Badger gets by Brookfield to move on
KINSMAN, Ohio (WKBN) – Badger gets by Brookfield, 7-6, to move on to the Northeast 1 Division 7 district final against top-seeded Mathews.
Badger's 3rd (Madison Lindus) and 4th (Kiyah Scharfenberg) hitters finished 7 for 8 at the plate. Scharfenberg (4-4) finished with 3 RBIs as Lindus (3-4) drove in 2 and scored another 2 runs.
Samantha Bradbury had a 2-hit day as she closed out the evening with a pair of singles.
Bradbury also tossed the complete game for the Braves as she let 5 earned runs score and struck out 4 to earn the victory.
The Braves improve to 11-7.
Mya Jumper and Madisyn Fisher each had two hits for the Warriors. Jumper tripled and finished with 2 RBIs. Aubrey Cabrera crossed home plate twice.
Brookfield finishes at 5-12.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Matthew Kent Olson Player Props: June 8, Braves vs. Giants
Matthew Kent Olson Player Props: June 8, Braves vs. Giants Matthew Kent Olson went hitless in his most recent game (0 for 3), but will have another crack at it when the Atlanta Braves take on Landen Roupp and the San Francisco Giants on Sunday at 4:05 p.m. ET on NBCS-BA and FDSSO. Find odds, stats, and more below to make your Matthew Kent Olson player prop bets. Matt Olson leads the Braves with 13 home runs, while putting up 34 RBI. Matt Olson ranks 18th in home runs and 51st in RBI among all hitters in MLB play. Watch tonight's Braves game on Fubo! Matthew Kent Olson Prop Bets and Odds Hits Prop: 0.5 hits (Over odds: -200) 0.5 hits (Over odds: -200) Home Runs Prop: 0.5 home runs (Over odds: +450) 0.5 home runs (Over odds: +450) RBI Prop: 0.5 RBI (Over odds: +155) 0.5 RBI (Over odds: +155) Runs Prop: 0.5 runs (Over odds: +115) 0.5 runs (Over odds: +115) Total Bases Prop: 1.5 total bases (Over odds: +130) How to Watch Atlanta Braves vs. San Francisco Giants Matchup: Atlanta Braves vs. San Francisco Giants Atlanta Braves vs. San Francisco Giants Time: 4:05 p.m. ET 4:05 p.m. ET Date: Sunday, June 8, 2025 Sunday, June 8, 2025 TV Channel: NBCS-BA and FDSSO NBCS-BA and FDSSO Live Stream: Fubo (Watch now! - Regional restrictions may apply) Matthew Kent Olson vs. Landen Roupp Matthew Kent Olson is 1 for 2 over his career versus Landen Roupp. Last season against Landen Roupp, Matthew Kent Olson was 1 for 2 at the plate. Matthew Kent Olson prop bet insights In 44 of 63 games this season (69.8%) Matthew Kent Olson has gotten a hit, and in eight of those contests (12.7%) he posted more than one hit. He has gone yard in 13 of 63 games in 2025 (20.6%), which is 4.7% of his trips to the plate. In 47.6% of his 63 games this season, Matthew Kent Olson has scored a run (30 times). He's also put up six games with multiple runs in 2025 (9.5%). In 39.7% of his games this season (25 of 63), he has produced at least one run. In eight of those games (12.7%) he recorded more than one RBI, while accounting for three or more of his team's runs in one contest. Matthew Kent Olson has struck out one or more times 46 times this year in 63 games played (73.0%), including 16 multi-strikeout contests (25.4%). MLB odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Sunday at 1:25 p.m. ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub. Matthew Kent Olson stats against the Giants Giants starter: Landen Roupp


New York Times
6 hours ago
- New York Times
Braves takeaways: After 14th loss in 17 games, manager and players still searching for answers
SAN FRANCISCO — If anyone was surprised to see the Atlanta Braves lose 4-3 Sunday to the San Francisco Giants, apparently they haven't been watching the Braves play. Because lately, that's what the Braves do: They lose, usually by one run. They have lost 14 of 17 games, their worst stretch since a 3-14 skid April 21-May 10, 2016. That was the week before Fredi González was fired and replaced by current manager Brian Snitker, who has helped develop a winning culture in Atlanta over the past seven years but is struggling mightily with this underperforming team and its flawed roster. Advertisement The Braves have a seven-game losing streak, matching the 0-7 skid they had to begin the season, the first time they've had multiple skids that long in a season since 2016. They are 10 games under .500 (27-37) for the first time since finishing 72-90 in 2017, the year before their current streak of seven postseason appearances began. Oh, it's bad. 'I'm a little lost for words, explanations on what it is to get us going right now,' said third baseman Austin Riley, who then described the mood of the team. 'It's a lot of disappointment and some self-reflection. You know, just trying to evaluate ourselves and what we can do to be better. A lot of guys that are in here have been a part of that (postseason streak) and know how to win. And it's just not happening right now.' They've been swept in consecutive series by Arizona at home and San Francisco on the road, and the Braves already have been swept as many times (five) as all of 2024. Their postseason streak is in peril, to say the least. The fourth-place Braves are 14 games behind the East-leading New York Mets and have the NL's fourth-worst record. The proud Braves, a gold-standard franchise, are 2 1/2 games ahead of the last-place and perpetually rebuilding Florida Marlins. 'I've always (believed) that tomorrow could be the start of something big,' Snitker said. 'I know it's sappy or whatever sometimes maybe, but there is still time. But we've got to start playing better. We haven't played our best baseball, we haven't put a total game together. 'We need to start doing that. Because some of these other teams are not gonna wait around for us, that's for sure. We gotta start making our own luck, and we gotta start making things happen and forcing the issue during the games. Everything, all that.' The Braves have been outscored by just eight runs during the 3-14 skid, which includes eight one-run losses. They have lost each of their past five by one run, and for the season they are 9-19 in one-run games and 13-26 in games decided by one or two runs. Advertisement 'We're right there in all these games against everybody we play,' Snitker said. 'I mean, we're right there. We're a hit away, a pitch away. Just the little things in baseball that produces winning baseball, we're not doing. But we're right there. Again, that doesn't get it, being right there. It gets it when you're there and make it happen. I still think we're better than what we're playing. But until we are, we aren't, I guess.' Riley said: 'I think when it continues and the same thing happens over and over and again, every day with the one-run games, you start trying to look for answers. And it's just not happening. Like I said, kind of lost for words on what we need to do.' Spencer Strider had his best start Sunday since returning from a year-long rehab for elbow surgery but got another loss after giving up three hits, four runs (three earned) and three walks with five strikeouts in six innings. He's 0-5 in five starts, the first Braves pitcher to lose five consecutive appearances since Mike Foltynewicz lost seven straight in 2017. 'I don't think that the outcome really changes the fact that we need to get better, whether we're losing by a hundred or one,' Strider said. 'And that's me more so than anybody. There's two types of games, wins and losses. Doesn't matter how they look.' Does Strider think the Braves can get rolling soon and take some momentum into July? 'I guess we're going to have to answer that,' he said. 'I think at this point everybody, and myself more so than anyone, just needs to be brutally honest and try to find as many ways as we can to get better, focus on the little things and just give ourselves a chance. I think it's unrealistic to expect to show up one day or have an inning or have an at-bat or whatever that you feel or see some enormous change. That's not how it works, good or bad. Advertisement 'That process takes time. You hope that if you put in the work, and like I said, you're honest and deliberate, purposeful consistently, that one day you'll look up and realize, oh, we've made an improvement. So, I think we've got to commit to doing that, and it's tough.' A potent offense could go a long way in covering up the Braves' lack of bullpen depth. This is not a potent offense. The Braves were trying to snap a losing streak and avoid getting swept again Sunday, and they ran out a lineup that included four hitters batting below .240, each with an OPS of .650 or lower: Ozzie Albies, Michael Harris II, Nick Allen and Eli White, who is half of a left-field platoon with an underwhelming other half, Alex Verdugo. Yes, poor situational hitting is a big reason the Braves are not a good offensive team, but so is poor overall hitting. When nearly half of the lineup is producing stats that awful more than two months into the season, that's hard to overcome. As Snitker said, the Braves have no margin for error with the way they're hitting. The thing is, two of those hitters, Harris (.237 average, .608 OPS) and Albies (.232, .650), are among the core players the Braves signed to long-term extensions with the anticipation they would be All-Star-caliber players annually through their peak years. They are far from All-Stars right now. Harris and Albies are among just 27 major-league qualifiers with .650 or lower OPS, with Harris having the 13th lowest. If Allen, who shared time at the beginning of the season with Orlando Arcia, had 14 more plate appearances to qualify, Allen's .575 OPS would be seventh lowest in the majors. That'd make it one-third of the lineup ranking in the bottom 30 of baseball in OPS, and the combined stats of the left-field tandem are right there with them. Advertisement The Harris and Albies situations are especially problematic because both are in what should be the prime of their careers; in Harris' case, barely entering the prime. He's a fourth-year major leaguer, only 24. And while the center fielder's defense remains elite, Harris has regressed annually at the plate. Meanwhile, Albies is 28 and should be squarely in his prime but instead plays like he's on the downside. Regardless of the on-base streak he extended to 23 games with a bloop single in the ninth inning Sunday, Albies has been a major disappointment and doesn't provide the serious switch-hitting power threat he did in the past. Perhaps multiple injuries for Albies over the years have taken a toll, but for whatever reason he's regressed to a below-average defender — his two-out error let in the go-ahead run in the fourth inning Sunday — with a poor throwing arm, and he's a mediocre base runner. This in addition to being a shadow of the hitter he was as recently as 2023, when he got MVP votes, made his third All-Star team and hit .280 with career highs of 33 homers, 109 RBIs and 126 OPS+. White and Allen were supposed to be bench players but have regular roles because Jurickson Profar, the Braves' only significant offseason addition, was slapped with an 80-game PED suspension after the first series of the season and because Arcia continued his anemic hitting this spring and early season, as he has since the 2023 All-Star break. The Braves should have addressed shortstop in the offseason — they also should've added a setup reliever — but continued to act as if they expected Arcia to be the hitter he was for a couple of months early in 2023 instead of the bad hitter he's been for most of his career. And they shouldn't have made their only offseason hitter acquisition a player who raised eyebrows — and perhaps should've raised red flags — by having far and away his best offensive season at age 31, when Profar hit a career-high 24 homers and posted a 134 OPS+ after never having one higher than 115 previously. The Braves were 1-for-6 with runners in scoring position Sunday and 3-for-22 in the series, and for the season they rank 16th in the majors with a .247 average in RISP situations and 22nd with a .696 OPS in those spots. Advertisement In the late innings of close games, the Braves' .199 average ranks 25th in the majors and their .606 OPS is 24th. They now rank in the bottom half of baseball in most offensive categories regardless of situations, including tied for 18th in average (.242), tied for 14th in home runs (68), tied for 21st in runs (259), 20th in slugging percentage (.383) and 18th in OPS (.694). This is just two seasons after the Braves tied an MLB single-season record with 307 homers and became the first team in history to slug .500 or better (.501). 'Guys (on the team) believe that it's going to happen,' Riley said. 'And I do, I really do. You know, guys prepare, guys come in every day. We're doing our homework on pitchers. It's just those key hits. Typically, you get a couple key hits in a game that can change it, and we're just not doing that right now.' (Top photo of Ozzie Albies out on a throw from Landen Roupp to Dominic Smith: D. Ross Cameron / Imagn Images)
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Braves Ace Spencer Strider Searching for Answers as Struggles, Team Skid Continue
Braves Ace Spencer Strider Searching for Answers as Struggles, Team Skid Continue originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The former Clemson Tigers' ace, Spencer Strider that hitters once dreaded, the flamethrower who mowed down batters with a record-setting pace? He's currently a man searching for himself on the mound. And the Atlanta Braves, mired in a deepening slump, are feeling every bit of his pain. Advertisement Strider's latest outing was another gut punch, as the Arizona Diamondbacks tagged him for three home runs in an 8-3 drubbing Tuesday night at Truist Park. The loss marks another frustrating chapter in the right-hander's quest to recapture the dominant form that made him a sensation before a torn UCL in his right elbow derailed his 2024 campaign. "Command without stuff is batting practice," a visibly frustrated Strider said postgame. "That's about what I offered up today. I've got to be better, just to give us a chance." The D-backs certainly treated it like BP. Ketel Marte launched two missiles off Strider within the first three frames, and Corbin Carroll added his own solo shot in the fifth. All told, Strider bled five earned runs on six hits over five innings. The numbers are grim: a 5.68 ERA through four starts this season, ballooning to 6.43 in his three outings since returning from a right hamstring strain that further complicated his comeback. "It just doesn't come back overnight," Braves skipper Brian Snitker lamented. "I wish it would. I know [Strider] does, but it's a tough process." Mar 29, 2024; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Spencer Strider (99) in action against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park. Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Tough is an understatement, especially with the Braves' season spiraling. Atlanta has now dropped a staggering nine of their last 12 contests. They're looking up from a 10-game deficit in the NL East, now glancing nervously over their shoulder as the last-place Marlins are only four games behind. The slide is so pronounced, the unthinkable is being whispered: Could the perennial contenders actually become sellers at the July 31 Trade Deadline? Advertisement "We've got to win games, and when it's my turn to pitch, I've got to give us a chance to win," Strider stated, shouldering the responsibility. "If I can't do that, then I don't know what value I'm providing, besides getting reps." This is a far cry from the Strider who was arguably the game's most electric arm from 2022-23, leading the Majors in strikeouts despite starting his rookie season in the 'pen. His record-breaking 281 strikeouts in 2023 seemed like just the beginning before an elbow injury (a compromised UCL due to a bone spur, not a full tear, leading to an internal brace procedure with a 12-month rehab) halted his ascent after just two starts in 2024. A brief return to Atlanta's rotation on April 16 this year was quickly stymied by that hamstring strain just five days later, costing him another month. There are glimmers, albeit faint. His four-seamer averaged 95.2 mph Tuesday, a tick up from last week. The slider, his signature weapon, still induced whiffs on 8 of 14 swings (57%) from Arizona, and an even better 60% against the Phillies previously. Advertisement But the command, or lack thereof, is killing him. An elevated changeup to Marte in the first. A 3-0 "cookie" to the same batter in the third. Another middle-middle fastball that Carroll deposited into the seats. "Regardless of the hitter in the big leagues, they're going to do damage on those," Strider acknowledged. "I thought there were some streaks where I was really executing pitches and commanding the ball the way I wanted, but it doesn't take but one mistake to change the game." Drawing inspiration from teammate Chris Sale, who battled back from his own early-season struggles to post a dominant 1.42 ERA in his last seven starts, Strider remains hopeful but realistic. He knows it's on him to force the change. 'I don't think things are just going to get better on their own,' Strider said. 'I think you've got to intervene deliberately... I do have the ability and the knowledge to make things better in the next five days.' Advertisement The Braves, and their fanbase, are desperately hoping he's right. The clock is ticking, on Strider's return to form, and potentially, on Atlanta's season. This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 5, 2025, where it first appeared.