Category: Sports

CCMS Tennis Sweeps St. Andrews on Thursday

Jayden Talley of CCMS tennis

The Coffee County Middle School tennis traveled to Sewanee on Thursday to tangle with St. Andrew’s. Both teams were looking to keep their unbeaten records in tact as they crossed rackets with the Mountain Lions. Both Raider teams not only got wins in the match, but both came home with sweeps.
The Lady Raiders won their match 7 to 0 winning 6 singles matches and a doubles match. In singles play Coffee County got wins from Sydney Bell(6-2), Jayda Wright(6-3), Marley Perry(6-0), Anna Amado(6-0), Lucy Riddle(6-0) and Wren Lawson(6-1). Coffee County also won the lone doubles match as Bell & Riddle captured the win in doubles play.
The Red Raiders also got a 7 to 0 win as they captured 5 singles wins and a pair of doubles wins. Winning in singles for Coffee County were Jaden Talley(6-2), Luke Irwin(6-2), Landon Booth(6-0), Tyler Rigney(6-1) and Loren Hansen(6-2) . The Raider doubles teams of Talley/Irwin(6-3) and Booth/Rigney(6-0) captured the doubles wins.
Coffee County will return home on Friday to take on Westwood. First serve is set for 4 PM at the Raider Academy.

Westwood Baseball Falls to Fayetteville in Season-Ending Loss

Trent Thompson of Westwood baseball

The Westwood baseball team’s season came to a close on Thursday with an 11 to 1 loss to Fayetteville in the elimination bracket of the Duck River Valley Conference tournament.   Fayetteville erupted for 7 runs in the 3rd inning to capture the win.

Westwood was held to 5 hits in the loss.  Brett Jones scored the lone Westwood run as he got on base in the 5th inning and was driven in on an groundout by Brady Nugent.  Trent Thompson finished the game with 2 hits.

The Rockets will end the season with a final record of 7 and 11.  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.

Middle School Golf Teams Split Matches at Bear Trace

Olivia Lewis of CCMS Golf

Looking for their 2nd straight wins, the Westwood Middle and Coffee County Middle School golf team traveled to Bear Trace on Thursday to take on North and South respectively.  The Coffee County team was able to scratch out a 6 ½ to 2 ½ win over South.  The Westwood linksters fell to North by a score of 5 to 4.

Coffee County got a sweep from the team of Chance Hancock, Bennett Williams and Olivia Lewis which is good for 3 points.  The team of Caleb Jarrell, Keegan Grubbs & Natalie Shawl earned 2 ½ points.  The team of Logan Hale and David O’Connor captured one point.

Elizabeth Brown of Westwood golf

For Westwood, the teams of Christopher Robinson/Blake Perry & Elizabeth Brown/Brayden Gray/Cara Bell each earned 2 points in the losing effort.

The middle school golf teams are back in action on Monday when welcome Fayetteville to Willowbrook.  That match will tee off at 4 PM.

Suzuki’s 3-run Homer Lifts Braves to Win

Landing at LaGuardia Airport this week with a six-game losing streak in tow, the Braves needed something to jolt them out of their recent malaise — and quickly.

The Mets gave it to them in the form of their own miserable week, which included a pair of defeats and the losses of their two biggest stars. Starting in place of injured pitcher Noah Syndergaard, Matt Harvey gave up a season-high six runs — including a game-breaking three-run homer to Kurt Suzuki — in Atlanta’s 7-5 win over the Mets.
Superstar Mets outfielder Yoenis Cespedes also departed in the fourth inning with a hamstring injury, further crippling a Mets club that has lost six straight games, and 10 of 11. The Braves have swept the Mets at Citi Field three times in the last 10 months.
Suzuki’s homer was the biggest blow, knocking Harvey out of the game after only 4 1/3 innings. But the Braves also took advantage of a career-high-tying five walks from Harvey, who did not learn until around 10 a.m. Thursday that he would be starting.
“I wasn’t really physically prepared for starting today,” Harvey said, noting that he took part in a heavy weightlifting session one day prior. “Having those workouts that I did yesterday and the throwing that I did yesterday, I just definitely wasn’t prepared.”
The Mets stayed in the game until late thanks to a two-run rally off R.A. Dickey in the fourth inning, and a Jose Reyes homer in the fifth, but were unable to do enough damage against a quartet of Braves relievers. Dickey — pitching at Citi Field for the first time since the Mets traded him to the Blue Jays in December 2012, which brough Syndergaard to New York — departed after only five innings and 67 pitches due to a left quad spasm.
“I’ve got to be honest, it was pretty anticlimactic,” Dickey said. “No Syndergaard. All the storylines that were built up weren’t there. But this win was really fun, such a community win.”
Visibly upset after allowing a game-tying passed ball in the bottom of the fourth, Suzuki came to bat in the fifth with two men on base and a chip on his shoulder — particularly after Harvey intentionally walked Nick Markakis to face him instead. Suzuki then launched an 88-mph Harvey slider over the left-field fence, giving the Braves a 6-2 lead.
“It’s great,” Dickey said. “I felt like that was some poetry. The guy scored to tie the game. The first chance [Suzuki] gets, he absolves that.”
Harvey’s velocity dipped notably in the second inning, bottoming out at 91 mph on both his two- and four-seam fastballs. Worse, Harvey couldn’t deliver those pitches over the plate with any consistency. He walked three batters in the second inning, allowing the first two to score on a Jace Peterson RBI single and a Dickey run-scoring groundout. Harvey finished with five walks, his most in a game since July 2015.
“All of the sudden the command was gone, the velocity was down, the sharpness was down,” Mets manager Terry Collins said.
Harvey generated just five swings and misses in 86 pitches, resulting in a 5.8 whiff percentage that ranked second-lowest of any single game in his five-year career. Coming into Thursday, Harvey’s 9.8-percent season whiff rate was also the lowest of his career.
The Braves will have right-hander Bartolo Colon (1-2, 4.50 ERA) on the mound and hope to have second baseman Brandon Phillips back in their lineup for Friday night’s 7:10 p.m. CT game against the Brewers at Miller Park. Right-hander Chase Anderson (2-0, 1.13 ERA) starts for the Brewers.

Titans Draft Two 1st Rounders on Thursday

With needs at defensive back and wide receiver, the Tennessee Titans drafted to their needs in the first round of the NFL Draft on Thursday night in Philadelphia.  Here is a first round recap from TitansOnline’s Jim Wyatt

Titans select Western Michigan WR Corey Davis in first round (5th overall) of 2017 NFL Draft.

Corey Davis hoped the Titans would pick him in the NFL Draft.

Even before Thursday, the Western Michigan receiver declared Marcus Mariota his favorite quarterback in the league. He said his pre-draft visit to the Titans earlier this month felt like home.

Davis got his wish. The Titans used the fifth overall pick of the draft to select him.

“It just feels right, and it is such a blessing,’’ Davis said just moments after walking across the stage, and shaking hands with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell. “I didn’t really expect to be picked at 5, and for it to be the Titans, I am just so happy. It all feels so surreal.

“Now, I am ready to go. I am ready to help the team out. I am going to do everything in my power to help this team. I am hoping to make a big impact, but I know I have to take it one day at a time.”

Davis is an imposing figure, standing nearly 6-3, at 209 pounds, with good speed. Davis caught 97 balls for 1,500 yards and 19 touchdowns last season, and his 5,285 career receiving yards is an FBS record. Davis caught 331 footballs and scored 52 touchdowns in his collegiate career.

Davis said he’s thrilled to join the Titans, and play with Mariota.

“That is my favorite quarterback,’’ Davis said of Mariota. “He is smart, he is very accurate and I told you before I like the swagger he has going on. He is very poised, and he is a great leader. Catching passes from him, it is going to be right. He is on his way to being one of the greatest, that’s for sure. Anything I can do to help the team out, that’s what I’m going to do.”

Davis, who also visited the Ravens, Eagles, Browns and Cardinals, was the first receiver taken in the NFL Draft, ahead of Clemson’s Mike Williams (7th to Chargers) and Washington’s John Ross (9th to Bengals).

“Me and the GM, we hit it off,” Davis said of Jon Robinson. “His faith is really strong, my faith is really strong and we were talking about a lot of things, talking about life. When I was there I met with the OC (Terry Robiskie), and he is real cool, real laid-back. The head coach (Mike Mularkey), the GM, they seemed to like me. We kind of hit it off. Overall, it went really well, really smooth.

I am looking forward to going to Tennessee and working.”

Davis said he broke down after hearing his name called. It was the end of a long journey, and also the beginning of a new one.

“I am trying to hold it back right now,” Davis said. “I keep saying it, but it really is a blessing to be here, a blessing from God. I was nervous, anxious, didn’t know what was going to happen coming into the day.

“I am just so happy they called my name. They saw something in me, and they believed in me, and I am thankful for that. I love it, man. I love everything about it.”

Titans Select USC Defensive Back Adoree’ Jackson 18th Overall

Adoree’ Jackson has a winning personality.

As he stood on the “Rocky Steps” here at the NFL Draft, the USC cornerback was grinning ear to ear after being selected with the 18th overall pick in the first round Thursday night. Conversations come easy for the versatile playmaker, he admits.

It’s why he felt so good about all of his pre-draft visits, and his prospects of getting picked early.

“I feel like every time I get a visit a team, (the team) will pick me,” Jackson said with a smile. “I just felt like I’d just be myself and at the end of the day, people would just like me for being me.

“But at the end of the day you don’t pick players for personality, I know that. It’s about needs and wants, and being able to help a team. (The Titans) picked me because they thought I could help the team.”

It’s true.

The Titans snagged Jackson to bring some action.

At USC, he was the 2016 Jim Thorpe Award winner as the nation’s top cornerback. He finished the season with 55 tackles, five interceptions and 11 passes defensed while totaling 1,230 all-purpose yards and five touchdowns.

In addition to playing cornerback, the 5-foot-10, 186-pound Jackson also saw time at receiver, kick returner, punt returner and running back.

“I can do more than one thing on the defense — I can play outside, I can play inside. I can also return,” Jackson said of his versatility. “And if I am needed on offense you can throw me out there whenever. I am just thankful the coaches at Tennessee believed in me and picked me up.

“I am fired to go put a helmet on, put a jersey on, strap up the cleats and to go out to practice right now.”

Jackson, who made a pre-draft visit to the Titans earlier this month, should make an immediate impact in the secondary, and beyond.

He was the 2016 Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year, and he ranked first in Pac-12 history in career kickoff-return touchdowns (four), and fourth all-time in career punt-return scores (four). He was a two-time finalist for the Paul Hornung Award, given annually to the most versatile player in major college football.

“When they were up on the board I was hoping they would pick me, and when they did it just felt right,” Jackson said of the Titans. “The coaches liked me and I liked the coaches, so it is just a blessing to hear my name.”

Jackson, who grew up in Illinois but moved to California before his sophomore year in high school, said the Titans made him feel comfortable during his visit. And it continued with the phone call he received from Titans GM Jon Robinson on Thursday night.

“He was like, Are you ready to be a Titan?,” Jackson said with a smile. “I talked to him, the head coach, and I went to the lady at the front desk. It was cool, and they all had that southern hospitality that I love and like. I felt welcome right away from the phone call.

“And it was just a great feeling when I came to visit. It felt like the coaches were warm-hearted, it felt like a family, the organization. I get that southern hospitality vibe. So I’m happy how things worked out. Now, I’m ready to get to work.”

Sonny Gray Dominates in Sounds’ Big Win

Sonny Gray pitching for the Nashville Sounds on April 27, 2017[Photo courtesy of Nashville Sounds]

Sonny Gray struck out seven batters over six shutout innings in the Nashville Sounds’ 9-2 win in front of 9,291 fans at First Tennessee Park Thursday night.
Pitching for the first time in a Sounds uniform, the Nashville native cruised through his six frames, allowing only two hits along the way. The right-hander did not walk a batter in the winning effort.
Franklin Barreto didn’t waste any time giving Gray and the Sounds (7-11) an early lead. The 21-year-old led off the bottom of the first inning with his team-leading fourth homer of the season.
Ryan Lavarnway got in on the act when he drilled his second blast of the season, a solo shot down the left field line to give Nashville a 2-0 lead in the fifth.
It was more than enough for Gray who allowed his two hits in the third inning. Both went to left field through defensive shifts. Pitching on a Major League rehab assignment, Gray finished his night with back-to-back strikeouts in the sixth. He threw 77 pitches, 54 of which were strikes.
Joey Wendle – also playing with Nashville on a Major League rehab assignment – started the bottom of the sixth with a ground-rule double to center field. He came around to score moments later when Mark Canha launched a two-run home run to make it a 4-0 game.
The inning continued as New Orleans (8-13) pitchers struggled to find the strike zone. Kelvin Marte issued three walks in the inning before being relieved by Brandon Cunniff.
Bruce Maxwell chipped in an RBI single, Kenny Wilson had a sacrifice fly, and Wendle was at it again when he cleared the bases with a triple to the right-center gap. His second extra-base hit of the inning gave Nashville a commanding 9-0 lead.
New Orleans picked up a pair of runs in the eighth, but the game was out of reach. Josh Smith worked a 1-2-3 ninth inning to secure the win.
Wendle went 2-for-4 with a 3 RBI and a run scored, while Lavarnway and Canha each had a multi-hit game.

Game two of the five-game series is scheduled for Friday night at First Tennessee Park. Right-hander Paul Blackburn (0-2. 2.12) starts for the Sounds against right-hander Stephen Fife (1-0, 4.91) for the Baby Cakes. First pitch is scheduled for 6:35 p.m.

Wednesday Prep Results

CHS Tennis(boys) defeated Shelbyville – 5 to 2(District 8AAA Team Semifinals)
CCMS Baseball lost to Tullahoma 4 to 3
CCMS Softball defeated Tullahoma – 11 to 5
CCMS Soccer lost to Harris – 8 to 0(CTC Tournament)

CHS Baseball lost to Tullahoma – 7 to 6(8 innings)

Herb Horton Steps Down as CHS Lady Raider Basketball Coach

Herb Horton(file photo)

The Coffee County Central High School Lady Raider basketball team will be looking for a new head coach for next season.  Herb Horton, the Lady Raiders coach for the last 4 years, has resigned his position effective immediately.  Horton met with his team on Wednesday afternoon to inform them of his decision.

Horton, who was named the District 8AAA Coach of the Year last season, led Coffee County to a 21 and 8 record and a berth in the Region 4AAA Tournament this year.  Horton was hired in April of 2013 and came to Coffee County after spending the previous 24 years as head coach at Gilmer High School in Ellijay, GA.

Dr. Joey Vaughn, Coffee County Central High School principal, had nothing but praise for Coach Horton when contacted by Thunder Radio on Wednesday afternoon. “ I appreciate Coach Horton and the work he has done at Coffee County Central High School and with our student athletes” said Vaughn.  He went on to say “I am confident that he leaves our program in a better state than he inherited it 4 years ago and I believe Lady Raider basketball will continue to build on the foundation he has laid here.”

The resignation was announced to the public via a press release from Ryan Sulkowski, Coffee County athletic director.  In the release, Sulkowski had this to say: “On Wednesday April 26, 2017, Coffee County Central Principal Dr. Joey Vaughn and I received and accepted the letter of resignation of Lady Raiders Girls Basketball Coach, Herbert Horton.  The Coffee County School District, Coffee County Central High School, and our Athletic Department would like to thank Coach Horton for everything he has done for the young ladies at CCCHS and wish him and his family nothing but the best of luck in their future endeavors.  A search for his replacement will begin immediately.”

Coach Horton released a statement, via an open letter to the Community of Manchester and Coffee County, early Wednesday evening.

“It has been an honor, a blessing, and a privilege to have been the coach for the Lady Raiders Basketball Team for the past 4 years. During this time I can honestly say that I have put my heart into our team, my players, and our program. I have enjoyed getting to know many of you and having you support our team and our school. After much thought, much prayer, and much discussion with my family, I have decided to step down as your Lady Raiders’ Basketball Coach. I only wish the best for this community, our school, and all of our students and teachers. The time spent with the Lady Raiders Basketball Team over the last 4 years has been very special to me. I have seen our players and our program grow and gain much respect in the district and surrounding area. In sports, as well as in life, there seems to be constant construction. I have tried to encourage my students and my players to always give their best effort in the classroom, on the basketball court, but more importantly in life. For me teaching and coaching has always been about developing relationships with my students, as well as my players. Teaching these kids the importance of being a person with high morals and character is the most important legacy that we can leave with our kids. I wish only the very best for them and for the citizens of Coffee County. May God always bless each of you and your families!

Sincerely,

Herb Horton”

 

 

Red Raider Baseball Falls to Tullahoma in Extra Innings

Nathaniel Tate of CHS baseball

The Red Raider baseball team invaded Tullahoma on Wednesday night attempting to ride the momentum of an extra inning win over the Cats on Tuesday.   After another late inning comeback, the Red Raiders forced a second straight extra inning game.  But six Coffee County errors produced 4 unearned runs for Tullahoma as Coffee County fell 7 to 6 in 8 innings.

Tullahoma got on the scoreboard first as they plated 3 runs in the 1st inning helped in part by the Raiders first error of the game.  Coffee County bounced back in the 2nd with a pair of runs in the second inning.  Tullahoma added 2 more runs in the 3rd as Coffee County produced base runners but could not get the timely hit leaving 7 runners on base thru the first 5 innings.

Trailing 6 to 2, the Raiders rallied in the 6th inning to tie the game using a pair of singles, a couple of hit batters and a Tullahoma error.  Nathaniel Tate had an RBI double in the inning to drive in the tying run, his second double of the game.  Neither team could muster a base runner in the 7th inning sending the two rivals to their 2nd straight extra inning game.  After Coffee County stranded the potential game winning run at 3rd base in the top of the 8th, Tullahoma used a walk and a pair of errors to plate the game winner and capture the series split with Coffee County.

Coffee County finished the game with 8 hits including Tate’s 2 doubles as he was named the Crazy Daisies player of the game.  Hayden Skipper added a pair of singles and 2 runs scored.  The Raiders travel to Lewisburg on Thursday, weather permitting, for a game with Marshall County.    First pitch is set for 4:30 PM.

Download the broadcast at: www.WMSRradio.com/downloads

CHS Tennis Powers to Finals Berth with Wednesday Win

Reid Lawrence of CHS tennis

The Red Raider tennis team hosted Shelbyville on Wednesday afternoon at the Raider Academy in the semifinals of the District 8AAA Team Tennis Tournament.  Coffee County, who entered the tournament as the #2 seed, was striving to advance to next week’s finals as they took on the 3rd seeded Eagles.  The Red Raiders took care of business by a final score of 5 to 2.

Coffee County got wins in singles play from Joseph Sadler(8-5), Reid Lawrence(8-1), Shlip Patel(8-4) and Jonah Rollman(8-3).  The Raiders missed a chance at the singles sweep when top-seeded Grey Riddle’s racket broke just before his singles match resulting in a forfeit.  In doubles, the team of Sadler and Patel got an 8 to 6 win to improve Coffee County to 9 and 1 on the year.  The win total is the best in school history for the boys team and advances Coffee County to next week’s district finals.

The District 8AAA singles/doubles tournament is scheduled for Friday and Saturday at Shelbyville’s HV Griffin Park, weather permitting.  The District 8AAA Team Tennis finals will be contested early next week.  Coffee County will take on the winner of the Lincoln County/Tullahoma match in the finals.  Keep it tuned to Thunder Radio as we will keep you informed about schedule updates and cancellations.