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DISTRICT SOFTBALL: Raymore-Peculiar downs Carthage in semifinals

Fifth-seeded Carthage saw its season come to an end at the hands of top-seeded Raymore-Peculiar in the Class 5 District 7 semifinals at the JHS Athletic Complex on Saturday.

The Panthers used a perfect game in the circle by Kelsie Donaldson and scored an unearned run in the bottom of the fourth inning, which was the difference in the game.

“We got ourselves in some tough situations there, but defensively there were two or three innings where we made some big plays that got us out of it and kept us within reach at the end of the game,” Carthage coach Stephanie Ray said. “Where all we had to do was get some runners on and put a ball in play and maybe it’s a different ball game. The whole time, we never felt like we were out of it. Our defense was pretty good outside of that one inning. I just wish we could’ve done a little more at the plate.”

Carthage closes the season with an 18-16 record.

“It was fun coming to practice everyday as well as the games because we have a bunch of kids who love playing softball with each other,” Ray said about her team’s season. “We call it a sisterhood. When we face adversity, they just pick each other up. We had a little lull in the middle of the season and we still find ourselves playing in a 1-0 game here with a heck of a ball club just because they believe and trust in each other and us. They are some of the hardest workers I have ever been around. They show up every single day. Whatever we throw at them, they handle and are ready to move on and get to the game.”

The Tigers graduate seniors Shelby Hegwer, Alexis Smith and Brooklynn Dolon-Main. 

“This is my 10th year at Carthage, but this was my fourth year as head coach, so this is my first class that I’ve been able to coach from freshmen to seniors,” Ray said. “They’ve been great leaders. I’ve been able to watch them grow from little baby freshmen to three full-time starters doing great things for us by the time they are juniors. They have put a mark on the program. They have accomplished things that a lot of people probably didn’t expect from them except us. They bought into what we are trying to do and it’s helped push us in the right direction to where we are notching almost 20 wins a season now, which is a big deal.” 

IN THE CIRCLE

Donaldson pitched seven scoreless innings and struck out 15 on the way to the win.

“She did a good job of getting ahead,” Ray said. “She’d throw the fastball off the plate, get ahead and then just kind of move up in the zone on us and get us to chase a little bit more and a little bit more.”

Addie Wallace was saddled with the tough-luck loss after allowing one unearned run on three hits and a walk in six innings.

“Addie threw a great game,” Ray said. “She was getting on top of batters, mixing it up well and hitting her spots. She brought a little today.”

HOW IT HAPPENED

Ray-Pec took the lead on a Carthage miscue in the bottom of the fourth. Carmen Boxberger led off the inning with a walk before stealing second to get into scoring position. Boxberger came around to score later in the inning when a throw behind her from the catcher in an attempted pickoff went into center field to put the Panthers on top 1-0.

Wallace got out of the jam without any more damage coming home after inducing a 5-3 double play.

“Instead of [letting the run that scored affect her] and falling behind in the count, she continued to attack the zone and trust her defense,” Ray said. “Jenna (Calhoon) made a great play with runners on first and second, ground ball, stepped on it and went to first to get us out of it. And it was a great stretch at first base, too.”

The Panthers looked to add insurance in the bottom of the sixth after the first two batters reached to leadoff the inning. Hayden Kurtz flew out to left with a runner on third and one out, with CHS’ Lexa Youngblood gunning down the runner at the plate to preserve the score at 1-0.

“They skied one, she got behind it and threw her out at the plate and our dugout erupted,” Ray said of the play. “That is something where going into the top of the seventh in a one-run ballgame, that play set us up to make a push there. It got us up and really had us thinking we had a chance to go win this game at the end.”

ON DECK

Ray-Pec takes on second-seeded Neosho in the Class 5 District 7 tournament championship game at 5:30 p.m. on Monday at the JHS Athletic Complex.

DISTRICT SOFTBALL: Neosho’s Kinnaird homers twice late, including walk-off in extras over Lee’s Summit West

In a season filled with adversity that ultimately led to a Central Ozark Conference crown, Neosho had to draw on that experience of battling through a daunting schedule one more time as the Wildcats found their backs against the wall with the season on the line. 

Down to their final three outs and facing a three-run deficit, Neosho rallied behind a game-tying home run from Carleigh Kinnaird in the seventh inning to send the ballgame into extras before Kinnaird delivered once again an inning later by belting a walk-off two-run homer in the bottom of the eighth inning to send Neosho past Lee’s Summit West 8-6 in the Class 5 District 7 semifinals on Saturday at the JHS Athletic Complex.

“I did know as soon as I hit it that it was gone,” Kinnaird said with a smile after being asked if she knew on contact. “But my mindset was just trying to get on because we needed as many baserunners as possible to get a run across. I just put the bat on the ball and it went out.”

“Some of our faculty members and other people from the community have called us the Comeback ‘Cats or the Cardiac ‘Cats, you can take your pick there,” Neosho coach Catie Cummins said with a smile about her team rallying late for the walk-off win. “Whether it was Webb (City) earlier in the year, or Raytown South, Nixa—we have always been a team that has done that. I think that resiliency from the tough schedule we played early on helped us here because we knew what it was like to play from behind and fight back and win.” 

BIG SWINGS

After surrendering three runs and the lead in the top of the seventh on a three-run homer from LSW’s Bailey Amezcua, Neosho refused to see its season slip away, rallying back in the bottom half of the inning. Kynden Smith and Beclynn Garrett walked to lead off the frame ahead of Kinnaird, who followed up by depositing an 0-2 pitch over the wall in center field for a game-tying three-run home run. 

“It was amazing,” Kinnaird said of her first long ball. “It was a game changer, which is what we needed in that moment because we were a little down after giving up those three runs. That swing felt great. I was so happy it went over so I could help my team out after letting them down by giving up those three runs.”

The first two Wildcats made outs to lead off the bottom of the eighth, but Garrett extended the inning by reaching base with a single up the middle to bring Kinnaird to the plate. 

“That was huge,” Kinnaird said of her teammate. “She had a great at-bat.”

Kinnaird took a strike on the first pitch before working a 2-1 count and promptly smacked the fourth pitch of the at-bat off the scoreboard in left field to a standing ovation on the home side of the bleachers, with her teammates waiting for her at home plate.

“She is just nails,” Cummins said of Kinnaird’s walk-off home run. “Talk about guts. Just the maturity to go back up there with people on base and get the job done again.” 

“We have confidence,” Kinnaird said about the never-give-up attitude her team has shown all season long. “That’s the biggest thing. We believe we are in every game no matter the situation. The fight that we have as a team is great. … That’s been our motto all year—‘fight till the end’— and we fought till the end.”

IN THE CIRCLE

Kinnaird also earned the complete-game win in the circle for the Wildcats. She allowed six runs, three earned, on nine hits, two walks and seven strikeouts in eight innings.

“To give up the home run in the seventh and think the game has ended, it shows how tough she is mentally to get right back in it,” Cummins said. “She could have just folded. But she didn’t. She has that no-quit mentality. She just bows her neck and says she’s going to take care of business and she did that.”

Kali Bogart started and took a no-decision after she allowed five runs on five hits, five walks and seven strikeouts in 6 2/3 innings. Rylee Vaughn took the loss in relief after allowing three runs on five hits and two walks in an inning of work.

HOW THEY GOT THERE

LSW recorded three straight hits with one out in the top first inning to get on the scoreboard with the first run. After a one-out single from Madelyn Reed and a double to right field by Amezcua put runners at second and third, Bogart singled to left field for an RBI and a 1-0 lead. 

Neosho wasted no time responding, plating two runs in the bottom of the first inning to take the lead and the momentum. Addy Hart brought the first run home with an RBI single to left before Journey Arnall followed with an RBI single up the middle to score the runner from second for a 2-1 advantage. 

Neosho added insurance in the last of the second inning when Garrett grounded a ball up the middle to the shortstop for an out, driving home the runner from third in the process to make the score 3-1.

Amezcua brought the Titans within a run of the lead in the top of the third after singling up the middle to score the runner from second to make the score 3-2.

Lee’s Summit West tied the game up at 3-3 in the top of the fifth when Kailey Coleman dropped a squeeze bunt down to score the runner from third.

Amezcua came up big once more in the top of the seventh when she ripped a one-out pitch over the scoreboard in left field to give the Titans their first lead, 4-3, since the first inning. JaJa Kastle delivered a bases-loaded single up the middle later in the inning to plate a pair of runners for a 6-3 advantage. 

IN THE BOX

Kinnaird homered twice, drove in a game-high five runs and scored twice to lead Neosho in the win. Hart had two hits and an RBI, while Arnall also had a pair of hits and drove in one. Garrett had a hit, drove in one and scored three times. Ashlyn Stevens doubled and scored a run.

ON DECK

Neosho will take on top-seeded Raymore-Peculiar in the Class 5 District 7 tournament championship game at 5:30 p.m. on Monday at the JHS Athletic Complex.

“It hasn’t quite sunk in that we are going to play for a district title, which has been one of our main goals all year,” Cummins said. “Our first was to win the COC, and we’ve checked that off, and this is kind of our next goal. We have our work cut out for us for sure, but I hope the confidence of this will carry over to Monday.”