alyssa Mitchell- O’Sullivan 8-2, while Yang-Yang beat Forst-Ashlynn Ball 8-0 and Morsy-Solum topped Kye Riggs-Madalyn Swatosh 8-0.

Individual district tourney play begins on Friday at both Thomas Jefferson and Millennium Family Fitness. Start time is 9 a.m.

 

NEOSHO 5, CARTHAGE 4

NEOSHO, Mo. — Pulling off several close wins, the Neosho Wildcats picked up their first Central Ozark Conference win of the season by beating Carthage 5-4 on Tuesday night.

In singles, Neosho’s Keely Keeton edged Kailie Layman 8-6, Emma VanDorn nipped Logan Lee 9-7 and Francisca Ruiz defeated Claire Giett 8-4.

Carthage’s Madeleine Goetzinger defeated Angel Lee 8-0, while Emma Seedorf beat Neosho’s Sydnee Minton 8-3.

In a key match at No. 6 singles, Neosho’s Abigail Coutu defeated Rachel Martin 9-8 (7-4).

At No. 1 doubles, Neosho’s Keeton-VanDorn got past Layman-Giett 9-8 (7-4).

Carthage’s Lee-Martin beat Ruiz-Lee 8-4 at No. 2 doubles, and the Tigers won the No. 3 doubles match, as Goetzinger-Seedorf defeated Minton-Coutu 8-5.

Individual district tournament play begins on Friday.

 

VOLLEYBALL: Webb City earns clean sweep over rival Carthage

WEBB CITY, Mo. — After suffering a pair of disappointing setbacks last week, the Webb City Cardinals needed to bounce back.

On Tuesday night, they did just that.

Webb City earned a confidence-building 3-0 victory over rival Carthage in a Central Ozark Conference volleyball matchup inside the Cardinal Dome. 

The Cardinals defeated the Tigers 25-15, 25-18, 25-16.

Webb City was coming off a loss to Rogers (Arkansas) in the semifinals of the Carl Junction Classic. The Cardinals also dropped a COC match to Carl Junction last week.

“This is a good win to build some confidence for our kids,” Webb City coach Rhonda Lawrence said. “Rogers was a tough game for us on Saturday, but it was a quality opponent. That’s the kind of team we needed to see. But hopefully tonight we got some confidence back.” 

Webb City is now 15-3 overall and 3-1 in the COC.

The 1-2 punch of sophomore middle/right side hitter Jaeli Rutledge and senior outside hitter Aubree Lassiter led the Cardinals. Rutledge recorded 14 kills and three blocks, while Lassiter had 10 kills and four digs. 

“I think Carthage had a hard time handling both of them,” Lawrence said of her dynamic duo. “They’re both six foot girls, so that makes a big difference.

“Aubree can be deceptive at the net,” Lawrence added. “Teams think she’s hitting across and she’ll hit it on a straight line. Jaeli has really been elevating her game. We’ve got her swinging a little faster and her touch is higher than most of the kids we play against. She’s contacting the ball at a high level. Her quicker swing has made her more effective.”

Webb City had to overcome an early five-point deficit in the first set.

“We’ve been fighting this all season, letting teams get ahead of us,” Lawrence said. “We came back strong, but that’s something we have to work on. They like coming from behind, but we can’t do that against some of the teams we’re getting ready to see in the conference. And that bit us in the butt against CJ last week, too.”

The visitors stayed within striking distance in the early stages of the second and third sets before the Cardinals grabbed the momentum for good with significant scoring runs.

“You go into every game wanting to win and wanting to battle,” Carthage coach Chloe Allmoslecher said. “I felt like we battled for moments, but finishing was our issue tonight. We battled in every set to 15 points, but the last 10 didn’t go our way. You can’t let a couple of hitters stop you from winning the game.”

Carthage stormed out of the gates in the opening set, taking a quick 5-0 lead after a kill from junior Jaidyn Brunnert.

But the Cardinals regrouped, and the set was tied 8-8.

With Lassiter and Rutledge leading the way, Webb City pulled away, leading 15-9 and 20-13.

Late kills from Lassiter, junior Kirra Long and Rutledge gave the Cardinals the first set, 25-15. 

Overall, Webb City finished the opening set on a 17-7 run.

The Tigers hung tough early in the back and forth second set, as the score was deadlocked at 15.

But that’s when the Cardinals grabbed the momentum, using an 8-0 surge to pull away.

Rutledge had a stretch with two kills and two blocks at the net during the spurt. 

Carthage trailed early in the third set, but the Tigers rallied with junior Millie Templeman serving, tying the set at 8-all and going up 10-8 after a kill from sophomore Sadie Comer.

The third set was tied at 12 when Webb City once again gained all of the momentum, using a 7-0 burst to go up 19-12.

From there, the Cardinals wouldn’t be denied, as Rutledge hammered home a big kill and junior Mia Lenker served an ace to finish off the match in straight sets.

Allmoslecher noted her team gave a good effort, but simply wasn’t able to stop Webb City’s momentum.

“You can’t let teams go on seven or eight point runs,” Allmoslecher said. “You have to shut them down after two or three points and get the ball back. That’s going to be a focus of ours going forward.”

In addition to Rutledge and Lassiter, Webb City’s Lenker had six kills and seven digs, while senior Makayla Mayes had four kills. 

Sophomore setter Savannah Crane handed out 29 assists, while senior libero Sophia Crane recorded a team-high 28 digs. 

Carthage senior outside hitter Ava Bourgault had six kills, while Templeman had five kills, Brunnert had four kills and junior Peyton Ray had three kills.

Comer had a team-high 16 digs, while Riann Schwartz had 10 digs and Bourgault had nine. Comer had 11 assists and Brunnert added eight.

Both teams have COC road matches on Thursday, as Webb City is at Nixa and Carthage (11-13, 2-2 COC) is at Willard.

The regular season is quickly winding down, something Allmoslecher is well aware of.

“We’ve only got five regular season games left,” Allmoslecher said. “I’ve been proud of the girls. There’s been a lot of growth this year. We have to keep pushing and see where it takes us at the end.” 

For the Cardinals, a key COC clash awaits on Thursday against Nixa (17-3, 3-1 COC).

Lawrence hopes her team can keep things rolling.

“We’ll see what happens,” she said.