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04-22-2014, 08:16 AM
ASHLAND Johnson Central softball coach Jason Hurtâs already high opinion of Ashland junior Megan Hensley rose to another level Thursday night.
Just like her rise ball.
Whether in the circle or ar the plate, Hensley continues to give opponents fits. On this occasion, the University of Louisville commit smacked a tworun homer in the first inning and mowed through the visitorsâ lineup for a two-hitter in the Kittensâ 91 romp.
Hurt said Johnson Central hasnât been able to rev up its pitching machine in practice lately as much as he would like. The Lady Eagles saw the real thing in Hensley, who struck out 14 batters to go to 9-0 on the season.
Sheâs averaging just under two Kâs per inning.
âWhat can you say? Hensleyâs an awesome pitcher,â Hurt said. âShe has that rise ball. You know itâs coming, but itâs not easy putting the ball in play or knowing when to lay off. Sheâs also a great hitter. She can bunt it, or hit it over the fence. We expect her to hit it hard. We just try to make a play on the ball.â
Hensley, who came in with a .559 batting average, also singled and finished with two runs and three RBIs against one of the 15th Regionâs top teams.
As well as Hensley played Thursday, 23rdranked Ashland again showed the kind of production up and down the lineup that excites coach Dave Miller.
The Kittens pounded out 14 hits, including a monster home run from sophomore Hayley Kilburn and freshman Sidney Campbellâs first three-hit game at the varsity level.
âIf you can hit one-through-nine, youâre going to have a lot of success in this game,â Miller said. âWeâve been getting that. You can see the improvement a lot of these girls have made in a yearâs time.â
Katie Baldock, Megan Griffith and Carly Conley each supplied two hits for the Kittens (11-1), who have not lost since splitting two games on their opening day.
âThey all hit it, top to bottom,â Hurt said. âYou canât look at anybody and say this is a gimme out, like you can against some teams.â
Conley, a sophomore in her first year as a starter, and Campbell went a combined 5-for-6 in the Nos. 8 and 9 spots.
âThe bottom of the order has been there for us pretty consistently this year,â Miller said.
Campbell singled all three trips, including a well-placed bunt down the third base line when she misread a Miller sign.
âI thought he called bunt, but I missed the call,â said the Kittensâ catcher. âIâm glad it worked out. It definitely was not my speed.â
Campbellâsperformancepushedher season average above .300.
âIâve been working a lot on my hitting,â said Campbell, who has struck out only three times this spring. âIt feels good to help the team.â
Griffith had RBI singles in the third and fourth innings. Ashland broke the game open with six runs in the fourth, highlighted by Kilburnâs three-run blast that cleared the scoreboard in left-center.
âIt surprised me,â Kilburn said of her first homer this season after hitting three as a freshman. âI have not been hitting all season, just little, dinky hits. Hopefully this was a good sign.â
Kilburnâs shot made it 9-0 and chased Johnson Central starter Casandra Hall.
âHayley absolutely killed it,â Miller said.âThatâsimpressive.Icouldtellthe other day in practice she was more aggressive swinging the bat.â
Meanwhile, Hensley held Johnson Central hitless until Jayla Spurlockâssharp single up the middle to open the fifth inning.
The Lady Eagles (7-5) got on the scoreboard in the sixth. Brooke Williams struck out to lead off the inning, but reached first when the ball went to the backstop. She moved around to third on a groundout and passed ball, then scored on an error.
Lauren Delong doubled later in the inning for Johnson Centralâs other hit before Hensley fanned the next batter for the third out.
Ashland crosses the Ohio River this weekend for the Valley of Thunder tournament at Symmes Valley. The Kittens play Upper Arlington (Columbus) tonight, followed by matchups against Gahanna Lincoln and Portsmouth West on Saturday.
Just like her rise ball.
Whether in the circle or ar the plate, Hensley continues to give opponents fits. On this occasion, the University of Louisville commit smacked a tworun homer in the first inning and mowed through the visitorsâ lineup for a two-hitter in the Kittensâ 91 romp.
Hurt said Johnson Central hasnât been able to rev up its pitching machine in practice lately as much as he would like. The Lady Eagles saw the real thing in Hensley, who struck out 14 batters to go to 9-0 on the season.
Sheâs averaging just under two Kâs per inning.
âWhat can you say? Hensleyâs an awesome pitcher,â Hurt said. âShe has that rise ball. You know itâs coming, but itâs not easy putting the ball in play or knowing when to lay off. Sheâs also a great hitter. She can bunt it, or hit it over the fence. We expect her to hit it hard. We just try to make a play on the ball.â
Hensley, who came in with a .559 batting average, also singled and finished with two runs and three RBIs against one of the 15th Regionâs top teams.
As well as Hensley played Thursday, 23rdranked Ashland again showed the kind of production up and down the lineup that excites coach Dave Miller.
The Kittens pounded out 14 hits, including a monster home run from sophomore Hayley Kilburn and freshman Sidney Campbellâs first three-hit game at the varsity level.
âIf you can hit one-through-nine, youâre going to have a lot of success in this game,â Miller said. âWeâve been getting that. You can see the improvement a lot of these girls have made in a yearâs time.â
Katie Baldock, Megan Griffith and Carly Conley each supplied two hits for the Kittens (11-1), who have not lost since splitting two games on their opening day.
âThey all hit it, top to bottom,â Hurt said. âYou canât look at anybody and say this is a gimme out, like you can against some teams.â
Conley, a sophomore in her first year as a starter, and Campbell went a combined 5-for-6 in the Nos. 8 and 9 spots.
âThe bottom of the order has been there for us pretty consistently this year,â Miller said.
Campbell singled all three trips, including a well-placed bunt down the third base line when she misread a Miller sign.
âI thought he called bunt, but I missed the call,â said the Kittensâ catcher. âIâm glad it worked out. It definitely was not my speed.â
Campbellâsperformancepushedher season average above .300.
âIâve been working a lot on my hitting,â said Campbell, who has struck out only three times this spring. âIt feels good to help the team.â
Griffith had RBI singles in the third and fourth innings. Ashland broke the game open with six runs in the fourth, highlighted by Kilburnâs three-run blast that cleared the scoreboard in left-center.
âIt surprised me,â Kilburn said of her first homer this season after hitting three as a freshman. âI have not been hitting all season, just little, dinky hits. Hopefully this was a good sign.â
Kilburnâs shot made it 9-0 and chased Johnson Central starter Casandra Hall.
âHayley absolutely killed it,â Miller said.âThatâsimpressive.Icouldtellthe other day in practice she was more aggressive swinging the bat.â
Meanwhile, Hensley held Johnson Central hitless until Jayla Spurlockâssharp single up the middle to open the fifth inning.
The Lady Eagles (7-5) got on the scoreboard in the sixth. Brooke Williams struck out to lead off the inning, but reached first when the ball went to the backstop. She moved around to third on a groundout and passed ball, then scored on an error.
Lauren Delong doubled later in the inning for Johnson Centralâs other hit before Hensley fanned the next batter for the third out.
Ashland crosses the Ohio River this weekend for the Valley of Thunder tournament at Symmes Valley. The Kittens play Upper Arlington (Columbus) tonight, followed by matchups against Gahanna Lincoln and Portsmouth West on Saturday.
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