EDITOR'S CHOICE
Walker goes 3-for-3, Underwood takes win as Orange beats Walkertown 7-0
Orange Coach Jason Knapp turned to the basics to end a three-game losing streak.
A game of kickball.
Following a 8-7 loss to East Chapel Hill on Friday, Knapp didn’t have a weekend of leisure. There were a couple of sleepless nights instead, paired along with nine-hour shifts at his Orange baseball diamond that remains in meticulous shape. As he mowed the grass during a sunny Saturday, Knapp pondered ways to shore up his team’s base running flaws that led to some costly outs against Northern Durham and East. So during practice Monday, he took his players back to their days of running across blacktops and playgrounds at various elementary schools.
For the record, the best kickball player on Orange’s team is junior third baseman/designated hitter Cesar Lozano.
Whatever it was that unfolded in practice Monday, a composed and relaxed Orange team turned in its most complete performance of the season in an 7-0 victory over Walkertown on Tuesday night at Panther Field. Senior Will Walker had his best night of the season, going 3-for-3 with a double and 3 RBIs as Orange (7-3) ended a three-game losing streak.
What impressed Knapp more was his pitching staff, who turned in the second shutout of the year. Jordan Underwood, in his first start of the season, earned the win after he threw the opening two innings. Pierson Kenney, in his team-high seventh pitching appearance, had his best outing of the year. Over three scoreless innings, Kenney conceded just one hit and one walk.
“A lot of guys contributed tonight,” Knapp said. “We got it done on the mound. It’s great to see (Jordan) Underwood get a start. Pierson (Kenney) looked real comfortable coming in out of the bullpen. Jaren (Sikes) just continues to get better. That’s how we had it mapped out tonight.”
It was an impressive win over a Walkertown (6-3) team that had not been shutout this season. The Wolfpack, from the 2A Western Piedmont Conference, defeated West Stokes on May 11. Three night later, Stokes edged Orange in Hillsborough.
Underwood got help from his defense early. After Walkertown leadoff batter Luke Tucker was hit on the first pitch of the game, Panther shortstop Jackson Berini triggered a 6-4-3 double play on the next Wolfpack at-bat, as he flipped a grounder to Connor Funk, who threw to Walker on the relay.
Orange’s David Waitt scored Orange’s first run. Waitt got aboard after being hit on the lower leg by a pitch. Catcher Davis Horton extended his hitting streak to eight games with a single to centerfield. After Waitt advanced to third on a wild pitch, Walker lined a first-pitch fastball to left field to bring in Waitt. Jacob Jones, running for Horton, went to third after Ryan Hench was walked. Lozano, taking every inch of the plate allowed, was hit by a pitch to score Jones for a run battered in.
“I love that out of him up there,” Knapp said of Lozano. “He’s just trying to find a way on. He’s really worked hard in practice and really proud of the effort he’s put in.”
Walker drew a two-out walk in the third inning. Hench sent a hard liner to the deepest part of the park in right center, an abyss for fielders. Walker scored all the way from first. It was Hench’s seventh RBI of the year.
Centerfielder Jaren Sikes led off the fourth with a single to centerfield. After stealing second, Berini sent a hard grounder to right for his first hit. It led to Horton lining a double into the abyss to score Berini and Sikes. Horton leads the team with 13 RBIs.
Orange pushed two more across in the seventh inning. Horton drew a walk, following by a stellar bunt single by second baseman Connor Funk down the third-base line. Walker nearly sent a 2-2 slider over the left field fence, but it bounced over for a two-run ground rule double.
It was Underwood’s first win since last season when Orange defeated Eastern Alamance in Mebane.
Orange baseball senior discuss win over Walkertown
On the night where seven Orange seniors were honored in pregame ceremonies, the Panthers played its most complete game of the season in a 7-0 win over Walkertown. Will Walker went 3-for-3 with a ground rule double that bounced over the left field wall in the sixth inning. Walker also had 3 RBIs. Jordan Underwood earned his first win of the season. He threw two scoreless innings, ending with a strikeout. Pierson Kenney relieved Underwood and added three scoreless innings. Kenney conceded only one hit and one walk. Tyler Lloyd started in left field and had a single in the fifth inning. Centerfield Jaren Sikes hit a leadoff single in the fourth inning and scored off a two-run double by catcher Davis Horton. Jacob Jones served as the courtesy runner for Horton and scored two runs, in the first and sixth innings. And Will Crabtree came off the bench to pinch-hit in the fourth inning. Crabtree is preparing for an even bigger role in life, to serve as a fireman, which he’s actually done while attending Orange. Crabtree will attend Appalachian State in the fall, along with Sikes. Orange is 7-3 and will face Cedar Ridge on Friday.
Orange baseball seniors talk win over Walkertown
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Retro Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week for 11/22: Cameron Lloyd
We journey back to Thanksgiving for today’s Retro Cedar Ridge Wolf of the Week. Sophomore Cameron Lloyd has quickly racked up honor after honor after just two years at Cedar Ridge. In January, Cedar Ridge captured the Big 8 Conference Championship after they romped through the regular season with an 8-0 record. Lloyd was the team Most Valuable Player and was an All-Big 8 Conference performer. Currently, Lloyd is on the American Volleyball Coaches Association Phenom Watch List. She wasn’t aimed a Class of 2023 Outside Hitter Watch List for PrepVolleyball.com. Lloyd was the USA Volleyball District 1 Most Valuable Player and was named an AAU Junior National All-Star. On this week where Lloyd is being honored, she had 16 kills in a 3-0 victory over Northern Durham at Poe Gymtorium, which was Cedar Ridge’s third win of the year on November 24. The daughter of Joel and Sherry Lloyd of White Cross, Cameron’s older sister Jordan played volleyball at Brevard College. Cameron helped Cedar Ridge defeat Union Pines in the opening round of the 3A State Playoffs, and looks to help the Red Wolves return to the top of the new Central Conference this August with new league rivals like Person, Western Alamance and Eastern Alamance. This is the second time that Cameron has been honored as Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week in her career, which means she’s in line to become among the first members of the Hillsboroughsports.com four-timers club.
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We journey back to Thanksgiving for today’s Retro Cedar Ridge Wolf of the Week. Sophomore Cameron Lloyd has quickly racked up honor after honor after just two years at Cedar Ridge. In January, Cedar Ridge captured the Big 8 Conference Championship after they romped through the regular season with an 8-0 record.
Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week: B.J. Thornton
This week’s Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week is sophomore B.J. Thornton. Last week, Thornton hit .428 as the Red Wolves defeated Northwood 6-1. It was the first time in school history the Red Wolves swept the season series from the Chargers. In the first inning, Thornton lined a RBI single to centerfield to vault the Red Wolves ahead 3-0. Cedar Ridge won add three more runs in the third inning, and Thornton would score off a single by shortstop Bryce Clark. Last Tuesday against Bethany Community School in Summerfield, Thornton went 2-for-4 with 2 RBIs. In the sixth inning, Thornton put Cedar RIdge in the lead with a 2-run single to centerfield. Thornton would later score off a base hit from catcher Tucker Cothran. Thornton has played right field and pitched this season for the Red Wolves. He developed his love of baseball at Gravelly Hill Middle School. During his brief freshman year, Thornton started at the varsity level under Cedar Ridge head coach Bryson Massey. Tonight, Cedar Ridge will continue its season against Chapel Hill. On Friday, they host crosstown rival Orange in a Vs. Cancer benefit that will feature memorabilia from current Major League stars being raffled off, as well as items from shops and eateries from throughout Hillsborough.
Cedar Ridge Red Wolf of the Week: B.J. Thornton
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Orange Panther of the Week: Kayla Brooks
This week’s Orange Panther of the Week is senior Kayla Brooks. On Thursday in her senior day meet at Auman Stadium, Brooks had two first place finishes against Northern Durham and Vance County. In the discuss, Brooks finished with a new personal best of 65 feet, one inch. In the shot put, Brooks had a throw of 29 feet, two inches. It was her third first place finish of the season. In the opening meet of the year against Cedar Ridge and Southern Durham on April 29, Brooks finished first in the shot put. Her throw of 29 feet, two inches was a new personal best for Brooks. Kayla comes from a family of Panthers. Her father was a football player under head coaches Greg Gentry and Tom Eanes. Kayla’s final meet happened inside the very stadium where her father played football. She is also a cheerleader who rooted on the Panthers during the chilly, early days of spring. When Kayla graduates next month, she plans on attending Baylor University in Waco, Texas. First, Kayla has more track meets to focus on, starting this Thursday at Northwood High in Pittsboro in a tri-meet that will also include Cedar Ridge. She aims to qualify for next month’s 3A Mideast Regionals at Southern Lee High School. Away from the athletic fields, Kayla has also spoken to freshman at Orange who have had difficulty making the transition from middle school to high school. As she moves forward, Kayla will continue to serve as a positive influence, be in the Tar Heel State or the Lone Star State.
Orange Panther of the Week: Kayla Brooks
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Orange wrestling set to face Chapel Hill for Big 8 Championship Tuesday
As crowds start to fill sports arenas and restrictions created by COVID-19 are eased back, it appears the pandemic may be showing signs of finally fading.
Its prolonged impact on high school sports, however, will continue to be felt for the remainder of this academic year.
Ordinarily, the Orange wrestling team would have already clinched a spot in the State Dual Team Tournament, which the Panthers have won five times in two different classifications.
But the North Carolina High School Athletic Association isn’t sanctioning a team tournament this year.
While individual champions will be crowned at the regional and state levels, the closest thing to a team championship Orange can earn this year will be this week.
And if there’s one thing that hasn’t changed in a pandemic world, it is Orange and Chapel Hill dueling for the Big 8 Conference Wrestling championship.
On Tuesday night, Orange and Chapel Hill will meet for the Big 8 title at Tiger Gymnasium for all the marbles. For the first time in 18 years, Orange will be looking to beat the team, as opposed to its unusual spot of being THE team.
Last January, Chapel Hill ended Orange’s streak of 16 consecutive conference championships in three different classifications with a stunning 32-30 win. It happened on Orange’s senior night.
Chapel Hill’s Porter Brice, then a freshman who was three years shy of being born the last time Orange didn’t win a conference title, scored a pin in the final match to send the Chapel Hill bench into a frenzy. It was the first time Chapel Hill wrestling defeated Orange in 32 years.
It was also Orange’s first conference loss since 2003.
Obviously, there’s nothing ordinary about that. Nor is there anything ordinary about wrestling in the spring, usually a sport contested in the dead of winter.
Third-year head coach Spencer Poteat, whose experience with Orange wrestling dates back to 1990 as a freshman under a young first-year head coach brand new from Chapel Hill named Bobby Shriner, doesn’t have his usual full allotment of wrestlers. Some are competing in track and field. A few are playing baseball.
For the first time possibly ever, Orange has had to forfeit every match at 106-pounds in all eleven of its dual matches this year.
The cherished wrestling room, where Poteat honed his skills in the 1990s en route to 102 career wins, isn’t even available right now. That’s sort of like the Pope being thrown out of Rome.
“We have maintenance going on right now in both of our rooms,” Poteat said. “They’re working on some air ducts. We have to practice in the gym. Everybody just has to adjust and keep moving.”
The Panthers have moved on. They’re 11-0, 6-0 in the Big 8 Conference. Senior Kessel Summers, a 132 pounds, is 11-0. He clinched his 100th career win after a forfeit win over Vance County on May 4.
Matthew Smith-Breeden is 9-2 with six pins. On May 13, Smith-Breeden pinned Riverside’s Ethan Louesy in 2:24, then claimed a forfeit win against Hillside. Smith-Breeden, who had 30 wins as a sophomore, also defeated Northwood’s Ian Morrison 10-2 in the Panthers’ 60-9 win over the Chargers on May 11.
At heavyweight, Tyler Larkin is 9-2 with six pins. Brendon Worsham, who finished with football season just in time for the wrestling season opener against East Chapel Hill on April 27, is 9-1.
For a program that relied on emotional balance regardless of the dozens of conference championships and regional titles it won across three decades, how does Orange respond after finishing second? It’s a question that all sports dynasties, from the Boston Celtics of the 1960s to UNC women’s soccer of the 1990s, had to answer at some point.
On Tuesday, Orange will have to find its own response if it wants to win the only championship it can this year as a team.
“This senior class, as juniors, they experienced something that this team hadn’t experienced in a long time,” Poteat said. “Chapel Hill did a great job last year in winning the conference championship. Our goal is to come and win it this year.”
Alumni Update: former Cedar Ridge star Jones wins again for NCCU track
Robert Jones: After capturing the gold medal at the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Championships in the high jump, former Cedar Ridge Red Wolf Robert Jones earned his third victory of the season. Last weekend, Jones finished first in the men’s high jump at the Aggie Classic Twilight at North Carolina A&T State University in Greensboro. Jones’ winning jump was 2.05 meters. This season, Jones has not finished outside the top-five in any of the events he’s competed in. He now heads to the NCAA Eastern Regional Championships, which will start Thursday inside Hodges Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida.
Mia Davidson: The Mississippi State softball team’s season came to an end over the weekend in the Stillwater Regional of the NCAA Softball Tournament. The Bulldogs opened play with a 3-1 win over Boston University on Friday afternoon at Cowgirl Stadium in Stillwater, OK. On Saturday afternoon, #5 Oklahoma State defeated Mississippi State 9-3. In the elimination game on Saturday night, Mississippi State easily defeated Campbell 12-0 in five innings. Oklahoma State eliminated the Bulldogs 10-2 in five innings on Sunday afternoon. Mia Davidson opened the tournament going 1-for-3 against the Terriers. She had an RBI fielder’s choice to score Aquana Brownlee in the fifth inning. In the first game against the Cowgirls, Mia went 1-for-3. Against Campbell, Davidson hit the 69th home run of her career. That moved her into sole possession of 2nd place all-time in Southeastern Conference history. It was also her third home run in the NCAA Tournament for Mississippi State, another school record. Mississippi State broke a school record with four home runs in an NCAA Tournament game. In the third inning, Mia tagged out Campbell’s Katelyn Chisholm at the plate. Davidson went 1-for-2 in her final game of the season. Mississippi State took a 1-0 lead in the opening inning after Davidson drove in a run with a single up the middle. It was her seventh career RBI in the NCAA Tournament, which is third in school history. She also reached base for the 20th straight game, a new career-high. Mia ended the year with a .311 batting average after starting all 60 of the Bulldogs’ games. She was second on the team with 17 home runs. She also registered 42 RBIs. Davidson, who was accepted into graduate’s school last month, will enter her senior season only two home runs shy of the SEC record, held by Florida’s Lauren Haeger.
Montana Davidson: Montana started all four of Mississippi State’s games at third base in the NCAA Tournament. Against Boston University, she singled up the middle in the sixth to knock in Christian Quinn for the game’s final run. Montana finished 1-for-3 against the Terriers. She went 0-for-3 against Oklahoma State. Later in the day against Campbell, Montana finished 1-for-3. She scored in the 3rd inning off a Carter Spexarth. On Sunday, Davidson drove in the final Mississippi State run of the year with a single in the 2nd inning. For the season, Montana finished with a .252 batting average in 58 games. She had three home runs and 21 RBIs. Mississippi State finished the year 34-23, which included an 8-game winning streak down the stretch. Montana is a senior, but can opt for another year of eligibility after the COVID-19 pandemic ended the 2020 season before the NCAA Tournament started.
Tori Dalehite: After winning the Southern Conference Championship for the first time, the UNC Greensboro softball team participated in the NCAA Tournament for the first time this weekend. Duke defeated the Spartans 2-0 in the opening game of the Athens, Georgia regional at the University of Georgia. Western Kentucky ended the Spartans season 8-4 in the elimination game at Jack Turner Stadium. Dalehite, a freshman, didn’t play in either game. This year, Dalehite appeared in 12 games, almost exclusively as a pinch runner. She had one at-bat, walked once and scored six runs. UNCG finished 34-17, 14-4 in the Southern Conference.
Wilson takes win for Braves in longest stint of his Major League career
Shuttling between the Gwinnett Stripers of Triple-A East and the Atlanta Braves hasn’t shaken Bryse Wilson in his sixth professional season.
Wilson had the longest start of his Major League career on Saturday afternoon as the Atlanta Braves defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-1 at Truist Park. In six-and-two-thirds innings, Wilson surrendered only one run on five hits. He struck out four and conceded two walks, as well as a home run to Pittsburgh catcher Michael Perez. Wilson improved to 2-2 on the year.
For the cherry on top of the sundae, Wilson added his first hit of the season with a line drive to right field. In his first plate appearance, Pittsburgh starter Mitch Keller nearly hit Wilson in the face with a fastball. Wilson barely eluded it and it struck his right hand.
As was the case with his first win of the season against the Chicago Cubs on April 18, Wilson received plenty of run support. Home run support, that is.
Atlanta Manager Brian Snitker, a former player with the Durham Bulls during their days in the Carolina League, praised Wilson’s variety of pitches.
“When he had his debut against the Pirates [in 2018] that was the one thing that stood out, was that changeup,” Snitker said. “Personally I think he started messing with the slider so much that he lost feel of his changeup a little bit. Two starts ago in [Triple-A] Gwinnett, he broke out his changeup really well and it’s a really good pitch for him. The fact that he throws strikes is huge. I’m just glad when he got hit that it didn’t affect him.”
Third baseman Ozzie Albies slammed two home runs, one from each side of the plate, to propel the Braves to a 5-1 lead at the end of five innings. Ronald Acuna Jr. led off the first with a dinger against Keller, who fell to 2-6.
“Fastball command was good,” Wilson said. “We were able to keep them on their heels between the four-seam and the two-seam, and the changeup was really good today. Really I was just able to pound the zone and throw a lot of strikes.”
Wilson’s best start in a Braves uniform came six days after his franchise-record streak of winning seven consecutive starts for the Gwinnett Stripers of Triple-A East came to an end. Last Sunday, Wilson had a no decision after he surrendered four runs off ten hits in six innings against the Louisville Bats at Coolray Field. He struck out three and walked none.
Though it had been known by local friends and family for several days, the Braves formally called Wilson up from Gwinnett on Saturday morning after optioning Jacob Webb back to Triple-A following the Braves 20-1 mauling of the Pirates on Friday night.
It was the second straight start where Wilson went six innings. On May 11 against Toronto, Wilson left the game with Atlanta leading 3-2. Against the Blue Jays, Wilson struck out five in six innings. He yielded two runs off six hits with no walks on 84 pitches.
Wilson now has a career Major League mark of 5-3. This season, he is 2-2 with a 4.38 ERA. He has 15 strikeouts and seven walks.
Atlanta is 22-24, two-and-a-half games behind the New York Mets for first place in the National League East. The Braves have a two-game series against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park starting Tuesday night. Next weekend, they face the Mets at Citi Field.
WIlson is a 2016 Orange High graduate who signed with Atlanta immediately after marching in the Smith Center. He is the first Orange High product to reach the Major Leagues. Josh Horton and Chris Maples reached the Triple-A level with the Oakland and Detroit organizations, respectively.