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GOING THE DISTANCE: Senior right-hander Brady Shadrick pitched a complete game with seven strikeouts to help Belton beat Copperas Cove 5-1 in the District 12-6A opener for both teams Tuesday night at Tiger Field. Shadrick (4-0) scattered seven hits and received plenty of support from his defense as he recorded his fourth win in four starts this season. Cooper Babcock, Jacob Estrada, Scott Gurnett and TJ Johnson produced two-hit games for coach Mark Krueger's Tigers (11-2-1), who will continue 12-6A play at Bryan at 7 p.m. Friday. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE


BELTON – Brady Shadrick missed plenty of Copperas Cove bats on a breezy Tuesday night at Tiger Field as Belton's senior right-handed starting pitcher mixed fastballs and curveballs to record seven strikeouts in the District 12-6A baseball opener for both teams.

However, what Shadrick really enjoys doing is watching the Tigers' other eight defensive players work.

“My defense is so good. We had great plays from (Aaron) Bain in left field, Keagan (Wolfe) in center, Josh (Westbrook) at third base making great plays . . . all over,” Shadrick said. “If they hit the ball, they're making the play. (Cove) barreled up a few balls, but our guys are fast and they make the play. When you've got a defense as good as I do behind me, throwing strikes makes it easy.”

That's proven to be a successful formula both for Shadrick and his Tigers. He's started four games this season and has produced a 4-0 record for Belton (11-2-1).

Shadrick and Copperas Cove senior righty Dekan Radigan were locked in a pitchers' duel for 5½ innings, but some ill-timed defensive breakdowns by the Bulldawgs and run-scoring doubles from Ben Jones and TJ Johnson helped Belton break open a close battle with a three-run sixth before Shadrick threw a perfect seventh to secure the Tigers' 5-1 victory.

“He did a great job for us tonight. He threw strikes, kept them off-balance and let our defense play,” Belton fifth-year head coach Mark Krueger said about Shadrick's performance, which was aided by Belton's error-free defense. “For our season (outlook), we look at good pitching and playing defense, and we think that if we can do those two things, we can win a lot of ballgames.”

Shadrick already had defeated Georgetown East View, Austin Regents and Denton in the Round Rock, Austin ISD and Richardson Lake Highlands tournaments, respectively, so Krueger was confident that the 6-foot-1, 170-pound senior was the right choice to take the mound for Belton's 12-6A opener.

Shadrick allowed seven hits and walked one batter against Cove (9-9), which seized a 1-0 lead in the top of the first inning. Shadrick's 93-pitch complete game might not have been his most dominant outing this season, but he certainly gave the Tigers what they needed.

“I wouldn't say it was his best of the year. He's had some great performances along the way in our tournament games, and he's separated himself from the other guys to be our (No. 1) guy who we can run out there,” said Krueger, whose squad went 3-0-1 at last weekend's Lake Highlands tournament. “That's why he had the ball in our district opener, no doubt.”


BRINGING IT: Belton senior Brady Shadrick delivers a pitch to Copperas Cove batter Dylan Martinez during the first inning of the Tigers' 5-1 win over the Bulldawgs in Tuesday night's District 12-6A opener at Tiger Field. Shadrick (4-0) allowed two hits and a run in the first inning but then fired six scoreless frames and finished with seven strikeouts in a complete game to help Belton improve its record to 11-2-1. Cove fell to 9-9 overall. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Cove second-year head coach Bryant Lopez and the Bulldawgs got a effective pitching performance from Radigan (2-2), who racked up eight strikeouts in 5 1/3 innings and never trailed until Wolfe's groundout drove in Johnson in the fifth. The Tigers eventually forced Radigan out of the game with one out in the sixth after he allowed singles to Cooper Babcock and Jacob Estrada and RBI doubles to Jones and Johnson, giving Belton a commanding 5-1 lead.

Despite the outcome, Lopez liked what he saw from Radigan, who mixed his fastball and breaking ball to give the Tigers problems for much of the evening.

“The fact that he was able to throw his off-speed pitch for strikes at any given count (was important),” Lopez said about Radigan, who permitted 10 hits and threw 107 pitches before catcher Russel Cochran relieved him with one out in Belton's big sixth. “He's emerged as our (top) starter because he can throw both of his pitches for strikes in any count.”

The Bulldawgs drew first blood in the 12-6A opener. Texas Tech-committed junior shortstop Travis Sanders ripped Shadrick's first pitch into left field for a single, then Jace Johnson's sacrifice bunt moved him to second base before Shadrick struck out Dylan Martinez looking with a slider for the second out.

Cochran then hit a hard grounder up the middle that senior shortstop Jones stopped with a diving stab before rushing to get up and make a hurried throw to first. The field umpire ruled Cochran safe – Krueger came out to argue the call – on an extremely close play and the speedy Sanders never stopped running, racing around third and scoring for a 1-0 Cove lead before a Shadrick fastball struck out David Cimmino.

Belton responded in its first at-bat. Leading off, senior second baseman Scott Gurnett singled over the first baseman's head and went to second on Wolfe's groundout. After a Radigan curve struck out Caleb Alexander looking, senior catcher Babcock roped a two-out single to center to drive in Gurnett for a 1-1 deadlock.

Cove was primed to regain the lead when Radigan began the second with a double off the wall in right-center. A sacrifice bunt by Caden Harris advanced Radigan's courtesy runner to third, but the runner's turn was too aggressive and first baseman Alexander – who had tagged Harris out – alertly threw a strike to third baseman Westbrook, who tagged out the wayward runner for a 3-5 double play.

The Bulldawgs threatened again in the third. Antonio Espinoza ripped a leadoff single and Sanders walked, but Shadrick made a key play when he fielded Jace Johnson's attempted sacrifice bunt and fired to Westbrook at third to get the force out on a close play. A wild pitch sent Sanders to third with one out, but Shadrick fielded Martinez's comebacker and the Tigers trapped Sanders in a rundown before tagging him out. Shadrick then stranded Johnson at third when Cochran grounded into a force.

In Cove's fourth, Radigan launched a long fly ball to left, into the teeth of the strong wind. It might have sailed over the tall wall for a solo home run on another night, but the breeze kept it in the ballpark and junior left fielder Bain sprinted back and toward the line and made a skillful running catch to help Shadrick post his first 1-2-3 inning of the night.

Belton made a bid to take its first lead in the fourth when Alexander rocked a leadoff double to right and Babcock walked. Radigan then struck out Bain with a fastball and Jones with a slider, but designated hitter Estrada scorched a two-out single to right. Harris charged the ball quickly and made such a strong throw home that Alexander couldn't even try to score after he made a big turn at third. He got caught in a rundown and Cochran tagged him for the third out, preserving the 1-1 tie.

The Tigers used more sharp defense to prevent the Bulldawgs from moving ahead in the fifth. Espinoza lined a one-out single and moved to second when a Sanders dribbler went for an infield single. Shadrick struck out Jace Johnson with a curve but then allowed Martinez's sharp single to left. Hungry for Cove to grab the lead, third base coach Lopez gambled with two outs by waving Espinoza home and challenging Bain to throw him out.

Challenge accepted.

Bain charged to field the ball and delivered a perfect one-hop strike to the waiting Babcock, who had plenty of time to tag out Espinoza before taking a tumble and showing the ball to the plate umpire before the Tigers celebrated the inning-ending defensive gem.

“I waved a runner on with two outs, and I just wanted to make something happen. It's been a tied game, and what they had to do was make a good play, and that's what they did,” Lopez said. “They had to throw a strike, and they did. With two outs, that's the play. It's a tough decision, because our 4-hole hitter (Cochran) was coming up next, but you take your chance.”


YOU'RE OUTTA THERE: Belton senior catcher Cooper Babcock shows the baseball to the home plate umpire after taking a tumble while tagging out Copperas Cove runner Antonio Espinoza during the fifth inning of the Tigers' 5-1 win over the Bulldawgs in Tuesday night's District 12-6A opener at Tiger Field. With the score tied 1-1, Espinoza was trying to score the go-ahead run on Dylan Martinez's two-out single, but the throw by Belton junior left fielder Aaron Bain was accurate and in time to cut down Espinoza at the plate and preserve the tie. Tigers senior pitcher Brady Shadrick (right) backs up home on the play. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



With that boost of momentum, Belton finally broke through in the fifth to take its first lead – with some help from Cove's defense. The 6-6 junior star for Belton's playoff basketball team, TJ Johnson started the inning by lining a single to right and he coasted into second after Harris let the ball get under his glove.

After Shadrick struck out, Gurnett beat out a soft liner for an infield single, giving the Tigers runners at the corners with one out. Wolfe, a Mary Hardin-Baylor commitment, grounded out to Sanders at shorstop but produced the go-ahead RBI as Johnson scored on the play for a 2-1 Belton advantage.

The Tigers continued to support Shadrick by flashing even more outstanding defense in the sixth. Wolfe sprinted back to the wall in center to catch the leadoff blast of Cochran, who tipped his helmet to Wolfe as he jogged back to Cove's dugout. Right fielder Johnson then made an on-the-run catch of Cimmino's fly ball near the foul line before a Shadrick curve struck out Radigan.

Belton proceeded to gain important separation with its three-run uprising in the sixth.

Babcock's leadoff infield single was followed by a Bain strikeout, but Jones – who along with Gurnett is committed to East Texas Baptist – sliced a ringing double to right that sailed over the head of Harris, who took a less-than-ideal angle to the ball. Babcock's courtesy runner, sophomore Mason Ramm, raced around to score, and Jones ran toward third as Sanders couldn't corral the incoming throw. And when first baseman Martinez's high throw airmailed third and skidded into foul territory, Jones dashed home for a 4-1 Tigers advantage.

“Obviously at the end we kicked the ball around in the outfield,” Lopez said. “Those two balls that were hit to (Harris), they hit them 100 miles an hour and they did a good job staying behind those balls. But we've got to be able to handle those balls.”


BULLDAWG BREAKDOWN BOOSTS BELTON: Senior Ben Jones (left, in red helmet) is greeted by Belton teammates after scoring during the fifth inning of the Tigers' 5-1 win over Copperas Cove in Tuesday night's District 12-6A opener at Tiger Field. Jones hit a double to right field to drive in a run, took third base on the Bulldawgs' throw into the infield and scored on the play when the first baseman's throw sailed over third base for an error. Junior TJ Johnson added an RBI double to complete Belton's three-run fifth inning. Cove players looking on are catcher Russel Cochran and pitcher Dekan Radigan (right). (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



After Estrada singled to right, Johnson clobbered a sizzling double to right-center that drove in pinch runner Jason Bonnett to make it 5-1 and chase Radigan before Cochran recorded the final two outs.

With a complete game and district-opening win in sight, Shadrick gave Cove no hope of a comeback in the seventh. He got Harris to line out softly to Gurnett and struck out pinch hitter Collin Sparks with a slider before Espizona grounded out to Westbrook to seal Belton's win.

“We're having fun. We have a great team and we're excited about this year. It's just great to be a part of it and great to pitch and help us win,” Shadrick said before he discussed what the Tigers still need to improve upon as they pursue the 12-6A championship. “We'll get the bats going. We have guys who can hit that maybe aren't hitting great yet. But once we get everything together, the team chemistry and team unity is better than any team I've ever had before, so we're going to clean some things up and be a really good team.”

And after Belton's 2020 campaign was stopped short last March because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Shadrick and his teammates are making sure to savor all of the experiences that this season has to offer.

“We've all played together all our lives, and last year getting cut short was hard on a lot of us who were juniors last year and seniors this year,” Shadrick said. “So we're hungry and that's pushing us even more. This is our final ride.”

Belton's first 12-6A road test comes Friday when Tigers travel to play Bryan – which lost its league opener 8-1 at Temple on Tuesday – at 7 p.m. Belton will host Harker Heights at 7 p.m. next Tuesday.


HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL

DISTRICT 12-6A


Belton 5, Copperas Cove 1

Cove 100 000 0 – 1 7 2

Belton 100 013 X – 5 10 0

C: Dekan Radigan, Russel Cochran (6) and Cochran, Travis Sanders (6). B: Brady Shadrick and Cooper Babcock. W – Shadrick (4-0). L – Radigan (2-2). 2B – C: Radigan; B: Caleb Alexander, Ben Jones, TJ Johnson.

Highlights – B: Shadrick seven strikeouts in complete game, earns fourth win in four starts this season; Babcock 2-for-2, run batted in; Johnson 2-for-3, RBI, run; Jacob Estrada 2-for-3; Scott Gurnett 2-for-4, run; Keagan Wolfe go-ahead RBI groundout in sixth; Jones RBI double in sixth; C: Radigan eight strikeouts in 5 1/3 innings; Sanders 2-for-2, run; Antonio Espinoza 2-for-3; Cochran RBI single.

Records – Belton 11-2-1 overall, 1-0 in District 12-6A; Copperas Cove 9-9, 0-1.

Note – Belton wins 12-6A opener, plays at Bryan (0-1 in 12-6A) at 7 p.m. Friday.

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BIG HIT: Temple College freshman third baseman Ty Tilson connects for a two-run single off the fence in left field during the fifth inning of the Leopards' 6-5 win over Weatherford in Saturday's opening game at Danny Scott Sports Complex. TC won the finale 9-6 to sweep the doubleheader and earn a four-game split with the Coyotes in both teams' first Northern Texas Junior College Athletic Conference series this year. Coach Craig McMurtry's Leopards (13-4, 2-2 NTJCAC) next will host Vernon in a doubleheader at noon Wednesday. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



By GREG WILLE


Despite the fact that Temple College and Weatherford both have 28 conference baseball games remaining after this weekend, the intensity and competitive brand of baseball that was played on Saturday afternoon and into the evening at windswept Danny Scott Sports Complex made the doubleheader feel like a league championship or the final postseason berth was at stake.

And because Temple lost its first two conference games Wednesday at Weatherford, there certainly was an added aspect of desperation – even though it's merely mid-March – in the Leopards' dugout.

“It was very important,” TC head coach Craig McMurtry said afterward.

Hungry to avoid a losing first week in Northern Texas Junior College Athletic Conference play and build momentum for the remainder of the 32-game league grind, TC handled the self-imposed pressure well and came up with the goods to grab a pair of vital victories.

In the seven-inning opener, Ty Tilson's two-run single off the left field fence highlighted Temple's five-run, go-ahead fifth inning, starting pitcher Ulises Quiroga racked up eight strikeouts in 5 2/3 effective innings and Belton graduate Brian Shadrick registered the final four outs to save the Leopards' 6-5 win.

Reliever Diego Fernandez boosted Temple by pitching four innings in the nine-inning finale, and Sammy Diaz, Seth Stephenson and David Wilson sparked the offense by producing a combined 10 hits and four runs batted in before Shadrick earned another save as the Leopards prevailed 9-6 for the must-have sweep.

“It was really important for us to win these two games today and get the ball rolling again,” said Stephenson, TC's speedy second-year freshman shortstop who has signed with Tennessee. “Weatherford's a good team. Everyone on the field wants to win. We've got nine dogs out there.”

After the Leopards improved to 13-4 overall and 2-2 in the NTJCAC, second-year freshman Shadrick – whose release point is somewhere in between submarine and sidearm, according to former major league pitcher McMurtry – spoke about embracing the pressure of the moment and coming through.

“We needed these today. They were must-win games,” the 6-foot-3, 165-pound Shadrick said after securing his second and third saves this season. “This is when baseball's fun. I don't know if I feel anxiety. I just feel the adrenaline and it's what I've been doing my whole life.”


SAVING THE DAY: Temple College freshman pitcher Brian Shadrick, a Belton graduate, earned the save in both of the Leopards' home wins against Weatherford on Saturday in Northern Texas Junior College Athletic Conference action at Danny Scott Sports Complex. The 6-foot-3, 165-pound right-hander used his submarine/sidearm delivery to get the final four outs of the Leopards' 6-5 victory in Game 1, then recorded the final five outs of their 9-6 win in the nightcap. Shadrick posted three strikeouts overall and didn't allow a hit. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Diaz, a sophomore catcher, has been with TC for only two months after transferring in from NCAA Division III University of Redlands in California. He said that after the Leopards lost their conference-opening doubleheader 8-2 and 6-5 on Wednesday in Weatherford, they were determined to redeem themselves with a home sweep of the Coyotes (16-8, 2-2).

“They were extremely needed,” Diaz said about Temple's two wins. “We need to win games to get to the playoffs, and we needed to salvage a series when we lose two in a row. We told ourselves, 'We've got to come out and take two at our place,' and that's what we did. We fought hard and we didn't let the games slip away from us like the last time.”

Diaz, who went 4-for-4, drove in two runs and scored two in Game 2, was especially impressed by the mentality and energy that the Leopards displayed throughout the doubleheader, which ended more than six hours after it began.

“It was amazing. I was trying to keep everyone up. The guys who didn't play, they did a great job of keeping the morale high,” said the 6-3, 220-pound Diaz, who caught five innings in the opener and all nine in the finale. “We tried to seize the momentum early and keep it rolling and keep it in our favor. We just played hard and it was a lot of fun out here today.”

In Wednesday's second game, Temple clawed back from a 4-0 first-inning deficit to go ahead 5-4, but the Leopards allowed two runs in the bottom of the eighth and absorbed a frustrating 6-5 loss. Back at TC's ballpark three days later, McMurtry saw the kind of competitiveness and play from his Leopards that he expected to see.

“We had a chance to win that second game up there and we let it slip away from us. We didn't make a play and it kind of got away from us late. We challenged these guys after the game,” McMurtry said. “We competed with those guys really well in the second game. We wanted to come in here today and find a way to win two ballgames, because you don't want to get down 1-3 or 0-4 to start conference. And they stepped up.

“Uli threw a great first game and was on top of his game the whole time, I thought, and Shadrick comes in and shuts it down. And then in the second game, we really didn't have a starting pitcher and Clay (Bradford) gave us a couple of innings as the opener. We're kind of searching for that fourth starter right now. We found a way to add some runs and Sammy had a really good game with four hits. (Weatherford) made some errors and we took advantage of them. We had a couple of errors as well that kept them in the ballgame, which is not what we want to do. Diego did a nice job for four innings, and again Shadrick comes in and does a really nice job of closing down the game.”


QUALITY FROM QUIROGA: Temple College freshman starting pitcher Ulises Quiroga (right) threw 5 2/3 innings and had eight strikeouts Saturday afternoon, improving to 4-0 as the Leopards edged Weatherford 6-5 in the doubleheader opener at Danny Scott Sports Complex. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Quiroga's sharp pitching was no surprise; the second-year freshman right-hander from Baytown Goose Creek Memorial entered with a 3-0 record and a 0.64 earned-run average, having permitted only six hits in 14 innings with 24 strikeouts and just one walk.

However, Quiroga had to get through some early turbulence against Weatherford in the seven-inning opener. Kameron Weil singled and Brenden Dixon walked before Brett Brown ripped a single that right fielder Wilson mishandled, allowing Weil and Dixon to score as Brown raced to third base for a 2-0 Coyotes lead with no outs.

But the ensuing Houdini act that Quiroga (4-0) performed played a key role in Temple's turnaround. With Brown on third and no outs, Quiroga stranded him there by striking out Jacob Guerrero, retiring Bo Willis on a ground ball with a drawn-in infield and striking out Hunter Rosson with a high fastball to limit the damage.

Quiroga then allowed only one hit and collected five strikeouts while keeping Weatherford scoreless in the second through fifth innings.

“Uli always does a good job and fills up the (strike) zone,” Stephenson said. “He keeps everything nonchalant, and that helps us.”

The Leopards' comeback began in their first at-bat. Travis Chestnut drew a leadoff walk against Coyotes lefty Kade Bragg before Clark Henry and Wilson hit consecutive singles to lead the bases with one out. Freshman third baseman Tilson then stroked an RBI single to right before Bragg kept the score 2-1 by getting Diaz to line into a double play.

TC couldn't get much going in the next three innings against the hard-throwing Bragg, who struck out two batters in each of the second and third frames before notching the rare four-strikeout inning in the fourth. Tilson reached first on a third-strike wild pitch before Bragg fanned Diaz, Jackson Sioson and Andre Jackson.

Quiroga featured a hard-breaking slider while striking out the side in the fifth, then the Leopards finally made their move during their game-changing half of the fifth.

No. 9 batter Cole Payne worked a long at-bat before ripping a leadoff single to right-center. Chestnut put down a sacrifice bunt and was safe when first baseman Nathan Rooney dropped the throw, and Stephenson reached on a fielder's-choice grounder when a Coyote throw to second was too late, loading the bases with no outs.

Weatherford's defense then faltered again. Third baseman Brown fielded Henry's grounder and tried to force Payne out at home, but his throw sailed a tad high and pulled catcher Willis' foot off the plate, creating a 2-2 tie and causing Coyotes head coach Jeff Lightfoot to replace Bragg with righty Hayden Alexander. Wilson then hit an infield single that brought in Chestnut to give TC its first lead at 3-2.

With the bases still loaded and a strong 25 mph wind blowing in from left field, Tilson launched a fly ball to left that in calmer conditions would have sailed well over the wall for a grand slam. The stiff breeze narrowly kept Tilson's towering drive in the ballpark, and left fielder Rosson looked like he might have a play on it. But the ball caromed off the metal fence, driving in Stephenson and Henry for a 5-2 game, although Tilson got only a single out of it after Wilson had retreated to first to tag up in case Rosson made the catch.

The Leopards completed their pivotal five-run barrage when Tilson scored on a two-out RBI single by freshman center fielder Andre Jackson that made it 6-2.

As it turned out, Temple really needed that four-run cushion.

Stephenson made an error on Guerrero's routine grounder to begin the Coyotes' sixth, then Willis ripped a single. Quiroga got Rosson looking with an outside-corner fastball for his eighth and final strikeout, but Noah Boughton singled to left field and Henry misplayed it for another error, letting Guerrero score. Rooney's RBI groundout made it 6-4 before McMurtry removed Quiroga after 5 2/3 innings.

“Uli threw a great game,” McMurtry said. “That one inning he maybe got a little tired, I don't know. But we don't make a play in that inning, either. He did a great job.”

Lefty reliever Mason Brandenberger uncorked a wild pitch that bounced high into the air, allowing Boughton to score and slice Temple's tenuous lead to 6-5. After Brandenberger walked No. 9 batter Austin Green and hit Weil with a pitch, McMurtry summoned Shadrick and the tall, lanky Belton product threw a fastball past Peyton Benesh to escape the rough inning with the one-run edge intact.

“We feel really confident whenever Shadrick comes in,” Stephenson said.

Temple couldn't add to its lead in the sixth, but Shadrick made sure that didn't matter by hurling a perfect seventh. He struck out Brown looking with a fastball, then retired Guerrero and Willis on grounders to save the Leopards' first must-have win.

“Personally, I like the pressure,” Shadrick said. “It's what I thrive on. It's what I've always been put in positions to do.”

Said McMurtry about Shadrick's development: “When he started dropping down and throwing from here (halfway between sidearm and submarine), things started getting better with that low arm slot. He's gained some velocity this year. Last year he was in the low 80s and this year he's run it up to 87 at times. Some guys can hit that, but there's quite a few (batters) that when they see this slot, it changes everything. You don't see it as often.”

Without a proven starting pitcher available for the nine-inning finale, Temple started second-year freshman lefty Bradford. He allowed Guerrero's two-out RBI double in the first, but Guerrero was thrown out in a rundown.


POP AT THE PLATE: Temple College freshman shortstop Seth Stephenson, a Tennessee signee, went 3-for-5 with two doubles, two runs scored and a run batted in as the Leopards beat Weatherford 9-6 in Game 2 to sweep Saturday's Northern Texas Junior College Athletic Conference doubleheader at Danny Scott Sports Complex. Also for TC in the finale, sophomore catcher Sammy Diaz went 4-for-4 with two RBI and two runs, freshman right fielder David Wilson went 3-for-5 and drove in a run and sophomore Cole Payne had two RBI. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



The Leopards seized a 2-1 lead in their half of the first against Coyotes southpaw Caden Hawkins. Stephenson popped a one-out double to left-center and Henry walked before Wilson ripped an RBI single to left to tie it. After Tilson walked, Diaz fisted a single over the first baseman to drive in Henry for the 2-1 lead before Hawkins eluded a bases-loaded jam by striking out Robert Shaw and Jackson.

Weatherford had runners at second and third with no outs in the second, but Bradford coaxed a shallow flyout, a force at home and then a groundout to escape and preserve TC's one-run edge.

The Coyotes took advantage of an ineffective relief outing by Davis Pratt to regain the lead in the third. After Weil singled and Jayden Hill walked, Texas A&M transfer Brown pummeled a Pratt offering to right-center for a three-run home run and a 4-2 lead. After Guerrero singled, McMurtry brought in third-year sophomore lefty Fernandez (1-0), a reliable strike thrower. He got a foul popup and a double-play grounder, then worked around a leadoff error to toss a scoreless fourth.

Temple forged a 4-4 deadlock in the fourth when Jackson's single to left-center drove in Diaz and Payne's groundout scored Shaw.

Fernandez then encountered trouble in the Weatherford fifth. Brown singled and Guerrero reached on Tilson's fielding error before Willis' successful sacrifice bunt. Rooney's sacrifice fly gave the Coyotes a 5-4 lead before Austin Green's RBI single to left extended it to 6-4.

That, however, proved to be the high-water mark for Weatherford. In the Leopards' half of the fifth, they sent nine batters to the plate and erupted for four runs against four relievers to grab the lead for good at 8-6. Diaz drilled a one-out double to right-center to drive in Tilson. Shaw was hit by a pitch and Jackson walked to load the bases before a pitch hit Payne, forcing in Diaz for a 6-6 tie.

Hill camped out underneath Chestnut's fly ball to medium right in anticipation of throwing home to prevent a sacrifice fly, but the ball bounced off Hill's glove for a crucial error and Shaw scored for a 7-6 Leopards lead. Stephenson then pushed it to 8-6 by lining an RBI single to right.

A defensive highlight in the Weatherford sixth kept things rolling for Temple. Fernandez walked Hill with two outs and Brown smoked a double to the wall in right, but Wilson fired the ball to second baseman Chestnut, whose strong, accurate relay throw from the outfield grass arrived just in time for Diaz to tag the speedy, sliding Hill out on an extremely close play at home plate for the third out. The fired-up Leopards sprinted back to their dugout, mobbing each other to celebrate the exciting defensive gem.

“That was the play of the game,” Stephenson said. “It gave us all the momentum.”

McMurtry agreed, adding: “That was really good. That was the turning point in some ways, because it kept the momentum.”


LOCKING IT DOWN: Temple College freshman right-hander Brian Shadrick (right) delivers a pitch during the seventh inning of the Leopards' 6-5 win over Weatherford in Saturday's first game at Danny Scott Sports Complex. Shadrick, who played for Belton, earned the save in the opener and another save in TC's 9-6 victory over the Coyotes in the doubleheader finale. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Weatherford had two runners aboard with one out in the eighth when McMurtry again put Shadrick on the mound in another save situation. On his first pitch, Weil lined into a 6-4, inning-ending double play.

The Leopards tacked on a potentially important run in the eighth when Stephenson ripped a leadoff double into the corner in left and scored on Henry's triple down the line in right, making it 9-6.

A walk and an error in the ninth helped the Coyotes get some traffic on the bases against Shadrick in their final at-bat, bringing the tying run to the plate with one out. But Willis hit a fielder's-choice grounder and Rooney lined out to right as the unflappable Shadrick locked up Temple's second must-have victory.

“We played a great fall and then we started out hot this spring, so we know that we have the talent,” Shadrick said. “We just have to all put it together, and today we did that.”

McMurtry commended Diaz's performance and maturity after the strapping transfer caught 14 innings overall and went 4-for-4 with two RBI as TC completed its vital sweep.

“Sammy takes charge behind the plate," McMurtry said, "and I think he's pretty smart back there as far as calling pitches and understanding what the pitchers have and how he's going to use it."

The Leopards play Vernon (14-8, 3-1 NTJCAC) in a four-game conference series this coming week, beginning with Wednesday's noon doubleheader at Danny Scott Sports Complex.

BASEBALL

Northern Texas Junior College

Athletic Conference


GAME 1

Temple College 6, Weatherford 5

WC 200 003 0 – 5 5 2

TC 100 050 X – 6 8 3

WC: Kade Bragg, Hayden Alexander (5) and Bo Willis. TC: Ulises Quiroga, Mason Brandenberger (6), Brian Shadrick (6) and Sammy Diaz, Andruw Gonzales (6). W – Quiroga (4-0). L – Alexander (0-1). Save – Shadrick (2).

Highlights – TC: Quiroga eight strikeouts, five hits allowed in 5 2/3 innings; Ty Tilson 2-for-3, three runs batted in; David Wilson 2-for-4, RBI; Andre Jackson RBI single; Travis Chestnut two runs; WC: Bragg eight strikeouts in 4 1/3 innings (four strikeouts in fourth inning).

GAME 2

Temple College 9, Weatherford 6

WC 103 020 000 – 6 12 1

TC 200 240 01X – 9 13 4

WC: Caden Hawkins, Ben West (5), Bristol Carson (5), Hunter Estill (5), Devan Lindsey (5), Cade Farr (8) and Davis Shackelford. TC: Clay Bradford, Davis Pratt (3), Diego Fernandez (3), Jace Walker (7), Brian Shadrick (8) and Sammy Diaz. W – Fernandez (1-0). L – Carson (0-1). Save – Shadrick (3). HR – W: Brett Brown (4). 3B – TC: Clark Henry. 2B – W: Jacob Guerrero, Bo Willis, Brown; TC: Seth Stephenson 2, David Wilson, Diaz.

Highlights – TC: Diaz 4-for-4, two RBI, two runs; Stephenson 3-for-5, RBI, two runs; Wilson 3-for-5, RBI; Cole Payne two RBI; Henry RBI triple, run; Andre Jackson RBI, run; WC: Brown 3-for-4, three-run home run, two runs; Nathan Rooney 2-for-4, RBI; Guerrero 2-for-5, RBI, run.

Records – Temple 13-4 overall, 2-2 NTJCAC; Weatherford 16-8, 2-2.

Notes – Temple and Weatherford split their conference-opening four-game series; TC will host Vernon (14-8, 3-1) in an NTJCAC doubleheader at noon Wednesday at Danny Scott Sports Complex.

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TOO HOT TO HANDLE: Collin sophomore guard Orion Virden (4) takes a 3-point shot over Temple College freshman defender Brandon Monroe during the host Leopards' 93-84 loss to the Cougars on Thursday night at TC Gym. Virden made five 3-pointers in the first half and six overall en route to a game-high 24 points, and Collin (11-3) compiled 13 3-pointers as it moved to 6-1 in the Northern Texas Junior College Athletic Conference. Monroe and sophomore guard Khouri Perkins scored 19 points apiece to pace Temple (5-8, 1-8 NTJCAC), which absorbed its seventh straight conference defeat. Five Leopards players missed Temple's Wednesday and Thursday games because of quarantine protocols related to COVID-19, first-year head coach Clifton Ellis said. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)




By GREG WILLE


Jim Sigona has been the head men's basketball coach at Collin College for 33 seasons. Kirby Johnson retired last year after 33 seasons as Temple College's head coach.

Johnson watched from the stands Thursday night at TC Gym as his old rival Sigona coached against one of Johnson's former players, first-year head coach Clifton Ellis of the depleted Leopards.

For a while, Collin sharpshooter Orion Virden looked like he might explode for 33 or more points off the bench against the zone defense of a struggling, short-handed Temple team that was without five players – including the four tallest Leopards – because of COVID-19 quarantine protocols.

Three-point marksman Virden didn't quite get to 33 points, finishing with a game-best 24. But 33 of the Cougars' 50 first-half points came from 11 3-pointers as they raced out to a 15-point lead before Collin withstood some feisty second-half runs by the undermanned Leopards for a 93-84 victory, extending Temple's conference losing streak to seven games with its fourth league defeat in six days.

“He's a really, really good shooter. He's normally a starter, and last year he was one of our best 3-point shooters,” Sigona said about Virden, a 6-foot-1 sophomore guard from Pine Bluff, Arkansas. “Sometimes we start him and sometimes we bring him off the bench, but I actually needed him in this game because I knew Temple was down and I knew they were going to be in zone the whole game. I was like, 'Man, we've got to have somebody make some shots.'”

TC played its second second straight game without two of its top three scorers in 6-8 sophomore forward Aleu Aleu (17.3 points, 8.9 rebounds per game) and 6-5 freshman wing Elijah Lomas (13.0 ppg) and also didn't have the services of 6-10 sophomore forward Mawien Mawien and two tall freshman forwards: 6-9 Tabarius Jolly and 6-8 Tawab Kokumo.

Sophomore guard Khouri Perkins and freshman guard Brandon Monroe paced Temple with 19 points apiece, freshman guard Sherrod Whitley scored 13 points and freshman forward Maison Adeleye and freshman guard Davion Sargent-Young added 10 each.

The Leopards' eight-man group produced a scrappy, competitive effort against deeper, beefier Collin (11-3 overall, 6-1 conference), but that wasn't nearly enough to keep TC (5-8) from sliding to 1-8 in the Northern Texas Junior College Athletic Conference. The Leopards haven't won a conference game since they beat Southwestern Christian 93-75 at home Feb. 10, when Aleu, Lomas and Mawien scored a combined 38 points.

“Our guys understood the situation. We've only got eight guys, and it just so happens that the guys who are out are our tallest guys,” said Ellis, whose Leopards had a quick turnaround after they lost 90-79 to Southwestern Christian on Wednesday evening in Terrell. “But as we talked about after the game, I feel like they're bringing a new kind of attitude, a new kind of spirit to our team with the way they've handled this whole situation. They showed a lot of competitive spirit.

“What was different about (the last two games) as opposed to the other conference games where we had double-digit leads in the second half and I felt like we kind of self-destructed, these last two nights the other teams just made some shots. It wasn't so much about anything that we were doing wrong. The other team was just making shots. So in this case, we just take it and move on.

"I told the guys that I feel like we got better the last couple days. I really did," Ellis added. "They recognized some things, and some of the guys who hadn't played as much played more and they showed me that they're deserving of some time on the court. So as long as we can all learn from this and carry it forward over these next couple of weeks, everybody's in the conference tournament (this season instead of only the top four teams advancing to the NJCAA Region V Tournament), so we'll see what happens.”


TAKING IT TO THE HOOP: Temple College freshman guard Sherrod Whitley (30) gets past Collin defender Kadar Waller for a layup during the second half of the Leopards' 93-84 loss to the Cougars on Thursday night at TC Gym. Whitley made two 3-point baskets and scored 13 points as Temple had five double-figure scorers but couldn't prevent its seventh straight conference defeat, including four in the last six days. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



Temple will aim to stop its losing skid when it plays Hill (10-6, 4-5 NTJCAC) at 4 p.m. Saturday in Hillsboro. Ellis said quarantines will prevent the five players who have missed the last two games from playing at Hill. He said that they're likely to return for next Monday's home game with rival McLennan.

Collin's nine-point win followed the Temple women's 96-87 victory over Collin. The Lady Leopards (11-3 overall) of first-year head coach Amber Taylor are 4-1 in their last five NTJCAC games. At 7-3 in the league, TC is in third place – a half-game behind 7-2 Ranger – but only one game behind first-place Hill (8-2) entering their clash at 2 p.m. Saturday in Hillsboro.

Virden made five 3-pointers in the first half and six overall for a 24-point night, and his teammates gave him plenty of help as the Cougars made 13 3-pointers overall. Antoine Smith Jr. and Trazarien White scored 15 points apiece, Alex Stoimenov – who hit three 3-pointers before halftime – had 11 and Kadar Waller contributed 10.

Collin leads the NTJCAC in terms of winning percentage (.857), although the Cougars are a half-game behind McLennan (8-2 conference) in the standings and just a half-game ahead of 6-2 teams Grayson and Ranger. Sigona said that because of broken water lines at Collin that caused the closure of its Plano campus, the game at Temple was the Cougars' sixth straight conference game on the road.

“So out of the last seven now, we've got six at home. I don't know, though. We keep winning on the road. I might just want to keep going on the road,” joked Sigona, whose team's only conference loss was 77-72 at McLennan on March 4.

Collin's longtime leader and native New Yorker was serious, though, when he spoke about the pandemic-related problems that Collin experienced last fall.

“First semester, it kind of went through us,” Sigona said about COVID-19. “It's been challenging. I just appreciate our guys, because it's very, very hard for them. You've got to try to stay isolated, you've got to try to stay away from others. It's been tough.”

Collin jumped out to 7-2 lead with 3 minutes gone, but Temple responded with an 8-0 run – including 3-pointers by freshman point guard Tyler Watkins and Whitley – to grab its first lead at 10-7 with 14:55 remaining. CJ Washington's 3 tied it before steals led to back-to-back layups by Watkins and Perkins for a 14-10 Leopards advantage.

Kristopher O'Neal's difficult fast-break layin gave Temple an 18-17 lead, but that proved to be the Leopards' final advantage of the evening.

Not surprisingly, it was Virden who shifted the momentum to Collin's side. He nailed an open 3-pointer from the left wing for a 20-18 Cougars edge. After Monroe's cutting layup made it 20-20, Stoimenov – a 6-5 freshman from Bulgaria – got the roll on a left-corner 3 to put Collin ahead to stay at 23-20 with 9:16 remaining until halftime.

Right after that was when the Leopards undoubtedly began to miss having the size of their five players who were out of action for the second straight night. White grabbed an offensive rebound and scored the putback, then Davien Minor did the same thing and added a free throw for a three-point play as the Cougars' lead grew to 28-22 with 7:46 left.

The next few minutes provided a dueling highlight reel of TC's Perkins and Collin's Virden, who made the next six baskets in alternating order. Perkins scored on a left-handed layup, a right-corner 3 and a putback; Virden countered with two 3-pointers from the right wing and a 3 from the top left.

Temple's deficit was only 37-33 at the 4:33 mark after Jonathan Joseph's shot in lane rolled in and Perkins made a difficult fast-break finish. However, the game then got away from the Leopards in a hurry as the Cougars carved up TC's zone defense by closing the first half with a decisive 13-2 run.

Waller sank a left-wing 3, White scored four points in a row and Stoimenov drilled a 3 from up top. Sargent-Young made two free throws to stop Temple's 3-minute scoring drought, but the pure-shooting Virden hit another 3-pointer – his fifth of the half – from the top left to extend Collin's advantage to 50-35 at halftime.

“When you play zone, you're going to give up something, and a lot of times it's perimeter shots. And in this case, they made them and that gave them some separation,” Ellis said. “Obviously we were worried about them throwing the ball inside and really taking advantage of our lack of size, but they made some (outside) shots and that changed the game around.”

Scoring by Adeleye and Whitley kept Temple within striking distance in the second half's opening 5 minutes, but White scored off Smith's pass before Virden finally showed he could make something other than a 3-pointer. He used a pump-fake to get open and hit a 15-foot jumper, then curled around a screen to get free for a 13-footer and a 65-44 lead with 14:08 left.

On the verge of getting blown out, the Leopards quickly clawed their way back into contention. O'Neal scored inside, then Monroe made back-to-back 3-pointers from the left wing as turnovers began to hurt the Cougars. When Sargent-Young's hard drive led to a banker plus a free throw for a three-point play, TC sliced its deficit to 66-55 with 11:53 remaining and still had plenty of time to pull off a much-needed comeback.

However, the next 6 minutes saw Collin push its lead back to 19 at 80-61 with 6:20 left, led by Smith's 3-pointer and Waller's three-point play.

The Leopards made one final push, using baskets by Perkins and Sargent-Young and then 3-pointers by Whitley and Sargent-Young to make it 84-71 at the 4-minute mark.

But when Virden penetrated from the left wing for a basket and Waller added an inside bucket to make it 88-73 with 2:24 left, the Cougars had secured another road victory.

Although Temple's frustrating NTJCAC losing streak reached seven games, Ellis saw things from his Leopards against Collin that made him far more optimistic than discouraged.

“I liked the entire team overall, I really did,” he said. “Each guy kind of had his moment, doing different things. I really liked the way we were moving the ball and running the court, competing and scrapping.

“I told them after the game, 'I feel like you guys are bringing a new attitude to our team. I feel like we've kind of been down. We couldn't play in the first semester and had to wait until the second semester, then we had a COVID outbreak, then we had the (winter) weather (postponements), all of this and that. I feel like everybody's kind of putting that behind us and we get to play basketball. Let's just go play and have fun.' You've got to have a little fun. The idea is we just want to get better and better, and hopefully we get everybody back and we can figure some things out with our team.”

And despite the adversity that he and TC have experienced during the last 12 months because of the pandemic, Ellis remains upbeat and optimistic about the Leopards' direction.

“To be honest, I'm just happy to be here at Temple College. I love this college. I played here and I'm happy to be back,” he said. “I'm happy to be working with these guys. Some of these guys are like me. They're just looking for an opportunity to play college basketball and they got it, and I'm just excited to be a part of that. I wish it was more of a normal circumstance (this year), but I love being here and I think our guys love being here and getting a chance to play.”

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Northern Texas Junior College

Athletic Conference


Collin 93, Temple College 84


Collin (11-3, 6-1 NTJCAC) – Orion Virden 24, Antoine Smith Jr. 15, Trazarien White 15, Alex Stoimenov 11, Kadar Waller 10, CJ Washington 9, Davien Minor 7, John Achebe 2.

Temple (5-8, 1-8 NTJCAC) – Brandon Monroe 19, Khouri Perkins 19, Sherrod Whitley 13, Maison Adeleye 10, Davion Sargent-Young 10, Tyler Watkins 7, Kristopher O'Neal 4, Jonathan Joseph 2.

3-point goals – Collin 13 (Virden 6, Stoimenov 3, Smith 2, Waller 1, Washington 1); Temple 8 (Monroe 3, Whitley 2, Perkins 1, Sargent-Young 1, Watkins 1).

Free throws – Collin 8-11, Temple 8-9.

Halftime score – Collin 50, Temple 35.

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