Thread Rating:
04-09-2014, 08:16 AM
ASHLAND Piling up victories against a particularly formidable rival is one of the impressive features of coach Dave Millerâs success story with Ashlandsoftball.
On Tuesday night, the Kittens extended a domination against Boyd County that dates back to 2007.
After three scoreless innings, Boyd County pushed across a run in the top of the fourth inits bid to reverse the trend early in a new season.
Ashland, however, responded to a challenge from Miller with six runs in the bottom of the inning and rolled to an 11-1 mercy rule win.
âThey rose up,â Miller said ofthe Kittens, currently ranked 24th in the state coachesâ poll. âWe were in a battle early and Iâm extremely pleased with how the girls answered the call.â
Ashland has won 23 of the last 25 games in the series â including three regional finals â despite Boyd County being a consistent 20-game winner.
âThe first four innings, things were going well,â Boyd County coach Geoff Stewart said. â(Pitcher) Lora Thompson was hitting her spots. Then it all
fell apart. We had a couple of errors, got behind in the count and had some mental breakdowns. I never expected a mercy though.â
Stewart paused.
âTeams like Ashland are going to do what good teams do,â he continued. âThey take advantage of another at bat. We just have to be mentally focused to beat the good teams.â
Ashland continues to hold the pitching edge in the matchup. Junior Megan Hensley, coming off a second team All-State sophomore season, continued her strong 2014 start by striking out eight batters and limiting the Lady Lions to three singles over six innings.
âHensley is Hensley,â Stewart said. âSheâs pretty darn good. She kept us off balance. At times we chased pitches. On the other side of the coin, we let some good pitches go by for called third strikes.â
Hensley (6-0) showed her toughness by shaking off a hard-hit comebacker that caromed off her leg and produced Boyd Countyâs run. She didnât even acknowledge being struck by the ball.
âMegan was mad because she didnât catch it,â Miller said. âThatâs the competitor in her. I guarantee she was not thinking another thing about that leg.â
Ashlandâs cleanup hitter also went 3-for-3 with a walk as part of the teamâs big offensive output.Every starter contributed at least one hit as the Kittens racked up 13 overall.
âI absolutely love that,â Millersaid of the hitting balance. âA teamâs one-through-nine, not onethroughfour.â Shortstop Megan Griffith doubled home the tying run in the fourth. Carly Conley and Sidney Campbell also went the opposite way with RBI singles in the Kittensâ big inning, and Katie Baldock did likewise by smacking a two-run double to make it 6-1.
âWe exploded,â Griffith said of the outburst. âIt just takes one (hit) to start us. Everybody in the lineup came through.â
Griffith, a junior, is off to a strong start at the plate after playing with a quad injury most of last season. She entered Tuesday with a .444 average and built on that by going 2-for-4 and scoring two runs. âI feel good and the confidence is back,â Griffith said. âItâs a whole different outlook.â
Boyd County, coming off a week of competition at Myrtle Beach, took a 1-0 lead when Destiny Goinsâ shot off Hensleyâs leg rolled through shortstop allowing Kenzi Martin to score from second. Miller was miffed that the Kittens failed to quickly track the ball down to prevent the run from scoring. Shortly after, Ashland dropped the ball at second base on a stolen base tag after Campbellâs strong throw from behind the plate easily beat the runner.
âCoach told us we were playing tight and needed to loosen up and play our game,â Griffith said. âAfter that, it all started to change for us.â
Ashland (7-1) has won six in a row. The Kittens, playing their fourth game in as many days, have a little break before hosting a fourteam event Saturday. The Kittensare scheduled to meet Greenup County at noon, then take on Lincoln County (W.Va.) at 4 p.m. Lawrence County faces Greenup County in the 10 a.m. opener and will also play Lincoln County at 2 p.m.
Boyd County (5-7) visits Wayne on Thursday to take on the defending West Virginia Class AA state champs.
âI donât like getting beat like that against Ashland, but we will be OK,â Stewart said.
Jordan Meade launched a tworun double in the sixth to close out the Kittensâ scoring.
BOYDCO. 000 100 â 1 3 3 ASHLAND 000 632 â 11 13 1 Thompson, Irvine (5) and Goins; Hensley and Campbell. WâHensley. LâGoins. 2BâGriffith (A), Meade (A).
On Tuesday night, the Kittens extended a domination against Boyd County that dates back to 2007.
After three scoreless innings, Boyd County pushed across a run in the top of the fourth inits bid to reverse the trend early in a new season.
Ashland, however, responded to a challenge from Miller with six runs in the bottom of the inning and rolled to an 11-1 mercy rule win.
âThey rose up,â Miller said ofthe Kittens, currently ranked 24th in the state coachesâ poll. âWe were in a battle early and Iâm extremely pleased with how the girls answered the call.â
Ashland has won 23 of the last 25 games in the series â including three regional finals â despite Boyd County being a consistent 20-game winner.
âThe first four innings, things were going well,â Boyd County coach Geoff Stewart said. â(Pitcher) Lora Thompson was hitting her spots. Then it all
fell apart. We had a couple of errors, got behind in the count and had some mental breakdowns. I never expected a mercy though.â
Stewart paused.
âTeams like Ashland are going to do what good teams do,â he continued. âThey take advantage of another at bat. We just have to be mentally focused to beat the good teams.â
Ashland continues to hold the pitching edge in the matchup. Junior Megan Hensley, coming off a second team All-State sophomore season, continued her strong 2014 start by striking out eight batters and limiting the Lady Lions to three singles over six innings.
âHensley is Hensley,â Stewart said. âSheâs pretty darn good. She kept us off balance. At times we chased pitches. On the other side of the coin, we let some good pitches go by for called third strikes.â
Hensley (6-0) showed her toughness by shaking off a hard-hit comebacker that caromed off her leg and produced Boyd Countyâs run. She didnât even acknowledge being struck by the ball.
âMegan was mad because she didnât catch it,â Miller said. âThatâs the competitor in her. I guarantee she was not thinking another thing about that leg.â
Ashlandâs cleanup hitter also went 3-for-3 with a walk as part of the teamâs big offensive output.Every starter contributed at least one hit as the Kittens racked up 13 overall.
âI absolutely love that,â Millersaid of the hitting balance. âA teamâs one-through-nine, not onethroughfour.â Shortstop Megan Griffith doubled home the tying run in the fourth. Carly Conley and Sidney Campbell also went the opposite way with RBI singles in the Kittensâ big inning, and Katie Baldock did likewise by smacking a two-run double to make it 6-1.
âWe exploded,â Griffith said of the outburst. âIt just takes one (hit) to start us. Everybody in the lineup came through.â
Griffith, a junior, is off to a strong start at the plate after playing with a quad injury most of last season. She entered Tuesday with a .444 average and built on that by going 2-for-4 and scoring two runs. âI feel good and the confidence is back,â Griffith said. âItâs a whole different outlook.â
Boyd County, coming off a week of competition at Myrtle Beach, took a 1-0 lead when Destiny Goinsâ shot off Hensleyâs leg rolled through shortstop allowing Kenzi Martin to score from second. Miller was miffed that the Kittens failed to quickly track the ball down to prevent the run from scoring. Shortly after, Ashland dropped the ball at second base on a stolen base tag after Campbellâs strong throw from behind the plate easily beat the runner.
âCoach told us we were playing tight and needed to loosen up and play our game,â Griffith said. âAfter that, it all started to change for us.â
Ashland (7-1) has won six in a row. The Kittens, playing their fourth game in as many days, have a little break before hosting a fourteam event Saturday. The Kittensare scheduled to meet Greenup County at noon, then take on Lincoln County (W.Va.) at 4 p.m. Lawrence County faces Greenup County in the 10 a.m. opener and will also play Lincoln County at 2 p.m.
Boyd County (5-7) visits Wayne on Thursday to take on the defending West Virginia Class AA state champs.
âI donât like getting beat like that against Ashland, but we will be OK,â Stewart said.
Jordan Meade launched a tworun double in the sixth to close out the Kittensâ scoring.
BOYDCO. 000 100 â 1 3 3 ASHLAND 000 632 â 11 13 1 Thompson, Irvine (5) and Goins; Hensley and Campbell. WâHensley. LâGoins. 2BâGriffith (A), Meade (A).
Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)