Connect with us

Sports

Haskell helping Murray boys volleyball to strong start

By mid-April, four games into the region portion of the season, the Murray boys volleyball team was leading the way with an undefeated mark in league play.  The Spartans’ good play shouldn’t be a surprise, as the team was second in Region 10 a year ago with a 9-3 record in the first year of […]

Published

on


By mid-April, four games into the region portion of the season, the Murray boys volleyball team was leading the way with an undefeated mark in league play. 

The Spartans’ good play shouldn’t be a surprise, as the team was second in Region 10 a year ago with a 9-3 record in the first year of boys volleyball being a sanctioned sport. As of April 12, Murray had an overall mark of 7-4. 

Though the Spartans’ success in starting off Region 10 action with a 4-0 record was a true team effort, setter Daniel Haskell stood taller. The junior made progress from last season and has emerged as a leader for Murray. 

“[Haskell] is a rare combination of fierce competitor and humble leader,” head coach Allan Mount said. “He’s exactly the type of setter any coach does to have running their offense. In addition to the assists he nets for the team, he is also our most consistent server and second on the team in digs—and all as a first-year junior setter. We’re lucky to have him.”

Haskell joined the boys volleyball team almost by accident. 

During his freshman year in school, Haskell wanted to try out for the basketball team. He had played the sport for years and wanted to be a part of the Spartan program. However, an injury prevented him from trying out. Once the winter sports season ended and the spring season arrived, Haskell’s injury had healed, so he decided to give volleyball a try. A close friend of his already played volleyball, so it made sense to join the team. 

Mount is happy he did, and Haskell has grown to love the game. 

“I love competing because of the feeling you get during a competitive point or long rally,” he said. “I love the satisfaction of competing at a high level with intensity; even when it’s not a winning outcome, it is still so fun.”

The sport is enjoyable for Haskell, and he looks forward to competing every time he steps onto the court. But what truly means the most to him is being a part of a tight-knit Spartans team. He appreciates the leadership on the team and the examples the older players have set.

“My favorite part about our program at Murray is how close all of the guys are,” he said. “Lots of the seniors this year are the friends that built the program when it was still a club, and it really feels like a family, on and off the court.”

The position of setter is a critical one in volleyball. If Haskell doesn’t do his job effectively, his teammates can’t do theirs. Haskell prides himself in knowing his role and in being able to outsmart the opposition. 

“As a setter I always try to work on being deceptive and hiding my set for as long as possible,” he said.

But Haskell isn’t complacent. He wants to get better and help his team capture a region title and be a factor in the Class 4A state tournament. 

“Individually, I want to be able to have a bigger presence as a setter in the front row, especially in terms of blocking,” he said. “As a team, our goal for this year had been to achieve first in region and go further in the state tournament than last year.”

The season started off slowly for Murray, as the Spartans dropped their first two matches and were 1-3 after four outings. Heading into region play, Murray was 3-4. However, Murray started off the Region 10 slate in dominant fashion. Murray defeated Hillcrest, Park City and Cottonwood, each in straight sets, 3-0. On March 27, Murray took care of Stansbury 3-1. 

Early on, the Spartans fell behind in some matches and got frustrated. Shaking off those struggles hasn’t been easy, but Haskell said he and his teammates have learned from these setbacks and are eager to continue improving as the season winds down. 

“For me and our team this year, one of the most challenging aspects has been pulling ourselves out of holes when we get down,” he said. “We learned how to do this in the preseason with some tough losses. That significantly benefited our ability to do this in region play.”

The Spartans wrap up the regular season April 29 with a road match at Park City. The 4A state tournament will be May 7 and 8 at Utah Valley University. Last season, Murray was seeded 10th and won a first-round match over Mountain Crest before falling in the second round to Sky View. Murray then defeated Desert Hills in the consolation bracket before ending the season with a loss to Provo. 

Haskell’s plans after high school include learning a trade, possibly serving a church mission and continuing his volleyball career—albeit a bit differently. 

“After high school, I want to look into trade school doing electrical work,” he said. “I am also thinking about serving a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. As far as volleyball, I really enjoy beach volleyball and want to focus more on that after high school.” λ





Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Several Michiana-area track and field athletes win state championships

INDIANAPOLIS (WNDU) – The IHSAA held both its boys and girls track and field state final meets this weekend, and several Michiana-area athletes are coming home as state champions! During the boys meet on Friday, Westview junior distance runner Noah Bontrager had a record-breaking night that saw him win two individual titles. He set a […]

Published

on


INDIANAPOLIS (WNDU) – The IHSAA held both its boys and girls track and field state final meets this weekend, and several Michiana-area athletes are coming home as state champions!

During the boys meet on Friday, Westview junior distance runner Noah Bontrager had a record-breaking night that saw him win two individual titles. He set a new state record in the 1600-meter race, winning it with a time of 4:02.60. The Notre Dame commit also claimed the 3200-meter title with a time of 8:51.22.

Meanwhile, Warsaw junior Jordan Randall won the high jump title with a leap of 7-00. The Tigers would go on to place an area-best fifth place as a team.

Following Friday’s meet, Bremen senior Luke Kincaid was named the winner of the Robert S. Hinshaw Mental Attitude Award, which recognizes a senior who excels in mental attitude, scholarship, leadership and athletic ability.

At the girls meet on Saturday, South Bend Washington junior track star Adriana Swanson won the 100-meter hurdles title with a personal best time of 13.83.

Additionally, Whitko senior Gwen Howard won the state title in shot put with a throw of 46-11.

There were a lot of other athletes who represented Michiana and that state finals this weekend. For a look at the full results from the boys meet, click here. For the girls meet, click here.

Michiana also had a very successful day at the Unified track and field state finals on Saturday, as Elkhart won its second state championship in a row and Penn finished as state runner-up.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

***** NCAA Outdoor Track and Field National Championships *****

National Championship Meet General Preview Nationals. One final meet. For it all. Beginning Wednesday, the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field National Championships will convene in historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. college track and field is a weird sport. What you do in the regular season seldomly matters come June. Rankings are thrown out the […]

Published

on


National Championship Meet General Preview

Nationals. One final meet. For it all.

Beginning Wednesday, the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field National Championships will convene in historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. college track and field is a weird sport. What you do in the regular season seldomly matters come June. Rankings are thrown out the window when that first gun goes off. This is a team sport that has seen overwhelmingly favorites crumble as it’s seen teams with an outside chance rise to the top. 21 events, some championship teams need scoring in 10+ events, some need about 5. There is no perfect formula to win this meet. It may be pretty, it may be ugly, it may take collegiate records, a team of multiple Bowerman watchlist athletes, it may take a plethora of 5th-8th place finishes. All that matters is who has the most points when all the events are tallied up.

How The Meet Is Scored
21 events. Each event awards points to places 1st-8th. 1st receives 10 points, then 8, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. The scores are then rallied for each school to determine the national champion.

How The Meet Is Structured.
Every race aside from the 5000 and the 10000 has a semifinal and a final. Races 800 and below (including the hurdles and relays) will have 3 heats of 8 runners each. To make the 9 person final. Getting to the final is most of the battle, it’s almost guaranteed points. For the 1500 and 3000 meter steeplechase. There are 2 heats of 12. The top 5 from each heat and the next 2 fastest times advance to a 12 person final. For the 5k and 10k, field events, and multis there’s no semis, just one final.

Field events such as the throws and horizontal jumps will have a prelims, then a subsequent final where the top 9 marks will advance to the final and be given 3 more attempts. The high jump and pole vault will have all 24 competing at once, there is an opening height for all athletes, but an athlete may open at a higher height. An athlete has 3 attempts to clear said height, but you will see take 2 and use their third attempt at a higher height.

The meet is spread across 4 days. Aside from the multi eventers. Each gender will have their own day to shine. The men will kick things off Wednesday with the semi final races and a few field events and have their final on Friday. For the women it’s on Thursday and Saturday. The Heptathlon and Decathlon are each two days. The Decathlon will take place the first two days and the Heptathlon the next two days.

Men’s Preview
Our men’s team has a very solid chance of contending for the national championship. Our men’s team has some versatility across multiple events. We have an entry in the 100, 400, 800, 1500, Steeplechase, 110 hurdles, and 400 hurdles. They also qualified both relays. However, they only have 1 field event athlete competing, which is Aleksandr Solovev in the men’s pole vault. This is a very senior laden team and if there’s ever been a close chance of winning it all, this group has as great of a chance as ever.

Our strength lies in some big hitters. We are 4th in entries for this meet. We will be relying on some big performances from Aleksandr Solovev who’s ranked 1st in the pole vault. Sam Whitmarsh who has the best PB in the 800 field, Auhmad Robinson who’s ranked 3rd in the 400 and has the capability to podium or win it all. As well as the versatility of Ja’Qualon Scott who in my opinion is the most valuable piece to this team. He’s ranked 4th in both of the 110 hurdles and 400 hurdles but has the capability to easily medal in both; and he is also the first leg of our 4×100 relay.

We also expect to score big in the 4×400 and the meet may come down to that final race. The question is who runs on that relay. The prelim should be easy but we can’t let up whatsoever with Florida and Alabama in the prelim heat. We have so many options to run the 400. We could place Auhmad Robinson, Kimar Farquharson, Cutler Zamzow, Hossam Hatib, Antonie Nortje, Eric Hemphill, or even Ja’Qualon Scott. The challenge will be picking the fastest 4. If it were me I’d go Cutler Zamzow – Auhmad Robinson – Hossam Hatib – Kimar Farquharson. Nortje hasn’t been running his best lately but if completely healthy he can easily step in. The meet may come down to this race and to win it’ll probably take a sub 3 minute race. We need these 10 points badly. All the other contenders will be in this race as well. For our men’s 4×100, it’ll take a huge huge race to get into the final. We don’t have the strong anchor that other teams have. Ernest Campbell has been running well, but in 2nd leg sk we shouldn’t move him. Last week we went Scott-Campbell-Mason Mangum-Robinson. Robinson doesn’t have the straight line speed to keep up with other anchors. We’ll be in a tough heat with Auburn, tu, and LSU. Beating one of these 3 would get us into the final probably. Anything can happen in a 4×100.

This team is strong and has some outstanding athletes, however, national championship teams cannot solely rely on a few big performers. It’s usually the team with more bullets to score that comes out on top. Rankings are important for the fans to follow, but once the gun goes off, they are of little importance. This statement is heightened in the distance events. In a championship meet, a distance race rarely comes down to who ran the fastest time (with pacers in a meet where that one event was your sole focus). It comes down to racing, strategy, and most importantly guts. In the 800, but more so in the 1500 and Steeplechase, what matters is getting to the final, then racing smartly and strategically. This is why having two strong races like Cooper Cawthra (1500) and Victor Kibiego (steeple) is great to have. I mentioned the big hitters, but points here can be the difference between standing under the confetti at the end or coming up just oh so close. I really think Cooper Cawthra can surprise the country here and have a huge performance. 2 years ago Victor Kibiego placed 3rd at this meet. He dropped out of the race last season due to health. He looked strong last week and I hope he has a huge race left in him.

The competition is fierce. We are going in ranked 2nd based on PR’s. USC is a much larger favorite thanks to their 17 entries and 8 entries between the 100 and 200. They are a speed factory with dominant sprinters and strong relays. They also have 4 field event entires. Having that many bullets who could score is scary and why they’re the favorites. They have more room to slip up while also having more room for someone to step up and have a big day. They can add some points in the high jump, long jump, and discus. Arkansas will be a factor as well. They are led by sprinting phenom Jordan Anthony (a former Aggie receiver, who never got to step foot on the track for us). He has the capability for winning both events. They also have 2 more entires than we do at 15 with all kinds of depth. They have a strong 800 duo, two strong relays, a solid distance group, a strong high jumper and even a Decathlete. Georgia has one more entry than us, and 4 other schools have more than 11 entries: Texas Tech, Ole Miss, Tennessee, and Alabama. Auburn New Mexico, and Minnesota also have a chance to score big points from a few individuals.

Our men’s team is solid. Pat Henry and staff have put together a strong squad for a moment like this. His famous saying goes, “it’s all about everybody having a great day on the same day.” We certainly have the potential to win the entire thing. It’ll take some really great performances, multiple podium finishes, and some athletes to step up big time. It’s going to be an interesting race to follow, I like our chances and I really hope we’re the ones who come out on top.

Women’s Preview
Our women sit in a similar situation as the men. One school is the favorite with us being ranked 2nd ahead of many other schools fighting along with us. Our women’s team doesn’t have the depth spread across as many events as our guys do. Our women’s team is composed of the dynamic sprinting duo of Camryn Dickson and Jasmine Montgomery, a spectacular heptathlete in Sofia Iakushina, a spectacular triple jumper in Winny Bii, and a spectacular high hurdler in Jaiya Covington. We also have a strong steeple duo in Debora Cherono and Kennady Fontenot, a 400 runner in Jaydan Wood and two strong relays that can play a factor.

This women’s team relies on the strength and versatility of Camryn Dickson and Jasmine Montgomery (and the trainers who keep them going after many races lol). They will both compete in Eugene, hopefully 8 times. They qualified in 4 events, the 100, 200, 4×100, and 4×400. They are so versatile and our staff asks a lot of them, and they always deliver. These sprinters have always been a vital part to a teams success, especially on the women’s side. Sprinters like Abby Steiner, Rhasidat Adeleke, and others. We can do a lot of damage with these two girls. Their strongest event is the 200 and they have a better shot at scoring there. I’ll break it down more in the event previews, but their 100 heat is insane lol.

As the meet will begin for the women with our runners taking center stage Thursday, Saturday will be huge for our women. Saturday we see the conclusion of the Heptathlon and the Triple Jump. Two events where we are expected to score big. Sofia is ranked first, with two amazing athletes ranked right behind her. It’s very clearly a 3 way race between Sofia, Pippi Lotta Enock of Oklahoma and Jadin O’Brien of Notre Dame. When I mean every inch or second counts in this event I mean it! Winny Bii is tied for first with the best mark in the triple jump with a 45’11.75. She is tied with Agur Dwol of Oklahoma and Shante Foreman of Clemson who all have the same best jump this season. This will be an intense back and forth battle! It’ll be on ESPN+.

Also on the track will be Jaiya Covington, the indoor 60 hurdle champion. With 40 more meters and a few more hurdles, she also has a chance of winning outdoors, but the competition will be even more intense! She is .15 behind the nation’s leader in Harris of Florida, but like I’ve said many times, it’s what happens when the gun goes off! Anything can happen, and Jaiya showed indoors she knows how to race when it matters most. Another surprise opportunity we could see some points is from the steeple. The two heats to me are really lopsided. Kennady Fontenot got placed in an extremely strong heat and I believe Cherono is in a much more manageable. Cherono has been improving each time she runs the steeple as it’s her first year doing so. So I expect her to get into the final and fight for some points!

A big piece for our women will be the relays! Our women looked great in the 4×100 even after a sluggish start. They’ve changed the first leg multiple times this season. Last time out it was Jasmine Harmon, usually it had been Latasha Smith but she had a rough meet last week and didn’t even run the relay. Jaiya Covington is also an option here. Legs 2-4 have remain the same with Dickson handing off to Bria Bullard and Montgomery closing out. I like our heat assignment and love having South Carolina and Baylor to our right to tag off of! I think this relay gets into the final with clean handoffs. Our 4×400 features Dickson and Montgomery, then usually it’s been Jaydan Wood and Latasha Smith. Who knows is Smith is healthy, if she is she’d make a huge difference. We’ll really need Wade to step up. This relay could easily get into the final with a great race, however there’s not much room to slip up. Getting both relays into the final would be huge for us and very important to add some points.

As for the competition, the overwhelming favorite is Georgia. The dawgs have put together a really strong and balanced team. What separates them from the rest of the field is their string group of lady throwers. Something we are lacking. Georgia has the two best javelin throwers in the country. They have two PB’s that are far ahead of the field. One of them is former Aggie Lianna Davidson who finished 2nd for us twice the past two years but she then transferred to UGA. I called it a devastating loss then and hoped it wouldn’t come back to bite us and now here we are UGA expects to score 18 here, they have a top hammer thrower who could win it, and a really strong shot putter. They can score 30 alone in the throws, with 3 transfers from last fall. Their 3 throwers can podium as an entire team. They also have two of the best 400 runners in the country and two strong relays and a 400 hurdler who will score. UCLA has 13 entires, one less than Georgia, we have 12 as does Arkansas, LSU, and USC. Don’t sleep on South Carolina or TCU.

On the women’s side, we have very little room to slip up. If any. One bad event for us and we might not have a chance to win it all. Losing Davidson hurts, as does losing Katelyn Fairchild for the season. Georgia is stacked, but the throws can always be tricky. We’ll have to follow what they do there. However we can still provide plenty of fight and still finish strong as a team. We have a strong group and can score big, let’s hope they all have a great day on the same day! It will be fun to follow!

Having both sides in contention will make this a great meet. I’m the first to admit that I’m the problem when it comes to this sport. We feel as if this sport is national championship or bust and I’ll be the first one upset if it doesn’t go our way, but we (ESPECIALLY I) need to understand just being in contention and finishing as a top team in the country is such an amazing feat. Like I said at the beginning of this, this sport is so fragile and delicate. Just one bad race can take you out of contention. It really takes an entire team firing all at once to win a meet like this. Pat Henry has done his best to field an amazing team on both sides. This will also be the last time we see some of these guys in an Aggie uniform. It’s felt like some of these guys have been part of the Aggie track family for so long, it’s surreal thinking about how well never get to see Auhmad Robinson, Ja’Qualon Scott, Sam Whitmarsh, Kimar Farquharson, and others in the maroon and white. I really hope they can go out on top. I’ll save the emotional stuff for later lol.

I’ll be trying to provide as much insight as I possibly can the next week or so. I’ll provide a preview for every single event, a daily preview and recap, as well as give you my predictions sometime time throughout the week. Then we can laugh at how wrong I’ll be. It’s going to be my favorite week of the year so buckle in and let’s talk and watch Aggie Track and Field! If any of you have any questions about this meet or anything about track, remember there is no dumb questions. I want to grow this fan base, all are welcome!! Let’s enjoy this championship meet, let’s cheer like crazy, and let’s BTHO Everyone!





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Twins Minor League Report (6/7)

Twins Video CURRENT W-L RecordsMinnesota Twins: 34-30St. Paul Saints: 30-29Wichita Wind Surge: 29-27Cedar Rapids Kernels: 32-23Fort Myers Mighty Mussels: 26-30FCL Twins: 15-10DSL Twins: 1-4 TRANSACTIONSThere were a ton of moves today, so let’s break things down by affiliate. St. Paul: The Twins sent Michael Tonkin back on a rehab assignment with the Saints. He was […]

Published

on

Twins Minor League Report (6/7)

Twins Video

CURRENT W-L Records
Minnesota Twins: 34-30
St. Paul Saints: 30-29
Wichita Wind Surge: 29-27
Cedar Rapids Kernels: 32-23
Fort Myers Mighty Mussels: 26-30
FCL Twins: 15-10
DSL Twins: 1-4

TRANSACTIONS
There were a ton of moves today, so let’s break things down by affiliate.

St. Paul: The Twins sent Michael Tonkin back on a rehab assignment with the Saints. He was already on rehab assignment with the Saints from late-April through early-May, but things weren’t going so well (9.39 ERA in 7 2/3 innings). Here’s hoping Tonkin looks refreshed after taking about a month off. 

The Saints also received Maddux Houghton, who is coming up all the way from down in Fort Myers. Houghton, 26, also made the jump from Low A to Triple A at one point last year. 

Wichita: RHP Cole Percival was assigned to the Wind Surge. He had a 2.70 ERA in nine games with Cedar Rapids. Yes, he is the son of former All-Star closer Troy Percival. He surfaced with the Twins after being released by the Yankees in late-April, where he had been pitching for their Double-A affiliate. Also, LHP Christian MacLeod was placed on the 7-day IL.

Cedar Rapids: RHP Jacob Kisting was assigned to the Kernels. The Twins 14th-round pick from last year’s draft, Kisting hasn’t pitched to a very impressive ERA for Fort Myers (3.97) but has been missing bats. The 6-foot-5 right-hander has 41 strikeouts in 34 innings of relief this season.

Fort Myers: RHP Matt Gabbert, who is rehabbing his way to Cedar Rapids, has been assigned to the Mighty Mussels. He had a 3.86 ERA and 1.07 WHIP in 14 innings with the FCL Twins.

FCL Twins: New signee Sam Rochard was assigned to the FCL Twins. He had a 1.17 ERA in 23 innings for the Gateway Grizzlies of the Frontier League. Also, OF Byron Chourio started a rehab assignment with the FCL Twins.

SAINTS SENTINEL 
St. Paul 4, Scranton/WIlkes-Barre 1
Box Score
SP: Darren McCaughan (5 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 1 K)
HR: Maddux Houghton (1)

Sean Aronson, Saints Director of Broadcasting & Media Relations, asked manager Toby Gardenhire about Houghton before today’s game.

“You don’t get to come from A-ball all the way up to Triple-A unless you’re a polished player, unless everybody really likes you,” Gardenhire told Aronson. “We love having him here, he’s a really good defender in center field. Hopefully he’ll go out there and get a couple hits for us tonight. ”

Houghton didn’t quite meet those hopes, but I think his manager will still be pleased. While Houghton fell shy of collecting a couple hits, the one hit he had was a big one. He got the Saints on the board in the fifth inning by blasting his first Triple-A homer.

The Saints then grinded out a single run in each of the next three innings. Edouard Julien plated a run in the sixth inning with a two-out single, they scored on an RBI groundout by Payton Eeles in the seventh inning and Anthony Prato hit a sac fly in the eighth.

Darren McCaughan picked up the win after throwing five shutout innings. Michael Tonkin was the first man out of the Saints bullpen. He’s back on a rehab assignment after taking the last month off. He pitched a scoreless sixth inning, giving up a hit and a walk while striking out a batter. He topped out at 94.5 mph and sat 93.2 mph with his four-seamer, which basically where that pitch was last season. That’s a great sign, since last time around Tonkin’s velo was consistently not reaching those 2024 levels.

Kyle Bischoff covered the seventh and eighth innings before Richard Lovelady earned his fifth save of the season for the Saints.  Miranda was the only St. Paul hitter with multiple hits. He was 2-for-4 with a double and two runs scored. Carson McCusker was 0-for-3 with a walk and a pair of strikeouts at the plate, but he threw out a runner at the plate in the top of the fifth inning when the score was still tied 0-0.

WIND SURGE WISDOM
Northwest Arkansas 6, Wichita 4
Box Score
SP: Connor Prielipp (4 2/3 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 5 K)
HR: None

Connor Prielipp took a big step this evening. For the first time in 21 career pro starts, Prielipp recorded outs in the fifth inning. In fact, he was inches away from completing five innings for the first time. The final batter he faced hit a grounder that Aaron Sabato had to go to his right to get. He made the toss to Prielipp, but the speedy runner barely beat him to the bag.

Prielipp was in attack mode, pounding the strike zone and working quickly. He threw 44 of his 60 pitches for strikes, an eye-popping 73.3%. For reference, the MLB average strike rate is 63.8% this season. He struck out five batters, did not issue a walk and the only run he surrendered was unearned. Preilipp’s ERA is down to 3.13 and he’s struck out 40 batters in 31 2 /3 innings.

Jacob Wosinski , the first man out of Wichita’s bullpen, gave up five runs over an inning of work and the lineup couldn’t mount enough of a rally to come back from that. Ricardo Olivar was the only Wind Surge hitter to reach safely twice, as he was 1-for-3 with a walk and a run scored. Kyler Fedko, Aaron Sabato and Rubel Cespedes all hit doubles. Kala’i Rosario also stole his ninth base of the season.

Tyler Dearden was ejected from this game in the top of the fifth inning for arguing the strike zone from the dugout. He didn’t appreciate a call during his at-bat, then the next Wichita hitter also appeared to have a call go against him. 

KERNELS NUGGETS
Wisconsin 3, Cedar Rapids 2
Box Score
SP: Alejandro Hidalgo (5 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 1 BB, 7 K)
HR: None

With the Kernels down to their last strike in the top of the ninth inning, Kyle DeBarge ripped a game-tying double past the third baseman. Wisconsin managed to answer in the bottom of the ninth to walk it off.

The game-winning rally started with a bloop single, followed by a walk and a sacrifice fly. Then Kernels pitcher Hunter Hoopes uncorked a walk-off wild pitch. Tough way to eventually lose after battling back. 

Alejandro Hidalgo is getting his feel for pitching back after missing the entire 2024 season due to a shoulder injury. It’s been a mixed bag in the early going, but he was great tonight. The 22-year-old right-hander struck out seven batters over five innings, and gave up two runs on three hits and a walk.

DeBarge had a pair of doubles and Rayne Doncon was 2-for-3 with a double and a walk.

MUSSEL MATTERS
Fort Myers 3, Palm Beach 1
Box Score
SP: Dasan Hill (4 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 7 K)
HR: None

Dasan Hill is off to an incredible start to his pro career. He turned in four innings of shutout ball tonight, surrendering just two hits and a walk. The 6-foot-5 lefty struck out seven of the 15 batters he faced tonight, topping out at 96.8 mph.

Among Hill’s 62 pitches, 19 were sinkers, 18 were changeups, 14 were curveballs, 10 were sliders and he threw one four-seamer (per Baseball Savant/Statcast data). He got 11 swinging strikes, six of which came on his curveball. Hill, 19, now has a 1.50 ERA and 40 strikeouts in 24 innings this season.

After Hill’s night was over, Adrian Bohorquez took over. It’s been a tough go for him this year, as he entered tonight with a 11.85 ERA in 13 2/3 innings, but maybe tonight will be a turning point. Bohorquez limited Palm Beach to one run over four innings and struck out five batters. He topped out at 96.5 mph and got a dozen swinging strikes. 

Yohander Martinez was involved in both of the Mussels’ scoring plays. The first run of the game was scored when Martinez reached on an error with two outs in the fourth inning. He later broke a 1-1 tie in the eighth inning by hitting a two-out, two-run double.

Walker Jenkins was 1-for-3 and played center field for seven innings.

COMPLEX CHRONICLES
FCL Red Sox 5, FCL Twins 1
Box Score
SP: Joel Garcia (3 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 2 BB, 5 K)
HR: None

There wasn’t much to highlight from this one, to be honest. The Twins only mustered three hits, struck out 12 times and committed three errors. Joel Garcia, the starting pitcher, racked up five Ks in just three innings, but he also surrendered three runs.

Brent Francisco, who the Twins signed from the Washington WildThings of the independent Frontier League, was the standout performer in this one. The 6-foot-7 right-hander struck out four batters in two scoreless innings of work. 

Byron Chourio, who had last played May 11, went 1-for-4 with a double in his first rehab game. He drove in the only run for the Twins

DOMINICAN DAILIES
DSL Twins 9, DSL Yankees 4
Box Score
SP: Angel Castillo (1/3 IP, 0 H, 2 R, 3 BB, 1 K)
HR: Jhomnardo Reyes (1), Teilon Serrano (1)

The DSL Twins are in the win column! The lineup made up for dud of a start from Angel Castillo by scoring four runs in each of the first two innings.

Three Twins runs in the first frame were scored without the benefit of a hit. There were a pair of bases loaded walks and a run scoring wild pitch. The big blow of the second inning came when 17-year-old Dominican center fielder and A+ name Jhomnardo Reyes hit a three-run homer. Teilon Serrano added a home run of his own in the third inning. It was the first professional home run for both Reyes and Serrano, who each have an OPS north of 1.500 in the very early goings for the DSL Twins. Serrano reached base three times and stole a base.

Castillo opened the game with a strikeout, but then walked each of the next three batters. Eliezer Lucena allowed two of those inherited runners to score, but the 17-year-old Venezuelan right-hander stabilized the game by throwing 2 2/3 scoreless innings with five strikeouts. 

TWINS DAILY MINOR LEAGUE PLAYERS OF THE DAY 
Pitcher of the Day: Dasan Hill, Fort Myers (4 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 7 K)
Hitter of the Day: Teilon Serrano, DSL Twins (2-for-3, HR, BB, SB, 3 R, RBI, K)

PROSPECT SUMMARY
Check out the Prospect Tracker for more. 

1. Walker Jenkins (rehabbing with Fort Myers): 1-for-3
5. Connor Prielipp (Wichita): 4 2/3 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 5 K
6. Kaelen Culpepper (Cedar Rapids): 1-for-5, K
9. Brandon Winokur (Cedar Rapids): 0-for-4
10. Dasan Hill (Fort Myers): 4 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 7 K
11. Kyle DeBarge (Cedar Rapids): 2-for-5, 2 2B, R, RBI, 2 K
17. Tanner Schobel (St. Paul): 1-for-2, 2B, BB, R, K
19. Carson McCusker (St. Paul): 0-for-3, BB, 2 K
20. Ricardo Olivar (Wichita): 1-for-3, BB, R

TOMORROW’S PROBABLE STARTERS
St. Paul vs. Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, 2:07 pm CT: Simeon Woods Richardson
Wichita at Northwest Arkansas, 2:05 pm CT: Aaron Rozek
Cedar Rapids at Wisconsin, 1:10 pm CT: Tanner Hall
Fort Myers vs. Palm Beach, 11:05 am CT: Michael Carpenter

 

 


Interested in learning more about the Minnesota Twins’ top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!

View Twins Top Prospects

Continue Reading

Sports

CVU girls, Essex boys claim D1 track and field titles

BURLINGTON, Vt. (WCAX) – On the last day of track and field state championships at Burlington High School, the CVU girls and Essex boys claimed the D1 crowns. The Redhawks earned their second in a row after capturing the program’s first-ever title last year. The Hornets are on top for the first time since 2019. […]

Published

on


BURLINGTON, Vt. (WCAX) – On the last day of track and field state championships at Burlington High School, the CVU girls and Essex boys claimed the D1 crowns.

The Redhawks earned their second in a row after capturing the program’s first-ever title last year. The Hornets are on top for the first time since 2019.

On the girls side, Burr & Burton and South Burlington tied for second, while on the boys side, St. Johnsbury finished in second, with CVU in third.

Check out the full recap in the video above.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

WIAA state championships Day 2 highlights

Gentile, Sprangers, Van Rossum and Waddell shine at WIAA state track Kimberly’s Sprangers, Neenah’s Gentile, Little Chute’s Van Rossum and Appleton North’s Waddell lead area athletes on the first day of WIAA state track. Kimberly’s Hunter Sprangers won the D1 boys discus and shot put, while Neenah’s Celia Gentile won the D1 girls long jump […]

Published

on


play

  • Kimberly’s Hunter Sprangers won the D1 boys discus and shot put, while Neenah’s Celia Gentile won the D1 girls long jump and triple jump.
  • Freedom’s Claire Helmila won the D2 girls 800-meter run and Lydia Merrick won the D2 girls high jump, helping Freedom win the D2 girls team title.
  • Shiocton’s Paxton Kuehn won the D3 boys 100 dash and Lydia Hofacker won the D3 girls 300 low hurdles.

LA CROSSE − The Post-Crescent coverage area had no shortage of champions at the WIAA state track and field championships this year.

Eight titles overall were earned by area athletes, including six June 7 at Veterans Memorial Stadium Sports Complex.

Mix in a championship relay team and a second consecutive state title for the Freedom girls track team, and it adds up to a banner day for the area.

Earning individual championships June 7 were Kimberly’s Hunter Sprangers in the Division 1 boys discus, Neenah’s Celia Gentile in the D1 girls long jump, Freedom’s Claire Helmila in the D2 girls 800-meter run, Freedom’s Lydia Merrick in the girls high jump, Shiocton’s Paxton Kuehn in the D3 boys 100 dash and Shiocton’s Lydia Hofacker in the D3 girls 300 low hurdles.

Winneconne’s D2 boys 1,600 relay team also captured gold to help the Wolves secure a second-place finish in the team competition. The Wolves finished with 42.5 points, just behind state champ Notre Dame (44).

The Neenah girls also finished as D1 state runner-up with 46 points. Arrowhead won the D1 girls title with 51.

Sprangers, Gentile headline area individual champs

Sprangers and Gentile also won titles on the first day, with Sprangers winning the shot put and Gentile the triple jump.

They were at it again on the second day, with Gentile recording a leap of 19 feet, 6.5 inches in winning the long jump and Sprangers capturing the discus title with a throw of 196-2.

Gentile, a sophomore, placed second last season in the long jump and this season was determined to do better. She recorded her winning jump on her fifth attempt, which put her far ahead of second-place finisher Makena McGarry of Onalaska (18-11).

“It’s a lot more rewarding to get first place this year,” she said. “That’s what I was coming here to do, so getting the gold is great.”

Gentile was on point in both of her championships, as she didn’t scratch on any of her 12 jumps.

“My coaches always like pounding on consistency,” she said. “So knowing that this is the biggest meet of the year, I want to get all my jumps in and all the possibilities to win.”

Sprangers trailed De Pere’s Connor Fontaine from the start in the D1 discus, with Fontaine recording a 193-0 throw on his first attempt with Sprangers following with a 192-11.

The Kimberly senior then found the right mix on his fifth attempt, recording a heave of 196-2 that netted the title.

“Going in to it I felt real good,” he said. “Mental clarity, it was unbelievable. I felt amazing. I never felt that good. I just knew it was going to take one good throw and it was going to take a throw that was just gonna click.

“After the throw I just knew. Mid-air, ‘Oh yeah.’ And it came down 196 and I lost my mind. It was awesome.”

Sprangers, who will compete at Penn State next season, said he and Fontaine may look like rivals during competition, but the two are actually good friends.

“It might look like we hate each other, but at the end of the day we’re best friends,” Sprangers said. “We’re just competing and at the end, we’re congratulating each other and it’s just a good time all around.”

Merrick, Helmila spark Freedom girls

Helmila’s state title in the D2 800 run was something she has dreamt of for quite some time.

The Freedom senior won the event with a time of 2:12.76 and led for nearly the entire race. She finished a little over two seconds ahead of Lancaster’s Maddie Driscoll (2:14.98).

“It’s been my dream to be a state champion individually and it just means the world to me,” she said. “It shows the work that I put in, but also the work that the people put into myself. And to be able to reward those people with something like this, it means the world to me.

“The coaches, my parents and my teammates that have all brought me to this moment and most importantly, to show how God has worked in my life through all the highs and lows and to be able to overcome those and get a state championship.”

Helmila’s title, along with Merrick’s championship in the high jump, was a big reason why Freedom was in contention for the state team title. The Irish would repeat as D2 state champs by finishing with 40 points, just getting past second-place University School of Milwaukee (37).

Merrick secured the high jump title — an event she also won as a sophomore — with a leap of 5-6. It was a big moment for the Freedom senior, who placed sixth in the event last year.

“It was just so fulfilling,” Merrick said. “Winning my sophomore year and taking sixth last year, getting back to the podium is a dream and I did it. I’m so proud of myself.”

Merrick fended off Hayward’s Helen Thompson, who took second with a 5-6 but lost out to Merrick, who accomplished the feat in fewer attempts.

“I’ve been jumping with her since sophomore year,” Merrick said. “We’re friends. All of the girls over there are friends. It was amazing competition and amazing sportsmanship.”

Hofacker, Kuehn lead Shiocton in Division 3

Lydia Hofacker let her hard work do the talking in winning the D3 girls 300 hurdles.

The senior had the top time heading into the state meet and put together a fine showing in the finals, finishing with a time of :44.35. That allowed her to eke out the championship over McDonell Central’s Elyse Bushman (:44.56).

“I was really, really nervous but worked really hard to get here,” Hofacker said. “And I walked into finals ranked No. 1 and knew that I couldn’t give up that ranking. I went into that race with running as hard as I could.

“(Bushman) is super sweet and we push each other. It was really awesome. We talked after the race and we both really helped to push each other. Awesome to have such supportive people around you and everyone just runs their hardest.”

Hofacker, who will be competing at UW-Oshkosh in college, left it all out on the track.

“This was my last time running the 300 hurdles,” she said. “It was awesome, a really rewarding feeling that all the hard work I put into during the season really paid off.”

For Kuehn, winning the D3 boys 100 dash could be seen as a dose of redemption. The junior qualified for the 100 final last June, but said a pulled hamstring kept him from competing.

“That was not good,” he said. “But I kept working and getting in the weight room and followed the directions of the coach and staying positive and praying and getting strength from the Lord.”

Kuehn won the title with a time of :10.99 seconds. His personal-best time is :10.89. He was able to fend off Unity’s Payton Merrida (:11.12), who finished second.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

House is open in new era for CU Buffs athletics – Boulder Daily Camera

At long last, the House is open. On Friday night the inevitable finally became reality, as the settlement was finalized in the House vs. NCAA case that will usher in a new era in collegiate athletics. A consolidation of several antitrust suits filed against the NCAA, the House settlement opens the door for direct revenue […]

Published

on


At long last, the House is open.

On Friday night the inevitable finally became reality, as the settlement was finalized in the House vs. NCAA case that will usher in a new era in collegiate athletics.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending