GREENE
COUNY WINS CONFERENCE IN SOFTBALL
The
Greene County softball team ended its first-ever season with a conference
championship while the two area boys baseball teams laid the groundwork for a combined
team next season.
T
he
softball team comprised of girls from East Greene, Paton-Churdan and
Jefferson-Scranton rolled to a 13-3 mark in the Heart of Iowa Conference to
share the league crown with Prairie City-Monroe. The team was locked into a
tight run to the crown. The Rams took the lead early in the season ahead of
Gilbert and Prairie City-Monroe. During the last week of the season, Greene
County fell into a tie and then briefly into second place, but the Rams beat
Gilbert in a doubleheader and followed the next day with a win over Prairie
City-Monroe that moved them one game ahead of PCM. GC lost to Roland-Story the
following night in the regular and conference season finale to end the season tied
at 13-3 with PCM for the HOIC crown.
Post-season
play opened in a very tough region with three ranked teams among the eight-team
field—No. 9 Ballard (Huxley), No. 11 MOC-Floyd Valley and No. 14 OA-BCIG—along
with the HOIC co-champions and Twin Lakes Conference runner-up (East Sac).
Greene County (25-7) traveled to Wall Lake to face East Sac (15-8) in a
first-round game. The Rams won 10-4 to move on to the semifinal round against
Ballard on the Bombers’ home field in Huxley. Ballard ended the Rams’ season in
a 3-0 win. Ballard (33-9) went on to win the region and qualify for state. The
Bombers beat Mid-Prairie (Wellman) 5-4 in the first round and Bondurant-Farrar
1-0 to move on to tomorrow’s championship game.
East
Greene and Jefferson-Scranton/Paton-Churdan completed their last seasons as
independent baseball and sports teams. Just as the girls teams of East Greene
and Jefferson-Scranton combined girls sports this summer, the two schools will
combine all sports beginning at the start of 2012-13 school year. Paton-Churdan
will compete individually in volleyball, girls and boys basketball, and girls
and boys track. The current sharing agreement between Paton-Churdan and
Jefferson-Scranton in football, wrestling, baseball and softball will continue
with the new Greene County teams formed by the sport sharing between JS and EG.
But PC will no longer get a separate “slash designation” as in JS/PC. The teams
will go by Greene County in all sports just as they did this summer in
softball.
The
Hawks struggled early in the year, but played some of their best ball in the
latter stages of the season. EG had graduated a number of all-district and
all-conference players from a 2011 team that won the district crown and advanced
to the substate. It had been the Hawk’s third straight district title with the
2009 team winning the substate and moving on the state tournament. This year’s
team was very young with no seniors on the roster and several eighth graders in
the starting lineup. The Hawks broke a 15-game losing streak with a 4-0 win
over Iowa Christian, and from then on played .500 ball.
EG
split with longtime league rival Glidden-Ralston during the season, losing the
first game in Glidden in mid-June 3-0 but winning in Rippey on July 2, 11-8.
The teams faced each other again in the first round of the district tournament
at Coon Rapids with EG winning 7-4 to take the best-of-three series from the
Wildcats. EG then went on to face Coon Rapids-Bayard, a team that qualified for
state last season, in the quarterfinal round. The Crusaders dominated the Hawks,
10-0, in a game shortened to 5 innings by the 10-run rule.
EG
ended the season at 6-23. The regular season win over GR moved them up to 4-10
in the league to tie for sixth place with Adair-Casey. The loss dropped GR to
3-11 and left them in the league cellar.
Jefferson-Scranton/Paton-Churdan
also dwelled in the lower echelon of its conference. The Rams ended Heart of
Iowa play at 4-12—tied with South Hamilton for seventh place in the nine-team
league, just ahead of last-place CMB (Maxwell). Overall, the Rams finished the
season at 11-20, an improvement over the 9 wins of 2011.
North
Polk won the league with a perfect 15-0 record and went on to win district and
substate titles in Class 2A. North Polk (29-4) has been highly ranked all
season, finishing the regular season as the No. 3 team in the state. The Comets
are seeded third in the state tournament which opens tomorrow night with the
Class 2A teams taking the field first among the four classes. North Polk meets
sixth-seeded Forest City (21-8) at 8 p.m. in Principal Park in Des Moines. The
other three classes begin play next week.
Ogden
has also advanced to the state 2A tournament, beating Prairie City-Monroe 6-5
in the substate Tuesday night in West Des Moines. The Bulldogs had opened
district play in Ogden on Tuesday, July 10, with a 10-0 win in 5 innings over
Woodward Academy in the semifinal round. Woodward Academy and JSPC faced off in
the first round at Ogden on Saturday, July 7. Woodward Academy had finished
3-17 in the 11-team West Central Conference comprised of 1A and 2A teams while
JSPC had competed in the mostly larger 2A (and one 3A) Heart of Iowa league.
Woodward Academy got the win over the Rams, 5-3, and moved on to face Ogden.
West
Central Valley (Stuart) squeezed by Panorama 4-3 in 10 innings in the first round
at Ogden with the winner advancing to face Gilbert in the semifinals. Gilbert
and Ogden had drawn byes in the six-team field. Gilbert pummeled WCV 17-0 in a
game shortened to just 4 innings by the 15-run rule.
Ogden
and Gilbert faced off on Saturday, July 14, in the district final at Ogden. The
Bulldogs won 4-2 and advanced to the substate. Prairie City-Monroe advanced
from the district at Pella Christian and looked to be the favorite after
battling North Polk for the HOI league lead all season and spending a number
weeks in the Class 2A state rankings. Ogden, however, was a formidable force in
the very competitive West Central Conference, tying with Coon Rapids-Bayard at
15-5 for third place, just behind league champion Van Meter (17-3) and runner-up
Des Moines Christian (16-4). The Bulldogs had been ranked in the Class 2A Top
Ten in the first few weeks of the season.
EYE ON GJ SAYS: The Greene County softball program
is taking shape to be among the better teams in central Iowa. Last year as
Jefferson-Scranton, the team was just one win away from the state tournament,
losing in the district finals to Estherville-Lincoln Central. This year’s
combined JS/PC and EG squad—the first ever high school team to play as Greene
County—started strong and kept up the intensity throughout the season. Along
with the conference co-championship, the Rams were also champions of the South
Hamilton tournament.
East
Greene had great representation on the Greene County team with 5 players among the
17-members of the varsity who saw action this season. Freshman Hannah Onken was
the starting first baseman and freshman Bailey Godwin saw considerable action.
Sophomores Shelby Cooklin and Emily Jacobsen and 8th grader Hannah
Cooklin also played key roles for the Ram varsity and got considerable
experience playing on the junior varsity team. The varsity was comprised of
five girls from EG, one from PC and 11 from Jefferson-Scranton. A number of EG
girls played key roles on the Greene County middle school team, among them 8th
grader Emily Most and 7th grader Taylor Wessling.
Greene
County graduates just one player—right fielder Elizabeth Carman—from this year’s
varsity squad.
In
baseball action, the Hawks fielded a very young team with no seniors while
Jefferson-Scranton/Paton-Churdan had eight seniors among its 16 varsity team
members. Rounding out the JS/PC roster were four juniors, one sophomore and
three freshmen. EG juniors Tory Beger, Reed Ostrander and Alex Gordon will form
a solid nucleus with the four returning JS/PC juniors for next year’s Greene
County squad. Look for key roles form EG’s returning sophomores Wes Tipton,
T.J. Lint, Zach Fouch and Jacob Vreugdenhil. Five eighth graders—Max Neese, Tyler
Beger, Ben Lint, Lance Ross and Matthew Gordon also saw considerable action for
the Hawks. They, along with junior Dakota Hoffman, sophomore Joe Pena and 8th
grader Brandon Dudley, will be making big contributions to the Greene County
Rams team next season.
AREA
TEAMS MAKE STATE: Along with Ogden making the Class 2A state baseball tourney field,
Earlham made the field in Class 1A. The Cardinals (21-10) finished fifth in the
tough West Central Conference with a 12-8 record. They got by conference
champion and No. 9 Van Meter, 3-2, in the district finals and then beat Coon
Rapids-Bayard in a 2-0 thriller in 11 innings Tuesday night in the substate at
Adel. CRB had advanced to the substate with a 7-2 win over EHK/Exira, champions
of the Rolling Hills Conference, in the district final at Coon Rapids. CRB was
looking to make a return trip to the state tourney.
Earlham,
seeded seventh, takes on No. 2 seed Newman Catholic of Mason City (33-4) in the
opening round of the Class 1A state tournament on Monday. Bishop Garrigan of
Algona (36-8) is seeded first with two-time defending champion Martensdale-St.
Mary’s (37-5) seeded fourth.
Kuemper
(Carroll), a longtime Class 2A rival of Jefferson-Scranton, also made it to the
2A state tourney, downing Clarinda 8-3. The Knights (26-11) are seeded fourth
and take on Ogden, seeded fifth, at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Principal Park. The
winner will become the unofficial “Class 2A champion of West Central Iowa” and
advance to the semifinal round next Thursday in Des Moines against the winner
of top-seeded Beckman (Dyersville) and eighth-seeded West Branch.
The
West Central Conference is having a great showing at state this summer with two
teams in the baseball tournament (Ogden in 2A, Earlham in 1A) and three teams
in the softball tournament at Fort Dodge. The Earlham girls, league champions and
ranked second in the state, qualified in Class 1A. Des Moines Christian and Van
Meter made the field in Class 2A. Earlham (35-4) beat Marquette Catholic 8-0 in
the first round and this afternoon sidelined Don Bosco (Gilbertville) 3-0 to
advance to the state championship game tomorrow at 10 a.m. against
Martensdale-St. Mary’s (40-2). That gives these two schools representation in both
the baseball and softball state tournaments this summer.
Des
Moines Christian thumped Emmetsburg 11-0 in the first round while Van Meter
lost to Sumner-Fredericksburg 4-2. Van Meter came back yesterday to beat Wayne
(Corydon) and Denver to win the consolation bracket (5th place). DMC
(29-6) beat Durant 4-0 in the semifinal round this afternoon and will take on
Treynor (27-5) in the 2A state championship game tomorrow at 12:15 p.m.
Ballard,
the team that sidelined Greene County in the regional semifinals, has advanced to
3A championship game after wins over Mid-Prairie (Wellman) and
Bondurant-Farrar. Ballard (34-9) takes on Solon (38-6) tomorrow at 2:30 p.m.
Ballard
and Bondurant-Farrar are members of the Raccoon River Conference which is having
a banner year at the state tournament with 5 of 10 teams qualifying—half of the
league. Along with Ballard and Bondurant-Farrar in 2A, Winterset, Carlisle and
Dallas Center-Grimes all qualified in Class 4A. DCG has advanced to the
championship tomorrow against Indianola.
Central
Iowa teams have fared very well at this year’s tournament with a team in each
championship game tomorrow. Three of the games are “all Central Iowa.” Its Earlham
and Martensdale-St. Mary’s in 1A; Indianola and DCG in 4A; and Ankeny vs. Des
Moines East in 5A; along with Des Moines Christian in Class 2A and Ballard in
Class 3A.
Two
Raccoon River Conference teams have qualified in the baseball tournament, as
DCG and ADM (Adel) made the field in Class 3A. North Polk in 2A baseball is the
lone representative in either tournament from the Heart of Iowa Conference,
while the Rolling Hills had no qualifiers this season.