2013 Spring Sports

Page 1

2013 SPRING SPORTS

TIGER BASEBALL

By BILL ROSEBERRY broseberry@edwpub.net The Edwardsville Tigers secured a staterecord 28th regional title in 2012 and posted a record of 28-10. Unfortunately, they saw their season conclude with a 3-2 loss to Southwestern Conference rival O'Fallon in the Class 4A Bloomington Sectional semifinals. The loss also saw the conclusion of the careers of players like Derek Page, Matt Huelsmann, Jevon Boyd and Devin Breihan among others which had become synonomous with the EHS program over recent years. With the third season of the Tiger summer baseball program though, head coach Tim Funkhouser was able to witness the maturation process of some younger players. Names like Alex Meyers, Alex Lay, Jacob Trueb, Matthew Zielonko and Brock Weimer appeared onto the EHS baseball landscape and helped the Tigers compile a 27-9 mark over the summer. With returning varsity players like Blake Graham, Drew Curtis, Zack Sparks, Jacob Fisher, Jordan Heckler, Alec Pizzini and Cole Hagen along with the new faces, Funkhouser is ready to see how it transitions to success in 2013. “Each year there is some transition but really with our summer it has helped us out,” Funkhouser said. “We get a good understanding of a good portion of the guys who are competing for spots and it’s always interesting to see how the guys have gotten stronger in the weight room or they’ve developed their skills. We’re really looking forward to getting outside to see how that transitions, but so far we’ve seen some good things.” Funkhouser is blessed with having his core foundation up the middle still intact. Pizzini, who hit .318 with three homers and 26 RBIs last season, will handle the catching duties again. Sparks (6-3, 2.41 ERA) and Curtis (2-1, 2.94 ERA) will offer pitching depth, Heckler (.350, 16 RBIs) will patrol shortstop, Fisher (.337, 14 RBIs) will man second base and Graham (.298, 2 HR, 13 RBIs) will flash his leather in centerfield once again. “It always helps out when you have a core group returning to kind of know what the expectation is for the team and know how we do things,” Funkhouser said. “All those guys are still developing their skills and we’re trying to progress them developmentally, but also there are a lot of guys competing for spots. We always have some of that heading into the season, but I think this is something that will continue throughout the whole year. We have multiple options in multiple places and right now we don’t have a good understanding of how that’s going to be put together before Game 1.

Bill Roseberry/Intelligencer

Pictured are senior members of the EHS baseball team. In front from left to right are: Drew Burns, Jordan Heckler and Alexander Lay. In the middle row from left to right are: Dan Levey, Blake Graham, Alec Pizzini, Caleb Frey and Maxwell Gabriel. In the back row from left to right are: Zack Sparks, Cole Hagen, Bryce Cantrall, Max Rolens and Brock Gulledge. Not pictured is Drew Curtis. “That’s kind of the fun part, having competition at each spot and also it’s a healthy competition because our guys are really working hard and working together to better their skills.” Curtis gives Funkhouser a very nice pawn to move around the field. The senior is committed to play at Saint Louis University next season and brings with him a hefty bat. Last year Curtis hit .417 to lead the team, tied with Page, who is now at Eastern Illinois, to pace EHS with six round trippers and was second to Page with 35 RBIs. Curtis has experience playing corner outfield positions as well as first and third base. Funkhouser said he will fit where it best suits the team and that is fine with Curtis. “It’s really what our team needs are,” Funkhouser said of where Curtis will play. “I was impressed with the way he played third

base this summer and he ended up playing a good portion of it (at third). A lot of it was for his development, a lot of it was to show some schools where he could play and be a viable option and a lot of it was for our team needs. With the emergence of Alex Meyers being able to play some first base, I think both those guys can play some first base. It will be interesting to see if anybody emerges as an everyday third baseman, or if we decide to go with Drew Curtis at third. There are some options. There are a lot of guys that can do different things, but with Drew Curtis it gives us a lot of flexibility that benefits the team. I even asked him to get an indication of his favorite position and he said, ‘Coach, I’ll do whatever is best for the team.’ To have one of your guys do that can be beneficial.” Funkhouser is anxious to see the contribu-

tions of the younger guys that stepped it up over the summer, too. “Meyers is a guy who emerged on the mound,” Funkhouser said. “Him and Cole Hagen. We’ve seen Cole in a few varsity innings and each time out he did really well. Those two guys in particular really commanded the zone and I thought had good stuff and gave us a consistent five, six innings each time out. “Position wise, we got to see Brock Weimer a little bit as a catcher and to see his development continue and how he stacks up behind the plate and also offensively and we’ve got a few other guys,” Funkhouser said. “(Matt) Zielonko was a guy playing as a true freshman over the summer and to come right into that was a heck of a challenge. He battled through it and he struggled at times, but he also showed some success. Zielonko has made great strides and

TIGER SOFTBALL

By MATTHEW KAMP mkamp.edwi@gmail.com Last year's so-called rebuilding season turned into a regional championship and a 33-3 record for the Edwardsville Tiger softball team. EHS, which featured four underclassmen starters, now enters the 2013 campaign with the lofty expectations that the program has come to expect during head coach Lori Blade’s tenure. Prior to the 2011 season, when the Tigers lost to Collinsville in the Class 4A Alton Regional championship game, Edwardsville had won six straight regional titles and posted five consecutive 30-win seasons. The 2011 team finished 274. Last year, EHS, facing a number of question marks to begin the season, delivered strong results. “We were very fortunate that we had some things fall in place for us and we had young kids step in with what we graduated the year before,” Blade said. “We have a very good nucleus coming back, some young kids with experience and a good senior class of leaders that will provide a lot for us.” Edwardsville did lose two seniors from last year’s team, Kendall Navin and Megan McNamee. Navin, the starting catcher and cleanup hitter, hit .544 with five home runs and 47 RBIs, all three led the team. McNamee, who played right field, hit .421 with four homers and 29 RBIs from the No. 5 spot in the batting order. The loss of the two could hurt the Edwardsville offense, which led the Southwestern Conference with 9.7 runs per

Matthew Kamp/Intelligencer

Pictured from left to right are Edwardsville softball seniors: Anna Stamer, Amber Toenyes, Megan Pranger, Aubry Dickmann and Taylor Maggio.

I’m anxious to see where he progresses. Tyler Worthey kind of focused on golf, but he’s out and we’re anxious to see where he fits in. He’s done some good things.” As for the schedule, it remains primarily the same with just a couple subtle changes. EHS plays its Busch Stadium game at 7:30 p.m. vs. Greenville on April 13 following a 3:15 Cardinals matchup with the Milwaukee Brewers. That is a Saturday night, which is a change. “The Busch game has been a great event all around for us, fundraising and the kids’ experience is No. 1 with it,” Funkhouser said. “Seeing a Cardinal game and then playing after it, last year was the Cubs, this year it’s the Brewers on a Saturday opening weekend. It’s also the replica jersey giveaway. The Cardinals will be wearing them that day, too and everybody 21 and over will get one, so that should be a good sell.” There were a few other tweaks Funkhouser noted from last season, too. “The Parkway Tournament we got in last year, we played four games, we’ll be able to play two of those this year,” he said. “We ran into some overscheduling last year and had to cancel some games and didn’t want to put ourselves in that situation again. We couldn’t find a date with Vianney this year, so maybe if we get some rainouts and they get some rainouts we can hook up. We go back to the Lincoln Tournament. Triad is out and Metamora is in, so it’s Metamora, Streator and Lincoln so we’ll see a different team there. Moline is coming down on a Friday early in the season. Other than that very similar teams that we’ve seen in the past.” He expects the conference to be its normal grueling challenge. Last season Edwardsville tied with Alton for second while O'Fallon won it outright. “I think our conference is going to be very similar to what it’s been in the past, very competitive up and down,” Funkhouser said. “I think O’Fallon being the conference winner last year, I know they return a few pitchers that really had success, but they lost their best pitcher (Sam Hopkins), but they’re always right there with 3-2, 4-3, 2-1 ball games. Alton has some arms coming back as well as solid position players with (Brent) Gibbs leading the way. Granite City’s catcher (Chad Spanberger) is a solid player and they have several other players. Collinsville pitcher Tanner Houck committed to Mizzou and they have some other guys that gave them a good chance on the mound last year and then you always have Belleville East and Belleville West in there. I think it will be another hard go, but that’s the beauty of being in our conference, you’re going to be tested everyday. You better be ready to go.” The orange and black kick off the season at home in 2013, hosting Greenville at 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday.

game. “I think the biggest question mark is going to be the offense,” Blade said. “Offensively, replacing Kendall and Megan’s bats in what they produced is going to be tough to replace. We do have some kids that I think are healthy and could provide for us. I think we are going to be fine, but we have to find a way to stay healthy and replace some runs that those two led us through." Health was an issue last season for EHS’ ace and No. 3 hitter Amber Toenyes. Back and arm problems sidelined the Eastern Illinois recruit for a portion of the second half of the season. She was unable to hit during the final four games of the season. Even with the injuries, Toenyes still batted .410 with four homers and 28 RBIs. In the circle, she was 15-1 with a 1.22 ERA in 109 innings. Toenyes is one of three senior starters on the team. Taylor Maggio returns for her third season in center field and Aubry Dickmann, who will play volleyball at McKendree, finds herself back in left field. Both slap hitters, Maggio hit .370 with 13 RBIs and a team-best 38 runs scored from the leadoff spot while Dickmann hit .346 with 10 RBIs. The senior class offers more than just the numbers, and that goes beyond the three senior starters to the role players Megan Pranger and Anna Stamer. “We have three great seniors that have a lot of experience,” Blade said. “The seniors provide a lot of good leadership. Megan has done a great job. She does whatever we ask her and she is going to get her opportunity. Anna Stamer is a good team player that does whatever we tell her. We have a great nucleus to build around.”

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