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BASEBALL: Joplin closes regular season with win over Lamar; Eagles to host district play

Joplin scored a pair of early runs and kept Lamar at bay until the Eagles used a three-run sixth inning to pull away to a 5-2 win in the regular season finale on Wednesday at the JHS Athletic Complex.

“It is always good to come out in that last regular season game and get a win on your home field,” Joplin coach Kyle Wolf said. “Hopefully, that propels you into next week when you only have one guaranteed game left. We say all year that all of the ups and downs and everything throughout the season leads you to this point. Hopefully, we can find some renewed energy coming off this win and get after it next week.”

ON DECK

Joplin ends the regular season with a 14-14 record. The Eagles are the fifth seed as the hosts of the Class 6 District 6 Tournament and take on fourth-seeded Republic at 1:30 p.m. on Monday at the JHS Athletic Complex. 

“We are so blessed to have this facility and to be able to play at this place,” Wolf said about hosting. “Anytime we can bring games to Joplin and put them on our field, we are excited to do so. Hopefully, our kids will take a little home field pride out there with them and execute the way we are capable of.”

ON THE MOUND

Brady Mails started the game and earned the win after allowing one unearned run on six hits and four strikeouts in 5 2/3 innings pitched. Joe Jasper worked 1 1/3 innings in relief, allowing one unearned run on two hits and a strikeout.

“He struggled a little early getting his tempo and finding his balance,” Wolf said of Mails’ outing. “When he found it, he did a good job of hitting spots and getting some quick outs for us.”

Robert Lawrence took the loss after allowing two runs on eight hits, a walk and two strikeouts in 4 2/3 innings of work. Ryan Davis worked 1 1/3 innings of relief, allowing three runs, two earned, on two hits, a walk and two strikeouts.

GAME ACTION

After Lamar left the bases loaded in the top of the first, Joplin swung the momentum in its favor with the game’s first run coming in the bottom of the frame. Byler Reither singled to right-center field with one out before stealing second and coming around to score on a two-out, two-strike single by Ethan Guilford to make the score 1-0.

The Eagles added to their lead an inning later with another two-out run when Reither doubled to center to score Isaac Meadows from second for a 2-0 advantage.

Lamar cut the lead in half in the top of the fifth when Lawrence doubled off the wall in left field to plate a run. The Tigers stranded the tying and go-ahead run.

Lamar threatened to tie the game in the top of the sixth inning when Alex Wilkerson singled to lead off the frame before ending up on second with two outs. Jasper entered in relief and induced a flyout to end the threat.

“That’s a tie game if he doesn’t get that out,” Wolf said of Jasper’s relief appearance. “For him to go out there and get us back in the dugout still up a run was a good job by him.”

Joplin struck for insurance in the bottom of the sixth inning after Kyler Stokes ripped a two-out single to left field to plate Bodee Carlson from second to make the score 3-1. Guilford followed with a sharp single up the middle to bring Stokes home for a second run in the inning. Landon Maples, who was courtesy running for Guilford, scored later in the inning on a wild pitch to extend the lead to 5-1.

“That was huge to be able to come out and score those three runs late in the game,” Wolf said. “Especially right after they scored when they had a little energy and were feeling good. To come out and put up those three took a little air out of their dugout and gave us some confidence.”

Lawrence singled to left field on a 3-2 pitch with one out in the top of the seventh to score a run and trim the deficit to 5-2.

AT THE PLATE

Reither had two hits, including a double, to go alone with one RBI and a run scored, while Guilford had two hits and two RBI. Justin McReynolds had two hits, while Stokes had a hit, one RBI and a run scored.

GIRLS HOOPS ROUNDUP: Joplin, Webb City, College Heights take losses; Mount Vernon beats Monett

BRANSON 44, JOPLIN 37

BRANSON, Mo. — The Joplin girls cut a double-digit deficit in the second half to five points with less than a minute to play before ultimately falling to Branson in Central Ozark Conference play on Thursday.

“Turnovers and missed free throws beat us tonight,” Joplin coach Luke Floyd said. “We didn’t match Branson’s energy in the first half and dug ourselves a hole we couldn’t recover from. We have to stop beating ourselves with the same mistakes over and over again.”

The Eagles (5-8, 0-3 COC) went into the half trailing 25-12 with the lead meandering back and forth around the double-digit mark all the way up until two minutes of game action left. 

With Branson (2-10, 1-1) leading 39-29, Joplin’s Lily Pagan scored inside to trim the lead to 39-31 with 1:45 to play. Brynn Driver followed with a 3-pointer a minute later to cut the lead to six, 41-35, with 52.7 seconds left. Pagan scored off the break with 26 seconds remining to make the score 42-37, but that would be as close as the Eagles would get before the final horn. 

Driver led Joplin with nine points, while Pagan added eight. Brooke Nice added seven points.

Joplin hosts Hillcrest on Jan. 21.

 

NIXA 70, CARTHAGE 52

NIXA, Mo. — Nixa pushed a 33-26 halftime lead to a 30-point margin to start the fourth on the way to the win over Carthage.

The Eagles (12-4, 1-1 COC) outscored the Tigers (10-7, 1-2) by a 23-13 clip in the third quarter to pull away.

Macie Conway led Nixa with 20 points, while Ali Kamies added 15. Nora Clark finished with 13 points.

Hailey Fullerton led Carthage with a game-high 25 points, including two 3-pointers. Kianna Yates added 11 points, while Brinna Ream finished with eight. 

Carthage is at Lamar on Jan. 26.

 

OZARK GIRLS 52, WEBB CITY 33

OZARK, Mo. — Hot-shooting Ozark defeated Webb City 52-33 on Thursday in COC girls action.

The Cardinals slipped to 4-6 overall and 1-1 in the conference, while Ozark improved to 6-8 and 2-0 in COC play. 

Jaydee Duda scored 15 points for Webb City, while Kenzie Robbins added 10 points. Both players made two 3-pointers. 

Anna Hitt led Ozark with 17 points and 12 rebounds, while Lyla Watson added 15. 

The Tigers, who shot 45 percent from the floor, made 15 field goals—nine were 3-pointers. 

Ozark led 18-7 at the end of the first quarter and 26-19 at the break.

The Cardinals cut their deficit to five in the third quarter before the Tigers hit back-to-back 3-pointers. Webb City trailed 36-28 entering the fourth quarter. 

The Tigers then scored the first eight points of the final frame to extend their lead to 16 points. 

Webb City is at the Logan-Rogersville Tournament beginning on Monday. 

 

WYANDOTTE 48, COLLEGE HEIGHTS 41

WYANDOTTE, Okla. — Wyandotte took a 24-23 lead into the locker room before outscoring College Heights Christian 20-7 in the third period to steal the momentum en route to victory.

College Heights limited Wyandotte to one field goal in the fourth quarter, but was unable to overcome the deficit.

Jayli Johnson led the Cougars (10-2) with 11 points, while Lainey Lett finished with 10. Grace Bishop scored eight and Catie Secker added seven.

College Heights takes part in the Lancer Classic on Jan. 18.

 

MOUNT VERNON GIRLS 68, MONETT 25

MONETT, Mo. — Lacy Stokes scored 20 points as the Mount Vernon girls basketball team earned a Big 8 win.

Ellie Johnston added 12 points for the Mountaineers, who led 14-5 by the end of the first quarter. Johnston hit four 3-pointers. 

Also for the Mountaineers, Allie Schubert and Jolie Prescott added nine points apiece and Kadence Krempges scored eight.

Mount Vernon led 34-13 at intermission. 

Sadie Camp led Monett with nine points. 

 

Joplin boys and girls cross country teams ready for competitive jump

With predominantly the same team from a year ago, the Joplin boys cross country team has a chance for a special season if the pieces fall in the right place. 

“We feel pretty good about where we are up front, and we have some depth at the back end to kind of close the door,” Joplin coach Dustin Dixon said. “This is probably the strongest team we have had in about five years or so. We feel really good about it.”

Senior Micah Bruggeman is expected to lead the Joplin boys team this season. Bruggeman finished last season as the lone state qualifier for the boys team after finishing 14th in the sectional race. 

“He is easily one of the best middle distance runners in the state of Missouri,” Dixon said. “He should have a significant chance to win a state title in the spring.”

The Eagles will have several young runners who figure to fill out the pack behind Bruggeman, with sophomore Hobbs Campbell leading the way after a freshman year filled with plenty of success. Campbell finished 22nd in districts and 49th at sectionals in his freshman season.

“He had a great middle school cross country career, but he didn’t know if he wanted to run cross country in high school,” Dixon said of Campbell. “He didn’t really run at all in the summer before his freshman year. He had a great freshman season for us, but he (is in much better shape) now because he has trained all summer.

“It has been a few years since we have had front runners, but I think with Micah and Hobbs, especially, that we can see some Joplin teammates at the front of races.”

Sophomore Zaben Barnes, junior Nicholas Horton, junior Evan Matlock are three runners expected to score plenty of varsity points this year for Joplin. 

Seniors Patrick Beranek and Ryan Byers will also help the Eagles fill out the pack this season. 

“My six, seven, eight, nine and 10 guys are all so closely jumbled together that I don’t know how the season will play out with those slots,” Dixon said. “We have some depth that we have not had in the past, and we feel really good about this year’s team.

“We feel like we will be able to put our seventh runner in front of a lot of teams’ No. 5 runner,” Dixon said. “Even though those six and seven kids don’t score points for the team, we think they can make the four and five kids have better scores.”

Coach Dixon is ready to see this boys team elevate to another level in 2020. After several seasons with strong individual finishes or competitive finishes as a team, he is ready to see the Eagles build towards winning races as a team. 

“We have a lot of experience being good and being competitive,” Dixon said. “We don’t have a lot of experience trying to win. Cross country isn’t like football or basketball, where you play against one team and it’s win or lose. You are at a meet with 30 teams, where we have a lot of experience in those meets finishing seventh. We ran well, but weren’t in the running to win the whole thing. Getting the boys to believe that not only can they win, but there may be races they should win. And we are really setting our sights on trying to win a conference championship, which is something that has never happened for this program.”

JOPLIN GIRLS WANT TO COMPETE AS TEAM

The Joplin girls cross country team is ready for a transition in strong finishes as a team in 2020, and the Eagles will be led by junior Jennalee Dunn.

Dunn is coming off a strong sophomore season in which she finished 11th at districts before setting a PR with a time of 19 minutes, 47.1 seconds at the sectional meet to qualify for state, where she took 77th. 

“We have always had good individual finishes and have been competitive,” Dixon said. “It feels like this may be a year where we can compete for a conference championship.”

Behind Dunn, Joplin will be relying on freshmen Alex Carson and Allie Keizer, as well as a group of sophomores — Mairi Beranek, Sage Mitchell and Jackie Triplett — to fill out the pack.

“Honestly, our top seven girls might not have a senior,” Dixon said. “I think that girls team is going to be really good.”

With so much youth on the girls’ squad, the goal for the start of the season is to get them used to the 5,000-meter run in order for them to peak at the end of the season as the postseason approaches.

“The race can feel really long in your mind,” Dixon said. “But the whole thing is over in 20 minutes, so it really isn’t a difficult run. It can be difficult for freshmen to know what the first mile should feel like and how fast should it be. … It takes some time to learn that. So, it may be the start of October before our freshmen feel comfortable running that distance.”

While the boys team is looking to make the jump mentally, Dixon said the girls team is in a similar place. For them to compete at the team level, it all starts with believing they can accomplish great things as a unit.

“For the girls, it’s mostly about them believing they can do it,” Dixon said. “We are trying to make that switch in getting them to believe we can do some really great things with this team. Teaching them that and getting our girls at the back end to buy in and try to create a positive culture is really the goal.”

One thing is clear, the excitement level for Joplin cross country is at an all-time high. With several young runners anchored by experienced upperclassmen on both teams, Coach Dixon is ready for both programs to make a leap in 2020.

“We have had a lot of years being runner-up (at the conference meet), but we’ve never won,” Dixon said. “And we have never had a team qualify for the state cross country championships. I think the boys have a shot this year, and maybe even the girls. But, every single girl on this year’s team will be back next year, so we have the opportunity to do something special if they really buy in.”