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FOOTBALL: Joplin’s defense shoulders the weight in win over Willard

Even when the offense struggled to find it’s rhythm during the middle quarters, the Joplin defense never wavered and kept Willard in check all night before two late scores sealed a 28-14 win for the Eagles over the Tigers on Thursday at Junge Field in Central Ozark Conference action. 

The Eagles started with a torrid pace, scoring two first-quarter touchdowns before the offense went silent deep into the second half. With Joplin’s defense keeping Willard in at bay all night, forcing the Tigers into five punts and a turnover in the second half, the offense found life late with two touchdowns in the fourth quarter en route to the win.

“You can’t say enough about the defense,” Joplin coach Curtis Jasper said after the win. “We struggled a little early getting after the quarterback. But, as the game wore on, we did a better job as a defensive line getting that pressure—batting passes down, getting to the quarterback and getting sacks or making him uncomfortable and getting interceptions. The defense put us in great field position all night long and we were able to punch a couple in during the fourth quarter to get us a little breathing room so we could put this one away.” 

BETWEEN THE LINES

Joplin senior TE Whit Hafer braces for impact before running over a would-be tackler on the way to the end zone for a touchdown in Joplin’s 28-14 win over Willard on Thursday at Junge Field. Photo by Israel Perez.

Joplin needed just three plays to get on the scoreboard in the game’s opening drive. The Eagles started the game with a 12-yard run from junior RB Toryn Jones and an 11-yard completion to senior WR Aidan Sampson before senior QB Hobbs Gooch found senior TE Whit Hafer on a screen pass in the flat. Hafer turned up the sideline, lowered his shoulder and trucked a would-be tackler before breaking loose for a 32-yard touchdown and a 7-0 lead with 11:04 left.

“I braced for that hit,” Hafer said. “At that point, if I am still standing, I am going to keep going. I hit him, saw the end zone and kept running.”

After a three-and-out by the Tigers, the Eagles went back to work on offense. Jones picked up gains of 9 yards and 27 yards on the first two plays from scrimmage to get into the red zone. Facing fourth-down-and-goal from the 1-yard line, Jones took the handoff right and found paydirt for his first rushing score of the season for a 14-0 advantage with 6:52 left in the first period.

The first quarter saw a turnover by each team, as Gooch was picked off on Joplin’s third possession before Collis Jones returned the favor for the Eagles, intercepting Willard’s Russell Roweton on the very next play to give possession back to JHS.

Willard put the ball in the end zone for the first time with 15 seconds left in the first half when Roweton found RB Gary Walker on a short pass with Walker breaking tackles on the way to an 18-yard touchdown to trim Joplin’s lead to 14-6.

Joplin senior WR Aidan Sampson hauls in a reception during the Eagles’ win over Willard on Thursday. Photo by Israel Perez.

Joplin forced Willard into a punt deep in its own territory on the first possession of the second half, with the Eagles taking possession at the Tigers’ 36.

In turn, Joplin got inside the Willard red zone before Gooch fumbled the ball over to the Tigers with 7:47 left in the third quarter.

After another WHS punt, the Eagles started their second drive of the third quarter at the Willard 44 and turned it over on downs with less than four minutes to play in the third quarter at the Willard 33.

“It was almost like we thought it was too easy and we lost focus,” Jasper said about the team’s lull offensively in the second and third quarters. “That, and we had a couple of guys up front get banged up, which had a little bit to do with it, too. 

“We have some depth up front, so we just need to be ready to go when our name is called. Eventually, we did do that, so I am proud of the guys who did step up on the offensive line. I do feel like, ultimately, they did a good job and toughed one out there. 

“We just have to do a better job of maintaining focus offensively throughout the game.”

Joplin junior DL Josiah Hazelwood came up with a sack of Roweton on third down to force Willard into its third punt of the third quarter on the Tigers’ following possession. 

The JHS defense gave the offense its best starting position of the game—the Tigers’ 20-yard line—following another Willard punt and personal-penalty tact on top. 

Joplin junior RB Toryn Jones looks for running room in the Eagles’ win over Willard on Thursday. Photo by Israel Perez.

Jones broke the Eagles’ scoring drought with a 12-yard touchdown run, breaking tackles along the way, on fourth-down-and-2 with 8:07 left in regulation to push the lead to 21-6.

“He is such a tough kid,” Jasper said of Jones. “He is not very big, size-wise, but he has a big heart and runs hard behind his pads. He had a big night.”

After Willard’s fifth punt of the second half, the Eagles, again with great starting field position at the Tigers’ 39, used a 38-yard rush from Jones to set up his third rushing score of the game from a yard out to give Joplin a 28-6 advantage with 6:34 left in regulation.

“I felt really good out there,” Jones said of his first start at the varsity level. “I know I had pretty big shoes to fill and I think I filled them pretty well. … I saw holes and I made them. I was able to get into the end zone and my teammates were there to support me. That was the best part about (the night)—celebrating with my teammates.”

Willard got into the end zone as time expired when Roweton completed a 25-yard pass to Hayden Rakeshaw.

TEAM STATS

Joplin finished with 294 yards of offense, 136 of which came on the ground. The Eagle defense limited Willard to 256 yards of offense, with the Tigers rushing for 96 yards as a team. 

INJURY UPDATE

Senior RB Quin Renfro missed Thursday’s game with a back injury sustained in the Week 1 win over Branson that is expected to keep him out several weeks.

UP NEXT

Joplin (2-0) is back at home in Week 3 with a matchup against Ozark (1-1) at 7 p.m. at Junge Field. 

 

GIRLS HOOPS: Mount Vernon jumps in front and holds off Joplin

Mount Vernon started the game on a 10-0 run and played with that lead through the final horn on the way to a 52-40 win over Joplin on Tuesday in the Eagles’ home opener.

Joplin’s Maria Loum (12) presses Mount Vernon’s Cheyenne Bieber during the Eagles’ loss to the Mountaineers on Tuesday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

The Mountaineers (1-0) pushed their early lead to as much as 15 by halftime. The Eagles (0-3) were able to cut the lead to 10 several times in the second half before finally breaking through midway through the fourth quarter and trimming the lead to seven with four minutes to play. 

Like it had so many times in the win, Mount Vernon was able to respond by pushing the lead back to double digits over the final minutes of action.

“I thought our girls played extremely hard,” first-year Joplin coach Brad Cox said. “We got into some foul trouble early, but I thought we did a good job of fighting through that adversity, and it’s only going to make us stronger. I told the girls, ‘we don’t lose, we learn.’ I learned something tonight. I learned we are great in a 1-3-1 defense, and I learned we have girls who are going to step up and are never going to give up.

“Our achilles heel is going to be our scoring. We are going to play extremely hard defensively. We still have a lot of room to grow. The main thing is, we are trending in the right direction and not the wrong direction. If we continue to build and have each other’s backs, good things are coming.”

Mount Vernon started the game with all of the momentum, scoring the first 10 points over the first four minutes of action. Cheyenne Bieber knocked down a pair of 3-pointers from the top of the key and Addie Hall converted an old-fashioned three-point play to fill out the opening surge.

Joplin’s Bailey Ledford knocked down a 3-ball from the corner to get the Eagles on the board. Joplin’s Riley Kelly sank a 3-pointer off a Mountaineers’ turnover to trim the lead to 12-6 before Hall answered with a 3-ball of her own at the buzzer to give Mount Vernon a 15-6 lead at the first break.

Ledford knocked down her second triple of the first half to open the second quarter to trim the lead back to six, but Mount Vernon used an 8-0 run to push the lead to double digits, 23-9, with less than four minutes to play in the first half.

Ledford and Mount Vernon traded 3-pointers before a free throw from Kelly with 30.9 seconds left cut the deficit to 26-14. Like they did at the end of the first quarter, the Mountaineers got a buzzer-beating 3-pointer from the top of the key by Bieber to go into the intermission up 29-14.

Joplin’s Bailey Ledford drives to the hoop for a bucket against Mount Vernon on Tuesday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

Joplin started the second half on a 7-3 run to trim the deficit to 11, 32-21, off a 3-pointer from Izzy Yust, two free throws from Kelly and a bucket inside from Maria Loum. Shortly after, Joplin cut the lead to 10 on a 3-pointer from Ledford to make the score 34-24 with four minutes on the clock in the third period. 

“She took a year off and I told her it was going to take time to get back into a rhythm and get her confidence back up,” Coach Cox said about Ledford’s day. “She can be that option to step up next to Brynn, Riley and others. We figured out tonight that we have all of the puzzle pieces, we just need to figure out how they fit.”

The Eagles and Mountaineers traded hoops to close out the third quarter, with Mount Vernon again getting a buzzer beater inside from Harley Daniels for a 40-28 lead with one quarter to play.

Joplin broke through to open the final period of play, using an elbow jumper from Kelly and a 3-ball from the corner by Kelly on consecutive possessions to cut the lead to single digits, 40-33.

“Riley is a sophomore starting at a Class 6 school,” Cox said. “She is tough as nails and is going to be a key player for us moving forward.”

As they did all evening, Mount Vernon had an answer. Bieber drilled a 3-pointer and followed with a mid-range jumper off a Joplin turnover to make the score 45-33 with three minutes left. Isabel Cloud added a 3-ball of her own for a 15-point lead the Mountaineers wouldn’t relinquish. 

SCORING LEADERS

A sophomore guard, Bieber led all scorers with 24 points, making a game-high six 3-pointers. Hall added 10 and Cloud finished with eight.

Ledford knocked down four 3-pointers on the way to a team-high 16 points, while Kelly finished right behind with 13. Yust added seven.

“Bailey and Izzy stepped up and played extremely well,” Coach Cox said. “Riley Kelly played her butt off. There is not another team in this league who has more heart than these girls do. I can promise you that.”

UP NEXT

Joplin hosts Pittsburg on Dec. 2.

Joplin’s Izzy Yust drives the lane before dishing out an assist in the Eagles’ loss to Mount Vernon on Tuesday. Photo by Jessica Greninger.

PREP GOLF: Joplin boys notch sixth team win of the season with victory at Horton Smith Invitational

Joplin boys golf continued its dominance to start the 2021 season after taking first place as a team in the Horton Smith Invitational on Monday at Schifferdecker Golf Course.

The Eagles earned their third tournament win with a score of 318, while Carl Junction placed second with a score of 330. Webb City placed third with a team total of 337, while Carthage (353) placed fourth and Nevada (359) fifth.

“They were kind of upset with their scores, but I told them, ‘Guys, you don’t want to peak too early,’” Joplin coach Jack Pace said with a smile. “Just enjoy the game right now and have fun. You want to peak around conference, districts and state. … I always say, though, when the kids feel like they aren’t playing to their expectations and they are still winning, that is a sign of a good team.”

Rounding out the team scores, Thomas Jefferson (370), Lockwood (387), McAuley (403), Seneca (413) and Sarcoxie (455) placed sixth through 10th.

Nevada’s Owen Swearingen finished with the medalist honors after carding a five-over-par 76. Carl Junction’s Noah Williams took second place after finishing one stroke back with a 77, tying with Joplin’s Kaden Park, who also carded a 77. Joplin’s Hobbs Campbell and Wyatt Satterlee both tied for fourth place after shooting 79 to round out the top five individual scores.

Joplin’s Fielding Campbell and Harry Satterlee tied for sixth with a final score of 80. Ethan Sage finished just outside the top 10 with an 83 for the Eagles, who have won all six of their matches as a team this season.

“The course was playing a little bit more difficult than I expected,” Fielding Campbell said. “I got off to a rough start, eight over after six holes, but I was able to grind it out and fire an 80, which I was not too upset with in the end.”

We kind of expected this because all of us have been playing a lot over the summer,” Campbell added about Joplin’s start to the season. “If we keep working hard, the success will continue for us.”

Carl Junction’s Zach Wrensch finished in a tie for ninth with an 82, while Jacob Teeter finished the round with an 83. Tommy Walker shot an 88, while Cooper Wyrick closed with a 90.

Webb City was led by Keegon Dill, who finished in eighth place with a score of 81. Braxton Cahoon shot an 84, while Cody Frazier finished with an 85. Jager Carter closed the day with an 87, while Carson Frazier shot an 89.

Britt Coy’s 83 led Carthage, while Owen Derryberry finished with an 87. Ben Nicholas finished with a round of 88, while Quinn Brewer shot a 95. Brandon Gacke’s 97 rounded out the Tigers’ fourth-place grouping.

Other notable scores from the area: Thomas Jefferson’s Owen D’Amour finished in a tie for ninth place after finishing with a round of 82. McAuley’s Evan D’Amour carded an 86. Nevada’s Logan McNeely shot an 88, while Lane McNeely shot a 95. Seneca’s Eli Olsen led the Indians with an 87. Lockwood’s Reese Fyfe finished just outside the top 10 with an 83.