Category: Sports

CHS Baseball Falls in District Tournament Game to Columbia on Sunday; Will Play Monday Night

Grant Sadler of CHS baseball

A four run second inning by the Columbia Lions put the Red Raider baseball team in an early hole on Sunday as Coffee County saw their 3 game winning streak snapped in the 2nd round of the District 8AAA baseball tournament. Coffee County, who came in as the #3 seed, had to travel to the 2nd seeded Lions after the Lions earned a first round bye. Columbia used that extra rest to claw their way to the 8 to 1 win.
The Coffee County defense cleaned up their play with only 2 miscues on Sunday after committing 5 errors in Saturday’s win. Neither Red Raider error led to a Columbia run. Grant Sadler took the loss on the mound surrendering 6 runs on 6 hits while walking 3 and striking out one. Garrett Eldridge remained hot for Coffee County as he had 2 hits in 3 plate appearances including a double. Noah Anderson had a double and scored the lone run for the Raiders. Cade Giles was 1 for 3 with an RBI.
The loss is the first for the Raiders in the double elimination tournament. Coffee County will now take on Lawrence County in a loser’s bracket game on Monday at Franklin County. That game will begin at 6:30 PM and Thunder Radio will be on hand to bring you the broadcast.

CHS Tennis Team Members Named to All-District Team

District 8AAA doubles tennis champions Reid Lawrence(left) and Grey Riddle(right) show off their medals with CHS tennis coach Mike Ray

The honors and accolades continue to accumulate for the Coffee County tennis teams as 3 Raider netters were named to the District 8AAA All District team on Friday.  For the Lady Raiders, Kayla Wright was selected to the ladies’ all-district team.  For the Red Raiders, Grey Riddle and Joseph Sadler were named to the men’s all-district team.  Red Raider teammates Shlip Patel and Reid Lawrence were named honorable mention to the men’s squad.

A Pair of Westwood Baseball Players Named to All-Conference Team

Wyatt Nugent(left) and Skylar Bratcher(right) were named to the DRVC All-Conference team.

Wyatt Nugent and Skylar Bratcher were named to the All-Conference Baseball Team for the Duck River Valley Confernece for 2017.  The pair of 8th graders helped lead the Rockets to the most wins in a season in more than 3 years this spring.  The honor was announced on Sunday afternoon at the Westwood baseball banquet and was voted on by the league coaches.

The Rockets ended the season with a final record of 7 and 11. The Rockets made it to the round of 6 in the conference tournament.  The 7 wins this year represents the 2nd straight year of improvement for Westwood baseball. The Rockets are coached by Dusty Hereford and Herb Nugent.

Preds Win Game Six, Advance to Western Conference Final

They’re halfway there.

For the first time in franchise history, the Nashville Predators have advanced to the Western Conference Final, defeating the St. Louis Blues, 3-1, in Game Six to win the series by a 4-2 count.

Two goals in the third period – including the game-winner from Ryan Johansen, then an empty-netter from Calle Jarnkrok – punched Nashville’s ticket to uncharted territory, a journey that will continue later this week.

“It’s a big step for us – not only for us as players, but also as an organization,” goaltender Pekka Rinne said. “It’s something that we haven’t done before. To see that third goal – that empty-netter – that’s a great relief. It was a really tight game, and [the Blues] played hard. All series, I thought each game was really hard and tight – a lot of one goal games. To see Jarny put that in – that was a great feeling, and obviously a big relief.”

It was St. Louis who scored first for the second consecutive game when Paul Stastny pushed a puck over the goal line just over two minutes into the contest to give the Blues a 1-0 lead after one.

Nashville had quite a response, however, as Mattias Ekholm found Josi at the side of the Blues’ net just 35 seconds into the middle frame to even the score at 1-1. It was Josi’s fourth goal of the postseason, tying him with Ryan Ellis for the team lead in goals, and giving the Predators nine tallies from their blueliners, a franchise record in a single postseason.

From there, Nashville’s first line cashed in when it mattered most as Viktor Arvidsson found Johansen streaking to the net at 3:15 of the third period, and the centerman deked around Jake Allen to deposit the puck over the line and send the Bridgestone Arena crowd into a frenzy.

“There’s a lot of confidence from the team and from the coaches in that line to be able to execute like that and to be able to win a big game for us,” Preds Head Coach Peter Laviolette said.

The fans remained standing for the remainder of the period, and with the Blues goaltender pulled in one last fit of desperation, Jarnkrok got Nashville’s third of the game with exactly one minute remaining in regulation.

And then, the Predators and the Blues met for a handshake at center ice.

For someone like Rinne, the longest-tenured member of the club, this moment is something he’s dreamed of for a long time. And although there’s still a ways to go until the ultimate goal can be realized, there’s nothing wrong with enjoying this for the night.

“It means everything right now,” Rinne said. “Obviously, we haven’t gone further than this before – it’s a great feeling. But there’s also a lot of work left. After this round, there’s only four teams left, and we all know that we have what it takes and everything is in our hands. It’s a good feeling. This is why you play this game – I’m happy.”

With a win in Game Six over St. Louis in Round Two, the Predators have advanced to the Western Conference Final for the first time in franchise history, a monumental step for the hockey club, the city and their fans.

“It’s a really positive thing – certainly for our franchise, our fans and the city of Nashville,” Laviolette said. “You can see the excitement not only in the building, but outside of the building, and I think that that only helps promote hockey and helps promote the growth of what we’re trying to do here in Nashville. It was an unbelievable experience tonight in the building and really all year. Our fans deserve so much credit for how the atmosphere is here. It doesn’t have to be that way yet it is. Our players, coaches and organization really appreciate that.”

In the third period, the 17,240 in attendance at Bridgestone Arena combined to create decibel levels not often heard indoors. And once the Preds took a 2-1 lead, that was all the team needed to carry them home.

“You take a look into the crowd, everyone’s on their feet for the entire game, and the atmosphere that the fans bring for us is unbelievable,” defenseman Ryan Ellis said. “Standing ovations at every whistle almost. It was an exciting game, an exciting series, and now we’re on to the next one.”

So when the final horn sounded and the scoreboard read 3-1 in favor of the Predators, one could argue – and there may not be much of one anymore – that the franchise had just accomplished their most important win in its history. But it’s not over yet.

“The expectation is the Stanley Cup,” defenseman P.K. Subban said. “I think we took a big step today for us and obviously for this organization and this city, but it’s not our goal. Our ultimate goal is to win the Stanley Cup, and we’ve worked really hard to put ourselves in a good position and there’s a lot of hockey left to be played. It’s a good accomplishment for this organization.”

Notes:

A Preds defenseman has now contributed either by scoring or assisting on 16 of the last 18 goals and 20 of 27 in the playoffs, with 27 points overall from the backend.

Pekka Rinne recorded an assist on Calle Jarnkrok’s goal, his third helper of the playoffs.

With their series victory, the Predators will now face either the Anaheim Ducks or the Edmonton Oilers in the Western Conference Final. A full schedule will be announced later this week.

Rallying Braves Fall Short vs. Cards in 14

Tommy Pham capped a memorable first weekend back at the big league level and added to the frustrations the Braves experienced during this homestand, drilling a deciding two-run homer off Josh Collmenter to give the Cardinals a 6-4, 14-inning win on Sunday afternoon at SunTrust Park.

While completing a three-game series sweep and leaving the Braves with just one win during a six-game homestand, the Cardinals received a career-high four hits, including two homers, from Pham, who made his season debut on Friday. The Braves’ bullpen had allowed just one hit over seven scoreless innings before Pham drilled his game-winner 411 feet with a 110.1 mph exit velocity, per Statcast™.
“I was joking around [in the dugout], saying, ‘We don’t get paid for overtime, so let’s go,'” said Pham, whose homer was the hardest hit by a Cardinal this season. “I was pumped to come through. It’s not like you can keep sending guys out to pitch in extras. Our bullpen is doing the job for us. They’re holding the game. We have to pick them up.”
Matt Carpenter drilled a two-out solo homer in the first inning and the Cardinals added to their advantage as they tallied four extra-base hits, including Pham’s leadoff homer, during a three-run third inning against R.A. Dickey. Michael Wacha preserved the early advantage as he cruised through the first five innings and exited after the sixth having allowed just two runs.
After his sixth-inning double — one of the four consecutive one-out hits recorded off Wacha — fueled the Braves’ comeback attempt, Freddie Freeman notched his ninth multi-hit game of the season with a game-tying home run off Brett Cecil in the eighth.
“You can’t just keep taking [positives] from each game,” Freeman said. “We’ve got to start winning. We’ve dug ourselves in a hole, really. You can’t keep taking a positive from every game and expect to come out here tomorrow or the next day and say we’ll get them next time. We’ve got to start doing it. Obviously, frustration has set in a little bit.”
The Braves stranded seven runners during the extra innings and came within inches of ending the game in the 11th as Ender Inciarte nearly beat out a two-out, bases-loaded infield single. The out call stood after a replay review showed Seung Hwan Oh may have received Carpenter’s toss while stepping on first base at the same moment Inciarte’s foot hit the bag.
“Obviously, that’s the game,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. “I was worried when I saw it in real time. Hats off to an umpire making a tough call against the home team.”
After throwing four straight fastballs to Carpenter in the first inning, Dickey made a mistake with a 71-mph changeup that the Cardinals’ first baseman drilled into the right-field seats. The Braves’ knuckleballer encountered more trouble in the third inning, when Pham’s homer was followed by the doubles recorded by Kolten Wong, Randal Grichuk and Jedd Gyorko.
Dickey has become frustrated by how well the ball has traveled at SunTrust Park. He has allowed seven home runs over 25 innings at the new ballpark.
“I just didn’t throw enough good [knuckleballs],” Dickey said. “I gave up a couple solo shots today that hurt us. Realistically, I think I should have given up two runs.”
After recording just one hit through the first five innings, the Braves recorded four consecutive one-out hits off Wacha during the sixth inning. Inciarte’s one-out single was followed by Adonis Garcia’s bunt single and Freeman’s RBI double. After Matt Kemp’s single scored Garcia, Wacha escaped further trouble by getting Nick Markakis to ground into a double play.
“We have to do a better job as a staff,” Dickey said after the Braves allowed a first-inning run for a sixth straight game. “I think that will help take the pressure off everybody. Today, we were fortunate that we clawed back. But hopefully, that’s not the norm.”
With his first-inning home run, Carpenter joined Albert Pujols (Turner Field) and George Hendrick (Fulton County Stadium) as the only Cardinals to homer in three consecutive games in Atlanta. Carpenter leads the Cardinals with seven home runs and 20 RBIs on the season.
Bartolo Colon will be on the mound when Atlanta begins a two-game set in Houston on Tuesday at 7:10 p.m. CT. Colon has allowed at least four earned runs in four of his past five starts and opponents have hit .400 against him over his past three starts.

Rally Falls Short in Sounds Loss to El Paso

A ninth inning rally fell short in the Nashville Sounds’ 3-2 loss to the El Paso Chihuahuas in front of 8,773 fans at First Tennessee Park Sunday afternoon.

Trailing 3-1 entering the bottom of the ninth, Matt Olson sparked a rally with a sharp single to right-center. After Phil Maton struck out Renato Nuñez for the first out, Matt Chapman lined a double to the gap in left-center to score Olson and make it 3-2.

A fly out to right field by Jaycob Brugman put Chapman on third, but Matt McBride struck out to end the game.

Going into the ninth, Nashville (13-14) had managed only four hits. For the first time since April 24th at Colorado Springs, the Sounds were held without a home run.

El Paso jumped out to an early lead when Dusty Coleman doubled in Jose Pirela with two outs in the second inning. Additional timely hitting gave El Paso another run in the third. Nick Buss rifled a two-out knock up the middle to bring in Franchy Corderdo to make it 2-0.

Starter Raul Alcantara went four innings and was tagged with the loss. The right-hander allowed two runs on five hits in his four frames.

Nashville got to El Paso starter Dinelson Lamet in the home half of the fourth as the clutch two-out hitting continued. Joey Wendle singled and moved to second when Mark Canha drew a walk. Moments later, Nuñez lined a solid single to left field bringing in Wendle to trim the deficit to 2-1.

Pitching on a MLB rehab assignment, Jarred Cosart worked four scoreless relief frames and kept the sounds high-powered offense at bay.

Pirela’s run-scoring base hit in the eighth extended El Paso’s lead to 3-1.

Cosart picked up the win, his first of the season. Maton earned the save, his fifth of the year.
Game three of the four-game series is scheduled for Monday night at First Tennessee Park. Right-hander Daniel Mengden makes a rehab assignment start for Nashville against right-hander Zach Lee (0-1, 9.35) for El Paso. First pitch is slated for 6:35 p.m.

Red Raider Baseball Advances in District Tournament; Set to Play on Sunday

Noah Anderson of CHS baseball

“It was ugly, but it is a win.” Those were the words of Coffee County Central High School baseball coach David Martin following Saturday’s 9 to 8 district tournament win over Lincoln County.  The win advances the Red Raiders to Sunday’s quarterfinal matchup with Columbia.

Trailing 8 to 7 entering the bottom of the 6th inning, Coffee County loaded the bases and on 2 singles and a hit batter before scoring the tying run when Nathaniel Tate was hit by a pitch to drive in A. J. Rollman.  Grant Sadler worked a walk to drive in Noah Anderson with the eventual winning run for Coffee County who improves to 17 and 13 on the season.

In a game you heard here on Thunder Radio, Coffee County built a 7 to 3 lead after 2 innings.  The Raiders allowed 3 unearned runs in the first 4 innings as Lincoln County closed the gap to 7 to 5.  In the 5th inning, the Falcons strung together 4 straight hits to capture an 8 to 7 lead with a solo home run being the lead run.  Not to be denied a matchup with Columbia in the 2nd round, Coffee County used the 6th inning rally to capture the lead.

Jacob Langham led Coffee County in hitting as he had a pair of doubles and scored 2 runs.  Noah Anderson had 2 singles, 2 RBI and 3 runs scored.  Grant Sadler and Jacob Duncan each finished with 2 RBI.  Hayden Skipper came on to pitch the final 2 innings to get the win.

Noah Anderson and Hayden Skipper were named the Crazy Daisies Co-Players of the game.  Coffee County will take on Columbia on Sunday afternoon at Columbia Central High.  That game will get underway at 5 PM.

Download the broadcast at: http://www.thunder1320.com/downloads/

Garcia’s 3-run HR Not Enough to Rally Braves

Even after losing their third outfielder to an injury within the past three days, the Cardinals still managed to extend Julio Teheran’s SunTrust Park struggles and provide sufficient support for Mike Leake during Saturday night’s 5-3 win over the Braves.

Leake limited the Braves to one hit through the first six innings, then allowed a pair of extra-base hits, including Adonis Garcia’s three-run homer, in the seventh. But as the Braves lost for the fifth time in their past six games, they were unable to overcome the damage created by Matt Carpenter’s two-run homer in the third inning and Matt Adams’ solo shot in the fourth.
“Yesterday, everybody contributed in that game. There were hard-hit balls all over the place,” said Cardinals manager Mike Matheny, whose club has scored 31 runs during its five-game road winning streak. “I think you just need a few of those days to kind of set that expectation level for what the offense should look like. Everybody is just kind of feeding off each other.”
This has not been a good week for the Braves, who have surrendered a first-inning run in each of the past five games and have seen their starting pitchers produce a 9.00 ERA over the first five games of this homestand. These struggles extended to Teheran, who gave up four runs over five innings on the way to producing his third consecutive disappointing home start.
“I felt a lot better as compared to my last start,” said Teheran, who allowed four runs in five innings to the Cardinals compared to the Mets’ six runs in six innings on Monday. “I felt like the ball was coming out pretty good. I made a couple mistakes, but that’s part of the game. They took advantage. Whenever I was missing, they scored some runs.”
When right fielder Jose Martinez exited in the top of the first inning with a left groin injury, the Cardinals inserted Adams, who singled ahead of Carpenter’s two-run shot and then drilled what proved to be a decisive homer in the fourth. Adams’ solo shot, which had a 107-mph exit velocity per Statcast™, stands as the latest of the five long balls Teheran has surrendered over his past 15 innings at SunTrust Park.
“Smashed a couple balls,” Matheny said. “[He has a] nice, short swing and the ball is jumping for him. [Playing left field] wasn’t exactly what he was expecting, but he did a real nice job.”
After Matt Kemp doubled with one out and Nick Markakis drew a walk, Garcia followed with his three-run blast over the left-center-field wall. The homer, which traveled a projected 424 feet (the second-longest of the third baseman’s career), snapped Leake’s streak of not allowing a home run over 55 innings. That streak stood as the longest in the Majors.
“[Leake] was throwing a lot of strikes and attacking a lot of hitters,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “He’s throwing the ball really good. I knew we were going to have our hands full going into the night. It just adds to the problem when you get behind a guy like that and have to play catch up.”
Though his ERA rose to 1.79 (second lowest in the National League), Leake still leads the Majors with six quality starts.
“[The] fastball and cutter were moving pretty good today,” Leake said afterward. “I didn’t have to go too deep with the secondary stuff.”
With a 3-for-4 night on Saturday, shortstop Aledmys Diaz is the first Cardinals player since 2009 to tally at least three hits in three consecutive games. Matt Holliday was the last to do so. Diaz has reached base 11 times since Thursday.
R.A. Dickey will take the mound when Atlanta concludes its three-game series against the Cardinals at 12:35 p.m. CT on Sunday. Dickey helped the Braves to their only win over their past six games as he tossed six solid innings against the Mets on Tuesday.

Lavarnway’s Heroics Lead Sounds Past Chihuahuas

The Nashville Sounds overcame a three-run deficit Saturday night to defeat the El Paso Chihuahuas 7-3 in front of a sellout crowd at First Tennessee Park. 10,193 fans witnessed the Ryan Lavarnway rip a bases clearing double in the bottom of the eighth inning to give the Sounds a lead they would not relinquish.

The eighth inning rally for the Sounds (13-13) began when Matt Olson reached on a strikeout wild pitch with two outs. Matt Chapman and Jaycob Brugman then each drew walks to set up Lavarnway to be the hero. The Sounds catcher clubbed a bases clearing double into the alley in right center field to double up El Paso 6-3. Chris Parmelee then doubled in another run just for good measure.

The Sounds’ offense found itself playing catch-up before getting a turn at the plate. El Paso (13-17) tagged Daniel Gossett (0-2, 4.71) for a pair of runs on four hits in the opening frame. El Paso’s Rafael Ortega put the Chihuahuas on the board when he cracked a two-run double into the right field corner.

El Paso tacked on a third run in the second inning when Franchy Cordero grounded out to second base to drive in Dusty Coleman. Coleman was on third base after drawing a walk, then he stole second base and advanced to third on an error by Lavarnway. Gossett finished the day with a season-high 100 pitches thrown, 60 of which were strikes in his five innings of work. The right-hander surrendered three runs on six hits and walked four Chihuahuas while striking out a half-dozen.

The Chihuahuas were poised to add to their lead in the fourth inning after a lead-off single from Diego Goris. Coleman then stepped up to the plate and drilled a pitch into the deepest part of the ballpark in center field that could have potentially scored Goris from first base. It was not to be, however, as Kenny Wilson flashed the leather and made a sensational over-the-shoulder sliding catch.

When the home half of the fifth inning rolled around Chapman continued his resurgence at the plate. The Sounds’ third baseman smoked a 2-1 pitch from Tyrell Jenkins the opposite way and over the fence to put Nashville on the board. For Chapman the home run was his fourth of the season, all of which have come during his current five-game hitting streak. Nashville shaved another run off the deficit as Franklin Barreto served a base hit into center field to score Lavarnway from second base. One inning later Chapman drove in the game-tying run as he lofted a fly ball into right field with Mark Canha on third.

The score would stay knotted at three until the bottom of the eight when Lavarnway delivered the knockout blow with two outs and the bases loaded.
Michael Brady (2-1, 3.57) was terrific out of the bullpen for Nashville as he worked three scoreless innings and struck out four en route to his second win of the year.
The Sounds continue a four game set with the Chihuahuas Sunday afternoon for game two of the series. Right-hander Raul Alcantara (0-0, 0.00) takes the mound for the Sounds against right-hander Dinelson Lamet (2-1, 2.52) for El Paso. First pitch is scheduled for 2:05 p.m.

Predators Fall 2-1 to Blues in Game 5, Head Back to Bridgestone Arena

History will have to wait.

The Predators’ first trip to the Western Conference final experienced a delay Friday, the result of a 2-1 loss to the St. Louis Blues in Game 5 of the second-round series.

Nashville’s pursuit of franchise history will be put on hold until at least Sunday, when the Predators will get another shot in Game 6 on Sunday afternoon at Bridgestone Arena, where they have won eight consecutive playoff games.

At the 25-second mark of the third period, Blues forward Jaden Schwartz popped in a game-winning rebound to prevent his team from being eliminated from the Stanley Cup playoffs.

The Blues’ main objective in their attempt to extend their season was scoring the first goal, which they hadn’t done in losing three of four. St. Louis led for a total of 3:51 in the first four games and aimed to correct that Friday, owning the puck-possession advantage in the first period.

Back-to-back Predators penalties, committed 10 seconds apart, awarded the Blues a lengthy two-man advantage in the final minutes of the period. It was a critical opportunity that they squandered, putting one shot on goal during the 1:50 stretch. Dangerous Blues forward Vladimir Tarasenko had five shot attempts, three of which Predators captain Mike Fisher blocked.

St. Louis ultimately achieved its first-goal goal, with forward Dmitrij Jaskin slipping behind the Nashville defense and flinging a rebound over goaltender Pekka Rinne.

When the Predators later received their own two-man advantage in the second period, forward James Neal was the recipient of a brilliant passing display, tying the game with a layup goal.