logo
Berlin repeats as conference champions

Berlin repeats as conference champions

Yahoo04-03-2025

CLAYSBURG, Pa. (WTAJ) – Southern Huntingdon had an early 5-4 lead on Berlin-Brothersvalley in the ICC Championship game, but the Mountaineers used a 17-0 run to help them defeat the Rockets 74-56.
'Just excited to be able to play another game and not have such a lay off (before the PIAA playoffs),' Mountaineers head coach Rachel Prosser said. 'We haven't played since last Wednesday, so we know it was a great opportunity. Southern Huntingdon is a great team. It was a very good preparation for going forward.'
In the state playoffs, Berlin will play the winner of Tuesday's game between Bellwood-Antis and Keystone.
Meanwhile in the boys championship, North Star held a lead for the majority of the game, but McConnellsburg used a 22-7 fourth quarter run to defeat the Cougars 49-39. North Star senior Andy Retassie tallied his 1,000th career point in the loss.
The Cougars will move on to face Shadyside Academy in the opening round of the PIAA playoffs.
GIRLS BASKETBALLICC ChampionshipBerlin Brothersvalley 74, Southern Huntingdon 56
BOYS BASKETBALLICC ChampionshipMcConnellsburg 49, North Star 39
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

LSU Tigers Pitcher Kade Anderson Reacts to Beating West Virginia
LSU Tigers Pitcher Kade Anderson Reacts to Beating West Virginia

Yahoo

time21 hours ago

  • Yahoo

LSU Tigers Pitcher Kade Anderson Reacts to Beating West Virginia

LSU Tigers Pitcher Kade Anderson Reacts to Beating West Virginia originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The LSU Tigers defeated the West Virginia Mountaineers 16-9 in the first game of the series. After the game, pitcher Kade Anderson spoke to the media. Advertisement On how he thinks he performed today Kade: I executed that well today. And that was just the plan. On getting hit by the ball and how it affected his pitching game Kade: Just got hit and there's no reason to make an excuse out of it. And I thought that there's no excuse and just keep going. On starting 10 games at the Box and your team going 10-0. What does that mean to you? Kade: Confidence in our team. An outing like today where I gave up a lot of runs, my guys had my back. I think that's the definition of a true team, when you need to pick someone else up when someone else isn't doing too good. I believe in our guys, and just proud of them. Advertisement On what kind of challenges the WVU lineup gave you today Kade: I felt it wasn't necessarily them. I wasn't commanding the fastball and working off of that as well. Fell into a rhythm for a little bit, but they put up a couple good at-bats. I don't think it was them; it was just me not making the pitches when I had to. On how much the two layoffs affected things and affected his rhythm Kade: I don't think it affected it at all. As a pitcher you go through those all the time. It's how you bounce back from those. It's a part of what we do. Watch the full press conference here: Related: Everything Steve Sabins Had to Say After West Virginia's Loss to LSU Related: Livvy Dunne is Officially a Supermodel after Walking the Runway at Miami's Swim Week Related: Livvy Dunne Wants to Make 'Hot Girl Fishing' a Thing Related: Livvy Dunne Shares Revealing Swimsuit Photos This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 8, 2025, where it first appeared.

END OF THE ROAD: LSU sweeps WVU in super regional
END OF THE ROAD: LSU sweeps WVU in super regional

Dominion Post

time5 days ago

  • Dominion Post

END OF THE ROAD: LSU sweeps WVU in super regional

BATAN ROUGE, La. — West Virginia baseball's quest to kick down the Omaha, Neb. door will have to wait another year. For the second straight season, the Mountaineers dropped both games of a road super regional and ended the season one round shy of their first College World Series in program history. This one was a relentless onslaught at the hands of arguably the best team in the country, a 12-5 loss to LSU following Saturday's 16-9 defeat. BOX SCORE 'We never focus on other teams and what they do,' West Virginia head coach Steve Sabins said. 'Couldn't be more proud of our guys.' West Virginia (44-16) hung in for as long as it could, even bringing the tying run to the plate as late as the sixth inning on Sunday night. But LSU (48-15) just had too much offense, too many power arms and made far fewer mistakes as it secured its 20th CWS appearance in the last 39 years. Just like in Game 1, a pair of big innings made the difference. LSU blew the game open early with five runs in the second inning, all after West Virginia starter Jack Kartsonas retired the first two batters on nine pitches. Three consecutive walks loaded the bases, and Steven Milam delivered a three-run double down the right field line. Milam came around to score on Jake Brown's RBI single and after Brown advanced on a wild pitch, a misplayed infield pop-up allowed him to trot home with the fifth run of the frame and sixth of the game. After West Virginia put up four runs in the middle innings and knocked LSU starter Anthony Eyanson out, the visitors had legitimate traction for the only time all weekend. Sam White hit a solo homer, Ben Lumsden popped up with the unlikeliest of homers — just his second all season — to make it 6-3 and White delivered an RBI single in his next at-bat. 'I have great hitters in front of me and great hitters behind me,' White said. 'My job is just to pass it to the next guy.' Just in time for another costly dropped pop-up. The second aerial miscue of the night was the first of three errors in a nightmare seventh inning, allowing LSU to score six times and put the game out of reach, finally delivering the knockout punch after a heroic Chase Meyer relief performance kept the Mountaineers in the game. Chris Stanfield's two-run insurance created initial separation, Milam added another RBI single and Jake Brown belted a two-run home run off the batter's eye to complete the inning. Tally it up for the series and you get galling numbers. West Virginia pitchers issued 17 walks, hit eight batters and committed four errors, far too much help for an LSU team with more than enough talent to win without the lifelines. 'When you give great teams and great offenses additional opportunities or free passes, they answer,' Sabins said. 'We had more walks than what a championship team can do. The walks and hit-by-pitches allowed for baserunners to get on. Our pitchers were consistently in stressful situations.' Stack it up in total for year one of the Sabins era, and the total body of work was unquestionably positive. It was arguably the greatest season in West Virginia baseball history, even building on from last year's success of winning a regional for the first time ever. 'We broke the all-time win record at WVU,' Sabins said. 'We won the first outright Big 12 title in football, basketball or baseball at our university, and this program has never been in back-to-back super regionals. Those were big milestones, and that was something that we're proud of.' But at this moment, the pain was still there. West Virginia just had no answers across two games. Not for the heat, the intimidating away environment and definitely not for an LSU team which showed why it spent a chunk of the season ranked No. 1 nationally. It is on to reflection, transfer portal work and the long countdown to February 2026, as the Mountaineers will begin the Omaha chase again. 'I don't get sad about baseball results,' Sabins said. 'I get sad about the group of people that you work with for a year straight to try to build something special — which this group did — won't ever get to be together again. There is some sort of finality with that final out, that you're not going to get to be with that same group of kids.' If West Virginia ever crosses over those pearly gates of Omaha into college baseball heaven, teams like this one will be responsible for laying the foundation. Not this year, though.

COLUMN: Avoiding disaster in the national spotlight, unfortunately, hasn't worked out for WVU athletics
COLUMN: Avoiding disaster in the national spotlight, unfortunately, hasn't worked out for WVU athletics

Dominion Post

time6 days ago

  • Dominion Post

COLUMN: Avoiding disaster in the national spotlight, unfortunately, hasn't worked out for WVU athletics

MORGANTOWN — What Steve Sabins and likely anyone associated or rooting for the WVU baseball program feared the most came to pass in the fifth inning Saturday, inside Alex Box Stadium. It was a complete disaster. It took four WVU pitchers to get through the inning. Only one of the four actually registered an out. A total of 14 pitches were needed for LSU to load the bases, 11 of them were called balls. Five pitches later, Steven Milam had himself a grand slam and the overall sixth-seeded Tigers had themselves a 7-1 lead in what finished as a 16-9 victory in the first game of the super regionals. By the time the inning came to a close, LSU (47-15) drew four walks, was hit by a pitch and added four hits in what must have felt like an hour spent on the diamond in nearly 100-degree heat for WVU players. If the Mountaineers (44-15) were to have any shot at making this best-of-three super regional interesting, they had to avoid disaster, just had to. They didn't, and it is here we must ask the gut-wrenching question: Is this the ultimate destiny for WVU athletics? Not just for the baseball program, which is to be commended for so much recognition and positivity it's brought to the school in recent years, but we're talking the athletic program as a whole. Now, we realize there is another game between these two same programs at 6 p.m. Sunday, and we're not exactly counting this resilient bunch out, but, man, how many times do WVU fans have to relive this same story? It's a story where every once in a while hope is not only created, but it festers itself into true belief. Belief that this time will be different. This time the underdog school representing an underdog state will leap over the hurdle, smash down the door and show the stuffy elitists of the college sports world that West Virginia University athletics deserves some respect. The school has been historically as close to that threshold as any university can possibly get without crossing over it. The legendary Jerry West had the ball in his hands as the final seconds ticked off in the 1959 men's hoops national championships. You know what happened next. Major Harris led an undefeated WVU football team to the 1989 national championship game against Notre Dame. Harris got hurt on the third play of the game and you know what happened next. Da'Sean Butler blew out his knee in the 2010 Final Four. Texas A&M hit a walk-off grand slam in 2019 to end the Mountaineers' feel-great story of hosting a baseball regional for the first time in most of our lifetimes. Just once, just going by simple mathematical odds alone, one of these damn moments in the national spotlight has to go WVU's way, right? WVU fans, a true tip of the cap is thrown your way today, because your passion for the Mountaineers is unwavering no matter how many times you've been dragged to the edge of the cliff only to be shoved right off it. We know you'll be right back in front of those TV sets at 6 p.m. Sunday with the hope this series somehow gets stretched to a Game 3. That isn't out of the realm of possibility, either, because once you peel back the layers that came with the Tigers' 16 runs, it was basically three swings, eight walks and five hit-by-pitches that did the Mountaineers in. If the 12,093 in attendance were being completely honest, LSU is not that much better of a baseball team than WVU. And we say that knowing LSU spent six weeks as either the No. 1- or No. 2-ranked team in the country this season. It's just a matter of whether or not the Mountaineers can avoid disaster and make it a straight-up you-against-us type of game. That would truly be a glorious notion, one that WVU fans have rarely experienced, because when the point comes for WVU teams needing to avoid disaster, unfortunately we also realize that's when it strikes.

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