logo
A spring tradition: Jackson-Reed makes it 32 straight DCIAA baseball titles

A spring tradition: Jackson-Reed makes it 32 straight DCIAA baseball titles

Washington Post08-05-2025

The D.C. Interscholastic Athletic Association baseball championship tends to follow a similar script each spring. Jackson-Reed's opponent shows up to the field — this year, the Nationals Youth Academy in Southeast Washington — hoping to undo more than three decades of precedent. But time and time again, often rather quickly, those hopes are put to bed, and again it's the Tigers who end the day with a trophy.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Aaron Judge delivers powerful statement with home run against Red Sox rookie who refuses to sign with Yankees
Aaron Judge delivers powerful statement with home run against Red Sox rookie who refuses to sign with Yankees

Fox News

time23 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Aaron Judge delivers powerful statement with home run against Red Sox rookie who refuses to sign with Yankees

Aaron Judge heard what Boston Red Sox rookie Hunter Dobbins had to say about his New York Yankees. Instead of talking back, he let his bat do the talking on Sunday night. Before his Sunday start, Dobbins told the Boston Herald that he would rather retire than sign with the Yankees. Judge said before the game that he was "a little surprised" Dobbins, a lifelong Red Sox fan thanks to his die-hard father, made that comment. Judge wasted no time getting back at Dobbins on the field, smashing a 97 mph fastball 436 feet to right-center field for a two-run home run. The ball exited Judge's bat at 108.6 mph, and everyone in the Yankee Stadium crowd knew the tension that was already there with Dobbins' comments making national headlines. "I've only heard Ken Griffey say that, so I was a little surprised," Judge said of Dobbins' comments, via ESPN. He was referencing the Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr., who said he wouldn't sign with the Yankees during his career after seeing how the franchise treated his father, Ken Griffey Sr., while he played for him. In the end, though, Dobbins and the Red Sox got the last laugh. Despite giving up those two runs in the first inning, Dobbins was solid against the Yankees lineup after that. He allowed one more earned run and four hits total over his five innings of work. Boston's offense also unloaded midway through the rivalry game, with Kristian Campbell hitting a two-run homer in the top of the fifth inning to get them on the board. Then, in the top of the sixth inning, a five-spot was put on the home team thanks in part to Carlos Narvàez's three-run homer. The Red Sox would add two runs each in the top of the eighth and ninth innings to ultimately beat their AL East rival 11-7, winning their first series of the year two games to one. Judge went yard once more in the bottom of the ninth inning to cut the Red Sox's lead to four, going to the bullpen in right-center to finish his night 3-for-4 with three runs scored and four RBI. Despite the loss over the weekend, the Yankees are still leading the division at 39-25. However, the Red Sox perhaps found some new life beating one of the best teams in baseball in this series. They are now 32-35 going into the week, where they will see New York once again with a weekend grudge match at Fenway Park in Boston. As of now, Dobbins is slated to face the Yankees in his next start. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Kerry Carpenter hits 3 home runs in Detroit Tigers' 13-1 win over Chicago White Sox
Kerry Carpenter hits 3 home runs in Detroit Tigers' 13-1 win over Chicago White Sox

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Kerry Carpenter hits 3 home runs in Detroit Tigers' 13-1 win over Chicago White Sox

CHICAGO — Kerry Carpenter hit three home runs against the Chicago White Sox on Monday, June 2, in the opener of a four-game series at Rate Field — launching his first shot in the first inning, another in the fourth, and his final blast in the sixth. The Detroit Tigers won easily, 12-1. Advertisement They're the first MLB team to 40 wins, with a 40-21 record. The 27-year-old, a former 19th-round draft pick, became the first Tigers player to hit three homers in a game since Victor Martinez on June 16, 2016. It marked the best game of Carpenter's four-year MLB career, which now spans 292 games. He finished 3-for-5 with five RBIs in five plate appearances. His three home runs combined for 1,156 feet. These were the three homers: In the first, he hit a middle-middle 83.9 mph changeup from right-hander Jonathan Cannon for a 401-foot homer to right-center field. In the fourth, he hit a down-and-in 87.5 mph cutter from right-handed reliever Bryse Wilson for a 357-foot homer to right field. In the sixth, he hit a middle-middle 92.4 mph fastball from Wilson for a 398-foot homer to center field. Advertisement The first homer put the Tigers ahead, 2-0, in the first inning, the second homer made it 8-0 in the fourth, and the third homer increased the Tigers' lead to 10-0 in the sixth. Carpenter is hitting .276 with 13 home runs in 56 games this season, posting an .822 OPS. He had been in the leadoff spot, but the return of Parker Meadows pushed him down to third in the lineup for the first time in 2025. The Tigers benefitted from a pair of non-Carpenter home runs: Dillon Dingler in the first inning and Wenceel Pérez in the second inning, both off Cannon. In the eighth inning, Carpenter flew out to center field in his attempt for his fourth home run. He also struck out swinging with a runner in scoring position in the second inning. Advertisement Only 19 players have hit four home runs in a game, including Arizona Diamondbacks third baseman Eugenio Suárez on April 26, 2025. Before then, a four-homer game hadn't happened since J.D. Martinez — also for the Diamondbacks — in September 4, 2017. No player has ever hit multiple four-homer games in their MLB career. Jack Flaherty shines Right-hander Jack Flaherty allowed one run on four hits and one walk with four strikeouts in six innings, throwing 99 pitches. The White Sox scored their lone run in the sixth. The 29-year-old owns a 2.22 ERA with six walks and 26 strikeouts across 24⅓ innings in his past four starts, including one run in his last 12 innings. Advertisement He has a 3.72 ERA in 12 starts. An amazing catch The Tigers made a one-in-a-million catch in the fifth inning, courtesy of the catcher and the third baseman. It was Dingler to Zach McKinstry. A ball hit into foul territory tipped off Dingler's glove, then ricocheted off McKinstry's leg, and somehow ended up in McKinstry's glove — just before landing in the dirt. The play happened in front of Chicago's dugout. This story will be updated. Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@ or follow him @EvanPetzold. Listen to our weekly Tigers show "Days of Roar" every Monday afternoon on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts. And catch all of our podcasts and daily voice briefing at Advertisement Order your copy of 'Roar of 125: The Epic History of the Detroit Tigers!' by the Free Press at This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit Tigers score: Kerry Carpenter hits 3 homers in Tigers' 13-1 win

Jack Flaherty dominates Cubs, top of the order delivers in Tigers' 4-0 win
Jack Flaherty dominates Cubs, top of the order delivers in Tigers' 4-0 win

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jack Flaherty dominates Cubs, top of the order delivers in Tigers' 4-0 win

In an early-season interleague battle of first-place teams, the Detroit Tigers came out victorious. With a sellout crowd Sunday, June 8, at Comerica Park of 40,343 (the fifth sellout of the season and third in a row), the Tigers beat the Chicago Cubs, 4-0. Advertisement The win clinched the series for Detroit (43-24), which took two out of three games from the National League central-leading Cubs (40-25). "Two out of three in front of our home fans against that team is exactly the type of environment that we want to create for the rest of the summer," Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. "There's a lot of quality baseball being played by these two teams that was on display this weekend, and (we) took it to win the series." Buy our book: The Epic History of the Tigers Kerry Carpenter turned in another hard-hitting game for the Tigers, hitting his ninth and 10th doubles of the season, the first one helping set up a two-run inning for the Tigers in the fifth. He finished the game 3-for-4 with a run, registering his seventh game with at least three hits in 2025. Kerry Carpenter celebrates after hitting a double for the Detroit Tigers against the Chicago Cubs during the bottom of the seventh inning at Comerica Park on June 8, 2025 in Detroit. It was a much-needed breakout for the lefty slugger, too, as he had only one hit in his past five games right after his three home runs Monday, June 2, against the Chicago White Sox. Advertisement He also saved a run Sunday by throwing out leadoff hitter Ian Happ looking to score on a single from center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong. "Helping the team win, I mean, there's nothing better than that," Carpenter said. "So whether it's with the glove, with the bat, with the arm, it doesn't really matter." Tigers center fielder Parker Meadows led off the bottom of the first with a hard-struck single between third base and shortstop. Gleyber Torres, who leads all qualified Tigers in walk rate (14.1%), followed with a walk, setting up the heart of the order with two runners on and no one out. It looked like it was going to be a missed opportunity for a struggling Tigers offense when Carpenter popped out to third baseman Matt Shaw, and Riley Greene struck out looking. But Spencer Torkelson picked up the slack with a two-run double to right-center field that fell just short of clearing the fence, giving the Tigers an early 2-0 lead. Advertisement Torkelson finished 2-for-4, adding a single in the eighth inning. SUMMER FUN: For the first time in a while, Tigers have Comerica Park rocking The outcomes flipped the second time through the order for the Tigers, with Carpenter and Greene both getting into scoring position after back-to-back two-out hits, but Torkelson's infield fly to shortstop Dansby Swanson ended a scoreless third inning. Detroit Tigers second baseman Gleyber Torres receives congratulations from teammates after scoring in the first inning against the Chicago Cubs at Comerica Park, Sunday, June 8, 2025. Torres got the bottom of the fifth started with a one-out single to right field, then Carpenter laced a double to the right-field wall. Greene brought them in one batter later with an opposite field single just over Swanson's head to shallow left field, giving the Tigers a 4-0 lead and Greene his first hit in his past four games. Advertisement "The game doesn't care if you're 0-for-4 or 4-for-4," Greene said after going 2-for-4. "So, just putting your head down and grinding, and try to make something happen." Flaherty has another quality start Tigers starter Jack Flaherty (5-6, 3.41 ERA) completed his third straight quality start Sunday, finishing with six shutout innings on two hits while walking three and striking out nine. Detroit Tigers pitcher Jack Flaherty pitches in the first inning against the Chicago Cubs at Comerica Park, Sunday, June 8, 2025. His nine strikeouts tied his season high, reached on April 4 against the New York Yankees. "We played well the first day, not so great yesterday," Flaherty said. "But just a chance to go out and go win a series, win another game, anytime you get a chance to do that it's fun." Advertisement He got Cubs slugger Kyle Tucker to buckle on a curveball for his first strikeout of the game. He then got the next batter Seiya Suzuki — who hit two home runs the day before — to strike out on a foul tip. He also struck out ex-Tigers catcher Carson Kelly on a curve the next inning and Swanson in the third, getting four called strikes and five whiffs of the 17 curveballs he threw in his first three innings. Flaherty struck out five batters through three, eclipsing the total he had from his previous outing (four) in Monday's win against the White Sox. All those strikeouts led to the pitch count piling up a bit, however, with Flaherty throwing 45 in three innings. He exited the game after the sixth inning with 94 pitches thrown. Flaherty got into his first bit of trouble in the fourth inning, starting off with back-to-back walks to Happ and Tucker. He then struck out Suzuki but allowed a single to Crow-Armstrong that looked to score Happ from second. Advertisement A strong throw from Carpenter in right field and a quick tag from catcher Dillon Dingler got the second out of the inning, with the call upheld on Chicago's challenge. Flaherty then walked Kelly to load the bases, but got out of the inning without allowing a run on Michael Busch's hard lineout to center. "Just all throughout these guys have been incredible, and it's just a testament to the work they put in," Flaherty said. "It makes it a lot of fun to watch and easy to trust the defense." Flaherty's seventh strikeout, via a fastball on second baseman Nico Hoerner in the fifth inning, got both Hoerner and Cubs manager Craig Counsell ejected by home plate umpire Derek Thomas for arguing. Flaherty's eighth strikeout came one batter later, getting Shaw to fish for a slider out of the zone. Advertisement He tied his season-high with his ninth strikeout getting Tucker looking in the sixth, and finished his by inducing two flyouts from Suzuki and Crow-Armstrong. A bullpen relay of righties Brenan Hanifee, Tommy Kahnle and Will Vest finished the win for the Tigers, who visit the Baltimore Orioles on Tuesday. You can reach Christian at cromo@ This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Tigers game: Jack Flaherty dominates Cubs, Spencer Torkelson delivers

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store