The Sylvania times. (Sylvania, Ga.) 2022-current, April 03, 2024, Image 3
thesy lvaniatimes. com The Sylvania Times Wednesday, April 3, 2024 - Page 3 LADY GAMECOCK NETTERS TAKE 11TH REGION TITLE IN 12 YEARS GAMECOCKS CRUISE TO ANOTHER REGION TENNIS TITLE Surviving a few tense minutes in the early going of their semifinal match with Metter, the SCHS Lady Gamecock netters of Kyle Reynolds claimed their fourth consecutive region title and their 11th in the past 12 completed seasons on the Claxton courts on March 26. The finals victim was Bryan County and the count was 3-0. With their title safely in hand, the Red and White have regular season matches left at Bulloch Academy on April 9 and at Statesboro High on April 10 before hosting the Region 2-A D1 fourth seed on or before April 18. A March 28 match in Swainsboro was canceled. Early in their semifinal contest with Metter, Lyla Johnson went down with a twisted ankle at number one singles, defaulting her match. At that moment third singles Emma Rose Griner and the top doubles team of Kerrigan Bogart/Ryland Reynolds each trailed. While that doubles team lost their set and were eventually pulled, Griner rebounded for a 6-4, 6-2 win over Alexis Driggers. Also winning were second singles Caroline Boswell at 6-0, 6-0 over Jordan Verbel, and second doubles Garyn Howard/Jayla Lovett 6-2, 6-0 over Zacner Kemp/ Elle Carter. Maybe the coaching staff did not need to worry. In the championship match with the Lady Redskins of Bryan County, wins came from Johnson (6-2, 6-2), who returned from the morning’s injury, over Shae Coursey, Boswell (6-0, 6-0) with her second shutout win of the day, this one over Clara Howard, and the doubles team of Howard/Lovett (6- 3, 6-2) over Kayla Kilmer/Sarah Conner. At third singles Griner led comfortably 6-1, 4-2 when pulled while the team of Bogart/ Reynolds lost their opening set 6-4 for the second consecutive match on the day and were eventually pulled during their second set. The tournament consolation saw Claxton defeat Metter for third place. Losing only two games in their six individual wins, the SCHS Gamecock netters easily claimed their fourth consecutive region title with a 3-0 win over Metter. They will head to the state playoffs for the 13th consecutive season, not counting the 2020 shutdown. Semifinal and final matches were at the SCHS courts on March 25. The Roosters will host the Region 2-A D1 fourth seed in a match that must be completed by April 18. The final regular season matches are trips to Bulloch Academy on April 9 and Statesboro High on AprillO. A scheduled match in Swainsboro on March 28 was canceled. The opening semifinal match took little more than 30 minutes for the Gamecocks. With a forfeit at second doubles already in hand, third singles Noah Boykin got things started with a 25 minute 6-0, 6-0 win over Aubrey Hendrix. What followed was a race between second singles JD Hall and one doubles Josh Patel/Whit Morgan to get the third win and not be pulled. When Boykin finished both were up 6-0, 5-0. The doubles team finished their 6-0, 6-0 win over Ramsey Hendrix/Jess Aponte first. Hall was pulled up 6-0, 5-0 and first singles John Boswell was pulled up 6-0, 3-0. Following their overly easy win over fourth seeded Claxton in the semifinals, the Gamecocks cruised to their three championship wins over runner-up Metter. The victories came from Hall (6-0, 6-0) over Cameron Oglesby and the teams of Patel/Morgan 6-0, 6-0 over Victor Bolanos/ Gage Odom and senior Bo Doss/ junior Tucker Thomas 6-1, 6-1 over Hunter Cason/Rusch Goswick. Boswell was pulled for the second time on the day up 6-0, 4-3 and Boykin was pulled up 6-4, 5-0. Freshman Caroline Boswell is currently 13-3 at number two singles (photo by Bo Doss) SU j.Si'll if A^ifvA7 A } w v. Senior Lyla Johnson prepares for a return on the Claxton courts (photo by Bo Doss) Freshman three singles Noah Boykin makes a hard return to Jack Riggs in his region title match (photo by Dana Doss) Senior one singles John Boswell comes to the net for a return in the region title match against Tanner Snipes (photo by Dana Doss) GAMECOCKS SWEEP CLAXTON IN FINAL REGION SERIES Evening their region record at 4-4, the SCHS baseball Gamecocks of Josh Sheley swept their three game series from Claxton’s Tigers last week to claim third place in the final region standings. The Roosters will still play a huge role in detemiining the region championship when they go to Metter on April 9 for a makeup contest. An SCHS win and Bryan County (7-2 in region) wins the region while an SCHS loss gives Metter (6-2 in region) the region title. The teams split on March 12. The Red and White are scheduled to host Johnson County this evening and 5:30 and will next be in action on April 8 when Swainsboro, a possible state playoff opponent, comes to town. After a disastrous week with three lopsided losses to Bryan County, the Gamecocks got well against Claxton on the Tigers’ home field. Sweeping CHS on March 26 by margins of 7-5 and 10-0, at that point the Roosters were back in the hunt for a home playoff series. That changed when Metter took two of three from Bryan County last week. Getting outstanding pitching from a pair of freshmen starters in DeMarko Ward (1-0 2.40) and Holland Zipperer (1-3 4.13) there were also some clutch hits. Ward started the first game and allowed a pair of earned runs on four hits through four innings while Zipperer hurled a complete game no hitter, walking but three while striking out eight. Senior Rylan Robbins (3-2 3.37) pitched the three innings behind Ward for a save. Offensively the Gamecocks got a five spot in the third to put themselves up 5-2 and they never trailed the rest of the night. The inning provided more mns than three games against Bryan County. In the inning Robbins walked, Greyson Garvin reached on an attempted sacrifice, Jeremiah White brought in both with a single and later scored himself following a sacrifice by Noah Brownlee. Up 3-2 Gatlin Scott walked and Worth Brown doubled with both being brought in with a Brayton Knight single. White ended the game with two of the SCHS six hits. White, Scott, and Knight had two rbi each. Game two saw the Roosters score in each of the last five innings after failing in the first two. Brown had three hits and four rbi to leaa the biggest SCHS offensive output since February 27. White again had two hits as well as two walks. The Gamecocks played errorless ball and were patient enough to pick up eight walks, all in support of Zipperer’s impressive no-hitter. The series finale had the Gamecocks taking advantage of 11 walks, four errors, and only six hits to claim a 14-4 five-inning win. Brown and Knight had two hits each while Knight and Josh Oglesby had three rbi while White had two. Scott (3-2, 6.06) went the five allowing two earned runs on four hits with eight Ks. Gamecock freshman Holland Zipperer hurled a complete game no-hitter last week in a win over region foe Claxton (photo by Kaitlyn Snow Stossmeister) AROUN^m THEO&mZ There was joy among SCHS baseball fans and players last week with a three game region sweep. There was also a little disappointment during the win on Friday night. Coming into the game the situation for SCHS was rather simple - defeat Claxton and have Bryan County defeat homestanding Metter and the Roosters could earn a home field state playoff series with a win over Metter in the April 9 makeup contest. That did not work out. Bryan scored twice in the top of the seventh to take a 2-1 lead but Metter scored twice in their half of the seventh for the 3-2 win. Now the Gamecocks can play villain to Metter and hero to Bryan County. Both MHS and BCHS have two losses and will finish one and two. A Gamecock win on April 9 gives Metter three losses and Bryan County the region title. A Gamecock loss and Metter, using the head to head tiebreaker, is region champion over Bryan. It has worked out that our region champion will have two losses, but we, not Claxton (who finished winless in region play) can play the role of spoiler. Last week Gamecock freshman Holland Zipperer hurled a complete game no-hitter in a region game against Claxton. Legitimate no-hitters have become very rare around here of late. I say legit because of all the “no-hitters” thrown in A GOOD WEEK FOR BASEBALL, GOOD V. EVIL, AND THE END both baseball and softball while we played in the region with the Augusta schools (all of them 2016-2020, some of them 2005-07 and 2012-2014). Playing Glenn Hills, Josey, Butler, and sometimes Laney the big deal was whether or not they got a hit. In my mind the three and four inning no-hitters meant nothing. They devalued the event. Well we haven’t played in that type of region this decade. No-hitters are back to being a meaningful event. Totally shifting gears, prior to the March 30 women’s Sweet 16 matchup last week Los Angeles Times writer Ben Bolch penned a column on March 29 entitled “UCLA v. LSU is America’s Sweethearts vs. Its Basketball Villians.” The title of that story brings to my mind the ESPN 30 for 30 documentary “Catholics vs. Convicts” relative to the gridiron contest between Notre Dame and The U (Miami) back in 1988. There were t-shirts for that one. I also thought of the 1990 and 1991 March Madness games between Duke and UNLV to which the media attached every possible nickname - lawyers v. outlaws, saints v. satan, and the lighter, showpiece v. showboat. In those cases The U and UNLV embraced their image as the “bad guys.” However last week LSU Head Coach Kim Mulkey did not embrace the label affixed to her team. Mulkey has, Burton Kemp Unless otherwise noted all articles in Sports are written by Burton Kemp, Sports Editor however, done nothing to curtail that image, in fact she seems to embrace the idea of “us v. everyone else.” Her most well known player is definitively known for trash talk and hair pulling. You think that the 1980s Canes don’t love that? I will say that, in all earnestness, it does seem different putting affixing the name “basketball villains” to a team of young ladies. Sometimes you just have to put on the shoe that fits you. We are currently in a holding pattern in the SCHS athletic department. Baseball played in Statesboro yesterday and is at home against Johnson County tonight. That is all that is going on this week. I reckon that there will be a lot less copy in the sports page on April 10. The stretch run is here. Tennis has two matches next week and then the state playoffs. Soccer has two matches next week and then the state playoffs. Baseball has two weeks of regular season beginning next week and then the state playoffs. Track has two more regular season meets and then the region meet on April 22-23. The athletic year is absolutely winding down.