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Mountaineer grapplers celebrate Senior Day with 45-3 win over Gardner-Webb

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By Bret Stelow. BOONE, N.C.  Ranked No. 24 in the country, App State Wrestling closed the regular season with a 45-3 home win against Gardner-Webb on Senior Day in Varsity Gym. The Mountaineers (10-4, 7-1 SoCon) won 62 of 70 individual matches in their seven SoCon victories during the regular season, including nine of 10 on Sunday against the Runnin’ Bulldogs (7-9, 3-5). Will Miller (165 pounds), Luke Uliano (174), Chad Bellis (125) and Kaden Keiser (in the 149 finale) all recorded pins for App State, which earned at least one bonus point in all nine victories. Tommy Askey opened the dual with a tech fall at 157, while wins by major decision came from Carson Floyd (197), Triston Norris (season debut at heavyweight), Ethan Oakley (133) and Ike Byers (141). Gardner-Webb’s Jha’Quan Anderson, a two-time NCAA qualifier ranked 28th at 184 pounds, won a 7-3 decision against freshman Tomas Brooker. The Mountaineers improved to 66-6 in SoCon duals over the past 10 years. Miller needed just 99 seconds to record his pin, and Keiser ended the dual just 43 seconds after he took the mat for his first start at 149 pounds. He opened the regular season with a start at 141. Before the dual, App State recognized four wrestlers on Senior Day: Byers, Cody Bond, Jacob Sartorio and Heath Gonyer. The 2023-24 season is presented by Hungry Howie’s and Penn Station. App State is back in action on Saturday, March 9 as the host school for the 2024 SoCon Championship tournament at the Holmes Center. App State 45, Gardner-Webb 3157: #19 Tommy Askey (APP) def. Tyler Brignola (GW) 21-5 tech fall (5:16)165: #22 Will Miller (APP) def. Andrew Wilson (GW), fall (1:39)174: Luke Uliano (APP) def. Samuel Mora (GW), fall (4:33)184: #28 Jha’Quan Anderson (GW) def. Tomas Brooker (APP), 7-3 dec.197: Carson Floyd (APP) def. Josh McCutchen (GW), 9-1 maj. dec.HWT: Triston Norris (APP) def. Edison Flores (GW), 11-1 maj. dec.125: Chad Bellis (APP) def. Matthew Rowland (GW), fall (6:04)133: #27 Ethan Oakley (APP) def. Aedyn Concepcion (GW), 14-2 maj. dec.141: Ike Byers (APP) def. Tyler Lamon (GW), 14-3 maj. dec.149: Kaden Keiser (APP) def. Sam Harris (GW), fall (0:43)

Doubleheader split: App State defeats Cleveland State, 8-1, before falling to host NC State, 6-2

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By Jacob Plecker. RALEIGH, N.C. – It was a great day at the plate for the App State Mountaineers, tallying 20 total hits and 10 runs, which led to a doubleheader split in the Wolfpack Classic finale on Sunday. The Mountaineers defeated Cleveland State 8-1 to begin the day before falling to the host NC State 6-2 in the finale.

App State (7-5) played a complete game on both offense and defense in the day’s first game against Cleveland State (3-5) as the Mountaineers jumped in front in the third inning and never looked back. A three-spot in the third inning courtesy of an RBI single by Peyton Darnell and a two-RBI triple by Killian Roberts gave App State a lead it never looked back from in game 1.

Roberts recorded her best game of her young Mountaineer career against Cleveland State, scorching three hits and driving in a season-high four runs. She accounted for half of App State’s runs in the first game. Darnell continued her strong showing at the Wolfpack Classic with three hits and two more RBIs. She’s driven in 14 runs through the first 12 games in her Mountaineer career.

Overall, 10 Mountaineers recorded at least one hit against the Vikings, including Ambry Lucas’ first hit of the season. Three different players tallied multi-hit games.

It was another strong outing for left-handed pitcher Kaylie Northrop as she quieted the Viking bats all game, tallying five scoreless innings and striking out six. Jenna Samuel came in for her second appearance in the Black and Gold and closed things out to secure App State’s third win of the weekend.

In game 2, it was Darnell who started the Mountaineers in front with an RBI single to give App State a lead against ACC opponent NC State (12-3). The Mountaineers led at the end of the first three innings, but a four-run sixth for the Wolfpack offense pushed them ahead to the win.

Sejal Neas provided the Mountaineers with another great start as she pitched 5.1 strong innings before being lifted in the sixth inning. She struck out two in her outing and kept the Wolfpack to just four hits with runners on base.

For the weekend, the Mountaineer staff was excellent as they allowed just eight runs across the four games.

How it Happened: Game 1: App State 8, Cleveland State 1

The Mountaineers saw a runner reach base in every inning as they tallied 15 hits in the game. On the defensive side, Kaylie Northrop continued her brilliant stretch in the circle as she extended her scoreless inning streak to 20, picking up her fourth win of the year.

App State immediately got its day started courtesy of a lead-off single from Kayt Houston, marking her fifth hit of the weekend. Nothing came after that for App State in the first, but a clean inning from Northrop in the bottom of the inning kept the Vikings at bay and held the game scoreless after an inning.

The second inning saw the Vikings see their first baserunner of the game reach, but two straight punchouts from Northrop stranded the runner at second as she recorded her first two strikeouts of her outing.

Northrop’s clean inning brought life into the App State dugout as they immediately took the lead in the third inning thanks to four hits and three runs. First, it was Abby Cunningham who singled through the left side to tally her first hit of the game. Then Grace Barrett reached via a bunt single, and Darnell promptly scored Cunningham on the first pitch she saw in her at-bat. It was Darnell’s fourth straight game with an RBI.

A fielder’s choice advanced both runners into scoring position, allowing Killian Roberts a chance to drive in a pair of runs. She did just that, smoking a ball into right-center field that scored Barrett and Darnell, giving App State a three-run lead.

The defense stepped up with a lead in the bottom of the third, keeping the Vikings off the board. The Mountaineers fed off their defense again, scoring four more runs in the fourth inning to take a commanding lead.

Hits from Taylor Chumbley and Addie Wray got things started in the fourth and both were advanced on a sacrifice bunt from Cunningham. Chumbley scored from third on a fielder’s choice to plate App State’s fourth run and then two more hits from Barrett and Darnell doubled the Mountaineers’ run total as both players tallied RBI hits.

Capping off the inning, Roberts scorched another RBI single into right and scored the seventh run, making it back-to-back multi-run innings for App State.

Northrop finished her stellar outing with three more strikeouts over the next two innings, keeping the Vikings off the board and extending her scoreless inning to streak to 20 before Samuel relieved her. Northrop tallied 16 strikeouts across two games on Saturday and Sunday.

The Mountaineers scored again in the sixth courtesy of Roberts’ fourth RBI of the game. Sunday marked her second multi-RBI game of her Mountaineer career.

The Vikings recorded their lone run in the sixth inning, but Samuel tallied a clean seventh inning to finish off the Vikings in game 1.

Game 1 Notes

Home runs
App: N/A
CSU: N/A

WP – Kaylie Northrop (4-0): 5 IP, 2 hits, 0 runs, 1 walk, 6 strikeouts
SV – N/A
LP – Dakota Staffan (0-1): 3 IP, 6 hits, 3 runs, 1 walk, 0 strikeouts

Game 2: NC State 6, App State 2

App State led for five of the seven innings in game 2 against NC State, but a four-run sixth inning from the Wolfpack propelled them ahead to the win.

The Mountaineers started strong in the game, taking an early lead courtesy of Darnell’s fifth straight game with an RBI. She recorded a hit in every game this weekend and raised her season batting average to .500.

Sejal Neas took the ball first for head coach Shelly Hoerner and worked around a lead-off single to keep the Wolfpack off the board. A slick double-play turned by Grace Barrett cut off the runner at second and a strong throw from Roberts nabbed the runner at first.

Neas pitched well with runners on base in game 2 as she allowed just four hits with runners on base in the game. Her ability to work around traffic paid off in a big way in the second inning as she stranded two runners in scoring position with her first two punchouts of the game.

Neither team scored through the next 1.5 innings as both pitchers continued to work solid games. The Wolfpack tied the game in the fifth inning, however, scoring on a fielder’s choice for their first run of the game.

App State immediately answered in the fifth inning and took the lead right back with another two-out RBI from Kayt Houston. Addie Wray slapped a single that stayed fair down the left-field line and was advanced to third base after two straight productive outs. After a pitching change, Houston put a ball in play to shortstop and legged out an infield hit to score Wray and give the Mountaineers a 2-1 lead after 4.5.

NC State tied the game back up at two in their half of the fifth inning with a solo homer off the bat of Hasler. The Wolfpack kept App State off the board in the sixth and scored four more runs to take the lead in the bottom of the sixth. App State fought hard in the game and showed its resilience after a long weekend full of delays and time changes, but the gas ran out as the Mountaineers fell 6-2 in the weekend finale.

Overall, it was a solid weekend for the squad as they finished 3-1 and moved their record to 7-5. The pitching staff allowed just eight runs all weekend.

Game 2 Notes

Home runs
App: N/A
NCSU: Hasler (6)

WP – Aisha Weixlmann (5-1): 2.1 IP, 0 hits, 0 runs, 1 walk, 4 strikeouts
SV – N/A
LP – Sejal Neas (2-3): 5.1 IP, 7 hits, 5 runs, 4 walks, 2 strikeouts

Up Next

In a quick turnaround, the Mountaineers hit the field again on Tuesday, traveling to Johnson City, Tenn. to face the ETSU Buccaneers in a doubleheader at Betty Basler Field. First pitch from game 1 is set for 4 p.m.

Mountaineer netters edged by Phoenix, 4-3

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By Joey Jones. ELON, N.C. — App State tennis standout Savannah Dada-Mascoll powered the Mountaineers to wins in both her singles and doubles matches on the road Sunday, but App State fell 4-3 to Elon.

App State (3-4) claimed the doubles point early after Dada-Mascoll teamed up with Naledi Manyube to win 6-3 on court one, and Maggie Pate and Taya Powell clinched the team point on court two with a dramatic 7-6 (11-9) finish in a tiebreaker.

With Powell unavailable for singles action, App State’s lineup fell just short of being able to come through for the team victory over Elon (6-4).

Dada-Mascoll earned a 6-4, 6-4 win over Elon’s top player Sibel Tanik on court one, giving the Mountaineers’ ace her fourth straight singles win in the last four team matches.

Pate captured App State’s other point with her 6-2, 6-1 singles win on court two. She has now won her singles match in five of the last six outings.

Up Next
After playing the last four matches on the road, the Mountaineers return home for back-to-back home matches on Friday against Duquesne and Saturday against Western Carolina. Stay tuned for updates on the location of those matches.

The 2023-24 tennis season is presented by Hound Ears Club.

Results vs Elon

Doubles

  • Savannah Dada-Mascoll/Naledi Manyube (APP) def. Lizette Reding/Sibel Tanik (ELON) 6-3
  • Maggie Pate/Taya Powell (APP) def. Madison Cordisco/Mariana Reding (ELON) 7-6 (11-9)
  • Simone Bergeron/Ella Suk (ELON) def. Brooke Demerath/Brooke Gruber (APP) 6-3

Singles

  • Savannah Dada-Mascoll (APP) def. Sibel Tanik (ELON) 6-4, 6-4
  • Maggie Pate (APP) def. Lizette Reding (ELON) 6-2, 6-1
  • Mariana Redding (ELON) def. Naledi Manyube (APP) 6-3, 6-0
  • Ella Suk (ELON) def. Brooke Gruber (APP) 6-4, 6-3
  • Helen Sarikulaya (ELON) def. Riley Collins (APP) 6-1, 6-3
  • Simone Bergeron (ELON) def. Peri Tippins (APP) 6-0, 6-1

Strong pitching, offensive explosion in middle innings help App State complete weekend sweep of Siena, 10-6

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By David Rogers. HICKORY, N.C. — Senior righthander Dante Chirico gave up three runs on six hits in five innings of work on Feb. 25 at L.P. Frans Stadium but still picked up the win with a lot of help from the middle of the App State batting order. The Mountaineers completed their weekend sweep of the Siena Saints, 10-6, to improve their early season record to 6-1.

Chirico was credited with his first win of the season after the first three Mountaineer batters in the bottom of the fifth inning each launched solo home runs off of Siena starting pitcher Connor Byrne. Batting third in the order, centerfielder Banks Tolley was the first to hit a dinger, clearig the centerfield wall on a 2-0 pitch. Designated hitter Braxton Church followed with a shot over the right field fence and first baseman Drew Holderbach put an exclamation point on the Mountaineers’ “meat of the batting order” with an HR that cleared the left centerfield fence.

Photo courtesy of App State Athletics

The three moonshots were enough to chase Byrne before Evan Saulys was brought in by Siena head coach Alex Jurczynski to quiet the App State bats. While the freshman hurler wriggled out of the rest of the fifth inning without allowing any further damage, he didn’t fare so well in the bottom of the 6th as he was credited with allowing three runs on two hits before giving way on the mound to junior transfer (from UConn) Ramsey Collins.

The Mountaineers’ mid-innings power surge was not the only hot offensive production. Leftfielder CJ Boyd got only one hit in six at-bats on the day but it was a big one: a solo blast to leadoff the bottom half of the first inning. Holderbach followed Boyd in the first with a double down the left field line that scored teammate Austin St. Laurent.

Collin Welch (25) pitches in relief for the Mountaineers vs. Siena on Feb. 25. Photo courtesy of App State Athletics

The Mountaineers used only three pitchers in relief the rest of the way and they combined to give up three runs on four hits in the final four innings to mostly quiet the Saints’bats.

Meanwhile, App State padded its margin of victory with two more insurance runs in the 8th inning, manufactured when catcher Tommy Walker laced a sacrifice fly to center, scoring pinch runner (for Church) Grey LaSpaluto. Then, second baseman Joseph Zamora rapped an RBI single to right, scoring Holderbach from second.

Top Mountaineer Performers

  • 3B Austin St. Laurent: 3-5, 2 runs scored
  • DH Braxton Church: 2-3, 2 runs scored, 2 RBIs, HR, 2 BB
  • 1B Drew Holderbach: 2-3, 2 runs scored, 2 RBIs, HR, 2B, 2 BB
  • CF Banks Tolley: 1-5, 2 runs scored, 1 RBI, HR
  • LF C J Boyd: 1-6, 1 run scored, 1 RBI, HR

Tate fuels App State’s rally over Marshall, 65-58

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By Zach Smith. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. —For the third time in the 2023-24 season, App State men’s basketball played in front of a national audience on Feb. 24. The Mountaineers traveled to face Marshall, defeating the Thundering Herd for the second time in as many weeks, 65-58.

Junior guard Myles Tate led App State’s scoring effort, netting a career-high 25 points. Tate was joined by Donovan Gregory (15) and Terence Harcum (12) as Mountaineers in the double-figures. Tre’Von Spillers grabbed a team-best 11 rebounds.

App State junior netted 12 points and dished out a team-high five assists in the Mountaineers’ Feb. 15 victory over Marshall. Photographic image by Kitana Tucker, courtesy of App State Athletics.

Marshall’s Kevon Voyles and Kamdyn Curfman posted 19 points each, while Nate Martin pulled down a game-high 14 rebounds.

Not looking like themselves, App State found themselves trailing most of the first half. The Mountaineers grabbed the lead with just over 11 minutes in the half but Marshall scored nine consecutive points to take an eight-point advantage. The Herd later used a 6-0 run to hold a six-point lead at the intermission.

App State’s depth once again proved its worth in the second half. The Mountaineers scored 11 of the first 15 points out of the locker room, grabbing their first lead since the halfway point of the first half. Kamdyn Curfman cashed in on two free-throws to regain Marshall’s lead, but Myles Tate drained a three-pointer to give App State a lead they never returned. 

App State shot at a 38 percent mark, topping Marshall’s 33 percent clip. The Thundering Herd’s 13 percent shooting from beyond the arc proved to be costly as the Mountaineers connected on 37 percent of their tries from deep. The rebounding matchup was even, each team grabbing 46 boards.

Marshall falls out of contention for a double-bye in the upcoming Sun Belt tournament. The Herd remains in a tie with Georgia State for seventh in the conference standings. Marshall looks to bounce back into the win column Feb. 28 as they travel to Statesboro to face Georgia Southern. Tipoff is slated for 7 p.m., and can be streamed on ESPN+.

App State retains sole possession of first place in the Sun Belt standings, and the Mountaineers need one win to clinch at least a share of the regular season conference title. App State continues that quest Feb. 28, when they return to Boone for a battle with Old Dominion. Tipoff is set for 6:30 p.m., and the game can be streamed on ESPN+.

Mountaineers take Senior Day win over Dukes, 83-79

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By Zach Smith. BOONE, N.C. — Senior Day in Boone saw a thrilling women’s basketball matchup Feb. 24 between App State and visiting James Madison. The Mountaineers took down the third-place Dukes in a tight contest, 83-79.

App State was led by a 25-point, nine-assists performance from Faith Alston in what could be her last appearance in the Holmes Center. Alston was joined by fellow senior Taylor Lewis, who netted a career-high 23 points in her final sendoff. Lewis also grabbed a team-best eight rebounds.

App State netted a team-best 25 points in the Mountaineers’ Senior Day victory over James Madison Feb. 24. Photographic image by Kristin Shaffer, courtesy of App State Athletics.

Jamia Hazell posted a team-best 19 points for JMU, while fellow junior Ashanti Barnes notched a 10-point, 10-rebound double-double.

The first quarter set the tone for what proved to be a nail-biter. James Madison jumped out to an early, five-point lead at the media break, but App State responded with a 9-0 run to push into the lead. A critical defensive stop by senior Mariah Frazier sparked that run, but the lead didn’t hold for long. The Dukes fought their way back, tying the game at 23 to end the first quarter.

JMU was plagued by poor shooting in the second period. The Dukes grabbed eight offensive rebounds in the quarter, compared to App State’s three, but shot just 29 percent from the field. The Mountaineers were able to hold JMU scoreless over the last two minutes of the half, taking a four-point lead into the locker room.

App State was able to pull away in the third quarter despite the Dukes tying the game late in the period. Faith Alston took over early out of the intermission, scoring 10 of the Mountaineers’ first 15 points. Taylor Lewis then took the reins, hitting three shots from beyond the arc over the last four minutes of the frame. The last of those treys punctuated an App State 7-0 run to secure an eight-point advantage at the third quarter buzzer.

The Mountaineers extended their lead early in the final stanza, but JMU proved they were still in the fight. Trailing by 12, the Dukes scored each of the next 10 points to make the game a two-point affair. Despite the rally, App State held the visitors to just one made shot from the floor over the final four minutes of play, securing a hard-fought, Senior Day win.

Angel Elderkin coaches her team during App State’s Feb. 24 victory over James Madison. Photographic image by Kristin Shaffer, courtesy of App State Athletics.

App State head coach shared her perspective of the Mountaineers’ adjustments following their Feb. 22 loss to Old Dominion.

“Yesterday was a mental day, and yesterday was a day of ‘let’s not let Old Dominion beat us twice,’” Elderkin said. “I felt like, the first time we played the series between Old Dominion and JMU, we went into the JMU game with a little bit of an Old Dominion hangover, per se. So we said we gotta turn the page.”

“When Taylor is on, Taylor is on”

Seniors Faith Alston and Taylor Lewis accounted for more than half of App State’s offensive production, scoring 48 of the Mountaineers’ 83 total points. Alston praised Lewis’ scoring output.

“When Taylor is on, Taylor is on, you can’t really stop Taylor,” Alston said. “It took a while to get her confidence back, get back in her groove after breaking her hand early in the season. But for the past four or five games, she’s just been lighting it up. She’s the Taylor that we saw in the summer and in the first two games before she got hurt.”

Senior Taylor Lewis scored a career-high 23 points in the Mountaineers’ Feb. 24 victory over James Madison. Photographic image by Colby Suchla, courtesy of App State Athletics.

Alston also spoke on what she saw on the court in her 25-point performance.

“I look for my shots, I take them but if I need to pass it, I need to pass it,” Alston said. “Today my shot felt good, so I stepped in with confidence. I know that whether it’s a make or a miss my teammates always have my back.”

Fellow App State senior Mariah Frazier was a key defensive piece for the Mountaineers. She credited her team for App State’s crucial stops in the closing minutes of the game.

“I just see a whole group, a whole unit just working together,” Frazier said. “I know that Coach Angel told me about setting the tone on defense, just making sure I’m the energy on defense. I think the whole team really matched my energy, and even surpassed my energy sometimes, and was able to make some key stops down the stretch. It wasn’t a one-man thing.”

[She] stars — I’ll say it again — stars in her role”

Elderkin had high remarks for Frazier’s character and ability to play her role well.

“She’s a kid that’s graduating from graduate school in three years,” Elderkin said. “Very driven, very hard worker. And stars — I’ll say it again — stars in her role. A lot of her role doesn’t show up in [the box score], but it shows up on the court.”

As a team, App State shot 39 percent from the floor, short of the Duke’s 44 percent mark. The Mountaineers made stops when they needed to, forcing 12 JMU turnovers to just eight of their own. The Dukes outrebounded App State, 48-42.

James Madison’s loss drops them to 11-5 in conference play, good for a third-place tie with Old Dominion. The Dukes’ next test is a road trip to Conway, SC to face Coastal Carolina Feb. 28. Tipoff is set for 5 p.m., and the game can be streamed on ESPN+.

App State improves to 8-8 in Sun Belt competition, placing them ninth in the conference standings. The Mountaineers go on the road for their last two contests of the regular season, beginning with a trip to Troy Feb. 28. The mid-week Sun Belt matchup is slated to tipoff at 8 p.m. and can be streamed on ESPN+.

Northrop, Mountaineers shut out Iona, 7-0

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By Jacob Plecker. RALEIGH N.C. – A three-run first inning got the day started for App State Softball, and Kaylie Northrop kept Iona’s bats silent in a 7-0 win over the Gaels in the Wolfpack Classic on Saturday afternoon.

The App State-Cleveland State game also scheduled for Saturday has been moved to a 1 p.m. start time Sunday, and the Mountaineers will face host NC State at 3:30 p.m.

Five of the seven RBIs from the Mountaineers (6-4) on Saturday came from the first three batters in the lineup. Kayt Houston led the way by tallying two hits, one of which was a home run, and recording two RBIs. Peyton Darnell had a similar performance with two hits and two RBIs. Grace Barrett added one hit and one RBI out of the No. 2 spot in the order.

Northrop was dominant in the circle throughout the game. The strikeout pitch was working all game for Northrop, as she racked up 10 in her complete-game performance. While Iona had at least one runner reach base in five of the seven innings, Northrop and the Mountaineer defense kept the Gaels (0-1) off the scoreboard, stranding all eight batters that reached.

App State kept the pressure on all game, as it had a runner reach base in all seven innings, but the strong start would prove to be the difference in the win.

How it Happened
App State scored three runs in the first inning and never looked back. After a leadoff walk from Houston and a single from Barrett, Darnell doubled to center field, scoring both. Three batters later, Olivia Cook singled through the right side, bringing in Darnell.

The offensive attack continued in the second inning, when Houston doubled to the left-center gap and moved to third on the throw home, scoring Abby Cunningham, who had reached on a single. Houston scored off a Barrett RBI groundout to the second baseman.

The Gaels threatened in the bottom of the fourth inning. After the leadoff batter reached on an error, the following batter singled to left field. After a fielder’s choice moved both runners into scoring position, Northrop got a swinging strikeout to end the frame.

Houston padded App State’s lead in the top of the fourth, homering to right field for her fifth long ball of the season. The Black and Gold got some insurance in the top of the seventh, when Addie Wray singled through the left side to score Summer Simpson, who had run for Darnell after a leadoff single.

The Mountaineers threatened again in the seventh following Wray’s RBI single and a Brooke Kennerly walk to load the bases. A lineout ended the inning and left the bases loaded, but the Mountaineers had extended their lead to seven before the third out.

Northrop returned to the mound for the bottom of the seventh, getting a groundout, strikeout and flyout to end the game and cap off a dazzling performance.

Saturday Notes

Home Runs

App: Houston 1 (5)
Iona: None

WP: Kaylie Northrop (3-0): 7 IP, 5 hits, 0 runs, 0 walks, 10 strikeouts
LP: Samantha Rieb (0-1): 5 IP, 9 hits, 6 runs, 3 walks, 0 strikeouts

Up Next
App State will complete its weekend at the Wolfpack Classic with a doubleheader on Sunday. The Mountaineers will take on Cleveland State at 1 p.m., and a matchup with the hosting Wolfpack from NC State is slated for 3:30 p.m.

App State strong arms Siena in Hickory with 9-4 win

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By Matt Present. HICKORY, N.C. — App State Baseball rode strong arms on the mound and timely opportunities on the basepaths to a 9-4 win against Siena on Saturday afternoon at L.P. Frans Stadium.

The Mountaineers (5-1) clinched their second straight weekend series victory to open the 2024 campaign and will look to sweep Siena (0-5) in Sunday’s finale in Hickory. First pitch is scheduled for 1 p.m.

Jackson Steensma, last year’s closer who has moved into the weekend starting rotation this season, earned his first win as a Mountaineer starter. He allowed just one first-inning run before shutting down the Saints over the next four innings and racking up five strikeouts.

sEVEN OF NINE aPP sTATE STARTERS REACHED BASE, OFFENSIVELY.

Head coach Kermit Smith turned to the bullpen for the final four frames and got solid work from Grey LaSpaluto, Everette Harris and Zach Lewis, who combined to allow three runs on three hits with three strikeouts.

Seven of nine starters reached base for App State’s offense, led by shortstop Adam Quintero’s 1-for-4 day that included his second home run of the year. He scored twice, drove in two runs and flashed the leather with a pair of unassisted double plays and a nice sliding grab to cut down a runner at second.

Banks Tolley went 1-for-3, reached base twice on a hit by pitch and scored three times. Drew Holderbach went 2-for-4 with a run and an RBI, and Tommy Walker drove in two and stole two bases.

App State took advantage of four Saints errors in the contest, scoring two runs in the bottom of the third and four more in the seventh and eighth innings with help from Siena fielding miscues.

After Siena jumped ahead on a first-inning solo home run, the App State bats picked up where they left off from Friday’s 15-run performance by plating two in the second inning on a Walker single that drove in Holderbach and Quintero for Walker’s first hit and RBIs of the young season.

The 2-1 advantage was all Steensma and Co. needed.

In the top of the fifth, Siena threatened to cut into App State’s lead when a runner tried to score from first on a double to left, but a perfectly executed Boyd-to-Quintero-to-Walker relay cut down the Siena runner in front of home plate to keep the Saints off the board.

After Siena tacked on a run in the top of the sixth, Quintero led off the bottom of the frame with a blast over the right-field wall to extend the Mountaineers’ lead to 5-2.

BOX SCORE: https://appstatesports.com/boxscore.aspx?path=baseball&id=8855

Watauga WBB draws No. 1 seed, MBB the No. 8 seed in 4A State Playoffs

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By David Rogers. RALEIGH, N.C. — The North Carolina High School Athletic Association released the state playoff brackets Saturday afternoon and there is a lot of local interest in the High Country.

The Pioneers’ women’s team sported a stellar 21-5 overall record and 9-2 Northwestern Conference record, including a dominant showing in the past week’s NWC conference tourney to win the championship, and were rewarded with the No. 1 seed in the NCHSAA Women’s 4A West Bracket. In the first round, Watauga will stay at home and host the No. 32 seed, South Iredell (Statesville) on Tuesday, Feb. 27, at 6 p.m., the men to follow at approximately 7:30 p.m.

Watauga’s other NWC tournament championship team, the Pioneer men, drew a No. 8 seed and will face No. 25 Reagan High School of Pfafftown, a suburb of Winston-Salem. That game will also be at Lentz Eggers Gym on Feb. 27, following the women’s contest.

In Reagan, the Pioneers’ men will face a team that put together a 14-11 overall record, 6-8 in the highly competitive 4A Central Piedmont Conference where they earned a fourth place finish. In the 4A West, Reagan is ranked No. 26, its position strengthened by a 10.8 strength of schedule. Watauga is ranked just three spots ahead of the Raiders, at No. 23, its gaudy record somewhat discounted in the rankings because a strength of schedule rating of only 2.8.

The winner between Reagan and Watauga will advance to face the winner of No. 9 Independence (Charlotte) and No. 24 Cox Mill (Concord).

When it comes to the North Carolina State Playoffs, the final seedings are only a suggestion of strongest teams and their positionings. Lower seeds coming out of strong conferences, especially those coming out of more urban leagues that may be stronger, top to bottom, frequently upset higher seeds. So, Watauga will have to come out firing on all cylinders.

The Watauga women’s team faces a similar situation as the No. 1 seed. Their No. 32 seeded opponent was the fifth place finisher in a strong 4A Greater Metro Conference with a losing overall record (9-17) and a losing conference record (5-8), but at least one of their conference wins was against a team ranked higher in the final conference standings (West Cabarrus).

The winner of the first round pairing of Watauga and South Iredell advances to a second round matchup with either No. 16 North Mecklenburg (Charlotte) or No. 17 Asheville.

Other 4A men’s teams of interest include:

  • No. 18 South Caldwell @ No. 15 East Forsyth
  • No. 1 Myers Park vs. No. 32 Mallard Creek
  • No. 2 Lake Norman vs. No. 31 Parkland
  • No. 3 Weddington vs. No. 30 East Mecklenburg
  • No. 28 T C Roberson @ No. 5 North Mecklenburg

Other 4A women’s teams of interest include:

  • No. 30 South Caldwell @ No. 3 Charlotte Catholic
  • No. 10 Alexander Central vs. No. 23 Southwest Guilford
  • No. 2 Lake Norman vs. No. 31 Cuthbertson

Other Regional Men’s Teams in State Playoffs:

  • 3A – No. 1 Hickory vs. No. 32 West Charlotte
  • 3A – No. 9 Freedom vs. No. 24 South Point
  • 3A – No. 7 A C Reynolds vs. No. 26 North Davidson

Other Regional Women’s Teams in State Playoffs:

  • 3A – No. 19 Freedom @ No. 14 North Davidson
  • 3A – No. 11 Hibriten vs. No. 22 Hickory
  • 3A – No. 7 Ashe County vs. No. 26 Franklin
  • 1A – No. 17 Avery County @ No. 16 Rosman

 

 

Watauga MBB makes a statement and then some in capturing NWC tourney title, 63-56

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By David Rogers. BOONE, N.C. — There was a lot of “good” and hardly any “bad” — but it is hard to dismiss the “ugly” in the Watauga men’s basketball Northwestern Conference tournament championship win on Feb. 23, 63-56, over Alexander Central.

One onlooker among the standing room only, jam-packed Lentz Eggers Gym opined afterward, “That was some of the best high school basketball and some of the worst high school basketball by a single team in the same game.”

Maddox Greene in transition on Feb. 23 vs. Alexander Central in the NWC tourney’s championship game. He earned tournament MVP honors. Photographic image by David Rogers

The Good

As junior point guard Maddox Greene told High Country Sports after the game, “We wanted to come out strong. Put the pedal to the metal, so to speak.”

And they did.

With 1:34 to go in the first quarter, the Pioneers led the visiting Cougars, 25-4. Watauga’s punishing defense had Alexander Central suffering a more than five-minute scoring drought. Meanwhile, the Pioneers were running their up-tempo, transition offense to near perfection.

By halftime, Watauga established a daunting, 37-16 lead. At the end of the third quarter, the Pioneers were ahead, 51-31, appearing to be running away with the result.

Wyatt Kohout of Watauga connects from long distance. Photographic image by David Rogers

The Ugly

But then, the wheels of the all but assumed victory wagon started squeaking, perhaps even howling. The Pioneers got cocky and complacent. In short, they grew careless and the Alexander Central quintet took advantage.

Instead of playing “keep away” and burn time off the clock to protect the 20-point lead, the Pioneers put up some reckless shots from behind the arc (that did not go in) and lost possession, numerous times. With a couple of minutes left to play, Alexander Central had shrunk the deficit to just seven points and the packed Cougar stands behind their favorite sons’ bench started whispering, “Can we possibly pull off this unlikely, come-from-behind thriller?”

Cade Keller (10) drives baseline in the Northwestern Conference tournament championship game, Feb. 23. Photographic image by David Rogers

Fortunately for the Pioneers, there were some big shots that finally went in to keep the lead at around 10 points and with time winding down, Alexander Central was forced to foul. Almost all of those trips to the charity stripe were by Greene, who finished the night making 7-of-10 free throw attempts, accounting for a good chunk of his 17 points. And it was those calmly made free throws that proved the final dagger for the Cougars.

In one fourth quarter timeout, Pioneer head coach Payne said he told his guys, “Just settle down and finish this with good decisions.”

Pioneer senior guard Wyatt Kohout shot 50 percent from beyond the arc (5-of-10 attempts), on his way to a game-high 19 points. Forward Jackson Pryor recorded a double-double, with 14 points to go along with 10 rebounds. Kohout and Pryor were both named to the all-tournament team, Greene garnered tournament MVP honors.

Few in the building will forget Watauga’s dominating, “statement” lead through three quarters of play. They may or may not remember the near collapse in the fourth quarter.

Payne said he was proud of the team’s ability to cope with adversity, even if some of it was self-inflicted. He noted that several of the guys have been with the program in its rebuilding phase and are now seeing the fruits of their labors. Long time coach and athletic administrator in the region, Marc Payne, stated that Watauga’s 21 wins this season is a program record and that this was the second Northwestern Conference tournament championship for the Pioneers in program history. The first, according to longtime WATA radio announcer Mike Kelly, now retired, came in 1971-72.

The Pioneers now await the Feb. 24 release of the North Carolina 4A State Playoffs pairings. As the No. team in the Northwestern Conference, they are assured of at least a fairly high seed and a first round home game on Tuesday. That will take place after Watauga women’s first round home game, the guys probably to start at 7:30 p.m. or 8 p.m.

Josiah Railey makes an acrobatic pass in the first quarter of the NWC tournament championship game against Alexander Central. Photographic image by David Rogers