A Champions Tribute: Lake View Gators

1A State Champion: Lake View By: Austin Alexander-May 16, 2006   Lake View was crowned on Friday as South Carolina’s #1 1A team for the seventh time in twelve years. Since Kip Herlong took the head job in 1994 he has seen his Gators capture eight lower state titles en route to a 272-68 ledger during his tenure. So when his club found themselves down 1-0 in the Championship Series to defending champion Landrum, it understandable why Herlong may have been the calmest guy in the ballpark, he’d been there many times before. But his kids hadn’t. They grew up in the Lake View area as fans or batboys during that decade of title runs, not between the lines. Herlong credits his players, “As a coach, I am very proud of this years Lake View team for many reasons. This team learned early on how to deal with adversity when we found out that Brooks Arnette (right) would not be in the starting rotation and Justin King was lost for the majority of the season due to an injury,” he said. “I feel that this helped us to succeed in the playoffs and come back to win the final two games after the ten-run drumming in the first game. Putting everything in perspective, our young men never panicked, which put them in a position to win the final two.” The Gators were led all season on the mound by senior right-hander Bart Flowers. Flowers (left) was the winning pitcher in the decisive Game 3 versus Landrum and his only blemish on the year came four days before in Game 1. Flowers is set to attend Florence-Darlington Tech next year on the heels of season in which he finished 15-1 with a 0.68 ERA in 92 innings pitched. He struck out 99 and walked 21. Junior Ronald Sampson (right) pitched in on the mound (7-1, 2.38 ERA, 82 K, 24 BB in 56 IP) but also paced Lake View at the plate hitting at a .522 clip. The middle infielder hit nine homers and drove in 40 runs in a year that Herlong said is one of the best he’s ever seen. Arnette, a Lander signee, hit .407 with two homeruns and 21 RBI. Junior third baseman Josh Miller chipped in with a .412 batting average with 18 RBI in his role as a catalyst for the Lake View offense. Prior to their showdown with Landrum, the Gators had enjoyed a 6-0 record in the playoffs and outscored their opponents 50-4. Lake View finished the 2006 campaign with a 25-3 mark. Congratulations to Herlong, his team and the Lake View community.   For more information on Lake View, click here.   .

A Champions Tribute: Lake View Gators

1A State Champion: Lake View By: Austin Alexander-May 16, 2006   Lake View was crowned on Friday as South Carolina’s #1 1A team for the seventh time in twelve years. Since Kip Herlong took the head job in 1994 he has seen his Gators capture eight lower state titles en route to a 272-68 ledger during his tenure. So when his club found themselves down 1-0 in the Championship Series to defending champion Landrum, it understandable why Herlong may have been the calmest guy in the ballpark, he’d been there many times before. But his kids hadn’t. They grew up in the Lake View area as fans or batboys during that decade of title runs, not between the lines. Herlong credits his players, “As a coach, I am very proud of this years Lake View team for many reasons. This team learned early on how to deal with adversity when we found out that Brooks Arnette (right) would not be in the starting rotation and Justin King was lost for the majority of the season due to an injury,” he said. “I feel that this helped us to succeed in the playoffs and come back to win the final two games after the ten-run drumming in the first game. Putting everything in perspective, our young men never panicked, which put them in a position to win the final two.” The Gators were led all season on the mound by senior right-hander Bart Flowers. Flowers (left) was the winning pitcher in the decisive Game 3 versus Landrum and his only blemish on the year came four days before in Game 1. Flowers is set to attend Florence-Darlington Tech next year on the heels of season in which he finished 15-1 with a 0.68 ERA in 92 innings pitched. He struck out 99 and walked 21. Junior Ronald Sampson (right) pitched in on the mound (7-1, 2.38 ERA, 82 K, 24 BB in 56 IP) but also paced Lake View at the plate hitting at a .522 clip. The middle infielder hit nine homers and drove in 40 runs in a year that Herlong said is one of the best he’s ever seen. Arnette, a Lander signee, hit .407 with two homeruns and 21 RBI. Junior third baseman Josh Miller chipped in with a .412 batting average with 18 RBI in his role as a catalyst for the Lake View offense. Prior to their showdown with Landrum, the Gators had enjoyed a 6-0 record in the playoffs and outscored their opponents 50-4. Lake View finished the 2006 campaign with a 25-3 mark. Congratulations to Herlong, his team and the Lake View community.   For more information on Lake View, click here.   .

A Champions Tribute: Lake View Gators

1A State Champion: Lake View By: Austin Alexander-May 16, 2006   Lake View was crowned on Friday as South Carolina’s #1 1A team for the seventh time in twelve years. Since Kip Herlong took the head job in 1994 he has seen his Gators capture eight lower state titles en route to a 272-68 ledger during his tenure. So when his club found themselves down 1-0 in the Championship Series to defending champion Landrum, it understandable why Herlong may have been the calmest guy in the ballpark, he’d been there many times before. But his kids hadn’t. They grew up in the Lake View area as fans or batboys during that decade of title runs, not between the lines. Herlong credits his players, “As a coach, I am very proud of this years Lake View team for many reasons. This team learned early on how to deal with adversity when we found out that Brooks Arnette (right) would not be in the starting rotation and Justin King was lost for the majority of the season due to an injury,” he said. “I feel that this helped us to succeed in the playoffs and come back to win the final two games after the ten-run drumming in the first game. Putting everything in perspective, our young men never panicked, which put them in a position to win the final two.” The Gators were led all season on the mound by senior right-hander Bart Flowers. Flowers (left) was the winning pitcher in the decisive Game 3 versus Landrum and his only blemish on the year came four days before in Game 1. Flowers is set to attend Florence-Darlington Tech next year on the heels of season in which he finished 15-1 with a 0.68 ERA in 92 innings pitched. He struck out 99 and walked 21. Junior Ronald Sampson (right) pitched in on the mound (7-1, 2.38 ERA, 82 K, 24 BB in 56 IP) but also paced Lake View at the plate hitting at a .522 clip. The middle infielder hit nine homers and drove in 40 runs in a year that Herlong said is one of the best he’s ever seen. Arnette, a Lander signee, hit .407 with two homeruns and 21 RBI. Junior third baseman Josh Miller chipped in with a .412 batting average with 18 RBI in his role as a catalyst for the Lake View offense. Prior to their showdown with Landrum, the Gators had enjoyed a 6-0 record in the playoffs and outscored their opponents 50-4. Lake View finished the 2006 campaign with a 25-3 mark. Congratulations to Herlong, his team and the Lake View community.   For more information on Lake View, click here.   .

April Round-Up

April Round-Up By: Austin Alexander-May 1, 2006 Plenty of Spring Break and Easter tournaments along with playoff baseball blanketed South Carolina in April. A busy month involving plenty of quality hardball was on display and you caught it here first on the new and improved TheDiamondProspects.com. Diamond Prospects crunches the numbers and breaks down some of the highlights. Diamond Prospects Statistics: Teams covered-56 High School games seen-32 College games seen-6 Fields-27 Rainouts-1 Miles traveled-4,179 Pitchers serving as cut-off man-6 Coaches without rosters-25 Coaches with cell phones clipped to their belt-4 Coaches who gave us a line-up card instead of a roster then asked for it back after the game started because the press box needed a copy-2 Hitters “rung up” by an umpire on strike two-2 Total hits on www.TheDiamondProspects.com-213,946 Top 5 hits on DP-1) Palmetto Prospects-2956, 2) Player Profiles-2372, 3) Diamond Rankings-1790, 4) High School Links-1446, 5) Commitments-1378 College coaches with DP accounts-50 Area scouts with DP accounts-19 DP Fast Facts: Quickest game: Union versus Greer, 1:33 Best game: Eastside 7 AC Flora 5 in Round 2 of the AAA District Playoffs Best comeback: AC Flora versus Eastside. Trailing 7-1, the Falcons pulled to within two only to leave the bases loaded in the seventh inning. Weirdest play: With a runner at second and one out, a medium-range fly ball was hit to centerfield. As the out was recorded, the baserunner bluffed tagging up and advancing to third. As the throw reached the infield, the shortstop relayed it to third and the ball went 25 feet above the third base dugout. The runner, who was nearly within arm’s length of the shortstop at the time of the throw, was awarded home. Most exciting play: Catcher Nate Horton (Byrnes) legging out an inside the park homerun at Riverside High School. Best home to first time: Billy Jennings (Union HS) 3.78 on a bunt Best home to first time (turn): N/A Best pop time: Jeffrey Campbell (Boiling Springs) 1.85 in between innings Longest homerun: Jonathon Sharpe (Conway HS) Shortest hang time on a homerun: Brian Fogle (Lexington) 2.3 seconds Best defensive play: 1) Timmy Taylor (CF, Spring Valley HS) As heavy wind pushed Sam Mahoney’s (Wando HS) line drive toward left-center, Taylor’s diving circus catch ended the inning. 2) Nils Shirley (CF, Hartsville HS) A diving grab coming straight in on a sinking line drive to centerfield. 3) Hunter West (C, Dorman HS) A running dive in foul ground on a popped up bunt with the bases loaded. Tallest player: Case Stiglbauer (Dreher HS) 6’8” Shortest player: Andy Atwood (Greenville HS) 5’2” Best pitcher’s duel: Sumter 2 Fort Dorchester 0, Tyler Cappleman vs Mark Henderson Most dominant pitching performance: Justin Hopper, one-hit shutout in the Southeastern Classic Hardest fastball: Keith Campbell (Eastside HS) 91 MPH, Richard Magrath (Conway HS) 90 MPH Best baseball name: (tie) Konstantine Diamaduros, Brooks Robinson, Dusty Baker, Chipper Daniels, Pierce Labrador Cleanest round of pre-game: Gaffney, Lexington Top Fungo Guy: Right-handed-Tommy Petty (Union HS), Left-handed-Jeff Osment (Gaffney HS) Best Dressed Evaluator: Marlin McPhail (New York Mets) Attendance Award-Scout: Gary Randall (MLB Bureau) Attendance Award-College: Matt Williams (Spartanburg Methodist) Best Catcher’s Pop-up: Jeff Osment (Gaffney), Derek Urquhart (South Florence) Best Argument with an Umpire: Brooks Shumake (Sumter HS) Best line from a mom in the bleachers: (tie)“Shake that bat and bust that ball” and on a mound visit, “Why don’t ya’ll just have a picnic then?”  Longest National Anthem: Carolina Forest Best Playing Surface: North Myrtle Beach, Aynor Best pre-game tunes: College of Charleston February Round-Up March Round-Up       .

April Round-Up

April Round-Up By: Austin Alexander-May 1, 2006 Plenty of Spring Break and Easter tournaments along with playoff baseball blanketed South Carolina in April. A busy month involving plenty of quality hardball was on display and you caught it here first on the new and improved TheDiamondProspects.com. Diamond Prospects crunches the numbers and breaks down some of the highlights. Diamond Prospects Statistics: Teams covered-56 High School games seen-32 College games seen-6 Fields-27 Rainouts-1 Miles traveled-4,179 Pitchers serving as cut-off man-6 Coaches without rosters-25 Coaches with cell phones clipped to their belt-4 Coaches who gave us a line-up card instead of a roster then asked for it back after the game started because the press box needed a copy-2 Hitters “rung up” by an umpire on strike two-2 Total hits on www.TheDiamondProspects.com-213,946 Top 5 hits on DP-1) Palmetto Prospects-2956, 2) Player Profiles-2372, 3) Diamond Rankings-1790, 4) High School Links-1446, 5) Commitments-1378 College coaches with DP accounts-50 Area scouts with DP accounts-19 DP Fast Facts: Quickest game: Union versus Greer, 1:33 Best game: Eastside 7 AC Flora 5 in Round 2 of the AAA District Playoffs Best comeback: AC Flora versus Eastside. Trailing 7-1, the Falcons pulled to within two only to leave the bases loaded in the seventh inning. Weirdest play: With a runner at second and one out, a medium-range fly ball was hit to centerfield. As the out was recorded, the baserunner bluffed tagging up and advancing to third. As the throw reached the infield, the shortstop relayed it to third and the ball went 25 feet above the third base dugout. The runner, who was nearly within arm’s length of the shortstop at the time of the throw, was awarded home. Most exciting play: Catcher Nate Horton (Byrnes) legging out an inside the park homerun at Riverside High School. Best home to first time: Billy Jennings (Union HS) 3.78 on a bunt Best home to first time (turn): N/A Best pop time: Jeffrey Campbell (Boiling Springs) 1.85 in between innings Longest homerun: Jonathon Sharpe (Conway HS) Shortest hang time on a homerun: Brian Fogle (Lexington) 2.3 seconds Best defensive play: 1) Timmy Taylor (CF, Spring Valley HS) As heavy wind pushed Sam Mahoney’s (Wando HS) line drive toward left-center, Taylor’s diving circus catch ended the inning. 2) Nils Shirley (CF, Hartsville HS) A diving grab coming straight in on a sinking line drive to centerfield. 3) Hunter West (C, Dorman HS) A running dive in foul ground on a popped up bunt with the bases loaded. Tallest player: Case Stiglbauer (Dreher HS) 6’8” Shortest player: Andy Atwood (Greenville HS) 5’2” Best pitcher’s duel: Sumter 2 Fort Dorchester 0, Tyler Cappleman vs Mark Henderson Most dominant pitching performance: Justin Hopper, one-hit shutout in the Southeastern Classic Hardest fastball: Keith Campbell (Eastside HS) 91 MPH, Richard Magrath (Conway HS) 90 MPH Best baseball name: (tie) Konstantine Diamaduros, Brooks Robinson, Dusty Baker, Chipper Daniels, Pierce Labrador Cleanest round of pre-game: Gaffney, Lexington Top Fungo Guy: Right-handed-Tommy Petty (Union HS), Left-handed-Jeff Osment (Gaffney HS) Best Dressed Evaluator: Marlin McPhail (New York Mets) Attendance Award-Scout: Gary Randall (MLB Bureau) Attendance Award-College: Matt Williams (Spartanburg Methodist) Best Catcher’s Pop-up: Jeff Osment (Gaffney), Derek Urquhart (South Florence) Best Argument with an Umpire: Brooks Shumake (Sumter HS) Best line from a mom in the bleachers: (tie)“Shake that bat and bust that ball” and on a mound visit, “Why don’t ya’ll just have a picnic then?”  Longest National Anthem: Carolina Forest Best Playing Surface: North Myrtle Beach, Aynor Best pre-game tunes: College of Charleston February Round-Up March Round-Up       .

April Round-Up

April Round-Up By: Austin Alexander-May 1, 2006 Plenty of Spring Break and Easter tournaments along with playoff baseball blanketed South Carolina in April. A busy month involving plenty of quality hardball was on display and you caught it here first on the new and improved TheDiamondProspects.com. Diamond Prospects crunches the numbers and breaks down some of the highlights. Diamond Prospects Statistics: Teams covered-56 High School games seen-32 College games seen-6 Fields-27 Rainouts-1 Miles traveled-4,179 Pitchers serving as cut-off man-6 Coaches without rosters-25 Coaches with cell phones clipped to their belt-4 Coaches who gave us a line-up card instead of a roster then asked for it back after the game started because the press box needed a copy-2 Hitters “rung up” by an umpire on strike two-2 Total hits on www.TheDiamondProspects.com-213,946 Top 5 hits on DP-1) Palmetto Prospects-2956, 2) Player Profiles-2372, 3) Diamond Rankings-1790, 4) High School Links-1446, 5) Commitments-1378 College coaches with DP accounts-50 Area scouts with DP accounts-19 DP Fast Facts: Quickest game: Union versus Greer, 1:33 Best game: Eastside 7 AC Flora 5 in Round 2 of the AAA District Playoffs Best comeback: AC Flora versus Eastside. Trailing 7-1, the Falcons pulled to within two only to leave the bases loaded in the seventh inning. Weirdest play: With a runner at second and one out, a medium-range fly ball was hit to centerfield. As the out was recorded, the baserunner bluffed tagging up and advancing to third. As the throw reached the infield, the shortstop relayed it to third and the ball went 25 feet above the third base dugout. The runner, who was nearly within arm’s length of the shortstop at the time of the throw, was awarded home. Most exciting play: Catcher Nate Horton (Byrnes) legging out an inside the park homerun at Riverside High School. Best home to first time: Billy Jennings (Union HS) 3.78 on a bunt Best home to first time (turn): N/A Best pop time: Jeffrey Campbell (Boiling Springs) 1.85 in between innings Longest homerun: Jonathon Sharpe (Conway HS) Shortest hang time on a homerun: Brian Fogle (Lexington) 2.3 seconds Best defensive play: 1) Timmy Taylor (CF, Spring Valley HS) As heavy wind pushed Sam Mahoney’s (Wando HS) line drive toward left-center, Taylor’s diving circus catch ended the inning. 2) Nils Shirley (CF, Hartsville HS) A diving grab coming straight in on a sinking line drive to centerfield. 3) Hunter West (C, Dorman HS) A running dive in foul ground on a popped up bunt with the bases loaded. Tallest player: Case Stiglbauer (Dreher HS) 6’8” Shortest player: Andy Atwood (Greenville HS) 5’2” Best pitcher’s duel: Sumter 2 Fort Dorchester 0, Tyler Cappleman vs Mark Henderson Most dominant pitching performance: Justin Hopper, one-hit shutout in the Southeastern Classic Hardest fastball: Keith Campbell (Eastside HS) 91 MPH, Richard Magrath (Conway HS) 90 MPH Best baseball name: (tie) Konstantine Diamaduros, Brooks Robinson, Dusty Baker, Chipper Daniels, Pierce Labrador Cleanest round of pre-game: Gaffney, Lexington Top Fungo Guy: Right-handed-Tommy Petty (Union HS), Left-handed-Jeff Osment (Gaffney HS) Best Dressed Evaluator: Marlin McPhail (New York Mets) Attendance Award-Scout: Gary Randall (MLB Bureau) Attendance Award-College: Matt Williams (Spartanburg Methodist) Best Catcher’s Pop-up: Jeff Osment (Gaffney), Derek Urquhart (South Florence) Best Argument with an Umpire: Brooks Shumake (Sumter HS) Best line from a mom in the bleachers: (tie)“Shake that bat and bust that ball” and on a mound visit, “Why don’t ya’ll just have a picnic then?”  Longest National Anthem: Carolina Forest Best Playing Surface: North Myrtle Beach, Aynor Best pre-game tunes: College of Charleston February Round-Up March Round-Up       .

Preview: Spring Valley at Wando

Wando Baseball: 2006 By: Jeff Blankenship-Head Coach, April 28, 2006 Season Overview: Entering the 2006 baseball season, the coaching staff at Wando felt like we had a solid core of returning players along with some potential role players moving up from the Junior Varsity. The problem was experience, or lack thereof, as we returned only four starters from the previous year: Nick Sprowls, Brett Thomas, Lonnie Ferguson and Cole Rakar. The addition of Sam Mahoney, a USC signee, instantly boosted the excitement of our program in the off-season. As a first-year coach, it was important to me to establish goals for the program and establish leadership from the top down. We began in August with our weight room kick-off that would later have over one hundred players lifting with the baseball program. We feel like we became a team by spending more time working together in the off-season, especially from Thanksgiving until the Christmas Break.  An undefeated regular season is not something we had talked about as a team. I did not imagine that anyone would go undefeated in our region as I believed that Region VII was the toughest of the eight AAAA regions. Every team had at least one dominant pitcher and four to five solid hitters. If you noticed last week, Region VII had four teams represented in Lower State District Championships. Strong pitching and defense, as well as timely hitting, helped us clinch the title with three games to play. Rakar and Thomas were solid at short and second while we were able to rotate outfielders Jamie Childers, Jim Johnson, Grayson King, Chris Harbit and Drew Sheridan.  The H.I.T. Tournament provided an opportunity for our pitching staff to develop as starters Clarke Hinson, Brian Cisco and Sheridan all earned victories against out-of-state teams. District Overview: We began to prepare for Lower State District play the day after our first loss to James Madison from Virginia. We practiced the next day, the Friday of our Spring Break, and came back on Monday refocused on the task at hand. We opened up with Colleton County. This was a team that was going to be very aggressive at the plate and had defeated Hilton Head in their last game of the regular season to earn a berth in the playoffs. Rakar, Thomas and Childers all had multiple hits to lead us to a 9-4 victory. We then faced Richland Northeast. They were a team with a 12-12 record but had the potential to score a lot of runs in a hurry. I knew about Chris Love and Shawn Glover from our own players who play on the same summer teams. Nick Chinners and David Greene also impressed us on a day when rain threatened to stop the game at any time. We ended up winning 11-1 in five innings as the bottom of our line-up went 10-for-15.  The playoff format rewarded us by giving us a bye as we awaited the winner of the South Florence/Richland Northeast game. We had our pitching lined up to start Rakar (8-1) in Game 1 and Sprowls (8-0) Game 2. After rain on Wednesday, we set out to potentially play a doubleheader knowing how important it was to win Game 1. With the next games on Saturday and Monday, we knew two long outings by our starting pitchers might burn them for our next two games. We had a great opportunity in the fourth inning to blow the game open as Childers doubled into rightfield to drive in a run. Runners were left at second and third with no outs, but Clay Mitchell pitched out of a jam from there to leave the score at 2-0. After we tacked on a run in the fifth to make it 3-0, Love hit a hanging breaking ball that still has not landed over the leftfield fence. With two outs in the bottom of the seventh, sophomore Jim Johnson drove a 0-1 fastball over Brandon Faust’s head in center field. I looked to Johnson to make sure he was looking for extra bases when he began to trot as the umpire signaled “home run.” I was just as surprised as all of his teammates, who were waiting at the plate and a dysfunctional dog-pile ensued. This was our nine-hole hitter but this homerun is just one of many clutch performances a number of different players have turned in this season. Lower State Finals Outlook: We received word shortly after that Spring Valley had defeated James Island and would be traveling to Warrior Field on Saturday. A local travel coach told me they are the mirror image of our team and swing the bats well one through nine in their line-up. We are preparing to see Matt Branham, a senior with three quality pitches. Various coaches have informed me about Jeff Johnson, Rob Harding and Timmy Taylor as other impact players. In the spring of 1997, I met the coach of the Vikings, Charlie Wentzky (left), on his recruiting trip to the College of Charleston. He was a workhorse on the mound at CofC and it has been good to see him at different clinics and camps the last couple of years. He has done a tremendous job in his second season at Spring Valley and I hope we are up for the challenge this Saturday. Spring Valley Baseball: 2006 By: Charlie Wentzky-Head Coach, April 28, 2006 Season Overview: Before the season started we set two goals for ourselves. The first was to win a region championship, which was something that hadn’t been done at Spring Valley since 1987. We accomplished that finishing 10-0 in Region 5. Our second goal was to win twenty games. I thought if we set the bar high, we would end with 15-18 wins. After starting the year 2-2, I didn’t see us making that 20 win mark. We went on to win 12 straight games until we lost at Sumter in early April. At that point we were 14-3 with six …

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Preview: Spring Valley at Wando

Wando Baseball: 2006 By: Jeff Blankenship-Head Coach, April 28, 2006 Season Overview: Entering the 2006 baseball season, the coaching staff at Wando felt like we had a solid core of returning players along with some potential role players moving up from the Junior Varsity. The problem was experience, or lack thereof, as we returned only four starters from the previous year: Nick Sprowls, Brett Thomas, Lonnie Ferguson and Cole Rakar. The addition of Sam Mahoney, a USC signee, instantly boosted the excitement of our program in the off-season. As a first-year coach, it was important to me to establish goals for the program and establish leadership from the top down. We began in August with our weight room kick-off that would later have over one hundred players lifting with the baseball program. We feel like we became a team by spending more time working together in the off-season, especially from Thanksgiving until the Christmas Break.  An undefeated regular season is not something we had talked about as a team. I did not imagine that anyone would go undefeated in our region as I believed that Region VII was the toughest of the eight AAAA regions. Every team had at least one dominant pitcher and four to five solid hitters. If you noticed last week, Region VII had four teams represented in Lower State District Championships. Strong pitching and defense, as well as timely hitting, helped us clinch the title with three games to play. Rakar and Thomas were solid at short and second while we were able to rotate outfielders Jamie Childers, Jim Johnson, Grayson King, Chris Harbit and Drew Sheridan.  The H.I.T. Tournament provided an opportunity for our pitching staff to develop as starters Clarke Hinson, Brian Cisco and Sheridan all earned victories against out-of-state teams. District Overview: We began to prepare for Lower State District play the day after our first loss to James Madison from Virginia. We practiced the next day, the Friday of our Spring Break, and came back on Monday refocused on the task at hand. We opened up with Colleton County. This was a team that was going to be very aggressive at the plate and had defeated Hilton Head in their last game of the regular season to earn a berth in the playoffs. Rakar, Thomas and Childers all had multiple hits to lead us to a 9-4 victory. We then faced Richland Northeast. They were a team with a 12-12 record but had the potential to score a lot of runs in a hurry. I knew about Chris Love and Shawn Glover from our own players who play on the same summer teams. Nick Chinners and David Greene also impressed us on a day when rain threatened to stop the game at any time. We ended up winning 11-1 in five innings as the bottom of our line-up went 10-for-15.  The playoff format rewarded us by giving us a bye as we awaited the winner of the South Florence/Richland Northeast game. We had our pitching lined up to start Rakar (8-1) in Game 1 and Sprowls (8-0) Game 2. After rain on Wednesday, we set out to potentially play a doubleheader knowing how important it was to win Game 1. With the next games on Saturday and Monday, we knew two long outings by our starting pitchers might burn them for our next two games. We had a great opportunity in the fourth inning to blow the game open as Childers doubled into rightfield to drive in a run. Runners were left at second and third with no outs, but Clay Mitchell pitched out of a jam from there to leave the score at 2-0. After we tacked on a run in the fifth to make it 3-0, Love hit a hanging breaking ball that still has not landed over the leftfield fence. With two outs in the bottom of the seventh, sophomore Jim Johnson drove a 0-1 fastball over Brandon Faust’s head in center field. I looked to Johnson to make sure he was looking for extra bases when he began to trot as the umpire signaled “home run.” I was just as surprised as all of his teammates, who were waiting at the plate and a dysfunctional dog-pile ensued. This was our nine-hole hitter but this homerun is just one of many clutch performances a number of different players have turned in this season. Lower State Finals Outlook: We received word shortly after that Spring Valley had defeated James Island and would be traveling to Warrior Field on Saturday. A local travel coach told me they are the mirror image of our team and swing the bats well one through nine in their line-up. We are preparing to see Matt Branham, a senior with three quality pitches. Various coaches have informed me about Jeff Johnson, Rob Harding and Timmy Taylor as other impact players. In the spring of 1997, I met the coach of the Vikings, Charlie Wentzky (left), on his recruiting trip to the College of Charleston. He was a workhorse on the mound at CofC and it has been good to see him at different clinics and camps the last couple of years. He has done a tremendous job in his second season at Spring Valley and I hope we are up for the challenge this Saturday. Spring Valley Baseball: 2006 By: Charlie Wentzky-Head Coach, April 28, 2006 Season Overview: Before the season started we set two goals for ourselves. The first was to win a region championship, which was something that hadn’t been done at Spring Valley since 1987. We accomplished that finishing 10-0 in Region 5. Our second goal was to win twenty games. I thought if we set the bar high, we would end with 15-18 wins. After starting the year 2-2, I didn’t see us making that 20 win mark. We went on to win 12 straight games until we lost at Sumter in early April. At that point we were 14-3 with six …

Read More

Preview: Spring Valley at Wando

Wando Baseball: 2006 By: Jeff Blankenship-Head Coach, April 28, 2006 Season Overview: Entering the 2006 baseball season, the coaching staff at Wando felt like we had a solid core of returning players along with some potential role players moving up from the Junior Varsity. The problem was experience, or lack thereof, as we returned only four starters from the previous year: Nick Sprowls, Brett Thomas, Lonnie Ferguson and Cole Rakar. The addition of Sam Mahoney, a USC signee, instantly boosted the excitement of our program in the off-season. As a first-year coach, it was important to me to establish goals for the program and establish leadership from the top down. We began in August with our weight room kick-off that would later have over one hundred players lifting with the baseball program. We feel like we became a team by spending more time working together in the off-season, especially from Thanksgiving until the Christmas Break.  An undefeated regular season is not something we had talked about as a team. I did not imagine that anyone would go undefeated in our region as I believed that Region VII was the toughest of the eight AAAA regions. Every team had at least one dominant pitcher and four to five solid hitters. If you noticed last week, Region VII had four teams represented in Lower State District Championships. Strong pitching and defense, as well as timely hitting, helped us clinch the title with three games to play. Rakar and Thomas were solid at short and second while we were able to rotate outfielders Jamie Childers, Jim Johnson, Grayson King, Chris Harbit and Drew Sheridan.  The H.I.T. Tournament provided an opportunity for our pitching staff to develop as starters Clarke Hinson, Brian Cisco and Sheridan all earned victories against out-of-state teams. District Overview: We began to prepare for Lower State District play the day after our first loss to James Madison from Virginia. We practiced the next day, the Friday of our Spring Break, and came back on Monday refocused on the task at hand. We opened up with Colleton County. This was a team that was going to be very aggressive at the plate and had defeated Hilton Head in their last game of the regular season to earn a berth in the playoffs. Rakar, Thomas and Childers all had multiple hits to lead us to a 9-4 victory. We then faced Richland Northeast. They were a team with a 12-12 record but had the potential to score a lot of runs in a hurry. I knew about Chris Love and Shawn Glover from our own players who play on the same summer teams. Nick Chinners and David Greene also impressed us on a day when rain threatened to stop the game at any time. We ended up winning 11-1 in five innings as the bottom of our line-up went 10-for-15.  The playoff format rewarded us by giving us a bye as we awaited the winner of the South Florence/Richland Northeast game. We had our pitching lined up to start Rakar (8-1) in Game 1 and Sprowls (8-0) Game 2. After rain on Wednesday, we set out to potentially play a doubleheader knowing how important it was to win Game 1. With the next games on Saturday and Monday, we knew two long outings by our starting pitchers might burn them for our next two games. We had a great opportunity in the fourth inning to blow the game open as Childers doubled into rightfield to drive in a run. Runners were left at second and third with no outs, but Clay Mitchell pitched out of a jam from there to leave the score at 2-0. After we tacked on a run in the fifth to make it 3-0, Love hit a hanging breaking ball that still has not landed over the leftfield fence. With two outs in the bottom of the seventh, sophomore Jim Johnson drove a 0-1 fastball over Brandon Faust’s head in center field. I looked to Johnson to make sure he was looking for extra bases when he began to trot as the umpire signaled “home run.” I was just as surprised as all of his teammates, who were waiting at the plate and a dysfunctional dog-pile ensued. This was our nine-hole hitter but this homerun is just one of many clutch performances a number of different players have turned in this season. Lower State Finals Outlook: We received word shortly after that Spring Valley had defeated James Island and would be traveling to Warrior Field on Saturday. A local travel coach told me they are the mirror image of our team and swing the bats well one through nine in their line-up. We are preparing to see Matt Branham, a senior with three quality pitches. Various coaches have informed me about Jeff Johnson, Rob Harding and Timmy Taylor as other impact players. In the spring of 1997, I met the coach of the Vikings, Charlie Wentzky (left), on his recruiting trip to the College of Charleston. He was a workhorse on the mound at CofC and it has been good to see him at different clinics and camps the last couple of years. He has done a tremendous job in his second season at Spring Valley and I hope we are up for the challenge this Saturday. Spring Valley Baseball: 2006 By: Charlie Wentzky-Head Coach, April 28, 2006 Season Overview: Before the season started we set two goals for ourselves. The first was to win a region championship, which was something that hadn’t been done at Spring Valley since 1987. We accomplished that finishing 10-0 in Region 5. Our second goal was to win twenty games. I thought if we set the bar high, we would end with 15-18 wins. After starting the year 2-2, I didn’t see us making that 20 win mark. We went on to win 12 straight games until we lost at Sumter in early April. At that point we were 14-3 with six …

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Showcase Update

Must Read: Due to a conflict with a Gamecock Softball camp that Diamond Prospects has been informed of this week, our showcase at USC must be backed up one day to Thursday, July 20. The schedule for the day will remain the same, we apologize for any trouble this adjustment may cause you. We look forward to seeing you at Sarge Frye Field on the 20th! For more info on Diamond Showcases, click here. .