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‘Canes storm through SMAC

Huntingtown slips past Thomas Stone for softball three-peat

Friday, May 9, 2008


Click here to enlarge this photo
Staff photo by DARWIN WEIGEL
Haley Stueckler winds up during the Hurricanes’ 7-5 SMAC-winning victory.


Click here to enlarge this photo
Staff photo by DARWIN WEIGEL
Huntingtown’s Jennifer Price slides in safely under Thomas Stone catcher Ally Sloan during the ‘Canes’ 7-5 win.




 
Huntingtown 7, Thomas Stone 5

Stone 1 0 0 0 0 4 0 – 5 7 2 H-town 1 2 2 0 1 1 x – 7 11 2 WP Stueckler, LP Therres Extra-base hits: 2B – Nyers (TS), Gilroy (TS), Cook (H), Sita (H)


Huntingtown is making it easy on the engraver who etches the names on the SMAC championship plaques. The host Hurricanes won their third straight title Tuesday after jumping ahead and then surviving a late-game rally to defeat Thomas Stone, 7-5.

The SMAC schedule maker deserves a substantial pay raise after somehow managing to pit the two teams, who each had just one conference loss, against each other in a winner-take-all scenario.

Huntingtown (17-1, 15-1 SMAC) scored at least a run in each of the first four innings and survived a furious charge from the Cougars in the sixth inning to win the team’s third straight crown and second straight outright.

‘‘As a coach I could say I’m not incredibly happy with the win,” Johnson said, referring to Stone’s four-run inning that put the Cougars back in the game. ‘‘But that would be taking a lot away from Thomas Stone, and they were 16-1 [overall] for a reason coming in here. Even though those kids were down 6-1 with two innings to go, they never quit.”

Huntingtown enjoyed a five-run lead with just six defensive outs remaining.

‘‘Without a doubt I knew it wasn’t over, [but] I think maybe some of the kids relaxed a bit,” Johnson said. ‘‘Not a lot, but just enough that a good team could take advantage of it.”

And Stone (15-2, 14-2) did exactly that as Kayla Voorhees led off the inning with a single and raced to second when the ball bounced through the legs of the left fielder.

With one out, Brittany Therres stroked a run-scoring single and, three batters later, Brittany Gilroy bombed a two-run double off the right field fence. Pinch hitter Tiffany Mills then squared to bunt and, on the third pitch, poked a two-out, two-stroke slap bunt past first base to score Gilroy.

‘‘That was a bad defensive arrangement on my part,” Johnson said. ‘‘All we needed was the out, so I should have pulled [second baseman] Ashley [Dorr] back. I should have made a change, and it cost us.”

‘‘I relied on the same pitch,” Huntingtown pitcher Haley Stueckler said, referring to Stone’s five-hit inning. ‘‘At the beginning of the season that’s what I did, and I fell back into that habit that inning.”

Catcher Alyssa Cook added, ‘‘I think we got a little nervous, but we still knew we were still in the lead. We just needed to work as a team and hold them.”

The Hurricanes answered right back on Stueckler’s RBI single in the bottom of the inning and pulled ahead 7-5.

‘‘That was really tough because we had two outs,” Voorhees said of the run. ‘‘All we needed to do was get the last [out]. That’s just the way things fall.”

Christina Hutchinson was hit by a pitch in the top of the seventh, which brought Voorhees to the plate.

The Stone infielder had two singles and a walk in her previous three at-bats, but went down swinging.

‘‘She’s a lot like [Kristin] Schalk from Northern, because they’re both definitely good hitters,” Stueckler said of Voorhees. ‘‘I knew not to throw one pitch, because that’s what she got all her hits on, so I just tried to mix it up a lot more. It was definitely a big [strikeout].”

‘‘I disappointed myself,” Voorhees said of the at-bat, ‘‘because I know I could have done way better than I did.”

Stueckler then retired the next two batters to seal the title-clinching victory.

‘‘I’m very proud of them; they never gave up,” Stone coach Dave Reilly said. ‘‘A lot of teams when they’re down by that much in the sixth inning may not have come back, but these girls did. Right to the last out they thought they were going to win this game, and I thought we had a real shot to win it.”

‘‘It’s a tough one because we were obviously expecting to do better than we did,” Voorhees said, ‘‘but I’m just glad we fought back the way we did. We didn’t let the game slip away like a lot of other [teams] would have.”

The win was keyed by three key players – Stueckler, Cook and designated hitter Jordon DeGennaro – all of whom were thrust into unfamiliar situations at the beginning of the season.

Stueckler, who took over in the circle, allowed seven hits and a walk.

She struck out seven and retired eight straight and 15 of 17 after allowing a leadoff single to open the game.

‘‘I’m new to this [pitching every day],” Stueckler said of her nerves during her 82-pitch performance, ‘‘but I can stay calm during the game. I stayed really calm the whole time.”

Stueckler also collected three singles, drove in two runs and scored twice.

‘‘I hit a lot this week because I’d been focusing so much on pitching that I forgot about hitting,” she said. ‘‘It’s two different positions. But now I’m feeling a lot more stable about pitching, I can focus more on my hitting.”

‘‘She deserves a lot, because the kid has worked incredibly hard to be where she is right now,” Johnson said. ‘‘She wants this so bad for herself and for the team, so she’s doing whatever it takes to get us to where she would like to see us get to. In her mind, she has a lot to prove and she’s doing that this year.”

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