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POP AT THE PLATE: Troy junior right fielder Dylan Torres drove in a run in each of his three at-bats Friday night in the second-ranked Trojans' 12-0, five-inning home win over No. 19 Whitney. He produced a run-scoring single in the first inning, an RBI double in the second and a run-scoring groundout in the third. Torres was one of five players with two hits apiece for Troy (21-1 overall, 8-0 in District 17-3A). The others were senior Hagen Rose, sophomore Watson Washburn, winning senior pitcher Tanner Creel and junior Caleb Turner. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE


TROY – On a warm Friday evening at Trojan Field, Whitney had an opportunity to avenge its lopsided home loss to Troy and move into a tie with the second-ranked Trojans for the District 17-3A baseball lead.

However, if that opportunity was a door, Troy's focused and balanced team slammed it quickly and forcefully on the overmatched Wildcats.

Senior left-hander Tanner Creel set the tone by needing only four pitches in the first inning of his two-hit shutout, then the Trojans' aggressive, relentless offense produced three runs in the first and second frames and six in the third as Troy romped to a 12-0, five-inning victory over error-plagued Whitney.

“I think when we show up to play and we play the brand of baseball that we try to play, yeah, we're dangerous,” Troy head coach Steve Sebesta said after his squad moved to 21-1 overall and 8-0 in 17-3A, good for a two-game lead. “Especially when we can hit the ball like that and barrel balls up, that obviously helps, and when you run the bases the way we do and be aggressive, that's what we're trying to do.

“We make outs on the bases, but at the same time we put a lot of pressure on the defense and create problems. So I just told our guys, 'If somebody were to ask how the Troy Trojans play baseball, that would be it.' So I'm proud of them for showing up ready to play.”

Troy's only loss came in early March against Class 4A Lake Belton at Cameron Yoe's tournament. The Trojans are second in the Texas High School Baseball Coaches Association's 3A state rankings and No. 3 in the Diamond Pro Texas High School Baseball state rankings.

Troy won 11-2 at Whitney on March 16, but the Wildcats (16-7, 6-2) had ripped off five consecutive district wins since then by a combined 50-11 score. As such, the Trojans were prepared for a difficult challenge in the rematch. However, they played so well from the start that No. 19 Whitney never had much chance for revenge.

“It was to throw the first punch,” junior right fielder Dylan Torres, who drove in three runs, said about Troy's mental approach. “They're going to want revenge on us this time for beating them, so we knew it wasn't going to be easy and we're going to have to throw another punch and not let up at all.”

Said Sebesta about the Trojans' second blowout win over Whitney: “I'm a little surprised. They put their guy (ace pitcher Nate Callaway) on the bump, and I kind of thought it would be a close game. I just think our kids showed up ready to play, and when they do, they're dangerous. When they play like that, they're tough.”

Torres contributed heavily to the Trojans' offensive attack, driving in runs with a first-inning single, a second-inning double and a third-inning groundout. Four other Troy players recorded two hits apiece: Temple College-committed senior shortstop Hagen Rose (2-for-3, three runs), sophomore catcher Watson Washburn (2-for-3), Creel (2-for-2 with a triple) and junior second baseman Caleb Turner (2-for-3, two RBI singles, two runs).

Also contributing were senior third baseman Preston Lewis with an RBI double in the first, junior first baseman Kadin Workman with a two-run single in the third and senior center fielder Zach Hrbacek with two runs and stellar defense.

“I think a lot of it has to do with we got a lot stronger in the offseason,” Sebesta said. “Our guys did a great job in the weight room, so now we have a little bit of speed and power for the first time in a long time.”


SOUTHPAW SUCCESS: Troy senior left-hander Tanner Creel pitched a two-hitter with three strikeouts and also hit a triple and a single to help the second-ranked Trojans beat No. 19 Whitney 12-0 in five innings Friday night. Creel, who's committed to NCAA Division III Eastern University in Pennsylvania, improved his record to 6-0. The Trojans of head coach Steve Sebesta moved to 21-1 overall and 8-0 in District 17-3A. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



That was more than enough support for Creel (6-0), who retired the first six batters, then allowed two singles and issued three walks but never let a Whitney runner advance beyond second base.

A verbal commitment to NCAA Division III Eastern University in Pennsylvania, Creel said he came in confident that the Trojans were fully prepared for whatever Whitney threw at them.

“I mean, you can't ask for more, honestly. It started with our in-and-out (pregame infield and outfield practice), looking over from the bullpen and seeing everybody making throws and lots of communication,” Creel said. “Then when we get in our huddle and pray, and after that it's go time. You can just feel the energy in the dugout. That gives me all the confidence I need to go and pitch well.”

After Creel needed only four pitches to get three groundouts in the top of the first inning, Troy's lineup jumped on senior right-hander Callaway (3-1) immediately in its first time up.

Leadoff batter Rose ripped a single to left field, then raced to third when first baseman Levi Whitehead missed Callaway's pickoff throw. Hrbacek then bunted the ball back to Callaway, whose short throw home arrived in plenty of time but was dropped by catcher Garrett Peacock for another error, allowing Rose to score for a 1-0 lead.

Hrbacek tagged up to third on Workman's flyout and scored when Lewis hit a double to right, then Torres ripped a single to right to drive in Lewis for a 3-0 advantage.

After snagging Peacock's line drive to end a perfect second inning, Creel did damage with his bat. Batting eighth, the slender left-handed hitter launched a blast to deep right-center that fell just short of becoming only Troy's second home run this season but still went for a leadoff triple. Turner followed by ripping a single to left-center for a 4-0 lead.

Rose's hit-and-run single gave Troy runners at the corners, then Troy scored another run by pulling off a double steal. Rose drew a throw to second on his successful steal, which allowed Turner to sprint in for a steal of home to make it 5-0. With two outs, Torres pushed it to 6-0 with a double to left that drove in Rose.

“I'm very proud because I knew it helped the team out with scoring runs,” Torres said of his three-RBI night from the No. 5 spot.

“Dylan's having a solid season offensively. He's a strong kid and he provides a lot of power to the barrel,” Sebesta said. “We like the way he's swinging it right now.”

Whitney finally produced a base runner against Creel when Tate Winkler led off the third with a single to left and took second on Troy's lone error. However, Creel stranded Winkler there by striking out Kaden Auten, retiring Kannon Watson when Sam Houston State football signee Hrbacek made a deft catch on the run in shallow right-center and getting Cade Baker to ground out as Rose made a strong throw from deep in the hole.

The Trojans didn't necessarily need to pad their lead, but they did anyway by exploding for six runs in the third. It included three walks and two errors, and the key hits were Turner's RBI single to left and Workman's two-run single to left-center. Torres added a run-scoring groundout.

Troy's 7-8-9 batters – Washburn, Creel and Turner – were a combined 6-for-8 and, including courtesy runners, scored four runs. Turner tallied two RBI singles and two runs.

“In the beginning of the season it was kind of iffy with the bottom of the order, but now everybody's getting back in the swing of things and hitting shots,” Creel said. “And when somebody's off, we're able to get bunts down.”

Said Sebesta about Turner: “He's a scrappy little player for us. I love the way he plays the game. He's always full-throttle, he's always fifth gear wide open. He provides a spark for our offense. He's a scrappy dude.”

Creel permitted a Callaway single and walked Whitehead in the fourth, prompting a mound visit from Sebesta, but the southpaw responded with a strikeout and a flyout to keep Whitney scoreless. Creel issued back-to-back one-out walks in the fifth and received another visit from Sebesta, but Troy's typical sharp defense ended the game.

Baker chopped a grounder to Lewis, who stepped on third for the force out. His throw across the diamond was too late to turn the double play, but when trail runner Watson tried to advance to third on the play, Workman fired a strike back across to Lewis, who tagged Watson out to complete the Trojans' run-rule victory and another shutout for Creel.


COMING HOME: Troy senior left-hander Tanner Creel delivers a pitch to a Whitney batter during the second inning of the No. 2-ranked Trojans' 12-0, five-inning win over the Wildcats in District 17-3A action Friday evening in Troy. Creel (6-0) allowed only two singles in the shutout win. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



“First four innings I'd say (I was) really sharp. The last inning got a little iffy,” Creel said. “I just got a little too excited.”

Creel was a key player for the Trojans in 2019, when they won 29 games and reached the 3A Region III semifinals before losing to Pollok Central. Troy was loaded for another deep playoff run last year, but the COVID-19 pandemic stopped its promising season in March.

“After last year getting cut, this is our last year (for the seniors) and we've got to go get it, got to chase it,” Creel said. “I think we're pretty spot-on, and as the season goes on we're just going to get better. Being this good in about the middle of district, I think toward the beginning of the playoffs we should be pretty good.”

HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL

DISTRICT 17-3A

No. 2 Troy 12,

No. 19 Whitney 0 (5)

Whitney 000 00 – 0 2 4

Troy 336 0X – 12 12 1

W: Nate Callaway, Colby Estill (4) and Garrett Peacock. T: Tanner Creel and Watson Washburn. W – Creel (6-0). L – Callaway (3-1). 3B – T: Creel. 2B – T: Preston Lewis, Dylan Torres.

Highlights – W: Callaway four strikeouts, 1-for-2; T: Creel three strikeouts in shutout, 2-for-3, run; Torres 2-for-3, three runs batted in; Caleb Turner 2-for-3, two RBI, two runs; Hagen Rose 2-for-3, three runs; Washburn 2-for-3; Kadin Workman two-run single, run; Lewis RBI, two runs; Zach Hrbacek two runs.

Records – Troy 21-1 overall, 8-0 in District 17-3A; Whitney 16-7, 6-2.

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staff report


CISCO – Temple College got another strong pitching performance from Nathan Medrano to beat Cisco 4-1 in Wednesday's first game and the No. 15-ranked Leopards were in position to sweep the road doubleheader, but the Wranglers stormed back to score four runs in the final three innings and seize a 5-4, walk-off win to earn the split.

Temple (27-6) saw its six-game winning streak end in the finale, leaving head coach Craig McMurtry's Leopards with a 10-4 record in the Northern Texas Junior College Athletic Conference. TC is in second place, one game behind rival McLennan (12-4).

TC and Cisco (25-9, 10-8 NTJCAC) will complete their four-game series on Saturday with a 1 p.m. doubleheader at Danny Scott Sports Complex. Freshman right-hander Ulises Quiroga (7-0, 0.98 earned-run average) is the Leopards' likely starting pitcher in Saturday's first game.

After pitching a one-hitter with nine strikeouts in Temple's 4-2 non-conference win at Blinn on March 29, Medrano (6-2) went the distance for another victory in Wednesday's seven-inning opener at Cisco. The sophomore righty and University of Houston signee scattered six singles, struck out four batters and walked one. Medrano improved his ERA to 2.34 and has 54 strikeouts in a team-best 50 innings.

TC grabbed a 1-0 lead in the top of the third inning before Cisco made it 1-1 with a run in the bottom of the fifth. The Leopards came right back with three runs in the sixth to take a 4-1 advantage, and Medrano finished the job by holding the Wranglers in the final two innings.

Freshman third baseman Ty Tilson drove in two runs for Temple, and freshman outfielders Clay Bradford and Andre Jackson each hit a double. Bradford stole a base and scored two runs.

Cisco's Samuel Mendez (2-1) pitched mostly well in a complete game, allowing three hits and recording eight strikeouts against one walk. Colton Moore and Tanner Seidler produced two hits apiece for the Wranglers and Moore drove in their lone run.

The Leopards then had an opportunity to sweep the twinbill and remain in a virtual tie with McLennan for the NTJCAC lead, but they let a win slip away in the nine-inning finale. Single runs in the third, fifth and sixth innings staked Temple to a 3-0 lead in support of freshman lefty pitcher and Belton graduate Dylan Blomquist.

Cisco got on the board with one run in the sixth, then Blomquist recorded one out in the seventh and left the game with two runners on base. Reliever Davis Pratt got out of the seventh but not before both inherited runners scored for a 3-3 game.

Blomquist allowed four hits and three runs (two earned) in 6 1/3 innings, with seven strikeouts and one walk.

The Leopards responded with a run in the eighth to regain the lead at 4-3. Sophomore southpaw Diego Fernandez pitched 1 1/3 innings before freshman righty closer Brian Shadrick (Belton) relieved him in the ninth. Cisco produced a walk and two hits against Shadrick (2-1), who did not record an out, to push across two runs for the walk-off win that split the doubleheader.

Carlos Contreras paced the Wranglers' offense, going 3-for-5 with a double and three RBI. Moore drove in two runs and scored two. The late comeback made a winner out of Easton Malin (5-2), who pitched 1 2/3 scoreless innings.

Jackson and Seth Stephenson each had a double and two hits for Temple, and Tennessee signee Stephenson drove in a run. Tilson also drove in one run and has a team-high 29 RBI, one more than Stephenson.

BASEBALL

WEDNESDAY

Northern Texas Junior College

Athletic Conference

GAME 1

No. 15 Temple College 4, Cisco 1

Temple 001 003 0 – 4 3 0

Cisco 000 010 0 – 1 6 0

TC: Nathan Medrano and Sammy Diaz. C: Samuel Mendez and Angel Andrades. W – Medrano (6-2). L – Mendez (2-1). 2B – TC: Andre Jackson, Clay Bradford.

Highlights – TC: Medrano four strikeouts in complete game; Ty Tilson two runs batted in; Bradford two runs scored, stolen base; C: Mendez eight strikeouts in complete game; Colton Moore 2-for-3, RBI; Tanner Seidler 2-for-3.

GAME 2

Cisco 5, No. 15 Temple College 4

Temple 001 011 010 – 4 10 1

Cisco 000 001 202 – 5 7 1

TC: Dylan Blomquist, Davis Pratt (7), Diego Fernandez (7), Brian Shadrick (9) and Andruw Gonzales. C: Jon Barrera, Danny Davis (6), Seth Higdon (8), Easton Malin (8) and August Ramirez. W – Malin (5-2). L – Shadrick (2-1). 2B – TC: Seth Stephenson, Ty Tilson, Cole Payne, Andre Jackson; C: Carlos Contreras, Alec Carr, Colton Moore.

Highlights – TC: Blomquist seven strikeouts, four hits allowed in 6 1/3 innings; Jackson 2-for-4, run; Stephenson 2-for-5, RBI; Clark Henry two runs; Tilson RBI; C: Contreras 3-for-5, three RBI; Moore two RBI, two runs.

Records – Temple 27-6 overall, 10-4 in NTJCAC; Cisco 25-9, 10-8.

Note – TC hosts Cisco in doubleheader at 1 p.m. Saturday at Danny Scott Sports Complex.

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ANOTHER MASTERPIECE: Temple senior right-handed pitcher Bryan Williams threw a two-hitter with nine strikeouts to help the Wildcats defeat Killeen 1-0 in Friday night's District 12-6A game at Hallford Field. In three district starts against Harker Heights, Belton and Killeen, Williams (5-2) has allowed only six hits and one run while pitching 20 innings and compiling 29 strikeouts. District co-leader Temple (15-6, 5-1) produced its only run in the sixth inning when a safety squeeze bunt by senior Aaron Wagaman allowed junior Johnny Donoso to score. Killeen sophomore righty Jack Mellon also pitched a complete game. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE


Two things happen when Temple senior right-hander Bryan Williams pitches in District 12-6A baseball games: the Wildcats' opponents don't score many runs, and neither do the Wildcats.

Of course, Temple doesn't need to score many as long as Williams doesn't allow any.

Such was the case again Friday night at Hallford Field, where one week earlier Williams pitched a brilliant two-hitter with 10 strikeouts and the Wildcats scored twice in the bottom of the sixth inning to seize a 2-0 victory over rival Belton.

Frustrated through five innings by Killeen sophomore righty Jack Mellon, Temple finally broke through in the sixth as senior Aaron Wagaman's safety squeeze bunt brought home junior Johnny Donoso for the lone run before Williams finished off the feisty Kangaroos with a three-strikeout seventh to secure a 1-0, white-knuckle win for the Wildcats to keep them tied for the 12-6A lead.

“My main mentality is that if we're struggling at the plate, just throw it in there and let our defense work, and play to the best of my ability for my team,” Williams (5-2) said after pitching his second shutout in eight days and his third consecutive two-hit complete game in district. “Through the later innings, when we huddled up on the mound, I just told them, 'We're going to figure this out. We're gonna scrap through it.'”

Beginning with his two-hitter with 10 strikeouts in a 1-0 loss at Harker Heights on March 19, Williams has has permitted only one run and six hits while pitching 20 innings and racking up 29 strikeouts.

“Bryan is a kid whose work ethic is unbelievable,” Temple third-year head coach Dallas Robertson said about Williams, who retired his final 14 batters, eight on strikeouts. “His arm strength has increased definitely since last year – (helped by) a lot of bullpens. The thing he's showed, especially in the Belton game, is his grit. He's a kid who will take the ball and say, 'I got it.' It's his demeanor.”

And Williams has had to be at the top of his game, because the Wildcats (15-6 overall, 5-1 in 12-6A) haven't generated much offense to support him. Donoso's sixth-inning RBI triple was Temple's only hit against Belton, and the junior right fielder again played a key role in the Wildcats' sixth against Mellon – who allowed four singles in a complete game – and the youthful, pesky team from Killeen (3-17, 2-4).

The offensive firepower that Temple demonstrated Tuesday in its 17-6, five-inning win at Killeen Shoemaker was nowhere to be found against the Kangaroos on a cool, windy evening, so Robertson – a Killeen graduate whose defense turned in an error-free performance – decided to employ small-ball tactics to finally push his Wildcats over the top.

Donoso chopped an infield single to lead off the sixth, stole second base, advanced to third on a sacrifice bunt by Williams and scored when Mellon (2-4) had no choice but to throw to first on Wagaman's well-executed safety squeeze bunt that he angled toward the first base line.

“Our philosophy of hitting is that when (struggles) happen, we're going to start laying bunts down. So we executed our squeeze and got it in there in the sixth inning,” Robertson said. “We bunted a guy to second, got him to third and squeezed him in. The safety squeeze has been very effective for us in district. Bryan was throwing well, so let's just get one (run) and get out of here.

“Killeen played tough, just like I knew they would. If you look at the district, they've been doing that to people. They've got a young team, and they are growing.”


IN TOTAL CONTROL: Temple senior right-hander Bryan Williams delivers a pitch to sophomore catcher Xavier Padilla during the Wildcats' 1-0 win over Killeen in a District 12-6A game Friday evening at Hallford Field. Williams (5-2) pitched a two-hit shutout at home for the second time in eight days and finished with nine strikeouts, and his sacrifice bunt in the bottom of the sixth inning helped lead to the game's only run as 12-6A co-leader Temple (15-6, 5-1) staved off the Kangaroos (3-17, 2-4). (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Killeen second-year head coach Donald Trcka was pleased with the competitiveness and poise of his Kangaroos, who have 12-6A wins against Killeen Ellison and Shoemaker and played league co-leader Harker Heights close in a 4-2 loss Tuesday.

“We're playing with five freshmen and three sophomores starting right now. We're a young team, but they're coming around and they're playing really well,” Trcka said. “We've just got to hit the ball a little better.”

Mellon matched Williams through five scoreless innings, stranding Temple runners at third base in the first, second and fifth frames. He notched five strikeouts and allowed two singles each to Donoso and senior first baseman Isaiah Fach, walked two batters and hit one.

“That guy was on. He was good,” Robertson said about Mellon. “He was throwing to the outside corner and he was banging it, and we looked at it too many times. We tried to make an adjustment and crowd the plate and take it away from him, but he kept it there and would throw it in on us. His curveball was effective and it changed up his speeds. He definitely mixed it up pretty well and got us off-balance.”

After Williams worked around Rodrick Norman's one-out single in the top of the first, Mellon had to perform an escape act during Temple's first time at bat.

Leadoff batter Xavier Padilla's ground ball turned into a two-base throwing error on freshman shortstop Norman. Mellon struck out Donoso but threw a wild pitch that sent Padilla to third with one out. However, Mellon struck out Williams looking with an outside fastball and retired Wagaman on a soft comebacker.

Burly sophomore Connor Beeman ripped a single to left field to begin Killeen's second, but he tried to steal second and was thrown out by sophomore catcher Padilla. A similar situation occurred in the third, when Roos freshman Bryce Prince drew a leadoff walk but was cut down trying to steal second by an accurate Padilla throw, aided by the athletic tag of sophomore second baseman Issac Ramos.

“Early, we were trying to be aggressive and trying to get an extra base, things like that,” Trcka said.


RIGHT BACK AT YOU: Temple senior first baseman Isaiah Fach (20) prepares to connect for a sharp single up the middle that almost hit Killeen sophomore pitcher Jack Mellon during the second inning of the host Wildcats' 1-0 victory over the Kangaroos on Friday night at Hallford Field. Fach and junior right fielder Johnny Donoso hit two singles apiece as Temple remained tied for the District 12-6A lead with Belton and Harker Heights at 5-1. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Fach led off Temple's second by smoking a single that almost hit Mellon, whose cap fell to the mound dirt as the ball sizzled past him into center field. Fach advanced to second on a Ramos bunt and took third on junior Matthew McDonald's groundout, but Mellon avoided damage when Naeten Mitchell grounded out to third.

Unlike many of his teammates, the 5-foot-8, 163-pound Williams is not also a football player for Temple. However, he displayed his own type of physical and mental toughness during the top of the third.

With one out, Killeen freshman Cade Searcy popped up a sacrifice bunt attempt in foul territory, approximately 15 feet from the first base line. Williams sprinted off the mound and made a fully outstretched, diving try but couldn't quite reach the ball. He landed hard on his chest and ribs and was in obvious discomfort after his next several pitches, bending at the waist as he tried to gather himself.

“It was mainly hurting in my upper chest and lower ribs, but I had to fight through it and get myself out of that inning and just keep pushing,” Williams said. “No matter how much pain I'm in, I've still got a defense behind me and I've still got a team that I need to play my butt off for. It started to feel better after a while.”

Said Robertson, who let Williams deal with the injury on his own instead of walking out to check on the senior workhorse: “I don't baby Bryan. He's our catcher (when he's not pitching), and those are the things that happen to him.”

Searcy then reached base on a fielder's-choice grounder and stole second and third with two outs, but Norman swung through a high fastball by Williams to keep the game scoreless.

Nobody knew it at that juncture, but the Roos never again threatened to score against Williams. In fact, they never put another runner on base. Williams was perfect in the final four innings, highlighted by striking out the side in the fifth and seventh as he combined well-placed fastballs – many of them elevated and some out of the strike zone – with a sharp curveball.

“It's actually been a big pitch for me,” Williams said about his high fastball. “When I get ahead in the count and I feel comfortable with my fastball, I'm going to try throwing it up. If they chase it, they chase it. If they don't, so what. I'll find me another pitch that hopefully they chase or just look at.”

Said Trcka: “Hat's off to (Williams). He's done a really good job this year. We were trying to get our guys to hit the ball the other way, so that was our approach. Early we hit the ball really well; we just hit it at somebody. We struggled later at the plate, but overall we put the ball in play and hit it fairly well tonight.”

Temple made a bid to take the lead in the fifth, when a Mellon pitch glanced off Mitchell's helmet with one out before Mellon's wild pickoff throw to first skidded into foul territory, sending speedy sophomore Mitchell to third on the two-base error. But Mellon struck out sophomore center fielder Mikal Harrison-Pilot looking with an outside fastball and got out of it when Padilla grounded out to third.

“Jack pitched really well tonight, kept the ball around the plate and got his curveball over,” Trcka said. “I thought he did a great job. He's pitched really well for us this year.”

However, Temple finally got to Mellon in the sixth, the same inning in which the Wildcats broke through against Belton a week earlier. Donoso hit a high chopper between third and shortstop and easily beat it out for a leadoff single, then stole second before Williams, the No. 3 batter, put down a successful sacrifice bunt to move Donoso to third with one out.

“Bunting's a big part our program, so if we can lay one down, we have a high percentage of getting one run through,” Williams said. “And that's all we look at, one run an inning.”

Temple's ensuing safety squeeze bunt didn't surprise Trcka and Killeen, but it was an effective weapon for the Wildcats nonetheless. Wagaman, who alternates pitching starts with Williams, pushed a bunt toward the first base line, at which point Donoso started sprinting home. By the time the charging Mellon fielded the ball, he had no chance to throw out the fleet-footed Donoso at the plate and instead fired to first to get Wagaman, who recorded the game's lone RBI for a 1-0 Temple advantage.

“Coach Robertson's been doing a lot of safety squeezing, and we kind of knew it was coming and tried to defend it,” Trcka said. “But my pitcher's momentum was taking him forward, so we just had to get the out (at first).”

Fach singled sharply to left before Mellon walked Ramos and pinch hitter David Rios to load the bases with two outs, but Mellon's curveball struck out Mitchell to keep it a 1-0 game.

That minimal amount of support proved sufficient for Williams, who in the Killeen seventh struck out Mellon and Tanner Shain with high fastballs before Beeman swung through a thigh-high fastball on the outside corner, completing another Williams masterpiece and Temple shutout victory.

“Bryan doesn't panic. He's a gamer. You can rely on him,” Robertson said, adding: “I've told them from the beginning of the year that pitching and defense is going to carry us through, and we'll get the runs when we need them.”

After Temple practices on Saturday to work out its hitting difficulties, the Wildcats will complete the first half of their 12-6A schedule next Tuesday with a 7 p.m. game at fourth-place Copperas Cove (3-3). Killeen will host Belton at 7 p.m. next Tuesday.

HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL

DISTRICT 12-6A


Temple 1, Killeen 0

Killeen 000 000 0 – 0 2 2

Temple 000 001 X – 1 4 0

K: Jack Mellon and Kaden King. T: Bryan Williams and Xavier Padilla. W – Williams (5-2). L – Mellon (2-4).

Highlights – T: Williams nine strikeouts in second consecutive shutout win in district play (retired final 14 batters and struck out seven of final nine batters); Johnny Donoso 2-for-3, run; Isaiah Fach 2-for-3; Aaron Wagaman run-scoring sacrifice bunt in sixth; Padilla threw out two runners attempting to steal; K: Mellon five strikeouts in complete game; Connor Beeman and Rodrick Norman 1-for-3 each; Cade Searcy two stolen bases.

Records – Killeen 3-17 overall, 2-4 in District 12-6A; Temple 15-6, 5-1.

Notes – Temple shares the 12-6A lead with Belton and Harker Heights at 5-1; Temple plays at Copperas Cove at 7 p.m. next Tuesday; Killeen hosts Belton at 7 p.m. next Tuesday.

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