Tuesday, June 7, 2016 SPORTS SOFTBALL: Echo/Stanield ends solid season with ive irst team selections Page 2B East Oregonian Continued from 1B RBI), and outielder Amie Coffman (.412 avg., 26 runs, 13 stolen bases). Making second team for the TigerScots were second baseman Bailey Hillmick (.456 avg., 40 runs), outielder Char- mayne Bennett (.439 avg., 4 HR, 31 runs), and utility player Ashley Hill (.345 avg., 1 HR, 19 RBI). The Echo Cougars also had a tremendous season in the Eastern Oregon League, inishing third in the EOL with a 19-9 overall record, which earned them a trip back to the state tournament. The Cougars were also well represented in the all-league teams, earning ive irst team selections, one second team selec- tion and one honorable mention. The irst team selections were junior pitcher MacK- enzie Gonzales (11-8, 2.49 ERA, 122 K’s, 117.2 IP), senior catcher Erika Parks (.301 avg., 19 RBI, 27 runs, 19 stolen bases), senior irst baseman Kenzie Blankenship (.402 avg., 7 HR, 32 RBI, 10 doubles), junior outielder Hannah McCarty (.400 avg., 37 runs), and senior designated player Raychal Campana (.391 avg., 12 RBI). Senior inielder Chey- enne Hilliard was Echo’s lone second team selec- tion (.402 avg., 25 RBI, 27 runs) and senior outielder Jamie Christopher was named honorable mention (.253 avg., 19 RBI, 33 runs). The Riverside Pirates were represented by sophomore pitcher Skylar Wightman on second team and junior irst baseman Sadie Hasbell an honor- able mention. Umatilla senior utility player Bridgett Dunham was also picked as an honorable mention. ——— EOL All-League 2016 Player of the Year: Jessica Lambert, sr., Weston-McEwen Pitcher of the Year: Jessica Lambert, sr., Weston-McEwen Coach of the Year: Jeff Griggs, Weston-McEwen FIRST TEAM Pitchers MacKenzie Gonzales, jr., Echo/Stanield Jessica Lambert, sr., Weston-McEwen Catchers Erika Parks, sr., Echo/Stanield Sydney Peal, jr., Weston-McEwen Inield Isabelle Dillow, sr., Weston-McEwen Jordyn Lambert, fr., Weston-McEwen Hannah Mizuta, jr., Vale Asucena Trujillo, sr., Nyssa Outield Amie Coffman, fr., Weston-McEwen Hannah McCarty, jr., Echo/Stanield Lexi Mulvany, jr., Vale First Base Kenzie Blankenship, sr., Echo/Stanield Utility Mariah Moulton, so., Grant Union Designated Player Raychal Campana, sr., Echo/Stanield SECOND TEAM Pitchers Kelsey Hawley, jr., Vale Skylar Wightman, so., Riverside Catchers Gracie Jacobs, fr., Vale Brianna Zweygardt, so., Grant Union Inield Cheyenne Hilliard, sr., Echo/Stanield Bailey Hillmick, jr., Weston-McEwen Amanda Trenkel, jr., Vale Rayvn Walker, jr., Grant Union Outield Charmayne Bennett, so., Weston-McEwen Darby Gassett, jr., Enterprise/Joseph/ Wallowa Jocelynn Smith, sr., Grant Union First Base Natalie Williams, sr., Enterprise/Jo- seph/Wallowa Utility Ashley Hill, jr., Weston-McEwen Designated Player Natalie Stearns, jr., Grant Union HONORABLE MENTION Pitcher Cody Madden, so., Grant Union Catcher Madison Mitchell, jr., Nyssa Inield Madison Plew, so., Enterprise/Joseph/ Wallowa Outield Jamie Christopher, sr., Echo/Stanield Whitney McClellan, so., Grant Union Sicily Simpson, jr., Elgin/Imbler Kelsy Weber, sr., Vale First Base Sadie Hasbell, jr., Riverside Olivia Olvera, sr., Nyssa Utility Bridgett Dunham, sr., Umatilla Lucy Trujillo, jr., Nyssa Designated Player Sydnee Thomas, fr., Vale Staff photo by Sam Barbee In this Mar. 30, 2016 ile photo, Echo’s MacKenzie Gonzales deliv- ers a pitch during a game in Echo. PIONEERS: Five seniors depart, but young talent leaves future looking bright Continued from 1B for a single. “It was great to start that off and get it going. Us ive seniors really went out with a bang in that last inning,” Biggs said. “We spent a good half an hour before warm-ups just talking about how this was our last game, and how we’ve got to do something.” “What a game for her,” Christian said. “Three hits, senior year blowout. She was just crushing the ball and having fun and that’s what it’s all about.” Senior Brittney Erb followed with a pinch-hit double, and then senior Jenny Field put the Pioneers on the scoreboard with an RBI single to center. A sacriice ly by Rachael Lyon brought Erb in to make it 5-2 with one out, but Shaw inished off the Pioneers with a strikeout and a groundout. “I was super proud, and all the girls showed a lot of heart,” said senior Shannon Carter. “We weren’t going to go down without a ight.” Shaw inished the game with two earned runs allowed on eight hits, three strikeouts and no walks. Mac-Hi pitcher Mallory Copeland started the game by striking out Banks’ MaKenna Partain and the Pioneers retired the Braves in order in the irst, but Banks quickly got to Cope- land in the second an had chased her from the circle by the fourth with a 5-0 lead. The Braves scored four in the second inning, which was led off with a single to left ield by Shakayla Snyder (3 for 4). One of Mac-Hi’s three errors to advance pinch runner Destiny Maller, and Mac-Hi’s Sydney Earls throws from the pitching circle in the Pioneers’ 5-2 loss to Banks in the state 4A cham- pionship softball game Sat- urday in Corvallis. Staff photo by E.J. Harris after a groundout, another Mac-Hi error allowed two runs to cross the plate after a grounder by Alyssa Rogers. A ly to right gave the Pioneers their second out, but Partain then hit a triple to the wall in right-center for an RBI, and Keegan Wise followed with an RBI single before getting caught trying to stretch it to a double for the third out. After Shaw kept Mac-Hi searching for its irst hit in the bottom of the frame, the Braves jumped right back on Copeland in the third and plated one more run. Mary Schorn (4 for 4) led that at-bat off with a double, the Snyder hit her in with a single to right. Sydney Earls relieved Copeland in the fourth, and allowed just one hit between the fourth and ifth, then struck out Partain swinging to strand two in the sixth inning and keep the score at 5-0. The Pioneers brought the top of their lineup up in the sixth, and a swinging bunt by Carter was followed by Micha Fortune beating out a bunt in a cloud of dust to put two on with no out. Both runners moved up on a pitch in the dirt with Copeland at the plate, and the Pioneers’ rally took a devastating blow when Carter was called out at home plate trying to score on a grounder to second. Carter appeared to slide under the tag from Shakayla Snyder, but home plate umpire Gary Taylor saw it differently, and third base ump Michael Lieuallen agreed with his call when Christian protested. The Braves killed the rally there and got the next two batters out to put the Pioneers down to three outs left in their season. “That would have been a huge momentum for us,” Christian said, “but it shouldn’t come down to one call. We had a couple errors that were uncharacteristic today. I told the girls if we did lose we lost to a good team. (Banks) hit the ball well, they hit the gaps, and ours went right to some- body. That’s how it goes sometimes.” Banks threatened in the seventh, but left two runners stranded as Earls inished with a line of no runs allowed on four hits, one strikeout and no walks. “I thought Sydney Earls did a great job to come in and shut them down,” Chris- tian said. “Some hitters hit certain pitchers really well and I think (Copeland) was more like what they’d seen all year. Earls came in with a little bit different look and was able to keep us in it.” Mac-Hi was making its fourth-straight champion- ship game and had beaten Banks 5-4 on April 2 in Milton-Freewater. It was he second straight year the Pioneers and Braves met in the championship and the third time in the last four years. Banks beat Mac-Hi 1-0 in 2013 for the second of its back-to-back titles, and the Pioneers won their second-straight title 4-0 over the Braves last season. Staff photo by E.J. Harris McLoughlin loses to Banks 5-2 in the state 4A state championship softball game Saturday in Corvallis. The Pioneers will lose ive seniors (Biggs, Carter, Erb, Field and outielder Brooke Kralman), but bring up a lot of younger players that should keep them bracket-bound for at least a few more seasons. Banks graduates just two (Partain and irst baseman Gabby Eckhardt). Christian said she expects the Pioneers to make another run at the title in 2017, and wouldn’t be surprised in the least to meet Banks there. “We’re going to have to ill some gaps and see where we need to go to reload,” Christian said. “We have some great talent (coming up). … Banks is always solid. I think people just look at us and think, ‘Oh great, here they are again.’ Deinitely, I could see us back here.” ——— R H E BHS 041 000 0 — 5 12 1 M-H 000 000 2 — 2 8 3 M. Shaw and S. Snyder. M. Copeland, S. Earls (4) and J. Lesko. W — Shaw. L — Copeland. 2B —M. Schorn, S. Snyder (BHS); A. Biggs, B. Erb (M-H). 3B — M. Partain (BHS). ENTRUP: Tigers team, championship game will be talked about for a long time Continued from 1B The game was a minute shy of three hours, which actually ended up being a good thing as well. I had just come from watching the Pilot Rock Rockets beat the Union Bobcats for the 2A/1A softball title in true-cham- pion form. There would be no Rocky Balboa story for the Eagles, as the Rockets beat them mercilessly, 9-2, for the ifth time this season. With just enough time to make the drive from Corvallis to Keizer for the start of Stanield’s game, that left me transcribing interviews with the Rockets’ Tehya Ostrom and Bekah Roe as Stanield took a 2-0 lead in the irst inning on a single by Ryan Bailey and sacriice ly from Brody Woods. The Tigers came out hitting Bobcats ace Draper hard, a good sign after he’d gone the distance and held them to one run in their last meeting. Monkus was hit by a pitch in the game’s irst at-bat, and Tony Flores followed with a double to put runners in scoring position right away. A rare strikeout by Grogan followed (he more than made up for an 0-for-3 day at the plate later), then the irst of Bailey’s four hits gave the Tigers the lead. Woods came next with a sacriice ly to center, and it appeared the Tigers just might continue their high-scoring romp through the postseason after all. Should have known better. Although Stanield would chase Draper from the mound after three innings, the Eagles’ bullpen proved up to snuff and lefty Hunter Bain gave his team four scoreless innings of relief to keep the Tigers within striking distance. Stanield added its third run in the third when Grogan hit a sacriice ly to bring Monkus in, and Monkus then made a nice double play in the bottom half of the inning by catching a popped-up bunt and then slinging the ball to irst just ahead of a sliding Chance Ottinger. As I rushed to get the Rockets’ game story written and delivered, Bain stranded a pair of Tigers in both the fourth and ifth innings, and Grogan had a pair of strikeouts to go with a pickoff at irst by Monkus to highlight two more scoreless innings by the defense. But then in the sixth, the Eagles sucked the excitement from Stanield’s dugout with a three-run surge led by (who else?) Draper, who inished the game 2 for 4 with three RBIs. After a Stanield error gave the Eagles a new lease on life, the Tiger killer appeared to have done it again with a bases-clearing double into the gap that tied the score 3-3 and lipped the momentum back to Santiam Christian. “We had to take a minute because we kind of topped off there and stopped talking in the dugout,” Woods said. “The fans are great. They were so loud. They helped us get back into the game,” Bailey said. Grogan got the Tigers out of the inning with a ly Staff photo by E.J. Harris Stansield defeats Santiam Christian 5-4 in extra in- ning of the state 3A championship baseball game on Friday in Keizer. ball to right ield, where Jason Fitzpatrick was having a good game as the team’s only senior starter. Fitzpatrick went 2 for 5 at the plate and in the seventh inning had a sliding catch in foul territory near the dugout called off (some would argue wrongly) for being out of play. Grogan pitched out of a jam again in the seventh and stranded Ottinger at second with a ly to Justin Keeney in center. Keeney would come up big for the Tigers later in the game. The top of the eighth started off great for the Tigers as Bailey singled to lead off, stole second and went to third on a ly-out by Renner. But with one out and runners on second and third (Woods had walked and also advanced on Renner’s ly), Johnson made his irst risky call of the game with Fitzpatrick at the plate. Having already put down a perfect bunt for a single earlier in the game, Fitzpat- rick was asked to do it again with the added pressure of sending Bailey on the pitch. The pitch came in low and outside, and when Fitzpatrick was unable to make contact a rundown ensued that ended with Bailey tagged out at home by pitcher Daniel Hendrix. Fitzpatrick then grounded out to the pitcher for the third out, and the writing was starting to appear on the wall for the Tigers. Two quick outs in the bottom of the eighth on ly balls were a positive sign, but then Macal singled to bring up Draper. Again, Draper delivered in the clutch, and Macal was off on the crack of the bat with the speed to bring home the title for the Eagles. “When I saw that kid coming up again I was like, ‘ah’” Bailey said. “Everybody thought the game was over right there,” Monkus said. At least three people in Volcanoes Stadium weren’t thinking that. Keeney tracked the ball down at the wall and relayed it Flores who spun and put the ball on a line to Monkus at home plate, beating Macal by a step with his perfectly placed throw for the third out. It wasn’t until the 10th that the Tigers were able to take advantage of the sudden momentum swing as Hendrix struck out Flores swinging to end Stanield’s ninth with Damien Curiel on second. Woods relieved Grogan to start the ninth after 123 pitches, nine strikeouts and four walks from the junior. Grogan moved over to third, and had to make the long throw to irst on the Eagles’ irst at-bat in the 9th, and Bailey had a nice scoop to inish the out. Woods struck out the next two batters just three days after a six-inning outing against Rainier in the semiinals. Woods was the pitcher of record for three of the Tigers’ four postseason wins. “Three wins in the postseason. Three out of four wins as a sophomore, that’s stepping it up,” Johnson said. Grogan took a pitch to the shoulder to lead off Stanield’s 10th, and then took off for the most exciting 270-foot sprint in the Tigers’ season when Bailey sliced a two-strike double down the line in left and into the corner. Grogan slid across home well in front of throw and Bailey followed him in when Woods hit a single to center. Hendrix retired the next three batters, and the Tigers headed out into the ield to face the Eagles’ No. 9, 1 and 2 batters in the lineup. Waiting menacingly in the ive-hole was Draper, who no doubt was just itching to have another chance at dealing a death blow to the Tigers. Grogan went deep into the hole behind third for the irst out, but then Brady Patterson put down a perfect bunt to get an inield single and bring the tying run to the plate. Josh Swigart put the tying run on base with a single, and then another Stanield error allowed Patterson to score while keeping a runner on irst with two outs for Macal. Draper on deck. But that’s where he would stay as Woods got Macal to ground up the middle to Flores, who ielded the ball cleanly and made an effortless throw to irst for the inal out. And after the game as I quickly tried to track down players on the ield for one last interview of the season, I got to witness the cycle starting again as young boys, probably 10 years old, looked for autographs from their favorite players. “It’s deinitely way better from this side,” Grogan said. “It was a fun game, those are the games you want to watch.” I didn’t get to witness Stanield’s irst state title, but I’m glad I saw their latest, because this is sure to be a game that’s talked about for a long time. Way to go Tigers, way to go. ——— Contact Matt Entrup at mentrup@eastoregonian. com or (541) 966-0838.