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Baseball sectionals: Perfect Wadsworth moves on after 5-1 win over Copley

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WADSWORTH — Cue the 2010 DJ Khaled song “All I do is win.” The Wadsworth baseball team is still undefeated.

Craig Palidar

Craig Palidar

Wil Rock

Wil Rock

Nick Bebout

Nick Bebout

No. 9 hitter Wil Rock provided the icebreaking hit, Nick Bebout and Craig Palidar bombed line-drive home runs and Bebout made history on the mound Wednesday as the Grizzlies again picked apart Suburban League rival Copley with a 5-1 victory in the Hudson Division I Sectional finals.

The top-seeded Grizzlies (24-0), who improved to 29-0 at their 2-year-old home field, advanced to battle No. 4 Brecksville (21-5) in the district semifinals Tuesday at The Ball Park at Hudson. The Bees held on to defeat fifth-seeded Medina 4-3.

“Coach (Greg Pickard) definitely talked to us that one of the hardest things to do in a season is beat a team three times,” Rock said after receiving a cupcake to the face from Mason Egleston. “We came out, played our game and won.

“We just stayed the way we have been all year. We’ve been hitting off really all pitchers.”

Playing a little more serious than usual, Wadsworth scored one run apiece in the second, third and fifth innings while also getting two in the fourth to keep the seventh-seeded Indians (17-9) from grabbing any momentum.

Seven players got a hit — Toledo recruit Riley Campbell was 3-for-4 — all nine batters in the lineup reached base and a different Grizzly scored each run. Wadsworth also forced Copley left-hander Justin Hovorka (4-2) to exit after only four innings because his pitch count was at 93.

It was balanced offense that Pickard has come to expect.

“I thought we did a good job of extending a few innings,” he said as “All I do is win” blared in the background. “We got (Hovorka’s) pitch count up a little bit and got to the bullpen.”

With the game scoreless and Wadsworth playing a tad sloppy, the 5-foot-7, 184-pound Rock and 6-1, 232-pound Chris Byers provided the game-changing spark with two outs in the bottom of the second inning.

In only his 14th plate appearance of the season, Byers worked a four-pitch walk against Hovorka. Rock, who entered play in a 4-for-27 slump, then took two pitches before hammering a 1-1 pitch into the left-center field gap.

Byers chugged home without a throw after the ball rolled to the fence, and Rock stood on the second-base bag and let out a roar coupled with a mini-Hulk Hogan arms flex toward his dugout.

Wadsworth kept rolling after that.

“Throughout the season, I’ve kind of not been hitting so well,” said Rock, who is batting .224 but is second on the team with 14 walks. “I came back just now — luckily in time to get that hit. It was a 1-1 fastball outside, and I just drove it.

“That was a good feeling, a good feeling.”

Keyed by Rock’s double, the Grizzlies methodically tacked on insurance. The score moved to 2-0 on Palidar’s laser in the third, 4-0 in the fourth when Jared Houser smacked a single to center that scored Rock and Campbell and 5-1 when Bebout cranked freshman reliever’s Tyler Hays’ first pitch of the fifth into the left-field trees.

The rest of the nippy afternoon belonged to Bebout (8-0, 1.02 ERA), who tied pitching coach Bill Gearhart’s career school record with 24 wins.

The right-handed Walsh recruit allowed three hits — Chris Brennan had an RBI single in the fifth before Bebout induced an inning-ending 5-4-3 double play — struck out three and needed only 67 pitches to beat Copley for the second time this season. He also earned two milkshakes from Gearhart after only needing five pitches apiece to complete the sixth and seventh innings.

The latter inning involved standout defense, as first baseman Dylan Palidar caught a foul ball against the fence, catcher Craig Palidar snared a swirling pop-up behind the plate and Dylan Palidar scooped a one-hop throw to end the game after second baseman Adam Dennison made a diving stop in the hole.

Fittingly, Bebout’s Medina County-leading fourth home run of the season came in his first at-bat after seeing his consecutive innings without a walk streak end at 36 innings — unofficially the fifth longest in Ohio history.

“I was pretty mad about that (walk),” Bebout said with a grin. “It broke the streak I had going, but I made up for it.”

Notes

In 14 innings against Copley this season, Bebout threw 28 balls and 117 strikes.

• Hovorka hurled 38 pitches in the fourth inning, which ended when Craig Palidar flew out deep to center with the bases loaded.

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.

Wadsworth 5, Copley 1
Hudson Division I Sectional Final
Copley (17-9) Wadsworth (24-0)
AB R H BI AB R H BI
Brennan ss 3 0 1 1 Campbell ss 4 1 3 0
Maynard cf 3 0 1 0 Houser lf 3 0 1 2
Wharton 2b 3 0 0 0 C.Palidar c 3 1 1 1
Correia c 2 0 0 0 Pennington 3b 3 0 0 0
Moses 1b 2 0 0 0 Dennison 2b 3 0 1 0
Deagan rf 3 0 0 0 D.Palidar 1b 4 0 1 0
Doubell dh 3 1 1 0 Bebout p 3 1 1 1
Hovorka p 2 0 0 0 Byers dh 2 1 0 0
Roddy lf 1 0 0 0 Rock rf 2 1 1 1
Zelch 3b 0 0 0 0 Robinson cf 0 0 0 0
Hays p 1 0 0 0
Totals 23 1 3 1 Totals 27 5 9 5
COPLEY 000 010 0 — 1 3 2
WADSWORTH 011 210 x — 5 9 1
DP — Wadsworth (5-4-3). E — Brennan, Moses, Dennison. 2B — Campbell, Rock. HR — C. Palidar, Bebout. LOB — Copley 4, Wadsworth 10.
IP H R ER BB SO
Copley
Hovorka (L, 4-2) 4 7 4 3 5 2
Hays 2 2 1 1 1 2
Wadsworth
Bebout (W, 8-0) 7 3 1 1 1 3
HBP — by Bebout (Correia). WP — Hovorka.

The post Baseball sectionals: Perfect Wadsworth moves on after 5-1 win over Copley appeared first on The Medina County Gazette.


Magics turn tables on Bees

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Albert Grindle

The Gazette

MEDINA — Sometimes role reversals aren’t fun.

The Medina softball team had eliminated Barberton from the tournament in each of the last three seasons by a combined 22-6 score, but Friday was a different story.

The hug left-handed pitcher Kloee Cuckler gave to catcher Riley Ries was full of joy, as the experienced Magics got over the hump and upset the third-seeded Bees 7-4 in a Barberton Division I Sectional final.

Fifth-seeded Barberton (18-9) advanced to battle No. 2 Stow (24-3) in the district semifinals Thursday, while Medina finished 19-8.

“Remember for next year, ya know?” Bees coach Jessica Toocheck said. “We’ve got a young team. We have one senior (Brittany Becka), but the rest are returning, so hopefully they remember the experience and how bad they want to be at the next level.”

The Bees trailed 3-0 one out into the game but tied the score in the fifth inning on a sacrifice fly from Morgan Rittenhouse (2-for-3) that immediately followed an RBI single from Medina County leading hitter Jessie Holzman (2-for-4).

Momentum turned on its head, however, in the top of the sixth.

LourdesUniversity recruit Cuckler began with a single against Allison Stack (13-8). With one out, ClevelandState signee Macy Kaisk walked and Kayla Rorrer, who bombed a two-run home run in the first, singled to load the bases.

Stack quickly got a 1-2 count against No. 5 hitter MaKayla Okolish, but the next two pitches on the outside half barely missed the plate, causing moans of agony from Medina fans and a figure skater-looking jump and spin from Toocheck on the latter.

Okoloish took advantage, pulling an inside fastball to left field scoring courtesy runner Bethany Hrabusa.

“It’s tough,” Toocheck said. “You’ve got to control the controllables, and it wasn’t in our hands.

“Owe it to Barberton. They played a great game and did what they needed — put the ball in play. They earned it.”

Morgan Kadilak added a sacrifice fly to make it 5-3, and Medina went down in order in the bottom of the inning. Ries, another CSU pledge, then smoked a two-run double to left in the top of the seventh.

Holzman unloaded a laser-beam home run with the Bees down to their last out to cap the scoring.

The first half of the game saw Barberton in control. Stack was masterful over a 4⅔ inning-stretch with zero runs, two hits and three strikeouts, but three mistakes
resulted in the 3-0 hole.

Stack hit Ries on a 3-1 count, leading to Kaisk ripping an RBI double. Rorrer then hit a moon shot over the left-field wall on a 2-2 pitch.

The hard-throwing Cuckler (6-2) took a one-hitter into the fourth, but consecutive no-out singles by Rittenhouse and Emma Bobey and a walk by Becka gave way to Cassie Ulry hitting a sacrifice pop-up to short center field. The problem was Medina left two runners stranded on an afternoon in which its Nos. 5-9 hitters were 0-for-12.

The fifth inning got the Bees back in the game, as Holzman drove in Rachael Solomon, who had walked, and Rittenhouse’s sacrifice fly plated Caiti Rhodes, who had singled, to tie the game.

Unfortunately for Medina, the Magics had the last laugh.

“(Cuckler) was doing a good job keeping us off-balance, and (we) were able to put a few (runs) together in the fifth,” Toocheck said. “But it was not enough. Hats off to (Barberton).”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.

Barberton 7, Medina 4

Barberton (18-9)               Medina (19-8)

                       AB   R   H  BI                            AB   R   H   BI

Cuckler p         4    0    3    0   Rhodes lf            3    1    1     0

R.Ries c            3    1    1    2   J.Holzman cr     4    1    2     2

Kaisk 1b            3    2    1    1   Rittenhouse c     3    1    2     1

Rorrer 3b         4    1    2    2   Boby 3b              3    0    2     0

Okolish 2b       3    0    1    1   Stack p               2    0    0     0

Kadilak dp       2    0    0    1   Becka 1b             2    0    0     0

Krska rf             3    0    0    0   Ulry dp               2    0    0     1

M.Ries ss         2    1    0    0   A.Holzman rf      2    0    0     0

Young lf            3    0    1    0   Solomon ss       2    1    0     0

Lappin cf          0    0    0    0   Soldano 2b        0    0    0     0

Hrabusa cr       0    2    0    0   Kaskey ph           1    0    0     0

Boccia ph           1    0    0     0

Totals             27    7    9    7   Totals               25    4    7     4

BARBERTON                 300 002 2      —  7      9      0

MEDINA                           000 120 1      —  4      7      0

DP — Medina (6-3). LOB — Barberton 3, Medina 5. SF — Kadilak, Ulry, Rittenhouse. 2B — Kaisk, R. Ries, Rittenhouse. HR — Rorrer, J. Holzman. CS — Young.

                                               IP       H      R    ER    BB    SO

Barberton

Cuckler (W, 6-2)                     7        7       4        4        1        7

Medina

Stack (L, 13-8)                        7        9       7        7        2        3

HBP — by Cuckler (Solomon), by Stack (R. Ries). WP — Stack.


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Baseball districts: Wadsworth won’t look past Brecksville

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The Wadsworth baseball team believes it has sacrificed too much to allow its season to end tonight in the loaded Hudson Division I District semifinals.

Nick Bebout

Nick Bebout

Fourth-seeded Brecksville (21-5) will try everything to take down the top-seeded Grizzlies (26-0), with the winner to battle No. 2 Walsh Jesuit (23-3) or No. 3 Hudson (22-6) for the title Wednesday afternoon.

Wadsworth is the only undefeated team in Ohio, but the Grizzlies know they can’t overlook their future Suburban League National Division foe.

“Everyone knows we have some unfinished business on the team,” shortstop Riley Campbell said. “We’re not playing for ourselves right now. We’re playing for the team.”

Brecksville is led by Walsh recruit Anthony Krokos and Baldwin Wallace pledges Taylor Cave and Dan Cody. The latter pitched a complete game in a 4-3 win over Medina in the sectional finals and also owns a no-hitter this season.

The Grizzlies chief concern, however, is left-hander Jackson Gilbride, who struck out 12 in a 7-0 sectional semifinal triumph over Cuyahoga Falls.

While Wadsworth is unaware whether the Bees will start Gilbride or Cody, the Grizzlies had a unique opportunity to face a standout southpaw Monday following a 10-0 win over Chippewa.

That involved stepping into the box against Grizzlies junior varsity coach Jeff Shenker, a 2011 National Christian College Athletic Association All-American for Malone who fired at least 50 pitches in a simulated game-style session.

“There’s no special game plan,” Campbell said. “You’ve got to have good, quality at-bats.”

Common opponents between the Wadsworth and Brecksville, who scrimmaged in the winter, are few and generally can be disregarded because non-league games almost always feature No. 3-5 starters.

But for the record: The Grizzlies defeated North Royalton 13-2, while the Bees split a doubleheader. Brecksville also beat Nordonia 9-0, while the Grizzlies swept the Knights 3-2 and 6-4 in Suburban League play.

Wadsworth counters with ace Nick Bebout (8-0, 1.02 ERA) and a lineup featuring Campbell (.418, 36 runs, 27 stolen bases, Toledo recruit), Jared Houser (.357, 23, 12), Craig Palidar (.329, 28 RBIs), Kyle Pennington (.333, 20 RBIs, Baldwin Wallace), Adam Dennison (.377, Wheeling Jesuit) and Dylan Palidar (.400, 27 RBIs).

The time has come to separate the men from the boys.

“The kids know what’s at stake,” coach Greg Pickard said. “We know whoever we see is going to be a heck of an opponent. The coaches’ poll came out (Monday), and the four teams left are all in the top 13.

“Brecksville we know is a real tough team. They play a really tough schedule against really good pitchers.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


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District baseball championship: Close call stops Wadsworth cold in title game

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HUDSON — The stuff fairytales are made of ended in the nightmare of a lifetime.

Wadsworth designated hitter Alex Laikos was at the plate Wednesday in the Hudson Division I District championship with his dugout on the edge of pandemonium. The Grizzlies were trailing Walsh Jesuit by one, but the winning run was on first base with two outs in the bottom of the seventh.

Wadsworth’s Adam Dennison and his teammates react after losing 5-4 to Walsh Jesuit in the Hudson Division I District final. Wadsworth ends the season 27-1. (RON SCHWANE / GAZETTE)

Wadsworth’s Adam Dennison and his teammates react after losing 5-4 to Walsh Jesuit in the Hudson Division I District final. Wadsworth ends the season 27-1. (RON SCHWANE / GAZETTE)

Three months earlier, Laikos, a Kent State recruit, was in a hospital undergoing reconstructive surgery on his right knee. He defied the odds and made it back onto the field, making for a scenario fit for Hollywood.

Side-arming, Marshall-bound closer Shane Downey then delivered a 2-1 pitch. Laikos made contact and the 500-plus fans at The Ball Park at Hudson held their collective breath.

The slow roller went toward charging second baseman Brendan Regan, who fielded cleanly and attempted to tag the advancing Dylan Palidar in the same motion. Palidar somehow acrobatically twisted away safely, and Regan instinctively fired to first.

The ball hit first baseman Dominic Canzone’s glove while Laikos’ foot hit the bag simultaneously. The first-base umpire didn’t hesitate, pumping his fist to make his third controversial call of the 52-degree afternoon.

Game over, the Warriors won 5-4 and everyone threw their hands in the air — Walsh Jesuit players in celebration and Wadsworth players in complete shock after their heart-pounding rally ended like a high-powered rifle shot glancing off bulletproof steel.

“It’s unfortunate,” Grizzlies coach Greg Pickard said. “I wish we could have done something more earlier in the game so we wouldn’t have gotten in that spot.

“Two calls at first kind of took us out of two innings. … Obviously, we could have (taken advantage of) more opportunities early. You can never blame a game on an umpire.”

The play ended a classic game that exceeded the hype. The only undefeated team in Ohio, the Grizzlies (27-1), were No. 2 in the Prep Baseball Report D-I state poll, while the Warriors (25-3) were No. 3 along with owing the No. 33 slot in MaxPrep’s Xcellent 50 national rankings.

Wadsworth appeared dead in the water after Walsh Jesuit scored two critical insurance runs with two outs in the top of the seventh off right-handed reliever Chris Byers. Warriors coach Chris Kaczmar then replaced Missouri recruit Ty Shoaff (6-0) with Ohio State pledge Canzone, who moved to the mound from first base to begin the bottom half of the inning with his team leading 5-2.

Like they did all season, the Grizzlies battled until the bitter end.

Toledo recruit Riley Campbell led off with a towering two-strike triple to ignite the intensity. Jared Houser struck out swinging, but the hard-throwing Canzone lost the strike zone and walked Craig Palidar, Kyle Pennington (2-for-3) and Adam Dennison consecutively — the first two on 3-2 counts — to make it 5-3.

Kaczmar yanked Canzone and brought in Downey with the bases loaded to face Dylan Palidar, who then smacked an RBI fielder’s choice to third baseman Dom Mittita (3-for-4, 2 RBIs) that moved the score to 5-4.

That set up the bang-bang call both teams will remember for years.

“One-one count, I was looking fastball the whole way,” Laikos said. “I just didn’t get my hands through (the strike zone). It’s unacceptable.

“I thought I beat it out, but you can’t worry about that. The ball should have been in the outfield somewhere.”

Wadsworth also will remember a couple what-ifs earlier in the game.

The left-handed Shoaff, who beat the Grizzlies 9-3 in last season’s district semis, got through the lineup once with ease before the Wadsworth bats dialed in. Campbell reached on a two-out error in the third, leading to consecutive singles by Houser, Craig Palidar and Pennington that scored the first two runs. The inning ended with runners on second and third.

Two Grizzlies runners were stranded again in the fourth shortly after controversial call No. 1, as speedy No. 9 hitter A.J. Robinson attempted a sacrifice bunt and was called out after Shoaff’s scoop and throw. Campbell then smoked a one-hop come-backer that Shoaff snared to end the threat and preserve the Warriors’ 2-1 deficit.

“I thought A.J. beat (it) out,” Pickard said. “We had something going a little bit.”

Spurred by Shoaff getting out of the jam, the Warriors finally got to Wadsworth starter Cameron Deemer (5-1) in the top of the fifth. The 5-foot-7 right-hander, who started in large part due to clutch victories over St. Edward and Strongsville earlier in the season, allowed a leadoff single to Ohio State signee Azim Qadri, but two pitches later got a textbook double-play ball to second baseman Adam Dennison.

Dennison fielded cleanly and fired a tad high to shortstop Campbell, who couldn’t make the catch for only his fourth error of the season. The runners promptly were moved to second and third on a sacrifice bunt, setting up RBIs by Buffalo recruit Connor Regan (fielder’s choice) and Mittiga (infield single) that sent Deemer to the dugout.

Then came controversial call No. 2, as the first batter Byers faced, Wadsworth native Dan Mendenhall, hit a two-out dribbler to the right of Byers and was called out at first with two runners already aboard.

Though they fully believed the call against Mendenhall was poetic justice, the Grizzlies did nothing to take advantage at the plate over the next two innings.

They did everything they could, however, in their last at-bats with their season on the line.

That made the ending doubly hard to accept.

“We thought we were (going to win) there for a minute,” Pennington said, his voice cracking. “It just didn’t fall our way.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.

Walsh Jesuit 5, Wadsworth 4
Hudson Division I District Final
Walsh Jesuit (25-3) Wadsworth (27-1)
AB R H BI AB R H BI
Qadri lf 4 1 1 0 Campbell ss 4 2 1 0
Canzone 1b 3 0 0 0 Houser lf 3 1 1 0
Jenkins cf 3 0 2 0 C.Palidar c 3 1 1 1
C.Regan c 4 1 1 1 Pennington 3b 3 0 2 1
Deleone rf 2 2 1 1 Dennison 2b 3 0 1 1
Mittiga 3b 4 0 3 2 D.Palidar 1b 4 0 0 1
Mendenhall dh 2 0 0 0 Laikos dh 3 0 0 0
Minorik ss 2 0 0 0 Bebout rf 3 0 1 0
B.Regan 2b 2 0 0 1 Robinson cf 1 0 0 0
Shoaff p 0 0 0 0 Deemer p 0 0 0 0
Knipfer pr 0 0 0 0 Lallathin pr 0 0 0 0
Pipoly pr 0 0 0 0 Looser pr 0 0 0 0
Marshall pr 0 1 0 0 Rock ph 1 0 0 0
Reich pr 0 0 0 0 Egleston pr 0 0 0 0
Totals 26 5 8 5 Totals 28 4 7 4
WALSH JESUIT 000 120 2 — 5 8 3
WADSWORTH 002 000 2 — 4 7 1
DP — Wadsworth (7-5-6). E — Shoaff, Mittiga, C. Regan, Campbell. LOB — Walsh Jesuit 8, Wadsworth 9. 2B — Jenkins, Deleone. 3B — Mittiga, Campbell. S — Jenkins, Robinson. SF — B. Regan. SB — Marshall, C. Regan, Deleone. CS — Jenkins.
IP H R ER BB SO
Walsh Jesuit
Shoaff (W, 6-0) 6 6 2 0 1 2
Canzone ⅓ 1 2 2 3 1
Downey (S) ⅔ 0 0 0 0 0
Wadsworth
Deemer (L, 5-1) 4⅔ 4 3 1 3 4
Byers 2⅓ 4 2 2 0 1
HBP — by Deemer (Canzone, Mendenhall, Deleone). WP — Deemer.
Tuesday
Wadsworth 7, Brecksville 0
Hudson Division I District Semifinal
Brecksville (21-6) Wadsworth (27-0)
AB R H BI AB R H BI
Stringer cf 3 0 0 0 Campbell ss 1 1 0 1
Gilbride rf 3 0 1 0 Houser lf 2 1 1 0
Cody p 3 0 0 0 C.Palidar c 4 1 1 2
Harwood 1b 3 0 1 0 Pennington 3b 4 1 2 2
Cave lf 3 0 0 0 Dennison 2b 2 1 1 1
Stevens ss 3 0 0 0 D.Palidar 1b 4 0 1 1
Schwertle 3b 2 0 1 0 Laikos dh 4 0 3 0
Burnett c 2 0 0 0 Bebout p 3 0 1 0
Raffin 2b 2 0 0 0 Rock rf 1 0 0 0
Birk rf 0 0 0 0 Robinson cf 0 0 0 0
Lallathin pr 0 1 0 0
Looser pr 0 1 0 0
Totals 24 0 3 0 Totals 25 7 10 7
BRECKSVILLE 000 000 0 — 0 3 1
WADSWORTH 401 110 x — 7 10 0
E — Cody. LOB — Brecksville 3, Wadsworth 10. 2B — D. Palidar, Laikos. 3B — Pennington. S — Rock. SF — Dennison, Campbell. SB — Campbell 2, Houser 2. CS — Campbell.
IP H R ER BB SO
Brecksville
Cody (L, 6-1) 4 9 6 6 4 6
Gilbride 2 1 1 1 2 3
Wadsworth
Bebout (W, 9-0) 7 3 0 0 0 10
HBP — by Cody (Bebout). WP — Bebout. PB — C. Palidar 2.

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Clady jumps at chance to coach again

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Albert Grindle

The Gazette

YORK TWP. — A seven-minute car drive from Buckeye High to home was enough for Ron Clady to end his self-imposed coaching hiatus.

The LiverpoolTownship resident stepped down in 2009 after 10 seasons as Wellington girls basketball coach to focus on his three children, immediately going from the varsity sideline to T-ball, soccer and youth basketball.

When the Buckeye girls basketball position opened earlier this month, he saw the golden opportunity to get back in the game.

Clady replaces Bucks graduate Randy Haury, who was 39-73 over five seasons, and was introduced to the team Wednesday after school.

“I love basketball and I’ve been wanting to get back into coaching at this level for a while, but I waited until my kids were older,” Clady said. “My daughter just got done with sixth grade and the boys with second grade, and getting the opportunity to coach in the district I live in was quite an attraction. It all worked out.

“At least for a year being at Wellington and being a teacher there, it was hard going by the gym while they were practicing,” he added. “It was tough. It was painful because I felt like we had built it up and we had to step away, but I am very, very happy I did it because I got to spend a lot of time with my kids.”

Clady won more than 100 games at Wellington from 1999-2009. Prior to that, he was the Dukes’ junior varsity coach and a middle school coach at Western Reserve.

Clady will remain a math teacher at Wellington High, where he also was the boys golf coach.

The Bucks have posted a 78-118 record since their last winning season in 2005-06 but are slated to return first-team All-Patriot Athletic Conference Stars Division guard Kayla Glancy and fellow rotation members Alexa Eisenbrown (second-team All-Stars Division), Olivia Hartley (honorable mention All-Stars Division), Morgan Hama, Kaitlyn Hubeny, Katie Lyons and Maddie Smith.

Making the future appear bright was the lower levels experiencing success. The junior varsity was 15-7, while the seventh- and eighth-grade teams each finished second in the PAC.

“First and foremost, it was a combination of the community and how Buckeye has supported athletics,” Clady said. “The kids that I see around, it was a positive situation. That’s what drew me the most. I felt like I could bring passion and communication, and I’m in it for the long haul.

“(I saw) we had kids who wanted to work out and get stronger and start to play. We have girls with experience and natural ability.”

Clady said he prefers a full-court style with a rotation of at least eight players, but his first focus is breathing new life into the program.

With the aforementioned three children and a residence within the district, Clady stressed he’s all about long-term growth.

“If we can come together as one unit — and I’m talking (grades) 9-12 with one philosophy, one commitment and one pride of the system and school — that’s what I’m here for,” he said. “Hopefully, that will draw kids in and (they’ll) play hard.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


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All-Ohio baseball: Wadsworth’s senior duo Riley Campbell, Nick Bebout honored

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The postseason awards continued to roll in for Riley Campbell and Nick Bebout.

The Wadsworth senior stars picked up the biggest accolades of their careers when the Ohio High School Baseball Coaches Association All-Ohio teams were released Tuesday, as Campbell was on the Division I second team and Bebout was honorable mention.

They became the first Grizzlies players to earn All-Ohio distinction since infielder Nick Goddard (D-I first team) in 2003.

“Honestly when you look at our team in general, they were both equally as important,” coach Greg Pickard said. “Two years in a row — really, three years in a row — they had incredible seasons. They were really consistent players. … They have meant so much to our program.”

A 5-foot-9, 170-pound shortstop, Campbell batted .405 (34-for-84) with 39 runs, 29 stolen bases and 16 RBIs. The Toledo recruit also committed only four errors for the 27-1 Grizzlies, who repeated as Suburban League champions and reached the Hudson District championship game.

Campbell finished his career as the school leader in stolen bases (73) and hit-by-pitches (22) while also ranking in the Medina County top 10 for stolen bases, runs (110), and hits (117).

The 6-3, 190-pound Bebout is the second winningest pitcher in county history with a 25-3 record. This spring, the Walsh signee was 9-0 with a 0.89 ERA, 0.62 WHIP and 16.67 strikeout-to-walk ratio while also leading the county in home runs (4) and adding 22 RBIs in only 55 at-bats.

The right-hander had a 36-inning streak without a walk, ranking fourth in unofficial Ohio history.

Hudson’s Max Schoenman (OF) and Elyria’s Marques Inman (1B) were D-I first team, while Olentangy Liberty catcher Cameron Comer was player of the year and Toledo St. Francis de Sales’ Tim Gerken was coach of the year.

Revere’s Sam Susterstic (OF) was a first-team choice in D-II.

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


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Baseball All-Gazette: Riley Campbell, Nick Bebout put themselves among Medina County greats

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Wadsworth seniors Riley Campbell and Nick Bebout are the 2015 Gazette co-MVPs for baseball. (RON SCHWANE / PHOTO ILLUSTRATION)

Wadsworth seniors Riley Campbell and Nick Bebout are the 2015 Gazette co-MVPs for baseball. (RON SCHWANE / PHOTO ILLUSTRATION)

One was an easygoing, unbeatable strike-throwing machine who painted corners like a 6-foot-3 Rembrandt in size 13 cleats, baffling opposing hitters with precision instead of power and ironically launching home runs when he wasn’t.

The other was a fearless, born-to-play-in-the-dirt 5-9 leadoff hitter who terrorized on the base paths and gobbled up grounders with crazy range. Every inning had the potential to change complexion on one highlight-reel play from the four-year starter with a linebacker’s aggression.

All-Ohioans Nick Bebout and Riley Campbell unquestionably formed one of the most scintillating 1-2 punches in Medina County history. Bebout broke Wadsworth school records held by Bill Gearhart and Andy Sonnanstine, while many of Campbell’s exploits rank toe-to-toe with fellow shortstops Drew Saylor and Scott Fletcher.

For those needing a refresher, Gearhart, Saylor, Sonnanstine and Fletcher became MLB draft choices. The latter two played a combined 20 seasons in the majors, and all four are in the Medina County Sports Hall of Fame.

The complete baseball histories of Bebout and Campbell have yet to be written — both will play collegiately on scholarships — but their recent accomplishments involved helping the Grizzlies break their own 39-year-old county record for most wins in a season (27) and earning the distinction as the final undefeated team in Ohio. The only loss was a one-run heartbreaker in the Hudson Division I District championship game against Walsh Jesuit, whose roster featured eight Division I college recruits.

There is only one scenario where Gazette MVP can be shared in any sport these days: When two players on an elite team are in the company of all-time greats.

Bebout and Campbell fit the bill like a broken-in glove.

“It’s a bittersweet ending for me,” Wadsworth coach Greg Pickard said. “Both of them have been mainstays for four years for us. They were kids you loved to watch play and, for me, that I could rely on as leaders.

“We’re not just losing ball players. We’re losing the faces of our franchise.”

The Big Deal

Known solely as “No Doubt Bebout” for a good chunk of his career, Bebout saw his go-to nickname changed for good during an interview with Wadsworth Community Radio when the personality remarked, “I hear you’re kind of a big deal around here.”

Thus, “The Big Deal” was born and took off like wildfire throughout an amazingly tight-knit, senior-heavy team known for its variety of fun-loving goofballs. The blood-in-the-water effect followed after Bebout rolled his eyes whenever someone sarcastically said it.

The quiet, composed Walsh University recruit never reveled attention — all he wanted to do was win — and his vital stat line of a 9-0 record and 0.89 ERA was impressive, but county records for WHIP (0.62), strikeout-to-walk ratio (16.67) and consecutive innings without a walk (36, fourth in Ohio history) could stand for decades.

Yeah, “The Big Deal” sounds about right.

“He’s one of those guys on the baseball field, he’s a big deal when he gets on the mound,” a chuckling Campbell said before turning serious. “A lot of people know his name, and he lives up to it.

“I’m willing to get behind and play my guts out for him to have good game,” he added. “He’s giving it all he has, so why can’t I?”

Bebout is the second-winningest pitcher in county lore with a 25-3 record, 1.30 ERA, 0.93 WHIP, 22 walks and 170 strikeouts in 161⅔ career innings. Buckeye’s Jim Walter (1973-76), who will be inducted into the Medina County Sports Hall of Fame on June 11, is the only player to reach 30 victories.

Bebout pulled off a rarity under the circumstances and took his game to another level after winning Gazette MVP as a junior. Again, he did it without scout-drooling stuff, and instead got ahead in the count with an 83-85 mph fastball to set up a much-improved curveball or change-up.

What made Bebout impossible to defeat this season was possibly the best defense in Ohio — the infield sextet of Bebout (P), Campbell (SS), Dylan Palidar (1B), Adam Dennison (2B), Kyle Pennington (3B) and Craig Palidar (C) combined for a measly 10 errors — and pinpointing edges of the strike zone a la Baseball Hall of Famer Greg Maddux with the rare ability to memorize hitter tendencies, especially within the Suburban League.

Bebout’s command was staggering with 75 percent first-pitch strikes, 75 percent overall strikes and a .163 opponent batting average. Out of 55 innings with his mentor, Gearhart, calling pitches, 44 saw the first batter retired, 41 needed less than 13 pitches and 34 were perfect.

Toss out a bitterly cold season-opening start against Highland and Bebout’s ERA was 0.51 — and none of the runs allowed were unearned, making that sometimes-misleading statistic 100 percent legitimate.

“He really helped the younger kids see you don’t have to throw it 90 mph to dominate a game,” Pickard said.

Oh, was it mentioned Bebout led the county with four homers and drove in 22 runs in only 55 at-bats?

Bebout, who played right field when he didn’t pitch, showing such power was among the biggest surprises of the Grizzlies’ season. Pickard knew Bebout had great bat speed, and the team needed to use it with All-Gazette picks Alex Laikos and Mason Egleston missing most of the season with injuries.

Not known as a hitter since his Little League days — he was 6-for-30 over the prior two seasons — Bebout responded with bombs on three of his first four hits and kept going with 11 RBIs over the final 17 games. He finished with .309 average and was third in the county with a .582 slugging percentage.

“The Big Deal,” who also went by “Beebs” and “Birchbout,” became a big-time two-way threat.

“I always used to hit when I was younger, and in high school I specialized, you could say,” he said. “Everything came together and (the coaches) said, ‘You can hit, too.’ I showed it, I guess. I used to be the four-hitter up until high school, so I had the swing.”

Li’l Soup

Forgive the Toledo-bound Campbell for taking a hundred swings off a tee before school, tearing it up in the classroom and then playing like his hair was on fire. The youngest of Kevin and Tara Campbell’s four children had a lot to live up to athletically and academically whether he liked it or not.

Oldest brother Kael (a.k.a. the original “Soup”) started as a freshman at NAIA Northwestern Ohio before injuries struck and now is an accountant. Brother Aden (also a.k.a. “Soup”) was a four-year starter at Wadsworth, twice made the University of Akron Dean’s List while still in high school and currently is playing baseball for D-I Western Illinois, while sister Grace was the 2011 Gazette MVP in girls soccer and is a two-time Academic All-Mid American Conference selection and team captain at Ohio University.

No pressure, kid.

“It was neat going after them,” said Riley Campbell, who took post secondary courses through Akron. “They set the bar at a very high level, and I told myself I was going to reach it. It’s good to make them proud. I know they’re proud of me.”

With role models like that in his own household, Campbell was the infielder coaches dreamed of. The fuel tank never went empty despite never taking his foot off the throttle.

The No. 20 uniform was always dirty, and his infectious intensity — notably his tense walk from the on-deck circle to the box — became a running gag in the dugout. Think of someone playing with the heart of Dustin Pedroia, Craig Biggio or Rickey Henderson. That was Campbell.

Few could match Campbell’s passion, and few could dominate a game like he did without even swinging the bat.

“I don’t want to say he’s cocky, but he’s certainly confident in his ability,” Pickard said. “He’s made mistakes over the years, but he makes them going 1,000 mph. As much as you get upset, he’s trying to make something happen. He believes he can do that. He plays the game right. He plays hard …”

Pickard then paused for emphasis after each word.

“All … the … time,” he said.

Campbell began his career as a raw talent, hitting .254 without an extra-base hit and struggling defensively on the all-dirt infield of A.C. Field as a freshman. However, one couldn’t help but notice how quickly he learned from mistakes.

Pickard first asked Campbell to become a leadoff hitter, so he worked on swing mechanics and mental approach. Speed training, fielding and arm strength followed, leading to All-Gazette selections as a sophomore and junior.

The culmination was a senior season in which Campbell batted .405 and led the county by a mile in runs (39, ninth in county history) and stolen bases (29, fifth). He also walked 17 times, saw 11 of his 16 RBIs come with two outs, scored two or more runs in 12 games and committed only four errors in 96 chances.

Campbell raised his level of play to the maximum when the stakes were at their highest, too.

Over its final 15 games, Wadsworth played 10 teams with a combined 181 wins, four league crowns and three district titles, and Campbell batted .477 (21-for-44) with 26 runs (he scored in each game), 15 stolen bases, 11 walks and only three strikeouts.

That stat line is one of many reasons why he was second-team All-Ohio and surpassed Saylor (with 22 career hit by pitches) and Fletcher (73 stolen bases) in the record books.

“I took it one game at a time,” he said. “I didn’t know we were playing good teams, but I knew teams wanted to beat us. The guys next to me were stepping it up, and I had to step it up along with them.”

Bebout did the bragging for Campbell instead.

“Hard work and dedication — he’s always working hard no matter when it is,” Bebout said. “We always see each other in the weight room. He’s very baseball smart, too. He knows what he’s doing all the time.

“He’s always working hard to try and out do someone. He doesn’t want to be average. He’s always diving back or bouncing up and down, and he’s always on his toes. Nothing catches him off guard.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


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Walter smashed records, won championships with Bucks in 1970s

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Albert Grindle

The Gazette

Jim Walter donned his Buckeye uniform for the final time 39 years and two days ago. The 5-foot-9, 175-pound bona fide star pitched three shutout innings of relief and drove in every run in a 3-0 win over archrival Highland that clinched a share of the Inland Conference championship.

Ask him today about his exploits and he’ll almost certainly give a short answer.

The 1976 Buckeye graduate, LitchfieldTownship native and winningest pitcher in MedinaCounty history has never been one for words. The 57-year-old still loves baseball, but decided back then he didn’t want to play for ValdostaState in Georgia. That was too far from home and, to be blunt, he was mentally finished with school anyway.

He looks back not in regret but instead grateful for what he has: A wife (Debbie), two children (Amanda, 28, and Justin, 21) and a successful career in the heating, ventilation and air conditioning industry. The latter was introduced to him by Jim Tighe, whom the Buckeye baseball field is named after, in the summer of 1975.

Expect a short speech when Walter is inducted into the Medina County Sports Hall of Fame during ceremonies Thursday at The Galaxy Restaurant in Wadsworth. That’s how he’s wired.

“He was a very quiet guy,” said Bob Kramer, Bucks coach from 1967-81. “In fact, I was thinking about this, and if he’s got to make a speech, he did not like speaking. He was really shy and he was quiet. Emotions were inside, and he let his play do his talking for him.”

Statistics still tell Walter’s story. The right-hander with a tailing low-90s fastball and unnaturally strong leg drive won seven tournament games as Buckeye reached the 1975 state semifinals, where it lost to Bryan and future Major League Baseball hurler Steve Fireovid. Walter also is the only player in county history to win more than 30 games — a precise total may never be confirmed — and strike out 400 in a career.

A prodigious left-handed power hitter, too, Walter owned the area home run record (15) for 24 years, and his 91 RBIs stood for 20. Those numbers, mind you, were with wooden bats and predominately against non-conference schedules featuring Class AAA schools such as Wadsworth, Brunswick, Lorain and Admiral King — as well as small-school power Northwestern — because the Bucks only played 10 IC games per season.

The resume is impossible to ignore.

“What pushed me was I hated to lose,” Walter said. “I wasn’t the greatest athlete in the world, but I did whatever I had to to try and win.”

Love of the game

Born Sept. 26, 1957 as one of Joe and Lucille Walter’s six boys, childhood was what Walter made of it.

His father was a carpenter, his mother a housewife. Money was a luxury the family didn’t have in its blue-collar home on the corner of state Route 83 and Crow Road, one mile north of Litchfield.

Baseball meant everything to Jim and brother Joe Jr., who was one year younger. The day involved playing wherever they could around the neighborhood. The night involved finding whatever game they could on television or radio. Jim grew up without a favorite player mainly because he loved all of the Cincinnati Reds as they developed into “The Big Red Machine.”

The brothers signed up for hot stove in approximately 1967 and played for longtime Litchfield coach Pete Miller, who Kramer credited as the true driving force behind the scrappy, fundamentally sound Buckeye High teams of the 1970s. Litchfield upset powerhouse Alliance on its way to a state championship game in 1970, but lost partly because Walter couldn’t pitch after throwing nine innings the day before.

Litchfield regrouped in the summer of 1975 and won the Class E (ages 15-17) crown behind Walter and Wellington ace Kirk Gott. Litchfield scored six unanswered runs, including three in its final at-bat, in an 8-7 victory over Sebring, as Joe Walter belted the tying home run and Jim Walter launched the 365-foot game-winner while also getting the decision in relief.

The ironic part was Walter, who also struck out 29 in an extra-inning hot stove game in 1972, began his organized career as a catcher.

That experiment didn’t last long, and not for the reason many assume.

“I threw two guys out in a row at second base,” Walter said. “The next thing I know, I was a pitcher. I remember we lost almost every game my first year. I started pitching the next year, and we only lost one game. I think we went 18-1.

“I liked it, just being out there and making the difference in the game.”

Kramer heard “that there was this kid from Litchfield that threw the ball hard, hit the ball hard, ran fast and did it all” as early as 1968, but the even-keeled varsity coach, who still has a knack for telling a story when his slow, down-home voice is warmed up, was hard to impress. You see, Kramer’s best friend while helping nearby Northwestern win the 1959 Class A state championship was Dean Chance, who went 52-1 and tossed 17 no-hitters in high school and later won the 1964 Cy Young Award with the California Angels.

But preseason workouts in the high school gymnasium opened Kramer and assistant coach Ermando Simmons’ eyes. This 15-year-old was “throwin’ smoke” with a mean sweeping curveball/slider combination and, most importantly, throwing strikes.

Kramer was careful not to upset the chemistry of a talented team that went on to win the IC title, so Walter was the closer behind All-Gazette ace Jim Garvin (7-1) and Doug Miller (4-5) until finally making his first career against Black River in the Medina County Tournament late in the year.

Walter’s line on that rainy Saturday afternoon in Medina: Six innings, four hits and 14 strikeouts as the Bucks won 7-2.

“That was kind of interesting because when you get in there, you take some other kid’s place that thought he was going to be playing, which wasn’t too good,” Walter said about his freshman season. “I don’t think (I was intimidated). I was pretty used to playing in tournament games and stuff. I don’t remember anybody being upset.”

Kramer unleashed Walter in 1974. Walter went 9-3 with a 0.73 ERA, 0.86 WHIP and 107 strikeouts in 96 innings, tossed a no-hitter with 16 strikeouts against Black River in the Medina County Tournament, three-hit then-undefeated Elyria West and also hit .329 with 19 RBIs while starting at shortstop when he didn’t pitch.

Walter got stronger as the year went on, allowing two earned runs and striking out 70 over his final 11 appearances (58 innings).

“A lot of times it was fastball, fastball, curveball, strike three,” Kramer said matter-of-factly.

Next up was the magical season of 1975.

Walter, as expected, was the standout of an inexperienced but determined group that also featured first-team All-Gazette pick Bill Peters (1B), second-team choices Paul Schumaker (C) and Scott Yuhas (OF), plus Scott Miller (SS/2B/P) and Larry Brubaker (OF), who both hit north of .450 in the tournament.

Walter doesn’t remember much before regionals, as he got sectional wins over Gott-led Wellington (7 innings, 1 run, 4 hits, 7 strikeouts), Firelands (4, 0, 1, 3) and Brooklyn (7, 1, 5, 8) and district triumphs over Holy Name (7, 1, 2, 5) and defending regional qualifier Benedictine (7, 1, 3, 9). Walter also doesn’t remember the day after Benedictine, when he was 3-for-4 with a home run and five RBIs against Black River.

Instead he recalled a 3-2 regional semifinal triumph over defending state runner-up Triway.

Walter was cruising and allowed only one hit — a bunt single by Wayne County legend Keith Snoddy — over the final 5⅓ innings, but an infield error began the seventh and Walter followed by throwing a come-backer over the head of first baseman Peters that made the score 3-2.

Undeterred, Walter got a strikeout and pop-up to end the game.

“I thought, ‘I could blow this right here,”’ Walter said with a chuckle. “I settled down, I guess, and the next guy popped up on the infield and I got myself out of trouble.

“We played those guys all the time in hot stove, too, and those guys beat me 1-0 in hot stove. They had a heckuva team.”

In what is now taboo because state rules only permit a pitcher to throw 10 innings over 72 hours, the long-haired Walter took the mound the next day in the regional championship against Jefferson Area.

Kramer and Walter both downplayed pitching on back-to-back days. Elite players back then naturally could pull it off, and Walter always believed he was better on short rest because his rubber arm and strong legs already were loose. All that was needed was an Icy Hot massage the night before.

True to his belief, Walter was electric, tossing a three-hitter with seven strikeouts and scoring two runs as Buckeye won 4-0.

“They fed off each other, and they fed off Jim Walter,” Kramer said. “Losing never entered his mind because when he went out to pitch, he knew he was going to win. He didn’t always, but he did most of the time. The other kids, they picked up on that.

“It’s the old confidence factor. If you think you can, you can. If you’re not sure, you don’t. He was, ‘You can.’”

The season ended against Fireovid and Bryan in Columbus. The semifinal was rained out twice, forcing Buckeye to drive home and then back to Columbus each time. Walter then sat through another rain delay and struggled with a higher mound, but still allowed only one earned run on six hits. The problem was Fireovid countered with a 74-pitch three-hitter and Bryan won 4-0.

Bryan went on to win the championship, but Walter still believes his team did all it could.

“I don’t know how we’d ever score off (Fireovid), even if I would have pitched good,” he said.” It was pretty tough to beat him. What’d we have, (three) hits? He was pretty tough. I really feel like, ‘What could we have done?’ It would have had to been a 1-0 game somehow.”

In the 1975 tournament, Walter was 7-1 with a 0.52 ERA, 0.77 WHIP and 48 strikeouts in 53 innings. For the season, he was 12-1 with a 0.40 ERA, 0.79 WHIP and 101 strikeouts in 87 innings. The ERA, which was revised after a careful review of Kramer’s scorebook, was the county season record until last spring, while the win total remains shared with Highland’s Mike Houska (1978).

Walter also batted .464 (39-for-84) with four doubles, two triples, four home runs, 28 RBIs, 28 runs and only five strikeouts in 99 plate appearances, cementing his place as an elite player.

“When he started the game, we expected to win,” Kramer said. “You expected him to do it, and he expected to do it. He relished the kids relying on him. Some kids don’t like that pressure, but that was when he played his best.”

The pressure increased in Walter’s senior season. The Bucks were talented, with many key players from the 1977 state semifinal team in the lineup, but the schedule was loaded and talented rival Highland, which went a school-record 24-4, was set to challenge for IC supremacy before it left for the Suburban League that fall.

Walter was again dominant, going 9-4 with a 1.40 ERA and a county-record 147 strikeouts in 99 innings. His most notable start was May 12 at South Amherst, when he plunked the first batter but was perfect the rest of the way for his second career no-hitter.

Walter also had a three-inning, 10-strikeout save against Norwayne and allowed three hits in a 2-1 win over Wadsworth, which featured future MLB player Scott Fletcher (2-for-3), fellow Medina County Sports Hall of Famers Bill Goddard (0-for-3) and Andy Graham (0-for-2) and big-time hitter Ron Benek (1-for-3). That Grizzlies team held the area record for wins (26) until this spring.

Hitting was where Walter really made his mark, though, as he had a .522 batting average, .578 on-base percentage, .967 slugging percentage and then-county marks for home runs (9) and RBIs (38). He also scored 30 runs, stroked 11 doubles, swiped 22 bags and struck out four times in 104 plate appearances.

While leading the Bucks to an 18-10 record, Walter, whose short, line-drive swing complemented his clean, quick pitching mechanics, had a 14-game hitting streak, 16 multi-hit games, three four-hit games, seven games with three or more RBIs and hit a home run five times in a seven-game stretch from April 30 to May 13.

“I liked hitting probably just as much,” he said.

The only negative Walter recalled was losing for the third time that season to Independence, 5-3, in Buckeye’s first tournament game. Wadsworth got its revenge in the county tournament, and Walter also was knocked around against Highland on May 26, putting the Bucks in a desperate situation in the IC race.

Like he always did, Walter bounced back. He only pitched one inning — and struck out the side, no less — but went 4-for-5 with two RBIs and three runs as Buckeye defeated Avon (5-2) and South Amherst (11-4) to set up a June 4 date in Hinckley Township against Highland.

Joe Walter and Jerry Young pitched the first four innings because Kramer wanted to set up his fireballer by throwing “junk”. Highland countered with ace Bob Jones, who won 20 career games, but Jim Walter’s two-run triple in the third and home run in the sixth gave the Bucks all the runs they needed.

Walter took care of the rest, allowing three hits, walking none and striking out four over the final three innings. He finished his career by inducing a double-play ball with the tying run on deck.

Buckeye secured a share of the IC championship.

“He had really good control, and it’s one of those things,” Kramer said. “A lot of kids in high school threw as hard as he did, but didn’t have good control because they were trying to throw it too hard. He naturally had a really good arm and he threw strikes.”

Life after baseball

Walter’s all-around skill set caught the eye of local professional scouts, who told Kramer that Walter had potential but added they didn’t like his 5-9 height. Walter remembers talking to the San Francisco Giants, but not any college programs because school didn’t interest him anymore.

Kramer tried anyway, and through a connection from Vic Feist, the ace of Buckeye’s 1971 regional runner-up team, got Walter a workout with ValdostaState. The university agreed to fly Walter in for a tryout over Easter break.

Breaking the news didn’t go as Kramer planned.

“I was all excited for Jim and I was going to tell him the next day at school,” Kramer recalled. “He was in study hall, and I went out, got him in the hallway and said, ‘Guess what? I think we can get you a scholarship to play baseball,’ He was excited until I told him ValdostaState in Georgia, and he kind of got this funny look on his face. I asked, ‘What’s the problem?’ and he replied, ‘I don’t know if I want to go to school down there.”’

Walter rarely second-guesses that decision, even today. He already was working for Tighe, and the growing HVAC industry appealed to him because it was clean work, unlike construction, and paid well.

So Walter worked for Tighe for the next six or seven years while also playing for the Medina Merchants of the Greater Akron AA Amateur League, which featured dozens of local college players and a handful of future minor-leaguers. He led a team that also featured Al Kiene (Buckeye), Bob Alspach (Medina), Ted Given (Wadsworth), Mark Andos (Buckeye) and player-coach Mike McMullen (Medina) in wins multiple times and was named to the league’s all-star team alongside Kiene in 1978.

Walter moved on to Sisler Heating and Cooling and worked there for 15 years. He then started his own business, Walter Heating and Cooling, in 1998 and now has five employees.

Word-of-mouth recommendations are all Walter relies on — most of the work is new construction — and he is in the process of moving out of Medina County for the first time in his life, though Sullivan Township in Ashland County is not far away from Spencer Township.

Despite hanging up his cleats long ago, Buckeye baseball still has a cherished place in Walter’s heart. He has a box full of newspaper articles and momentos saved by his mother — highlighted by his warm-up jacket, ball cap and 1975 regional tournament game balls — and still follows county baseball from afar. He took a particular interest in Wadsworth’s undefeated regular season this spring.

The Grizzlies’ success brought back memories of his own. They reminded him not of how great he was, but how much fun he had.

“Making the state in high school was the best out of everything, especially with a lot of guys I had played with since 8, 9, 10 years old,” he said. “It definitely is something I’ve never forgotten about.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


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Golf: Spencer Koch breaks Fox Meadow course record held by his father

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MONTVILLE TWP. — Spencer Koch was wound so tightly as dusk approached Wednesday, he walked off the Fox Meadow Country Club course late in the round, went home and grabbed his oldest brother, Josh, before finishing.

Spencer wanted to make sure someone had video of history.

Playing with childhood friend Sean Gordon, the 18-year-old recorded an 11-under-par 61 to surpass his father, Medicus Golf founder Bob Koch, as course record holder.

Koch is still having a hard time believing what he accomplished.

“Oh, man, to be honest, I walked off the course and really didn’t know,” he said before immediately acknowledging he did, in fact, know. “It was the weirdest thing ever. I had to tell myself, ‘I just shot 61.’ It definitely was pretty weird. It took a little bit to kind of kick in, I guess.”

Koch lives in the housing development that surrounds the 6,917-yard layout and has played it hundreds of times. He knew something magical could be in the works when he hit a 3-wood to within 3 feet on the 595-yard, par-5 fifth hole and knew he was on fire after a birdie on No. 10.

The Long Beach State recruit, who left Medina High after his sophomore year to focus on skill development in Florida during the winter months, had 10 birdies, an eagle, a bogey and six pars. He hit 15 greens and 13 of 14 fairways while playing from the back tees.

Koch ended the evening in style, with a birdie on 18.

“You’ve just gotta get in a zone, honestly,” the 2013 second-team All-Ohioan said. “I was in a zone out there and really didn’t think about the score as much as getting the ball in the hole, especially in the last stretch. I was more nervous than thinking about my actual score.

“It was definitely hard on the last four or five holes. Definitely, I was super nervous. On 16, when I hit it to 5 feet, that’s when I was like, ‘Oh, my gosh. I birdie one more and it’s a course record.’ I was trying to keep my nerves, but I was freaking out the whole time. There was not one point where I was like, ‘Oh, I feel relaxed.’”

Gordon, who will play for former Medina coach Jeanne Pritchard at Wayne College, shot 75 and abided by the timeless superstition of not talking to Koch — like the pitcher on the verge of a no-hitter.

Koch had impressive shots other than the pin-seeker on No. 5. None was more important than saving par after hitting into a hazard on No. 12. The save snared momentum for a 25-foot birdie putt on the next hole.

That’s about the point when things got serious.

“After 17, I walked off the green and told Sean, ‘I’m 10 under right now. That’s ridiculous,’” Koch said.

Not many people, let alone 18-year-olds, shoot 61. Koch knows this as well as anyone and can’t wait to see what he can accomplish at Long Beach State in the fall.

“It made me realize how good I probably could be,” he said. “Sixty-one is real low. Not many people can go out and say they shot 61.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


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Boys basketball: Highland selects Adam Cestaro as new coach

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GRANGER TWP. — A familiar face within the Highland community has been named the 19th boys basketball coach in school history.

Already in the loop as a high school history teacher and freshman coach, Adam Cestaro accepted the school’s offer Friday after a drawn-out interview process.

The 35-year-old St. Vincent-St. Mary High graduate replaces Michael Murphy, who went 47-24 over three seasons.

“Probably the biggest thing being at Highland all these years, I’ve learned Highland Schools do everything first class,” he said. “You look at the school building we’re in, the arts, the academics and the football stadium we’re building. We need to build a consistent, long-term basketball program that is on par with those other aspects.”

Cestaro has been teaching at Highland since 2003 and was junior varsity coach under Chris Capannola and Chris Kestner. He then moved to Hoban as an assistant under T.K. Griffith for five seasons before returning to the Hornets as freshman coach last winter.

Murphy resigned in April, and Highland took an unusually long time to name his replacement. Cestaro unofficially ran the program in the meantime and set up a summer schedule before the interim tag was lifted.

“My biggest thing was knowing the kids and how to work with them for a year,” he said. “I wanted to make sure we got things accomplished in the spring and summertime. Even if we weren’t working on particulars, we’d be working on skill development, getting in the gym, getting in a summer league, coming together as a program, making teammates better and getting the most out of the offseason.”

The Hornets were decimated by graduation after going 18-7 last season. Four-year starters Brogan Scott (1,478 career points) and Tanner Houska (1,024) are gone, as are versatile swingman Kevin Greenhoe (11.2 ppg, 4.5 rpg, 2.1 apg) and marksman Ben Hauser (9.4, 30 3-pointers).

Only 149 points are slated to return, led by 6-foot-6 senior center Joe Wiencek (3.1 ppg, 4.4 rpg) and generously listed 6-2 senior backup and All-Ohio offensive lineman Tyler Frederick (1.5, 1.6).

The good news lies with a junior varsity that rebounded from a slow start to finish 11-10. Isaac Matejin worked into the back end of the varsity rotation, while Collin Levandowski, Brandon Shaw, Ethan Yerian and Kyle Meissner also saw time. Sophomore Collin Rittman will be another name to watch.

“You keep the standards high,” Cestaro said. “One of our big standards has been being a great teammate. Basketball is a team game, and one thing we really try to talk about is if you’re always focused on yourself all the time, you lose sight of how to make your teammates better.

“(It’s) the next-man up mentality. We definitely had a great senior class, but this group this year can be a good group, too. They’ve waited their turn and are ready to show what they can do. In a good basketball program, you have to do that sometimes.”

Cestaro, who is married with a son and lives in Green, will be the Highland’s eighth coach since 2000. He’s aware of that fact and plans on sticking around for a long time.

He also feels it is an exciting time with the overhauled Suburban League set to debut. The Hornets will be in the small-school American Division alongside Copley (13-10 in 2014-15), Kent Roosevelt (14-8), Tallmadge (17-8), Revere (6-18), Aurora (9-14) and Barberton (5-16).

“You don’t like that you’re losing some of the traditional rivals because it’s nice to play Wadsworth and Green twice a year in the sense you have the familiarity and you like to compete with programs like that,” he said. “On the other hand, the new Suburban League is divided up by school size better. We’re excited to get into a new new-look league and make our stamp.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


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Ohio Open: Parker Hewit frustrated with one of those days

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WESTFIELD CENTER — Only a talented 25-year-old playing on his home course could find fault after shooting 67.

Parker Hewit

Parker Hewit

That was how Westfield Center native Parker Hewit summarized the first round of the 95th Ohio Open, as the former Cloverleaf High and Bowling Green State star led 16 Medina County participants on a rainy and unseasonably nippy Monday at Westfield Group Country Club.

Hewit played the slightly tougher South Course — all 36 holes of the two-course facility are used for the first two rounds — at 3-under par, putting him five strokes behind 42-year-old defending champion and Dakotas Tour standout Tim Ailes.

“It was a little disappointing,” said Hewit, who finished 13th in 2014. “Everything was missing right today for whatever reason. I was hitting range balls, same thing. I must have hit 100 range balls that all had the same out to the right, out to the right, so that was frustrating.

“I hit in the hazard on (No.) 7, which was my 16th hole, and bogeyed (No.) 9, which was my 18th hole, so I had two bogeys. I didn’t do anything special today with the exception of the last couple holes hitting it out to the right.”

Hewit and Montville Township residents Pete Skirpstas (1 under), Austin Schreiber (1 under) and Spencer Koch (1 under) were the only county players to break par, while Brunswick resident and Cleveland State coach Steve Weir (even), Medina’s Kyle Richardson (1 over) and Patrick Luth (1 over), Montville Township’s Bob Koch (1 over) and Howard Clendenin (2 over) and Wadsworth’s Daniel Terry (2 over) weren’t far behind.

The field will be narrowed to 60 players following the second round today. A threat of scattered thunderstorms could wreck havoc on later tee times, much like increasing drizzle did Monday.

Hewit began on the back nine of the 6,546-yard, par-70 South and was in cruise control by making the turn at 1 under. He then took advantage of what he considered an easier stretch and moved to 4 under through 15 holes before finishing bogey, birdie, bogey.

Spencer Koch of Montville Township chips on the 16th hole on the Westfield Group Country Club’s South Course during the first round of the Ohio Open. (RON SCHWANE / GAZETTE)

Spencer Koch of Montville Township chips on the 16th hole on the Westfield Group Country Club’s South Course during the first round of the Ohio Open. (RON SCHWANE / GAZETTE)

The final three holes were why the bearded right-hander took the what-if approach, though he backed off initial frustration the more he recapped the round.

“It was one of those days where I just didn’t have anything going,” Hewit said. “That being said, I didn’t shoot myself out of it. I’m going to have to get a good one (today), for sure, but it was a little tough.”

Skirpstas, Spencer Koch and Schreiber each had a different story.

For the always-confident Skirpstas, who spent the winter competing on the PGA Tour Latinoamérica, Monday was about holding his ground after initially struggling with his driver on the South.

The former Mount Olive (N.C.) standout began on No. 10 and had three bogeys and two birdies over his first seven holes, but five straight pars and a needed birdie on the par-4 No. 4 put him in position.

“I’m more happy with the finish and not too terribly disappointed with the start considering I didn’t see the fairway until about No. 13 or No. 14,” the 27-year-old quipped. “I didn’t realize I was playing Westfield for about three hours because I was in the trees.

“(I rebounded because of) will power — straight will power. I kept to my routine and I kept picturing the shot I wanted to hit. Somewhere along the line I started hitting the shots I was picturing.”

Like Hewit, Koch instantly brought up his finish.

The Long Beach State recruit, who shot 61 at Fox Meadow Country Club earlier this month, used his putting to get to 2 under through 12 holes before a pair of bogeys over the final six got in the way.

The right-hander took the bumps in stride, however, and drilled a medium-range par save to end the afternoon.

“I finished terribly, honestly,” he said. “I didn’t do too many good shots the last couple holes. I’m lucky I made that putt, but I hit it good (overall) throughout the day and I chipped it pretty good. I didn’t hit my approach shots too close, but 69 is pretty strong. I’ll take it.”

Schreiber rallied like crazy on the South.

The Ashland standout and academic All-Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference selection began with two birdies before playing the next 12 holes 4 over. Knowing anything north of par wasn’t going to be acceptable, Schreiber birdied 15, 16 and 18.

The finish was what the easygoing, fast-talking right-hander needed.

“That was a good confidence boost going into (today),” he said. “The scores are so low, (today) is a big day and you have to shoot under par to stay relevant and make the cut.

“In past years, either at the Ohio Am or other tournaments, I always seem to get bad luck on tee times. I finally got done on a front nine with no rain.”

Other county golfers who competed were Mark Scott (Medina, 3 over), Bob Henighan (Medina, 4 over), Sam Thies (Montville Township, 5 over), Jason Martin (Westfield Center, 7 over), Mike King (Seville, 8 over), Mike Bishop (Medina, 8 over), Evan Schreck (Montville Township, 11 over) and Cody Geisler (Westfield Center, 13 over).

Only 40 of the 249 players broke par, with the South playing a half-stroke more difficult than the North.

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


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Ohio Open: Thunderstorms suspend play

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WESTFIELD CENTER — Northeast Ohio weather forecasters were the stars of the Ohio Open on Tuesday, as scattered thunderstorms were right on cue and suspended second-round action at 2:50 p.m.

Parker Hewit

Parker Hewit

Approximately 120 players will finish their rounds beginning at 8:30 this morning. The field then will be trimmed to 60, including ties, before the final round tees off at 1 o’clock.

Course officials also elected to move the final round to the flatter North Course, which has better drainage than the rolling landscape of the South.

Westfield Center’s Parker Hewit (3-under par) appears safe with the cut projected to be around 1 under, but the fates of Montville Township residents Pete Skirpstas, Austin Schreiber, Spencer Koch and Howard Clendenin and Medina’s Patrick Luth and Kyle Richardson — all were 2 over or better after the first round — are in limbo heading into today.

Brunswick native and Cleveland State coach Steve Weir (even) and Montville Township resident Bob Koch (1 over) completed the second round on the bubble.

Former Uniontown Lake High star Jake McBride technically is in first place at 10 under, but first-round leader and defending champion Tim Ailes, who shot an 8-under 64 Monday, was only three holes into his day when play was suspended.

“At first it was sunny and everyone said it was going to rain, but I didn’t think we were going to get the rain we did,” said Schreiber, who has 12 holes remaining in the second round. “You look up, the sky started turning back and, before you knew it, it was a straight-up downpour. It was brutal.”

Hewit again struggled to find positives Tuesday after shooting an even-par 72 on the North Course, as the story was similar to his first round with a strong start and so-so finish.

The former Bowling Green State standout had four birdies on the front nine to move to 5 under and was in position to contend for a top-10 spot in the standings before the woes popped up.

Hewit’s back nine wasn’t a disaster with eight pars and a double-bogey on No. 18, but the 25-year-old had higher expectations than simply playing around par on his home course.

“I played terrible all day,” Hewit said. “I’ve hit some of the worst shots I’ve hit in I don’t know how long. It was bad.

“When you hit it that bad, you can’t expect any breaks. I got zero breaks today. I putted into the lip of the bunker on 18. It was just bad. It was just not good.”

The rest of the county players were competing for pride, and the majority posted improved scores.

Bob Henighan (Medina, two-day 145), Black River High graduate David Morgan (Wellington, 147), Mark Scott (Medina, 148), Mike Bishop (Medina, 154) and Evan Schreck (Montville Township, 160) equaled or bettered their first-round scores in relation to par. Wadsworth’s Daniel Terry (149) and Medina’s Sam Thies (154) also competed.

Other county players who didn’t complete the second round were Westfield Center’s Jason Martin and Cody Geisler and Seville’s Mike King.

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


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Golf: Record day for Hewit, county golfer makes history at Westfield

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WESTFIELD CENTER — Parker Hewit had a heart-to-heart with himself, cleared his head and made history.

Parker Hewit of Westfield Center tees off on the 13th hole on the Westfield Group Country Club’s North Course during the final round of the Ohio Open. Hewit put together a history-making  day to finish in a tie for fifth. (RON SCHWANE / GAZETTE)

Parker Hewit of Westfield Center tees off on the 13th hole on the Westfield Group Country Club’s North Course during the final round of the Ohio Open. Hewit put together a history-making day to finish in a tie for fifth. (RON SCHWANE / GAZETTE)

The Westfield Center native didn’t win the 95th Ohio Open — he tied for fifth — but sent Westfield Group Country Club abuzz Wednesday with a finish he’ll remember for years.

Complete with a 40-foot eagle putt, near-hole-in-one and a blistering 28 on the front nine, Hewit tied the North Course record with a 9-under-par 63. He now owns both course records at the facility after shooting an 8-under 62 on the South Course in recent years.

The 25-year-old understandably was beaming despite ultimately falling three strokes shy of two-time Ohio Open champion and 2010 NAIA national medalist Justin Lower (three-day 199).

“I still can’t believe it,” Hewit said. “I shot 28 on that (front) side. It was nice.”

Hewit was frustrated over the first two days and entered the final round tied for 25th at 3 under. The former Cloverleaf High and Bowling Green State star’s body language was tense because he’s never struggled at Westfield in organized competition dating to high school.

The look-in-the-mirror moment happened Tuesday evening. Hewit recognized his attitude needed to change, and he sent texts to his caddy, Tom Penrose, to apologize for “immature” and “childish” behavior.

The sun that finally broke through after a previously rainy 48 hours shined directly on Hewit, who began on the 10th tee and caught fire once he birdied the par-4 18th.

Over his final 10 holes, the long-hitting right-hander was 9 under. To put that into perspective, only 13 players were 9 under or better for the 72-hole tournament.

“I told (Penrose) that no matter what happened, we were just going to have fun and focus on the shots and not about what happened,” Hewit said. “I think that had a lot to do with it. I turned at 1 under (for the day). I didn’t get mad. I didn’t throw any clubs. … I knew that (score) wasn’t good enough, but I was still positive.”

Sitting at 4 under overall and well behind the leaders at that point, Hewit went for broke and drove the green on the par-4 No. 1. The ball rolled back onto the fringe, setting up a breaking 40-foot putt.

Even Hewit didn’t have grand expectations.

“I’m thinking, ‘I’ll be doing pretty good just to two-putt this,”’ he said. “I end up hitting it, I’m kind of walking after it and about halfway there, I’m like, ‘This looks OK,’ and it ends up going in.”

Hewit followed with a near-ace on No. 2 and drilled another long putt for a birdie on the par-4 fifth. He then recorded a par on No. 6 before finishing birdie, birdie, eagle.

Hewit was in one of the first groups to finish, leading to two hours worth of congratulatory handshakes as he mingled around the clubhouse.

“I stayed positive,” he said. “I didn’t really get down on myself. I don’t how it happened.”

“It shows you how important your mental (approach) is, like body language,” he added. “It goes a really long way to stay positive, especially in golf. I think that was the biggest difference.”

Hewit was one of a handful of players who made the cut but didn’t have to complete the second round earlier Wednesday. The rest of the Medina County field wasn’t as fortunate.

Brunswick resident Steve Weir was next in line. The Cleveland State coach tied for 45th with a three-day 213 after being one of the final competitors to make the 66-player cut at even par.

Kyle Richardson (T-54th, 215), Howard Clendenin (T-58th, 216) and Spencer Koch (64th, 218) rounded out area players who also made the cut, while fellow Montville Township residents Bob Koch (1 over), Austin Schreiber (2 over) and Pete Skirpstas (2 over) narrowly missed.

Patrick Luth (Medina, 4 over), Mike King (Seville, 14 over), Jason Martin (Westfield Center, 16 over) and Cody Geisler (Westfield Center, 29 over) also completed the second round earlier in the day.

Notes

More than 40 Westfield Group Country Club employees worked Tuesday night and early Wednesday morning on preparing the North Course for final-round play.

Many players complimented the conditions unprovoked when they turned in their scorecards.

“Unbelievable. I don’t know they did it,” Hewit said. “They might have all slept in the North Course maintenance barn. Hats off to those guys. Obviously you’re going to have some spots that were wet, but the greens were phenomenal.”

• Former Mayfield High and University of Rochester standout Nick Palladino led for most of the afternoon before a bogey on No. 18 opened the door for a trailing Lower. The former Malone University standout birdied Nos. 14, 15 and 16 to take the lead for good.

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


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Boys basketball: Matt Saunders out, Tom Harrington in at Buckeye

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YORK TWP. — The opportunities were too enticing to ignore.

At 31 years old, Buckeye boys basketball coach Matt Saunders realized an offer to become assistant principal at Barberton Elementary West was a rarity for an educator his age.

At 32, Brunswick assistant coach Tom Harrington saw gym teacher and head basketball coach openings at a neighboring school. That combination doesn’t present itself often, either.

Matt Saunders

Matt Saunders

Tom Harrington

Tom Harrington

The end results: Saunders is hanging up his whistle to further his professional career and Harrington, the former Highland coach, is back in charge of a Medina County program while also replacing Saunders as a teacher.

“It came down to there’s a teaching position available, and it’s very important to teach in the same school district you coach in,” Harrington said. “I know being in Medina County that Buckeye is excellent academically. That was very attractive, and I know that there’s a great sense of community pride there. You add all those things together and I felt like that was a great fit for myself and my family.”

Harrington, who lives in Medina and is married with two children, was longtime Blue Devils coach Joe Mackey’s lead assistant the past five years — he added he has a special place in his heart for Mackey and the Brunswick community — and compiled a 68-12 record as the Blue Devils’ junior varsity coach before taking over Highland for the 2009-10 season.

A teaching position never opened at Highland, however, giving way for Harrington’s return to Brunswick. The Hornets went 8-14 in his lone season but posted a six-win improvement over the prior year and set a school record for defensive scoring average (46.6).

The former Holy Name and Baldwin Wallace point guard takes over an experienced Buckeye roster that went 15-8 and finished second in the Patriot Athletic Conference Stars Division last winter. All-Gazette guard Nathan Polidori (19.1 ppg, 3.3 apg, 2.7 spg), center Nick Wills (8.8, 5.0 rpg) and forward Liam Murray (7.8, 4.8) are returning starters, while the junior varsity compiled a sparkling 19-3 record.

“I know they’ve been very successful the last several years, so that was something that also was attractive to me throughout this whole process,” Harrington said. “To know that there’s a winning mentality, that’s invaluable. I’m looking forward to hopefully coming in and implementing our system and getting the most out of the kids both as people and as basketball players.”

Saunders departs with an 81-76 record over seven seasons. In 2013-14, the Bucks broke a 56-year-old school record for wins with 21 and set another standard with a 47.0 defensive average. Saunders was Gazette Winter Coach of the Year and shared Ohio Division II Coach of the Year honors.

The Rocky River native spent the last two years at Baldwin Wallace University working toward an administrative license. In what he called “a last-minute thing,” Saunders became aware of the Barberton opening, applied, interviewed twice and was offered the job.

The Medina resident’s decision came quickly out of necessity, but that didn’t make it any less difficult.

“For one, we put that program in a position where it can have sustained success going forward, and watching them realize that success will be enjoyable for me,” said Saunders, who added he’s confident Harrington will take the program to greater success. “The hardest thing for me was the senior group because I had those guys as a teacher since they were in fourth grade. All of my eight years at Buckeye were with that group, so that was hard calling those kids and letting them know why I was leaving and explaining to them that the expectation for them is still really high.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


New-look Suburban League promises to be interesting

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Behind-the-scenes work two years in the making culminates Friday when the new-look Suburban League gets completely under way with the opening kickoffs of the football season.

“Intriguing” is the first word that comes to mind.

The big-school, small-school divisions mirror a developing trend throughout Ohio. Copley, Revere, Tallmadge and, up until recently, Highland will get to battle schools their size for the first time in decades, while Wadsworth must knock heads with the big boys consistently for the first time since leaving the Pioneer Conference in 1984.

How long the two-division SL will last will be the burning question, because history shows stability is never a guarantee. The exception is when multiple rural communities are jam-packed into one county (see the neighboring Wayne County Athletic League founded in the 1920s).

Entering its 67th season, the SL is a testament to resiliency despite only one school, Copley, having been in the fold since 1949 (Nordonia and Hudson left but returned). A lot of that has to do with the suburbs of Akron, as 14-of-15 schools either are located within Summit County or bordering it. Even former longtime members such as Green (1949-2015), Coventry (1969-83), Woodridge (1958-78) and Norton (1972-2005) fit the mold.

The reasonable travel is a major sticking point as to why the SL expanded from its traditional eight-team format, as Cuyahoga Falls, North Royalton, Hudson, Twinsburg and Stow were tired of having to bus teams to Mentor, Shaker Heights, Garfield Heights and Elyria in the annoyingly confusing (and thankfully now-defunct) Northeast Ohio Conference, where divisions were based on strength of sport and not geography. Rivalries never developed and athletic budgets were stretched because, seriously, what average fan in his right mind would drive an hour to watch two bad teams duke it out?

Kent Roosevelt had outgrown the Portage Trail Conference as the big fish in a small pond. Aurora had a similar reason to leave the Cuyahoga/Geauga/Lake county-based Chagrin Valley Conference, but travel was the largest concern.

So, here we are: Brecksville, Cuyahoga Falls, Hudson, North Royalton, Nordonia, Twinsburg, Stow and Wadsworth in the National Division; Aurora, Barberton, Copley, Highland, Revere, Roosevelt and Tallmadge in the American. Goodbye, Cloverleaf and Green, and best of luck to you.

With six former NOC schools in the National Division, the SL’s premier division is going to be awesome in many sports.

Getting fantastic-across-the-board Brecksville from the Southwestern Conference was a big coup. The Bees’ gymnastics team has won a gaudy 12 straight state championships, and the wrestling program could end Wadsworth’s 23-year reign atop the circuit.

Though a given early on the process, grabbing Hudson was huge, too, as the Explorers were regional participants in a half-dozen sports in 2014-15.

Don’t sleep on North Royalton’s girls programs, either. The same goes for Twinsburg track and field and girls basketball and Stow softball. Add them to Wadsworth and Nordonia’s prowess — they combined for 10 SL titles last season — and the National Division can stake a claim as one of the deepest public school leagues in Northeast Ohio (though boys basketball doesn’t look particularly promising this year).

The same can’t be said for the American Division, which feels like an afterthought despite legitimate depth in football, boys soccer and baseball and a pair of state girls golf powers in Highland and Kent Roosevelt.

Grouping longtime SL members Copley, Highland, Revere and Tallmadge made perfect sense, as all four are D-II/III football schools and don’t have a ton of room to grow much larger. The latter two in particular will benefit immensely as the smallest in the league.
The elephants in the room are the long-term viabilities of Aurora, Roosevelt and Barberton.

Aurora was no doubt recruited for its top-notch football program, which has won 104 games and four regional titles over the last 10 seasons. Outside of that and a state-level baseball team, however, the Greenmen are non-descript in many sports.

The same goes for Barberton, whose lack of talent other than a token basketball, wrestling or softball team barely made the Magics better than the school they replaced, Norton, when they were in the SL from 2005-11. They’re not much of an upgrade from Cloverleaf — dead last in 11-of-19 sports in 2014-15 — either.
Roosevelt had a bunch of paper titles while in the PTC Metro Division, but what did they mean, really? The Rough Riders were beating the pulp out of the Streetsboros, Springfields and Coventrys of the world, and when’s the last time anyone heard anything from them in the postseason on a consistent basis?

In essence, Roosevelt was to the PTC what Buckeye is to the Patriot Athletic Conference, but the Rough Riders will have a chip on their shoulders and make the American Division stronger if they can sustain a winning tradition. They are clearly the biggest unknown.

The other lingering question is finding an eighth team, because playing a non-league football game in the heart of the season against a random opponent (New Philadelphia at Tallmadge, Akron North at Barberton, Garfield Heights at Kent Roosevelt, Warrensville Heights at Revere and Aurora, Copley at Bedford, etc.) is unnatural and, to be blunt, a financial hit.

Bedford, CVCA, Maple Heights and Northwest expressed interest, but none garnered enough votes among the current SL schools for approval, resulting in the seven-team awkwardness. Travel is a concern with Bedford, Maple Heights and Northwest, while athletic directors would never admit that CVCA being a private school scared them off.

The Royals would be a great fit, however, as they are located in Cuyahoga Falls and lose a lot of potential athletes to parochial power Walsh Jesuit, which is located across the road. CVCA is strong in cross country/track, wrestling and basketball, but not exactly a juggernaut overall.

Luckily, SL Commissioner Keith Walker said finding an eighth team for the American Division is a priority.

Time will tell if all the work was worth it. At the very least, this corner is betting on the National Division lasting for a very long time.



Basketball: Ashland basketball lands Jodi Johnson

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WADSWORTH — The Ashland women’s basketball program snared another big fish.

Jodi Johnson

Jodi Johnson

Wadsworth first-team All-Ohioan Jodi Johnson is going to give up volleyball, as the senior accepted the Division II school’s partial scholarship offer that increases with each school year.

Johnson was so dead set on Ashland there weren’t any other serious contenders for her services.

“I got to play with some of the girls on the team, and I actually know one of them (West Holmes High graduate Laina Snyder), so they really helped me get to know other teammates,” Johnson said Tuesday. “And, obviously, the coaching staff is really nice.”

The Wadsworth connection to the Eagles began with Lindsay Tenyak, a starter for Ashland’s 2013 national championship team. Fellow former Gazette MVP Taylor Woods was next in line, becoming the school’s all-time leading 3-point shooter.

Johnson naturally got a glowing scouting report from Tenyak, now a teacher at Wadsworth’s Lincoln Elementary, and getting another inside scoop from Snyder, Ashland’s second-leading scorer as a freshman who knows Johnson through Wadsworth forward Laurel Palitto, was the deal-clincher.

“I felt like I’d fit in there, especially hearing from Lindsay Tenyak,” said Johnson, who has a 3.8 grade-point average and is undecided on a major. “She talked to me, and (Wadsworth) Coach (Andrew) Booth knows how things run there.”

Tradition didn’t hurt, either, as the Eagles reached the D-II regional finals and were ranked 22nd in the final national poll.

Associate head coach Robyn Fralick recently took over for the retired Sue Ramsey, giving Ashland continuity alongside talented young players such as Snyder and reigning Great Lakes Intercolleigate Athletic Conference Freshman of the Year Andi Daugherty.

“It’s awesome to know that we could do the same thing in the future,” Johnson said. “It’s crazy to think about, but that’s obviously something that’s going to be our goal.”

Johnson has helped the Grizzlies reach the Norwalk D-I Regional championship game in each of her first three varsity seasons. The 5-foot-11, 145-pounder blossomed last winter en route to earning Gazette MVP honors, averaging 15.3 points, 6.3 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 2.6 steals while also playing lock-tight defense.

In the meantime, she’ll star for the Wadsworth volleyball team during its quest to return to the regional finals.

“At the very end (of the process), we talked about walking on (to the volleyball team), but I decided to pass,” she said.

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


Football Week 1: All for one, Brunswick switches to flexbone

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Brunswick's new offense will center around quarterback Nick Horton (3) running the flexbone to Zach Snyder (34), Marc Davis (11) and Jordan Sadler. (RON SCHWANE / GAZETTE)

Brunswick’s new offense will center around quarterback Nick Horton (3) running the flexbone to Zach Snyder (34), Marc Davis (11) and Jordan Sadler. (RON SCHWANE / GAZETTE)

The 1978 Van Halen song “Runnin’ with the Devil” never had more meaning for the Brunswick football team.

History will be made on multiple levels tonight in Granger Township, where the Blue Devils will play neighboring Highland for the first time since 1986 and the gridiron christening of North Gateway Tire Field is getting most of the hype.

Brunswick wants to crash the party because of something it is itching to unveil as well: The triple-option-based flexbone offense.

Call them the Georgia Tech Blue Devils or Brunswick Midshipmen all you want. Frankly, they don’t give a darn.

“Brunswick’s known for being a smashmouth football team, running hard and playing until the whistle,” fullback Zach Snyder said. “For this offense and for this team, it’s a really good way to show what Brunswick football’s all about.”

In the offseason, sixth-year coach Luke Beal began searching for a new offense after his team graduated key players such as quarterback Steven Ficyk and All-Ohioans Gary Clift Jr. (WR) and Tom Knuff (OL). A five-wide, pass-happy philosophy didn’t fit the personnel anymore, and Beal was dead set on a long-term solution.

After Beal went to the lab and dissected his options, he came to the conclusion the flexbone was the perfect choice. If Hilliard Davidson could win a Division I state title using it, why couldn’t Brunswick successfully run the same offense?

After all, the Blue Devils had a rugged, run-first quarterback in Nick Horton (6-foot, 190 pounds). They also had a strong-legged fullback in Zach Snyder (5-11, 190), speed with Jordan Sadler (6-0, 200), Marc Davis (5-7, 165) and Jacob Martin (6-1, 185) and a smaller, quicker offensive line.

Beal then went to school. He studied Georgia Tech and Navy, two of the three teams in the Football Bowl Subdivision that run the offense. He watched online clinics. He picked the brains of colleges coaches from Capital and Muskingum. He got a hold of game film from high school counterparts from as far away as Louisiana.

Beal has gone all-in betting the flexbone will work.

“We’ll see a lot of spread, quarterback-run offenses, and that’s something a lot of people are ready to defend,” Beal said. “(The flexbone) is something that is a little more unorthodox and it’s a little more difficult to prepare for than some of those other (spread offenses).

“We didn’t just want to experiment. We wanted to go with a system that we knew if you install it the correct way, it’s going to work.”

What is the flexbone, exactly? A mad-scientist formula of part wishbone, part wing-T and part run-n-shoot, the base formation with two slotbacks, two wide receivers and a fullback was brought to prominence by Air Force coach Fisher DeBerry in the 1980s.

Paul Johnson then took over as unofficial ambassador and has won 165 games in 19 seasons while posting gaudy rushing statistics at Georgia Southern, Navy and Georgia Tech.

The flexbone is exciting for players and fans alike because so many things can happen on the same play.

On one snap, the fullback bulldozes up the gut. The next, the quarterback fakes the fullback dive and takes off unabated. Don’t forget about the trailing slotback ready for a pitch after his pre-snap motion, either.

The sexy-looking triple-option play — oftentimes called the veer — is only called approximately 25 percent of the time and can take time to develop. Quick-hitters such as tosses, dives, counters and options via leaving a defensive tackle unblocked (aka the midline option) are otherwise used to keep tempo varied.

“It’s not just a slow-down, hand-off-to-the-fullback-and-beat-people-up offense,” Beal said. “With any offense, you want to get the ball to your best players in space. This allows us to do that.”

Offensive linemen love the flexbone as well, mainly because their hands are in the dirt and bodies are leaning forward. Attacking and not reacting is the mentality.

While Brunswick still boasts the largest offensive line in Medina County (243-pound average), the flexbone allows smaller linemen to succeed. Most key blocks involve beating a defender to a spot instead of driving him off the line of scrimmage.

Guards still need to be bulky because they often are required to create the initial hole for the fullback, but the tackles and center need to be quick to reach linebackers in a hurry since one defensive lineman is left unblocked on nearly every play.

Fans should get used to seeing the big fellas running downfield because fumbles are bound to happen with such an aggressive philosophy. They should get used to seeing opposing D-lines sucking wind, too.

“I was surprised because it was new, but I knew that the coach makes the right decisions that are best for the team,” tackle Eddie Conway said. “It’s a faster-tempo offense and it’s good for tough, smaller guys that like to be smashmouth. That’s how I am, and that’s how the rest of the offense is.”

There’s that word “smashmouth” again. Players love the testosterone associated with it, but classifying the flexbone as a 3-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust offense would be a fatal mistake.

With so much potential ballhandling on a single play, defenses must tone down aggressiveness in favor of sticking to individual assignments religiously. The slightest mental breakdowns lead to monster gains.

The Blue Devils are banking on the opposition not taking them — or the flexbone — seriously. They’re also confident enough to not fall into the us-against-the-world trap.

Why? Because the “Read ’em and run” era has arrived.

“We have some things in store for teams,” Snyder said. “I think they’ll be surprised.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL: Zelinski throws two TDs as Highland christens new stadium with win

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GRANGER TWP. — For one night, Tyler Zelinski, Sam Jenkins and Taran Treb felt like royalty.

Highland quarterback Tyler Zelinski throws under heavy pressure from Brunswick’s Sam Sottosanti during the second quarter. AARON JOSEFCZYK/GAZETTE

The Highland football team successfully ignored the hype Friday, as Zelinski connected with Jenkins for two long touchdowns and Treb and the defense sparkled to lead the Hornets to a 17-7 non-league victory over neighboring Brunswick in the first game at North Gateway Tire Field.

More than 5,500 fans were in the house to witness Highland’s first win over Brunswick since 1984. It was the teams’ first meeting since 1986.

“This is just awesome,” said safety Treb, who had an interception and tackle for loss in his first career start. “We’ve been aiming for this since the beginning of summer. We always want to be the kings of Medina (County). At least that’s how I looked at it.

“This was our chance to put ourselves out there against a Division I team, Brunswick. We hope it will be a rivalry for the long term. It’s awesome right now. I can’t even describe it.”

The Hornets began the second half up 14-0 after 70- and 35-yard TD passes from Zelinski (6-for-15, 212 yards; 13 carries, 62 yards) to Jenkins (51 rushing yards, 111 receiving), but Brunswick made a few offensive adjustments — notably inserting 6-foot, 215-pounder Alex Gillespie at fullback — and made the game interesting.

Treb, Jacob Scavuzzo, Chris Petrilla, Michael Oriti and Co. had other plans when their backs were against the wall, as Brunswick had drives end on the Highland 31-, 15-, 32- and 28-yard lines. The final one proved key, as Treb intercepted Nick Horton with 11:30 to go.

The physical 6-0, 190-pound Horton had 110 yards on 24 grueling carries and accounted for eight of the Blue Devils’ 12 first downs. Fullbacks Zach Snyder (8 carries, 24 yards) and Gillespie (4, 18) had quiet nights, while wingbacks Marc Davis, Jacob Martin and Jordan Sadler combined for 21 yards on 13 carries in what amounted to a busted debut for the flexbone offense.

Brunswick’s lone score came when Horton ran a speed option left and pitched to reversing wide receiver Victor Talley, who lofted a pass to a wide-open Sadler for a 62-yard TD with 7:52 left.

Factor that out and the Blue Devils averaged 3.5 yards per play.

“If you looked at our scouting report, it had two things it said we had to do: We couldn’t give up big plays and we needed to be more physical,” said Brunswick coach Luke Beal, whose team was 3-for-13 on third-down conversions. “Those were the two glaring things that we did not do.”

“It’s a lot to prepare for,” Highland coach Mike Gibbons said. “It looks like our defense went out there and swarmed pretty well, but it was a work in progress. All summer long we attacked that option — tackling the dive, tackling the quarterback, tackling the pitch.”

Even so, Highland had to put away the game after the trick play and wasn’t exactly lighting the world on fire with a dormant rushing attack.

The offensive line, Jenkins and Zelinski picked up the intensity, however, and marched 56 yards in 11 plays, burning 4:33 off the clock and setting up a 26-yard Charles Howe field goal. Key plays included Zelinski scampering 23 yards on second-and-21 and Chris Burnside getting a first down on third-and-inches with 265-pound sophomore Joey D’Amico as the lead blocker out of the stack-I.

Highland’s Ethan Suran then recovered a fumble on the ensuing kickoff, and Zelinski soon thereafter took a knee inside the red zone to end the game.

“We executed plays better than they did,” said Zelinski, who nailed James Rogers for a 70-yard gain on the second play from scrimmage. “We did exactly what we were supposed to do. Now we’re going to celebrate for the next 20 minutes and then off to next week.”

The Hornets took the 14-0 lead 15 minutes into the game using the same play call on each score. Zelinski initiated by faking a jet sweep to a wide receiver, allowing running back Jenkins, normally a lead blocker, to slip into the flat and bolt up the sideline.

No one was in the zip code. Zelinski connected on probably the easiest TD passes of his life and Highland had a two-score lead 15:41 into the game.

Brunswick adjusted and saw sophomore safety Seth Clark intercept Zelinski in the end zone when the Hornets tried the play a third time, but the long TDs put the Blue Devils’ inconsistent offense behind the 8-ball.

“You’ve got to go one play after another,” said Zelinski, who also averaged 43.8 yards on six punts. “Our coaches kept telling us, ‘Don’t even think about the crowd, don’t think about the TV, don’t think about the reporters. Just focus on what we have to do and do it right.”’

In the end, that Hornets did enough right to walk away a winner.

“I think it’s just our atmosphere as a team,” Treb said. “It’s heart over everything else, and every man has each other’s back. It’s always been like that and it’s always going to be like that at Highland.

“The ‘H’ resembles what we are as a family and we have everyone’s back.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.

Highland 17, Brunswick 7

BRUNSWICK      0  0  0  7  —   7

HIGHLAND         7  7  0  3  — 17

First

H — Sam Jenkins 70 pass from Tyler Zelinski (Charles Howe kick), 7:25.

Second

H — Jenkins 35 pass from Zelinski (Howe kick), 8:19.

Fourth

B — Jordan Sadler 62 pass from Victor Talley (Tim Dick kick), 7:52.

H — Howe 26 field goal, 3:19.

 


Football Week 2: Jimmy Daw’s drawing attention, but he’s taking it in stride

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Jimmy Daw’s going to be Jimmy Daw whether he’s Jimmy Daw the standout running back or Jimmy Daw the regular ol’ high school student.

Medina football coach Dan Sutherland wouldn’t want his junior captain any other way.

(RON SCHWANE / GAZETTE)

(RON SCHWANE / GAZETTE)

Standing 6-foot-4 and checking in at 200 pounds with a frame to carry more, Daw is the lone returning skill position player for a Bees team that, by most accounts, is on the rise.

Bump into him on the street, however, and the average Joe wouldn’t guess that from Daw’s demeanor, although his athletic physique offers a hint.

“I always make a joke that if Jimmy Daw runs for 300 yards, he’s the exact same if he rushes for 0 yards,” Sutherland said. “I’ve seen Jimmy Daw come off the field after a 90-yard touchdown run and I’d say, ‘Great job, Jimmy,’ and he’d say, ‘Thanks, Coach.’ He’s even-keeled all the time, and that helps him. He never gets too high, he never gets too low. He just works hard.”

Daw fits the mold of an old-school soul with a new-school build, as running backs traditionally aren’t tall and long-legged. He looks more like a college tight end prospect — that’s what happened to 6-3, 230 Highland all-time leading rusher Chris Snook when he went to West Virginia six years ago — but Bowling Green State University offered Daw a scholarship, which remains on the table, to play running back.

Daw rushing for 805 yards and 12 touchdowns in nine starts as a sophomore didn’t look like much to the average fan, but Division I coaches took notice because the Bees played five playoff teams and two other opponents with winning records.

A 205-yard effort with a pair of breakaway touchdowns last week in a 56-13 win against Lakewood certainly didn’t hurt.

“It was an awesome experience for me,” Daw said of starting as a sophomore and seeing some part-time duty as a freshman. “To be in the program for three years has taught me a lot of things — to be tough and to be a leader on this team.

“Now I’m the big gun, so everyone’s smaller than me. I’m turning into what the other guys were when I was a freshman, basically.”

Daw is the most hyped member of a hyped junior class that has given Medina hope for its first winning season since the magical playoff run of 2010. Claggett Middle School never lost a game with Daw in the backfield, and A.I. Root went 14-2. It’s not hard to figure out which team Root lost to each season.

Daw is far from the only class of 2017 standout, as Ryan Seabrook (DL), Nick Pankow (LB), Chris Fryer (OL) and Garrett Grandis (OL) also started last season. One of the varsity newcomers, quarterback John Curtis, threw three TDs in his first start last week and another, Jonathan Lally, recovered a fumble.

Opposing defensive coordinators, though, zero in on Daw first, which is one of the reasons the Bees switched to a spread offense with four receivers. With no more than eight players in the box these days, Daw can set up defenders more easily before cutting downhill and using his 4.5-second speed in the 40-yard dash.

Vision is what impresses Sutherland most, as Daw uses intelligence to offset his natural inability to hide behind offensive linemen like smaller backs. He’ll carry defenders for extra yardage and catch passes, too — he had 26 grabs and three TDs last season — making him a true every-down back.

Jimmy Daw

Jimmy Daw

“One thing he does better than most backs at the high school level is his vision is fantastic,” Sutherland said. “I don’t know if it’s just an innate ability or he’s been playing running back so long he’s learned how to play the position. It’s a natural feel for him.”

Daw already is inching his way up Medina’s record books. With 1,126 career rushing yards, he needs to average 115.7 over the next 19 games to break the school record of 3,322 set by Medina County Sports Hall of Famer Dean “Mighty Mite” Brubaker in the late 1940s. This, of course, is assuming the Bees don’t make the playoffs and Daw remains healthy.

Statistics really aren’t much of a concern to Daw. Putting the Bees on the map within Northeast Ohio circles — something that hasn’t happened in consecutive years since the late 1990s — is far more important.

“We’re just trying to stay confident and not get too cocky,” Daw said. “We’re coming into this week with the mentality that we’re going to win. We’ve just got to stay focused, follow techniques and we’ll be good.”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.


Polidori powers Bucks

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Albert Grindle

The Gazette

ROCKY RIVER — Nathan Polidori flashed a million-dollar smile and, other than sweaty, jet black hair, appeared no worse for wear.

Buckeye offensive coordinator Bill Turner’s faith in his quarterback was rewarded.

Polidori rushed for three touchdowns, threw another and returned a kickoff to the house Friday, leading the Bucks to a well-earned 42-28 non-league victory over athletic but mistake-prone Rocky River.

The road to 10-0 is 20 percent complete.

“I’m really in shock,” the 5-foot-11, 175-pound Polidori said after a hug from Turner. “I knew we had it in us, but I didn’t know if we were going to show up today. But we did.”

With Turner calling the counter play “Q-skin” nearly 20 times, Polidori rushed 23 times for 219 yards while jukin’ and jivin’ defenders all over the FieldTurf. He also completed 6-of-11 passes for 62 yards, including a 14-yard TD strike to Nathan Scott, and returned the opening kickoff 90 yards to paydirt.

While All-Ohioan Trevor Thome (15 carries, 79 yards, TD) and Scott (10, 69) also were productive on the ground, Polidori was the heart and soul of an offense that posted 453 yards (391, 62), converted 6-of-8 third downs and didn’t punt in the second half.

Polidori was money on the most important drive of the game, too, with four carries for 58 yards on a nine-play, 92-yard march. He capped it by juking two defenders on a 17-yard TD run that put the Bucks up by 14 with 4:40 remaining.

“Our offensive line did fantastic,” Polidori said of Jalin Brock, Hunter Gray, Jack Schroeder, Bruce Barnby, Brad Calta and Co.

The game was in doubt heading into the fourth quarter, as Buckeye had taken a 35-28 lead on a 29-yard TD scamper by Polidori with 3:34 left in the third. The Pirates (1-1), who had scored 491 points over their prior 11 games, kept firing back with a dynamic offense of their own that put up 354 yards.

Johnny Manziel-impersonator Eric Jones masterfully eluded pressure for 3½ quarters and finished with 18 carries for 107 yards while completing 10-of-19 passes for 128 yards. Jitterbug tailback Dameon Crawford (18 carries, 74) sliced and diced for 59 yards in the first half, while long-striding speedster Evan Nugent scored two touchdowns.

Rocky River’s problem was five fumbles, including two lost. The most costly ones were on consecutive snaps, as the exchange was botched on third-and-1 from the Buckeye 11 and a quick-hitter to the fullback resulted in a fumble that ended up in Thome’s arms with 8:45 left and the Bucks up 35-28.

Despite all its miscues, Rocky River put up a valiant last stand and had first-and-10 from the Buckeye 11 with three minutes left. That’s where the Bucks defense stood tall, as Kyle Svagerko or Brock sacked Jones on three consecutive plays to essentially clinch a victory.

“I really didn’t know what to expect,” Brock said. “We watched film and things like that. We came out strong and they came out strong, but we wanted to win more than they did.

“At halftime we kind of had our heads down. We were thinking, ‘Why are our heads down? We’re tied right now. Four out of five people (in The Gazette Pick-It Line) thought we were going to lose this game. If we come out and win we’ll show a lot of people what we can do.’”

Contact Albert Grindle at (330) 721-4043 or agrindle@medina-gazette.com.

Buckeye 42, Rocky River 28

BUCKEYE                                 14 7 14 7 — 42

ROCKY RIVER                         14 7   7   0 — 28

FIRST

B — Nathan Polidori 90 kickoff return (Richard Gatt kick), 11:46.

R — Eric Jones 8 run (Matt Goepfert kick), 10:52.

R — Jack Rodgers 1 run (Goepfert kick), 6:57.

B — Nathan Scott 14 pass from Polidori (Gatt kick), 3:50.

SECOND

B — Trevor Thome 1 run (Gatt kick), 7:56.

R — Evan Nugent 22 pass from Jones (Goepfert kick), 0:45.8

THIRD

B — Polidori 24 run (Gatt kick), 8:23.

R — Nugent 31 run (Goepfert kick), 7:02.

B — Polidori 29 run (Gatt kick), 3:34.

FOUTRH

B — Polidori 17 run (Gatt kick), 4:40.


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