OTT_Prep Baseball & Softball Preview_032320

Page 1

THE TIMES 2020 BASEBALL AND SOFTBALL PREVIEW

A look at the season ahead ... hoping there is a season Younger Crusaders take on tough act to follow How will Marquette follow up state championship? By Charlie Ellerbrock cellerbrock@shawmedia.com Todd Hopkins has a problem, but it’s one that he doesn’t mind one bit having and that every other baseball coach in the state of Illinois would love to take off his hands. How do you follow up a near-perfect season that ends in a state championship? Hopkins and his Marquette Crusaders have left themselves a pretty tough act to follow. Teams don’t go 31-1, run through their conference undefeated and bring home the ultimate prize in their class — in their case last season, 1A — very often. However, Hopkins prefers to have his team live in the now and feels if the pitching matures as expected, more postseason plaques are not out of the question. “Right now for us, last season is past, something that we can look back on and savor later on,” said Hopkins. “For now we have a job to do, and that’s get ready for this season. … I don’t know how last year’s success will affect this team. Since we took fourth back in 1999, we’ve had a target on our back, so that’s nothing new, but I’d say there’s a target and a bullseye on our backs now.

“This is a totally different team, but I’ve been telling the guys that other teams don’t know that, don’t know what we lost. Just like what happened to Hall last year after they won it all two years ago. They were seeing everybody’s No. 1 starter, and I’m sure we’ll be seeing a lot of No. 1s this year, too. It’s a situation where if we don’t come to play, we could get embarrassed pretty easy. “We have to be ready.” Ready but without many talented cogs to last year’s title-winning wheel from that weekend at Peoria’s Dozer Park. Gone are The Times Baseball Player of the Year, center fielder Logan Komater, right fielder and Times Football and Basketball Player of the Year Jack Snook, shortstop Nate Melvin and pitchers John Thompson and Bryce Jones, all of them first-team picks for The Times and Tri-County Conference, plus Times Second Team first baseman Haydon Price and Honorable Mention DH Max Donahue. On the positive side, there’s also plenty back. That includes Luke Couch, an Illinois Baseball Coaches Association 1A/2A All-State First Team choice after batting .413 with 44 runs scored, 28 batted in, 12 doubles and 16 steals, and pitching a 2-0 mark with three saves and a 1.37 ERA. He’ll move from second to shortstop this season, but his return to the mound will be delayed a bit while he com-

pletes his recovery from a broken wrist that cost him nearly all of the basketball season. Shane Reynolds, also a Times HM honoree (.378, 16 runs, 16 RBIs, 3-0, 2.14 ERA) is back at third base when not pitching, while junior Grant Waldron (.333 in 12 ABs) is himself coming off a shoulder injury and will take over at first. Second base falls to senior Jalen Flavel (.455 in 11 ABs) and junior Nate Nelson. Battling for time in the infield will be sophs Beau and Brady Ewers and freshman Logan Nelson. In the outfield, junior Nick Melvin, a Times Second Teamer after hitting .379 with 29 runs, 25 RBIs and 19 steal, returns probably in center. Junior Jake Thomas will play left or right, but the other spot is up for grabs between juniors Will Fiesel and Pat McGrath, sophomores Jackson Olsen, the Ewers twins and Logan Nelson. Senior Jay Scott is back catching the pitching staff that Thompson and Jones led so capably. They’ll be missed, but there is solid work to be had, in part by Scott himself. When he takes the mound, sophomore Hayden McKenna (.400 in 10 ABs) and Beau Ewers will step in behind the plate. It will also be up to Reynolds, a hard-throwing righthander, and eventually Couch to help pick up most of the slack. Also looking good on the mound so far is Thomas, but the club will need Olsen and freshmen Logan Nelson, Aiden

The Times | File The Marquette Crusaders, shown here accepting and celebrating their 2019 IHSA Class 1A State championship, will have a number of key pieces to replace but have plenty back and fresh talent incoming for the 2020 campaign. Thompson and Taylor Waldron to add to the early-season committee approach on the hill.

“I think defensively we’ll be solid,” said Hopkins. “We have guys that can pick it, but the pitching, just like the hitting,

we’re going to have to see, but I feel if we can get the hitting going by the end of the season, we’ll be all right.”

’20 Lady Pirates prepared to maintain success Ottawa returns 5 starters, D-I P from first regional winner By Kyle Nevins knevins@shawmedia.com Ottawa graduated a wealth of talent off its historic 2019 ballclub. Gone to Pomp and Circumstance are the likes of All-American Sloan Gayan — who’s taken her pitching prowess to the University of Kentucky — and fellow mainstay Molly Harris. However, the cupboard is far from bare for fourth-year Lady Pirates coach Adam Lewis (72-23-1 record), who welcomes back a handful of starters — headlined by all-state slugger Jenna Nink (Northern Illinois signee) — in addition to another Division I pitcher recruit (Omaha commit Abby Bukantis), from last year’s 24-8-1 team that claimed the program’s first regional plaque. “Over the past couple years, we have lost a number of four-year varsity players; yet, when looking up and down our roster we still have a majority of players with significant varsity experience ready to step in where others left off,” said Lewis, whose Lady Pirates

are rated sixth in the preseason ICA Class 3A state poll. The versatile Nink (MIF/1B) is a fourth-year veteran, while juniors Abi Claus (3B/MIF), Cassie Turk (OF/3B), Lauren Carlson (IF/OF) and Bukantis are all in their third year. Sophomore Zoe Harris (C/1B) caught Gayan as a ninth-grader. “More importantly than the number of years is the quality of years. All of those players contributed (to our success),” Lewis said. “The No. 1 discussion since last fall to our returning players was them understanding that their role changes from year to year, and I feel like they understood that and attacked the offseason accordingly. “I think versatility will be our main strength.” Bukantis, Ottawa’s No. 2 hurler the past two seasons, will assume the role of ace this spring. She brings experience (101 1/3 IP) and success (11-2 record) at the varsity level to the circle — as well as confidence after leading her travel team, the Orland Park A’s, to a runner-up finish at the PGF 16U Platinum Nationals last July. “Abby will be a huge key to our success,” Lewis said. “She’s improved her velocity and spin over the last year, which is a great compliment to her

tremendous change of speeds.” Powering the offense will be the sweet-swinging lefty Nink (.374 BA, 7 HR, 6 2B, 3B, 21 RBIs, 31 R, .427 OBP, .645 SLG, 1.072 OPS; ICA All-State Second Team in ‘19), who Lewis stated looks incredible and is a different player athletically than she has ever been. The “much stronger and seasoned” Turk (.323 BA, 2 HR, 2 3B, 3 2B, 24 RBIs; All-NIB 12 West HM), Claus (.290 BA, 2 HR, 3 2B, 11 RBIs), Zoe Harris (HR, 2 2B, 11 RBIs) and Carlson (2 3B, 4 2B) have shown they’re capable with the bats. “We should be able to hit for extra bases, as well as smallball to advance runners,” Lewis said. “Our offensive versatility and functional athleticism also translates to defense. ... I think we will field another strong defensive team.” Rounding out the dozen-player roster are newcomers, senior and Mount Mercy-signed Hanna Roalson (C/ UT), along with juniors CeCe Battistelli (1B), Emma Haage (C/3B), Piper Nanouski (OF), Paisley Nixon (1B) and Emma Pillon (LHP/UT). Winning a conference championship, a regional and making a deep postseason run remain the goals. “We have been to a regional

Lady Pirates slugger Jenna Nink takes a swing during the 2019 softball season. championship three years in a row and a sectional championship last year,” Lewis said. “The

ILLINOIS VALLEY ORTHOPEDICS at Illinois Valley Community Hospital

Dr. Connor Kasik Orthopedic Surgeon

majority of our kids have the experience, but I don’t feel like we have become complacent.

Shaw Media | File

“If anything, they are more driven to make sure they get back.”

• ACL and MCL • Stress fractures • Shoulder, knee and ankle injuries

Talk to us today! 815.223.2143 ivch.org/sportsmedicine

Dr. Robert J. Mitchell Orthopedic Surgeon


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.