Category: Sports

CHS Softball Goes 1 and 2 in Saturday Tournament Action

Hosting their annual Coffee County Classic softball tournament on Friday and Saturday, the Coffee County Lady Raider softball team suffered through some inconsistencies going 1 and 2 on the tournament.  Playing 3 games on Saturday, Coffee County suffered losses to state tournament favorites Baylor and Forrest before defeating Culleoka in the final game of the day.

Opening up against defending state champion Baylor, the Lady Raiders fell behind 6 to nothing after 3 innings.  Katie Rutledge took the 11 to 4 loss in the circle but led Coffee County in hitting with a double and 2 singles while driving home 2 runs.  Raven Rogers had a pair of hits and Ashley Evans had an RBI double.

In the noon game that you heard here on Thunder Radio Forrest closed out the game 10 unanswered runs to claim an 11 to 1 win.  The Lady Raiders were held to 3 hits as 3 costly errors hurt Coffee County.  Rogers led Coffee County in hitting as she had a pair of singles to earn the Crazy Daisies player of the game award.

In the day’s finale, a mad and hungry Lady Raider team roared out to an 8 to 0 lead to coast home with a 12 to 2 win.  Coffee County banged out 15 hits in the game as they scored in every inning.  Haley Richardson got the win in the circle for the Lady Raiders.  Offensively, Evans had hits to lead the way.  Jayden Scheller and Erin Ferrell each finished with 3 hits while Abigail Parker had a double, a single and 2 RBI.

Coffee County will close out the regular season on Monday and Tuesday with a pair of district games.  The Lady Raiders will take on Lincoln County on Monday in Fayetteville.  That game will get underway at 6:30 PM.  Coffee County will play their final regular season home game on Tuesday when they host Tullahoma at Terry Floyd Field at 6 PM.  The district tournament will begin later in the week at Lincoln County.  Thunder Radio will keep you updated on the Lady Raiders game times as they are announced.

Westwood Softball Season Comes to a Close

Haidyn Campbell of WMS softball

A pair of losses on Friday and Saturday in the Duck River Valley Conference tournament ended the season for the Westwood softball team on Saturday.  With their best record in recent memory, the Lady Rockets claimed a regular season division title while compiling a record of 11-4-1.

In Friday’s 2nd round matchup with Fayetteville, an 9 to 5 lead after 3 innings was not enough as the Tigers roared back with 5 unanswered runs to claim the 10 to 9 win.  Six Westwood errors led to 7 unearned runs for Fayetteville.  Brookelyn Blake, Paisley Campbell, Abby Clark and Brayden Gray all banged out doubles to lead the 10 hit Lady Rocket hitting attack.  Campbell finished with 3 RBI.

On Saturday, 8 Westwood errors allowed 7 unearned runs for Community as the Lady Rockets fell 8 to 2.  Blake had a pair of singles and an RBI for Westwood.  Haidyn Campbell finished with a double, a stolen base and took the bitter loss in the circle for Westwood.  The 8th grader had 8 strikeouts while only walking one.

Coffee County Youth Bass Club In Saturday Action

Five boats from the Coffee County Youth Bass Club traveled to Dayton, TN on Saturday to take part in the Battle of Chickamauga.  The Battle of Chickamauga is a state trail tournament event fishing out of Dayton on Chickamauga Lake.

The brother tandem of Colby Thurmond & Braeden Thurmond were the top finishers for Coffee County as they caught 4 fish weighing 10.14 pounds to finish in 30th place.  Brothers Brandon and Dawson Wells finished in 47th place with 4 fish totaling 7.55 pounds.  Hunter Sanders and Blake Mangrum were 49th with 3 fish totaling 7.56 pounds and a top fish of 4 .59 pounds.  Isaac Turner and Cam Rutledge finished in 87th place and Adam Petty and Joe White came in 127th place.

The Coffee County anglers return to the water on Friday and Saturday for the State Trail Championship.  The fishing will take place on Old Hickory Lake.

Claybusters Capture More Titles

Austin Schaller, Colter Smith, Zach Bonee, Hayden Jacobs and Tucker Carlson celebrate their varsity win in Morristown on Saturday[Photo provided]

The Coffee County Claybusters traveled to East Tennessee on Saturday for their biggest shoot of the year thus far.  Battling against more than 200 shooters in White Pine, TN, the Claybusters once again were the class of the field as they captured 5 of the 6 high overall shooters and a team title in the varsity team competition.

The Varsity team of Hayden Jacobs, Tucker Carlton, Colter Smith, Zack Bonee and Austin Schaller won the varsity competition as they shot 477 of a possible 500 targets.  As individuals, Coffee County won both the high overall shooter for both male and female as Hayden Jacobs and Victoria Majors earned those titles respectively.  Owing to the Claybusters dominance, each had to win their title with a “scorecard playoff” over a fellow Claybuster teammate.  Jacobs edged Zack Boneewith both shooting 98 targets.  For the ladies, Majors scraped by Lindsey Dickson as each shot 95.   In the Junior varsity division, Tucker Carlton broke 96 targets to earn the male title while Alexus Stacey won the JV girls’ title with 92.  In the intermediate advanced division, Emma Mathews won the female high overall title with 90 broken clays.

The Claybusters return to the firing line on Saturday, May 12th at Big Springs.  That shoot will take place around 9 AM at the Christiana range.

Westwood Baseball Falls in Opening Round of DRVC Tournament

Blake Hale of Westwood baseball[File Photo]

Opening play in the Duck River Valley Conference baseball tournament on Friday, the Westwood Rockets traveled to Murfreesboro to take on Middle Tennessee Christian.  Tied at 3 entering the bottom of the 7th, the home standing Cougars pushed across the winning run to drop the Rockets 4 to 3.

Westwood jumped out to an early lead as they scored twice in the first inning.  Hits by Brady Nugent and Blake Hale got them on base as they came around to score to make it 2 to 0.  The Rockets added a run in the 7th to on an RBI hit from Hale.  MTCS scored once in the 1st inning and took a brief lead in the 5th inning after a pair of walks helped plate 2 more runs.  The Cougars dropped Westwood with the heartbreaking walk off in the 7th.

With the loss, Westwood falls into the loser’s bracket where they will resume play on Monday.  At press time, Westwood’s time and opponent were not available at press time.  The Rocket’s game will be played at Liberty Middle School in Shelbyville.

Fiala Tallies Winner in Double Overtime, Preds Tie Series with Jets

Kevin Fiala

The 100th Stanley Cup Playoff game in Predators’ history has a reason to be remembered.

Kevin Fiala scored the winner in double overtime and the Nashville Predators defeated the Winnipeg Jets by a 5-4 final in Game 2 on Sunday night to even the series at one game apiece. It’s Nashville’s seventh postseason overtime win in club history, their third in multiple overtimes.

A goal just 27 seconds into the contest was the perfect start for the Preds, and Fiala’s tally at 5:37 of double OT ensured this series will need at least five games as things shift to Winnipeg.

“If you weren’t from Nashville or Winnipeg, you had to like that,” Predators Head Coach Peter Laviolette said, referring to the stress-inducing nature of the back-and-forth game.

“Resilient,” Preds center Ryan Johansen simply stated. “We’ve been like that since we’ve been put together as a team. That’s hockey for you, the ups and downs and adversity. You have to fight through and all that matters is we won tonight and the series is 1-1.”

It took Johansen just 27 seconds into the contest to give the Predators their first lead of the series when he fired a shot from the slot to beat Connor Hellebuyck top shelf. Winnipeg responded before the period was out with two quick goals from Dustin Byfuglien and Mark Scheifele to take a 2-1 lead into the first intermission.

But five minutes into the middle frame, on the power play, P.K. Subban blasted home his first of the postseason to even the contest at two, and then with less than two minutes to play in the period, Viktor Arvidsson’s slapper from the right side beat Hellebuyck to give Nashville the advantage after 40 minutes.

Brandon Tanev tied the game five minutes into the third, but then Johansen went around Toby Enstrom and roofed a shot for his second of the game just 34 seconds later to give Nashville the lead once more. With 1:05 to play in regulation, Scheifele recorded his second of the night, this time with the extra attacker, to send the Preds to overtime for the first time in the 2018 postseason.

After the first OT solved nothing, Craig Smith found Fiala, who made his move and backhanded a shot into the twine to send the sold-out crowd into a frenzy.

Already down 1-0 in the series, giving up a tying goal late in regulation to force overtime could have been demoralizing for some. It seemed to be the exact opposite on Sunday night in Nashville.

“This group’s been together for a while,” Laviolette said. “We’ve added a few pieces to it, but playoff series I think do that. Winning, losing, overtime wins, overtime losses, I think all of that builds a little bit to your group. It was tough in the third because I don’t think we were at our best. I thought that was [the Jets’] best that we had seen and they were able to tie the game. With that comes one of those momentum swings. Coming out from the overtime, I think we handled it pretty well.”

Now it’s off to Winnipeg for Games 3 and 4 and into a building with an atmosphere that rivals Bridgestone Arena – not to mention the hosts, who owned the League’s best home record this season. However, bet you can guess who had the top road record.

Two games in, this series is far from over. Best of five, commence.

“We just kept going,” Subban said. “This is really good for us, this type of adversity early on in a series is great for us and we found a way to win and now we’ve got to go on the road and do what we’ve done well all year and that’s win. For us right now we’ve just got to get some rest and get some good food, some good eats, like I said some good rest and get ready for the toughest road trip of the year.”

JOFA Line Jubilance:

Filip Forsberg was dishing on Sunday. Ryan Johansen was scoring. And Viktor Arvidsson was doing it all. Again.

Forsberg’s three assists in Game 2 marked the second-highest total from a Preds player in a single playoff game, Johansen’s two goals marked his first-career multi-goal postseason contest, and Arvidsson notched his first three-point playoff outing.

Other than that, nothing special.

“Those two are unbelievable,” Johansen said of Forsberg and Arvidsson. “We could talk about those guys for days, but as a line we need to step up our game and take it to another level. I feel like we did our thing tonight, supported each other and worked for each other and found a way to produce too.”

“I thought we played good,” Forsberg said. “We want to be out there to make a difference. Joey (Ryan Johansen) and Arvi (Viktor Arvidsson) played an unbelievable game and I’m just trying to keep up and good as I can.”

So humble, right?

It’s clear how much Forsberg, Johansen and Arvidsson all contributed in Game 2, and if it weren’t for them, Nashville wouldn’t have even had a sniff at overtime. But when the trio is clicking, there’s no telling what’s next.

“We worked hard,” Arvidsson said. “We just supported each other and played in the O-zone a lot I feel like that was a big part. We got the pucks deep, played a simple game and just put pucks in the net and that’s when we’re good.”

Simple as that.

Winner, Winner:

He’s already played the role of Stanley Cup Playoff overtime hero once in his career.

Kevin Fiala’s encore was just as impressive, and few before him have ever done so. In fact, Fiala became one of just nine players in NHL history to have multiple game-winning goals in the postseason before turning 22.

Fiala is also the first Preds player to record multiple overtime goals in club history.

All of a sudden, Fiala has goals in consecutive games and is noticeable just about every time he steps on the ice, a very good sign. And it’s not just Fiala, but his entire line with Kyle Turris and Craig Smith, who have been making a difference through the first two games of this series.

“One series to the next for a line, I believe, is a new opportunity,” Laviolette said. “You have to go out and you have make your way and help contribute for the team. Sometimes when you close the door on one team and you open up another one, it’s almost like a fresh season and a fresh start so we had some of those conversations and they’ve been able to chip in a couple of big goals.”

Notes:

Ryan Hartman entered the Preds lineup for the first time in this series, taking the place of Miikka Salomaki on the Nashville fourth line.

The Predators are now 7-8 all-time in postseason overtime and 3-3 in games that require multiple overtimes.

Nashville has now won five of their last six playoff overtime games.

Pekka Rinne made 46 saves on 50 shots, his highest career save total in a playoff game.

Game 2 marked Nashville’s 100th Stanley Cup Playoff game in franchise history with Head Coach Peter Laviolette behind the bench for 50 of them.

The series now shifts to Winnipeg for Games 3 and 4 on Tuesday and Thursday, respectively, before Game 5 comes back in Nashville on Saturday night.

Pete Weber’s Postgame Report

CHS Netters Close Season at District Tournament in Sewanee

Reid Lawrence of CHS tennis[file photo]

The Coffee County Central High School varsity tennis season came to a close on Friday in the district tournament at Sewanee.  Playing the district singles and doubles matches at the University of the South, a host of Friday morning wins were not enough to get any Raiders into Saturday’s semifinals and finals.  In the boys’ JV bracket, Tyler Rigney captured a pair of wins as he will represent the Raiders on Saturday in the JV singles tournament.

In varsity action, both Lady Raider doubles teams advanced to Friday afternoon’s quarterfinals.  The teams of Jessica Barrera and Odalis Garcia fell in the quarterfinal round as did the Lady Raider team of Natalie Elzeer and Wren Lawson.  The Red Raider doubles squad of Reid Lawrence and Grey Riddle were one match away from advancing to Saturday’s semifinals as they fell to in Friday’s quarterfinals.  In singles play, freshman Luke Irwin got a win to advance before dropping his quarterfinal matchup.

Rigney will play in the JV semifinals on Saturday morning.  The tournament opens up at 9 AM and is being played at the University of the South.

Favorable Effort, 48 Shots Not Enough as Preds Fall to Jets in Game 1

Sometimes, a favorable effort doesn’t reflect in the final score. Game 1 was one of those nights.

The Predators outshot the Jets by a 48-19 margin in the opening contest of their Round Two series, but it was Winnipeg netminder Connor Hellebuyck who made 47 saves to lead his team to a 4-1 win over Nashville on Friday night. It’s just the second time in their last six postseason series the Preds have dropped the opening game, a rare postseason loss on home ice.

Nashville led in just about every category on the night, except where it mattered most. All but two Preds skaters registered a shot on goal in what many called their best game of the postseason. But as Predators Head Coach Peter Laviolette said following the game, it’s about more than just effort at this time of the year.

“We have to win hockey games,” Laviolette said. “You can hang your hat on that sometimes in the regular season when you’re talking about a process and a long haul and a big picture. But right now, if you give me two choices on where to be, our game or their win, I’d take the win. It’s about winning hockey games right now. We’ll look at it and try to get better.”

“It’s too bad [the effort] doesn’t matter, though; you have to win a hockey game,” Preds center Ryan Johansen said. “They’re up 1-0, that’s all that matters. For us, there are some good things we can look at for sure, and some things we can improve on.”

The Predators set a postseason franchise record with 20 shots in the opening frame, but it was Winnipeg who took a 1-0 lead, courtesy of a goal from Brandon Tanev. Paul Stastny made it 2-0 in the second period, and after Filip Forsberg hit the post on a Nashville power play, the Jets came right back and Mark Scheifele potted his fifth of the playoffs for a 3-0 lead after 40 minutes.

Pekka Rinne was pulled in favor of Juuse Saros to begin the third period, and Kevin Fiala gave the Preds life when he finished off a nifty passing play and beat Hellebuyck at 1:23 of the final frame. However, that was all Nashville got on the night with Scheifele icing it with an empty-netter late in regulation.

“The goals, the were really tough for Peks,” Laviolette said of his decision to pull Rinne. “We need to do a better job, especially on those first two that you’re talking about. It was just to change it up, to go in a different direction, to send the game in a different direction.”

For the Predators, the focus simply shifts to Game 2 now, a contest that always carries a noticeable swing – either go down by two, or turn it into a best of five. You can decipher which result the Preds would prefer.

“For us, right now, there’s a few things we need to clean up,” Nashville defenseman P.K. Subban said. “A couple mistakes cost us, but bounces are going to happen in a hockey game. That’s just the way it is. Like I said, we’ll be ready to go on Sunday.”

“We have a smart group and they know how to handle situations, especially this one,” Johansen said. “So for us, we’ll take tomorrow and I’m looking forward to hanging out with my dogs on the nice day – maybe take them to the park – and then get back to work.”

Notes:

Austin Watson left Game 1 after the first period and did not return, with Head Coach Peter Laviolette saying he expects to have an update on Watson’s condition on Saturday.

The Predators finished with 48 shots on goal, just six shy of tying their postseason franchise record for a single game.

Scott Hartnell and Ryan Hartman were among the Nashville scratches in Game 1.

Game 2 between the Preds and Jets comes Sunday evening at Bridgestone Arena at 6 p.m. CT. The series then shifts to Winnipeg for Games 3 and 4 on Tuesday and Thursday of next week.

Westwood Tennis Gains Split at Warren County

Lauren Perry of WMS tennis

The Westwood tennis teams hit the road to McMinnville on Friday to take on Warren County.  The Lady Rockets continued their winning ways with a 6 to 1 win.  The Rockets lost a hard-fought 4 to 2 decision.

Lauren Perry and Anna Johnson each recorded 6 love shutout wins for Westwood in girls’ singles play.  Rylea McNamara and Addison Welch claimed 6 to 1 singles win.  And both doubles teams for the Lady Rockets captured 6 love wins as the teams Perry/McNamara and Welch/Johnson rolled past the Lady Pioneers 6 to 0.

For the Rockets, Caleb Simmons captured a 6 to 3 singles win.  Caleb teamed up with Isaac Simmons to win in doubles by a score of 6 to 2.

Westwood hits the court again on Friday when they host Warren County.   That match will be played at Fred Deadman Park and is scheduled to get underway at 4 PM.

Thursday Prep Results and Friday Prep Schedule

Thursday Prep Results
> CHS Boys’ Soccer at Lincoln Co – See the Story HERE
> WMS Tennis HOSTS Tullahoma – PPD, Makeup is TBD
> CCMS Softball HOSTS Tullahoma – CTC Tournament – PPD until Friday
> WMS Baseball at MTCS – DRVC Tournament – PPD until Friday
> CHS Baseball HOSTS Forrest (Senior Night) – PPD until Tuesday
> CHS Softball HOSTS Tullahoma – PPD until Tuesday
> WMS Softball vs. Fayetteville – DRVC Tournament at Lynchburg – PPD until Friday
> CCMS Baseball vs. North Franklin – CTC Tournament at Tullahoma – PPD until Friday

Friday Prep Schedule
9:00 AM – CHS Tennis at District Singles/Doubles Tournament at Sewanee
4:00 PM – WMS Tennis at Warren Co
4:00 PM – CCMS Softball HOSTS Tullahoma – CTC Tournament
7:00 PM – WMS Softball vs. Fayetteville-DRVC Tournament at Lynchburg
7:00 PM – CHS Boys’ Soccer HOSTS Fayetteville
7:30 PM – WMS Baseball at MTCS-DRVC Tournament
7:30 PM – CCMS Baseball vs. North Franklin – CTC Tournament at Tullahoma