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STATE TENNIS: Carl Junction doubles team takes 3rd; TJ’s Ding finishes 7th in singles

 

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Carl Junction’s duo of Naiyah Wurdeman and Jenna Besperat finished third in the Class 2 doubles bracket on Friday at the 2023 MSHSAA Girls Tennis Championships at the Cooper Tennis Complex.

Jenna Besperat and Naiyah Wurdeman.

In the third-place match, Wurdeman and Besperat ended the 2023 season on a high note by beating Springfield Catholic’s Hannah Lee and Britney Ung 6-1, 6-4.

In Thursday’s opening round, the Bulldogs defeated the St. Pius X duo of Chloe Kronlage and Brooke Madden 6-0, 6-0.

In the quarterfinal round, Wurdeman and Besperat topped Grain Valley’s Brooklyn Spencer and Emma Thiessen 4-6, 6-2, 10-7.

In the semifinals on Friday morning, Parkway North’s Yvonne Shannon-Emily Koo defeated Wurdeman-Besperat 7-6, 6-1. That loss sent the Bulldogs to the third-place match.

Shannon-Koo ended up winning the state title by beating Villa Duschesne’s Alexandra Todorovich/Katherine Todorovich  6-3, 6-2.

Besperat is a senior and Wurdeman is a junior. The pair led the way as the Bulldogs went 15-4 in duals this fall. 

This was the second straight season Wurdeman and Besperat advanced to state in doubles.

 

DING TAKES SEVENTH IN SINGLES

Thomas Jefferson’s Allison Ding.

Thomas Jefferson senior Allison Ding finished seventh in the Class 2 singles bracket on Friday.

Playing for seventh place, Ding defeated Washington’s Evelyn Bryson 6-3, 6-2 to conclude the individual state tourney on a positive note.

On Thursday, Ding defeated Holt’s Jennifer Nelson 6-0, 6-1 in the opening round.

In the quarterfinals, MICDS’ Rachel Li topped Ding 6-0, 6-0.

In the consolation quarterfinals, Ding edged St. Pius X’s Kiera Dunn 6-1, 4-6, 11-9 to advance to Friday.

In the consolation semifinals on Friday, Springfield Catholic’s Caroline Nelson topped Ding 6-0, 6-1.

With the seventh-place match victory, Ding earned medalist honors for the third straight season.

The 2023 campaign isn’t over quite yet for Ding, as she and the Thomas Jefferson Cavaliers will compete at next week’s team state tournament. 

Thomas Jefferson (14-0) will meet Grain Valley (23-2) in the Class 2 semifinals at 9 a.m. on Oct. 20.

 

VOLLEYBALL ROUNDUP: Webb City, Thomas Jefferson and CHC wrap regular season with wins

WEBB CITY 3, BRANSON 0

BRANSON, Mo. — Webb City concluded the regular season on a high note by sweeping Branson on Thursday night.

The Cardinals defeated the Pirates 25-20, 25-16, 25-21 in the Central Ozark Conference finale.

Jaeli Rutledge led the Cardinals with 19 kills, while Aubree Lassiter added seven kills and Makayla Mayes added four kills.

Savannah Crane handed out 33 assists from the setter position, while Avery Gardner recorded a team-high 19 digs. Three players, Jaylee VanBecelaere, Kirra Long and Mia Lenker, contributed five digs apiece.

Webb City won the match without a key performer, as all-state libero Sophia Crane was out sick, Webb City assistant coach Jason Brown said. 

The Cardinals finished 5-4 in the COC. 

Webb City (24-6) will return to Branson for the Class 4 District 6 tournament. The second-seeded Cardinals meet seventh-seeded Parkview at 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday.

 

THOMAS JEFFERSON 3, GOLDEN CITY 0

Thomas Jefferson knocked off Golden City 25-12, 25-20 and 25-16 in the season finale.

The Cavaliers closed the regular season with a 22-7 record and finished 6-0 in the Ozark 7 Conference on the way to their first title since 2000.

Lannah Grigg finished with 13 kills, four digs and three blocks to lead TJ, while Gabbi Hiebert closed with seven kills, five digs and three blocks. Maci Shifferd had five kills, eight digs, a block and an assist. Mary Nguyen had 15 assists, seven digs, two aces and a kill, while Leah Studer added nine assists, eight digs and a kill. Maggie Sutton had 13 digs and three aces.

Thomas Jefferson is the top seed in the Class 1 District 10 volleyball tournament and will play the winner of (4) Purdy and (5) Verona at 5 p.m. on Oct. 23 at Verona High School.

 

COLLEGE HEIGHTS 3, WHEATON 0

College Heights Christian volleyball closed the regular season on a high note after defeating Wheaton 25-11, 25-12 and 25-10 on Thursday.

The Cougars finish the regular season with a 14-10-3 record.

Maddy Colin led CHC with 30 assists, 10 kills and six aces, while Lilly Plassman had 11 digs and Bailey Peeples finished with 18 kills. Katie Moss had 14 digs, with Christa Miller adding 13 digs.

College Heights is the second seed in the Class 1 District 10 volleyball tournament and takes on seventh-seeded Exeter at 6:17 on Oct. 19 at Verona High School.

 

BOYS SWIMMING: Host Tigers win home invite, Joplin takes 2nd

 

CARTHAGE, Mo. — The host Tigers captured the team championship at their own Carthage Invitational swim meet on Thursday night at the Fair Acres Family YMCA.

Carthage finished with 360 points, and Joplin was second with 206. 

Rounding out the team standings were Monett (188), Hillcrest (129), Nevada (122), Marshfield (80), Seymour (21) and Greenwood (16).

The Carthage Tigers pose after winning their home invitational on Thursday. Courtesy photo.

CARTHAGE HIGHLIGHTS

Carthage’s 200-yard medley relay team of Kellen Frieling, Braxton McBride, Will Wright and Maveric Allphin took first in 1:46.

The Tigers also won the 400 freestyle relay with a time of 3:36, with McBride, Frieling, Aydan Nye and Wright competing.

Frieling and Wright each won a pair of individual events.

Frieling took first in the 100 butterfly in 57.34 seconds and the 100 backstroke in 58.34 seconds. 

Wright won the 200 IM in 2:11 and the 100 breaststroke in 1:04.

Also winning individual events for Carthage were McBride (50 free) and Ryan Steinbach (500 free).

McBride was the runner-up in the 100 free, while Nye took second in the 200 free and Ben Rogers finished second in the 500 free. 

The Tigers placed fourth in the 200 freestyle relay, with Allphin, Daryl Martin, Rogers and Nye competing.

 

JOPLIN HIGHLIGHTS

Joplin’s Nathan Wardlow won a pair of individual events, the 200 freestyle in 1:51 and the 100 freestyle in 49.76 seconds.

The Eagles won the 200 freestyle relay in 1:39, with Parker Hinman, Isaiah Thom, Ian Vermillion and Wardlow competing.

Joplin’s 400 freestyle relay team of Hinman, Thom, Vermillion and Wardlow finished second.

Hinman was second in two events, the 200 IM and the 100 butterfly. 

The Eagles finished fourth in the 200 medley relay, with Owen Mordica, Jackson Mordica, Connor Intessimone and Jordan Goins competing.

 

OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

Nevada was the runner-up in the 200 medley relay. Nevada’s Kolton Evans was second in the 100 backstroke and teammate Trace Gould was the runner-up in the 100 breaststroke.

Monett’s Ryan Goodson took second in the 50 free and third in the 100 free.

The Cubs took second in the 200 free relay. 

CROSS COUNTRY: McAuley’s Parrigon takes 1st at Clever

CLEVER, Mo. — McAuley Catholic junior Michael Parrigon was the individual medalist at the Clever Invitational on Thursday. 

Parrigon finished the 5K in 16:26 and Crane’s Calen Faucett was second in 16:43.

It was Parrigon’s fourth win of the season.

Also for the Warriors, Trae Veer finished 10th in 17:51, Will Mollnow was 21st in 18:26 and Connor Taffner took 27th in 18:43. 

Cassville’s Ethan Bohmke took seventh in 17:38, with teammate Trever Garnett 12th in 17:55 and Mount Vernon’s Sam Fish finished 14th in 18:04. 

Leading the way for College Heights Christian were Connor Jordan (42nd) and Colton McMillan (44th).  

McAuley’s boys finished third in the team standings (113) after Strafford (97) and Cassville (112). There were 15 full squads competing.

“It was a great performance by the team,” Warriors coach Andy Youngworth said. 

On the girls side, Cassville’s Jadyn Williams-Reed (21:20) and McAuley Catholic’s Olivia Parrigon (21:25) finished 10th and 11th, respectively.

Mount Vernon’s Rylee Simons took 13th (21:29) and McAuley’s Kendall Ramsey finished 14th (21:32).

College Heights Christian’s Marla Anderegg and Jesalin Bever finished 17th and 20th, with teammate Lilly Royer 27th. 

New Covenant’s Clara Trent won the race in 19:31.

The top four girls teams were Chadwick (43), Clever (75), Fair Grove (102) and Strafford (116).

 

DISTRICT SOFTBALL: Carthage rallies past Joplin behind big sixth inning

Fifth-seeded Carthage trailed 6-4 heading into the sixth inning before scoring six times with two outs to take control on the way to a 10-6 win over fourth-seeded Joplin in the finale of the opening round of the Class 5 District 7 tournament on Thursday at the JHS Athletic Center. 

“Joplin is a great offensive team and they just come at you and are hard outs from the top of the lineup to the bottom of the lineup,” Carthage coach Stephanie Ray said after the win. “We regained our focus and honed it back in there after they got out ahead of us. We had some opportunities to score after getting runners on base with our speed before we just started getting hits where we needed them in that sixth inning to get those six runs.”

ALL GOOD THINGS

The loss ends Joplin’s season with a 15-14 record, with the Eagles graduating seniors Bailey Ledford (3B), Ashley Phillips (LF), Taryn Casey (RF), Peyton Meadows (LF) and Megan Meeker (RF).

“I am very happy with the way the girls responded throughout that game,” Joplin coach Brenden Schneider said. “Obviously, we can’t give up a six spot because it’s hard to come back from that. But, it’s funny because that’s how the game works. Last time we played them (earlier in the season), we put up a big inning to go ahead in the top of the seventh at their place. … Credit to Carthage for finding a way to have good at-bats and battle all game. The one thing I have always said about Coach Ray’s Carthage teams is they’re extremely tough and always play you hard. Hopefully, next year we will find a way to overcome that stuff and get better.”

“Every single one of those kids has found a way to get better and found a way to help their teammates get better,” Schneider added of his senior class. “Ultimately, it’s a softball program, but it’s also a human-development program. When they leave this place after four years, the one thing we care about more than wins and losses or statistics is, ‘are they better people?’ If they walk off this field as better human beings than when they walked on it for the first time, I feel like our staff has done a pretty good job. We can’t thank those five enough for how they’ve helped turn this program around. We are going to miss all five of them. There is nothing more I can say than thank you.”

RUN WITH TWO

Carthage went into the sixth inning down 6-4 and rallied with six runs touching home with two outs in the frame. Lottie Youngblood brought in the first two runs with a two-run single to center to tie the game at 6-6. Shelby Hegwer flared a ball to right field for an RBI single and a 7-6 advantage. After a Joplin pitching change, Lexa Youngblood put Carthage on top 8-6 with a run-scoring double to right field before Jenna Calhoon dropped a ball inside the foul line down the right-field line in the next at-bat to plate two more runners and wrap the scoring in the inning.

“Anytime we come into the dugout, whether we are down two or even four runs, these girls have always had the ability to score big,” Ray said. “We talked to them before the inning and told them to get a couple and get it even. They went and put six runs up. When their energy is up and they believe, anything is possible.”

HOW THEY GOT THERE

Carthage took the lead in the top of the first inning when Brooklynn Dolon-Main drove in a run with a sacrifice fly to left field before Joplin answered back in the bottom half of the opening frame with a run-scoring single past shortstop by Jadyn Pankow to tie the game at 1s.

The Tigers clawed back in front, 2-1, in the second inning after Calhoon scored from third on a shallow single to center by Emmy Stark.

The Eagles used a big swing to jump in front in the third inning when Pankow ripped a ball over the wall in center field with a runner on to give Joplin a 3-2 advantage.

Joplin added two insurance runs in the bottom of the fourth when Abby Lowery drove in a run with a groundout before Libby Munn brought a run home after reaching on an error when a popup on the infield found the turf with two outs and runners on the corners for a 5-2 lead.

Carthage cut the deficit to one in the top of the fifth when Dolon-Main singled to right field to drive in a pair of runs to make the score 5-4.

Joplin answered immediately in the bottom of the fifth when Ledford reached on an infield hit with runners on second and third to score a run and push the lead to 6-4.

IN THE CIRCLE

Addie Wallace earned the complete-game win after allowing six runs, four earned, on 12 hits, a walk and three strikeouts in seven frames. 

“She did a great job,” Ray said. “Early on, we felt like they had her number a little bit. We brought her in the dugout and went over spray charts. She became a student of the game and started studying. She locked back in the second half of the game and went and got some big outs when we needed them.”

Ava Wolf took the loss after allowing nine runs, four earned, on 11 hits, two walks and three strikeouts in 5 2/3 innings. Caelyn Bobski allowed one run on four hits and a strikeout in 1 1/3 relief innings.

IN THE BOX

Lottie Youngblood had two hits, two RBI, two runs scored and two walks. Calhoon doubled twice, drove in two and scored once for Carthage. Dolon-Main had two hits and two RBI, while Hegwer had a hit, scored a run and drove in a pair. Avyn Willis and Ashlyn Brust each had two hits and two runs scored. Stark had two hits and an RBI. Lexa Youngblood had a hit, an RBI and a run scored.

Pankow led Joplin with two hits, including a home run, a team-high three RBI and scored a run. Ledford had two hits, scored a run and drove in one. Lowery had a hit, scored a run and drove in one. Munn, who doubled, and Wolf each had two hits, while Maria Loum and Phillips each had a hit and scored a run.

ON DECK

With the win, Carthage improves to 18-15 and takes on top-seeded Raymore-Peculiar at 1 p.m. in the semifinal round on Saturday.

DISTRICT SOFTBALL: Neosho holds off Lee’s Summit in opening round

Seventh-seeded Lee’s Summit rallied back from an early hole to tie second-seeded Neosho in the middle innings of the Class 5 District 7 opening-round game only to see the Wildcats answer right back and keep the Tigers at bay the rest of the way for a 6-3 win on Thursday at the JHS Athletic Complex.

“I like that we scored early to get the lead and I thought Olivia (Emery) threw well,” Neosho coach Catie Cummins said after the win. “I was a little frustrated with our defense. We just weren’t real sharp. … We had good production from the top and the middle of our lineup. … Overall, we did enough to win and that is what matters. I would like to play a little cleaner on Saturday.”

HOW IT HAPPENED

Neosho took the initial advantage when a pair of runs came home to score in the second inning on two Lee’s Summit throwing errors. Autumn Kinnaird hit a ground ball to short with a runner on third base and reached on a throwing error. Kinnaird advanced on the play and the return throw to second sailed into the outfield, allowing her to round third and touch home on the play for a 2-0 lead.

The Wildcats picked up a third tally in the third inning when Avyn Blair drove a run in with a ground ball to shortstop, scoring Addy Hart from third in the process for a 3-0 advantage.

Lee’s Summit rallied all the way back to tie the game up on an RBI single by Ryann Arnold with the bases loaded to center field, which was compounded by a Neosho error to allow two more runs to score and tie the game at 3-3.

Arnold looked to score on a bunt in the next at-bat, before Autumn Kinnaird faked the throw to first and tagged the runner trying to score from third to keep the game tied.

“It was huge because it allowed us to get Olivia through less pressure without the go-ahead run on third,” Cummins said of Kinnaird’s play at the plate. “That was a huge heads-up play by Autumn and it was a big momentum swing for us.”

Neosho didn’t wait to respond, as Carleigh Kinnaird clubbed a ball over the scoreboard with two outs and two on for a three-run home run and a 6-3 advantage.

“As soon as it was, I just screamed,” Cummins said with a laugh. “I don’t even think it was words that came out. You just knew off the bat. … She just crushed it. I asked our coaches if it went over the scoreboard. They said, yeah, that ball is in Kansas now.” 

IN THE CIRCLE

Emery earned the win after allowing three runs, two earned, on five hits and three strikeouts in four innings. Carleigh Kinnaird pitched three scoreless relief innings on two hits, a walk and two strikeouts.

Alyssa Nichols took the loss after allowing six runs, four earned, on eight hits, two walks and six strikeouts in six innings of work.

IN THE BOX

Autumn Kinnaird had two hits, scored a run and drove in one. Carleigh Kinnaird homered on the way to three RBI and a run scored to lead the Wildcats.

ON DECK

(2) Neosho takes on (3) Lee’s Summit West at 3 p.m. on Saturday.

DISTRICT SOFTBALL: Webb City advances to semifinals with run-rule win

 

NEVADA, Mo. — An eight-run third inning propelled second-seeded Webb City to an 11-0 victory over seventh-seeded Raytown on Thursday night in the quarterfinals of the Class 4 District 7 softball tournament at Bushwhacker Field. 

The higher seeds prevailed in three of the four quarterfinal matchups.

Top-seeded Nevada blasted eighth-seeded Raytown South 18-0, third-seeded Belton pounded sixth-seeded Warrensburg 15-0, and in the lone upset, fifth-seeded Carl Junction outslugged fourth-seeded McDonald County 19-15.

In Saturday’s semifinals, Nevada (25-7) will meet Carl Junction (11-19) at noon, while Webb City (25-11) will take on Belton (17-10) at 2 p.m.

The Cardinals pushed across two runs in the first inning on Alex Maturino’s RBI double to left and Lily Hall’s run-scoring single through the right side.

Webb City blew the game open with an eight-run third inning.

In the big inning, Kylee Sargent delivered a two-run triple to right and Karsyn Cahoon followed with a bloop single. 

Later in the frame, Abby Sargent was plunked with the bases loaded and two more runs came home when the Bluejays were unable to haul in Dawsyn Decker’s pop up. 

Next, Maturino made it 10-0 with a two-run double, her third double of the night.

Rilley Hanes smacked an RBI to left in the fourth to give the Cardinals an 11-0 advantage.

Raytown had the bases loaded in the fourth and fifth innings, but the Cardinals retired the side each time without any damage. The game ended after the top of the fifth due to the run-rule. 

Addie Burns started in the circle for the Cardinals. The freshman tossed three scoreless innings to earn the win.

Makenzie Wynn and Laney Taylor each pitched a scoreless inning in relief.

 

Class 4 District 7

Thursday’s scores

(1) Nevada 18, (8) Raytown South 0

(5) Carl Junction 19, (4) McDonald County 15

(2) Webb City 11, (7) Raytown 0

(3) Belton 15, (6) Warrensburg 0

 

STATE TENNIS: Carl Junction doubles team, TJ’s Ding advance to Day 2

 

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Carl Junction’s doubles team of Naiyah Wurdeman and Jenna Besperat and Thomas Jefferson singles player Allison Ding kept their respective seasons alive with their performances on the opening day of the MSHSAA Class 2 Girls Tennis Championships on Thursday at the Cooper Tennis Complex. 

In doubles, Carl Junction’s duo of Wurdeman and Besperat went 2-0 and advanced to Friday’s semifinals.

In the opening round, the Bulldogs defeated the St. Pius X duo of Chloe Kronlage and Brooke Madden 6-0, 6-0.

In the quarterfinal round, Wurdeman and Besperat topped Grain Valley’s Brooklyn Spencer and Emma Thiessen 4-6, 6-2, 10-7.

The Bulldogs will meet Parkway North’s Yvonne Shannon-Emily Koo in the semifinals. The other semifinal features Springfield Catholic’s Hannah Lee-Britney Ung vs. Villa Duchesne’s Alexandra Todorovich-Katherine Todorovich.

In singles, Ding went 2-1.

Ding defeated Holt’s Jennifer Nelson 6-0, 6-1 in the opening round.

In the quarterfinal round, MICDS’ Rachel Li topped Ding 6-0, 6-0.

In the consolation quarterfinals, Ding edged St. Pius X’s Kiera Dunn 6-1, 4-6, 11-9.

Ding will meet Springfield Catholic’s Caroline Nelson on Friday in the consolation semifinals.