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July 27, 2010
Lynchburg-Hillcats.com
Lynchburg matched their season-high with nine runs in a 9-3 win over Frederick on Tuesday night at Harry Grove Stadium.
With the aid of a pair of errors, Lynchburg started early again with a run in the top of the first inning to take a 1-0 lead.
Frederick responded though with a pair of runs in the bottom of the first to take a 2-1 advantage. Billy Rowell and Buck Britton both singled in a run with two outs in the inning.
The Hillcats would tie the game in the third inning with an RBI groundout by Denis Phipps. An inning later they tacked on three more runs to take a 5-2 lead.
Kevin Coddington singled in run and Josh Fellhauer and Brodie Greene both hit sacrifice flies in the frame.
The Cats weren't done though, as they followed their three-run fourth inning with a four-run fifth inning to make it a 9-2 contest.
Frederick would plate a run in the bottom of the ninth inning to close out the scoring. Britton drove-in his second run of the ballgame with a sacrifice fly.
The win went to starter Chase Ware (1-2) for Lynchburg (14-17, 43-58) and the loss went to starter Ryan Berry (2-2) for Frederick (15-16, 56-45).
Ware picked up his first win at the Advanced-A level and his first win as a starter this season.
The Hillcats go for the series sweep on Wednesday night in a 7:00 p.m. start at Harry Grove Stadium.
Right-hander Lance Janke (3-8, 6.66) will get the call for the Cats opposite righty Oliver Drake (2-5, 4.62) for the Keys.
July 26, 2010
HokieSports.com
GREENSBORO, N.C. - Virginia Tech was the choice of the media assembled for the 2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Football Kickoff to win the ACC's Coastal Division and defeat Florida State for the 2010 ACC Football Championship in voting which was announced Monday at the Grandover Resort in Greensboro.
A record number of ballots were cast at the Kickoff with 98 media members voting.
Virginia Tech was chosen on 50 ballots to win its fourth ACC football title in just its seventh year in the league.
Florida State finished second with 26 votes, followed by Miami (10), Georgia Tech (8), Boston College (2) and North Carolina (2).
The Hokies were tabbed to win the ACC's Coastal Division with 532 points and 62 first-place votes outdistancing Miami (444 points, 20 first-place votes), Georgia Tech (408), North Carolina (379), Duke (169) and Virginia (126).
Florida State compiled 565 points and 78 first-place votes to claim the Atlantic Division title over Clemson (479), Boston College (389), NC State (283), Wake Forest (203) and Maryland (139).
Virginia Tech was previously chosen as the preseason ACC gridiron favorite in 2007 and 2009. The Hokies captured the 2007 ACC title, but finished in the Coastal Division second to ACC champion Georgia Tech last year.
Florida State senior quarterback Christian Ponder, who led the ACC in total offense in 2009 (321.8) after nine games before suffering a season-ending shoulder injury, was a runaway selection as the ACC's Preseason Player of the Year.
Ponder garnered 45 votes to finish ahead of Virginia Tech tailback Ryan Williams (16) and quarterback Tyrod Taylor (11), NC State senior quarterback Russell Wilson (6) and North Carolina defensive end Robert Quinn (6). In all, 12 ACC players received votes for ACC Preseason Player of the Year, including Tech's Darren Evans.
July 26, 2010
Lynchburg-Hillcats.com
Lynchburg homered four times in a game for the first time this season en route to a 7-4 victory at Frederick. Neftali Soto smacked a three-run homer in the first and now leads the team with 15 homers and 54 RBI.
The Hillcats wasted no time jumping all over the Keys with a five-run first inning. The first five Cats that came to the plate all got hits and all scored. Neftali Soto started the scoring with a three-run home run.
It was his team-leading 15th of the season and it was his first three-run shot of the campaign. After a single by Denis Phipps, Chris Richburg followed with a two-run homer, his first as a Hillcat to make it a 5-0 game with still no outs recorded in the ballgame.
In the third inning the Green & Gold added to their lead with another long ball, this one a solo shot by Phipps, his fifth dinger in 12 games with the Hillcats.
That homer gave Phipps seven straight hits, which tied Pedro Powell for the most consecutive hits in Hillcats history.
The Keys plated their first run of the evening in the bottom of the frame with an RBI single by Kyle Hudson to make it 6-1.
With the bases loaded later in that inning with one out, Billy Rowell hit a sharply hit ground ball down the third base line that appeared to be headed into the left field corner. But Shane Carlson made a diving stop, got to his feet, stepped on third base and threw to first in time for the inning ending double play.
The next half inning Carlson started things off by hitting his first homer as a Cat to up the lead to 7-1.
Frederick got back within striking distance in the bottom of the seventh inning with three runs to pull within three at 7-4.
Bobby Stevens, Xavier Avery and Hudson had three straight doubles to plate a pair of runs and chase Hillcats starter James Avery from the contest. Ronnie Welty singled in another run in the inning to finish the scoring in the frame and on the night.
The win went to Avery (6-3) and the save was notched by Donnie Joseph (11) for Lynchburg (13-17, 42-58) and the loss went to starter Nathan Moreau (3-1) for Frederick (15-15, 56-44).
The Hillcats will look for their fourth straight win on Tuesday night at 7:00 p.m. at Harry Grove Stadium.
Right-hander Chase Ware (0-2, 3.66) will get the call for the Cats opposite righty Ryan Berry (2-1, 2.67) scheduled to start for the Keys.
July 25, 2010
Lynchburg-Hillcats.com
Kevin Coddington had two extra base hits including his first triple of the season and the Lynchburg Hillcats took the finale 6-5 over the Salem Red Sox. Lynchburg and Salem split the four game series.
The Cats jumped on starter Michael Lee in the first inning. Josh Fellhauer was hit by a pitch and Cody Puckett doubled to left field. With runners at second and third, Neftali Soto struck out and Denis Phipps walked.
Then Kyle Day hit a two-run single to put Lynchburg in front 2-0. He extends his hitting streak to 11, tied for the longest by a Hillcat all season.
In the second, Coddington led off with a triple and scored on a wild pitch during Jose Gualdron's at-bat. It was Coddington's first triple of the season in Lynchburg.
Salem scored one in the third, and a Will Middlebrooks home run pulled the Sox within one. But Lynchburg scored one more in the fifth. Phipps drove in Fellhauer with a single. Fellhauer singled to lead off the frame.
In the sixth, Lynchburg scored again. Brodie Greene singled, stole second and scored on Coddington's double.
Salem struck for two in the top of the seventh to pull the Red Sox within one. Dan Butler walked then scored on Jon Hee's double.
That spelled the end of starter Jordan Hotchkiss. Reliever Dan Guerrero entered the game and surrendered a double to Ryan Dent that scored Hee. Salem was back within one once again, 5-4.
But the cats added some insurance in the seventh. Soto and Phipps led off with two singles. After a pitching change, Chris Richburg pinch hit and hit a sac fly that drove in Soto. Richburg notched his first RBI with the Hillcats.
After scoring one more in the eighth, the Red Sox put the tying run on first base. Dan Butler singled to lead off the inning and was pinch run for by Luis Segovia.
Hee then singled to put the tying run at second. After a Dent sacrifice bunt, Mitch Dening was hit by a pitch to load the bases. Peter Hissey flew out to left field, and Oscar Tejeda grounded out to the mound to end the game.
Jordan Hotchkiss threw a solid six and one-third innings. He gave up four runs and struck out two and gets the win, his seventh of the season. Justin Freeman earns his seventh save.
Lynchburg heads on the road for six games starting tomorrow night at Frederick for a 7 p.m. start.
James Avery (5-3, 3.05) starts for the Cats against Nathan Moreau (3-0, 1.89).
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Clarke County 'Raided' by Appomatox 11/22/09 - A few moments before, Clarke County High School’s fans were screaming louder than they had all game. As two players hit Appomatox County quarterback Kenny Scott at the Eagles’ 37-yard line, they began to roar again.
Their fervor was short-lived. Scott somehow shook off the two tacklers at the line of scrimmage and wasn’t touched again until he crossed the goal line with 6:25 left in the fourth quarter, giving the Raiders the two-touchdown lead they needed to secure the win.
Behind 396 total yards and six total touchdowns (five rushing) from Scott, fourth-seeded Appomattox upset top-seeded, undefeated Clarke County 42-28 in the Region B, Division 2, semifinals Saturday afternoon at Wilbur M. Feltner Stadium. The Raiders (9-2) will travel to play No. 2 Gretna (9-2) in next week’s regional final, a rematch of the 2007 Region B semifinal won by the Hawks 52-0. Appommattox defeated the two-time defending state champion 28-26 on Oct. 30. For a Clarke County (10-1) team that outscored its regular-season opponents by an average of 45 points and outgained them by an average of 310 yards in posting a perfect record, Saturday’s result was a stunner to say the least. The Raiders’ 42 points were eight more than Clarke had allowed all season and their 519 yards were more than 400 more than Clarke was surrendering per game. Despite the long odds they faced during the second quarter, the Eagles (10-1) nearly avoided the dejec-tion that was apparent on so many of their faces after the final whistle. Clarke County, which trailed 28-7 with 5:17 left in the second quarter, battled back to make the score 35-28 on a 2-yard touchdown run by Jeremy Rhoads (11 carries for 82 yards) with 7:30 left in the fourth quarter. Clarke County’s fans, quiet for most of the second half, exploded after Rhoads’ score, and the noise only grew when Appomattox’s offense came onto the field to start possession at its own 34. Joe Reed (18 carries for 123 yards) gained just two yards on first down, but Scott hit A.J. Rose for a 27-yard completion on second down to put the Raiders at the Clarke 37. It was Scott’s speed that was primarily responsible for his five total touchdowns that put Appomattox up 35-21 at the half, but on the next play, the 6-foot, 170-pound senior used plenty of brawn. Clarke County had him by his feet, but he was still able to rip himself free, break an arm tackle and burst up the middle. The ensuing extra point made the score 42-28, and Appomattox held Clarke to minus-15 yards on its last three possessions, with the middle one ending on a Rico Rose interception. Amidst the Raiders’ post-game euphoria, Scott had no idea how he broke free. “It was a blown play,” Scott said. “I just did what I had to do to get in the end zone. (That touchdown) was a big turning point. It was huge.” With 220 yards and five touchdowns on 19 carries and 176 yards and one touchdown on 5-of-9 passing, Scott saved one of the best games of his career for the opportune time and place. Appomattox’s blocking created holes and running lanes for him, and he was just too fast for the Eagles. Scott’s ability to disguise his option intentions bewildered Clarke County, particularly in the first half, and created big plays for him and the rest of the offense. A 59-yard run by Reed set up a 1-yard touchdown run by Scott with 4:47 left in the first quarter. Scott’s 68-yard touchdown run gave Appomattox a 15-7 lead with 11:25 left in the second quarter. A 49-yard pass to Mike Marshall led to a Scott 13-yard touchdown run on the next possession. Scott hit Neil Thomas on a slant for a 53-yard catch and run touchdown on the possession after that to make it 28-7, and Scott closed the Raiders’ first-half scoring with a 70-yard touchdown run. “We came in knowing we had more speed than them,” Scott said. “But we had to come in and show we also had a physical team as well as a speed team.” Raiders coach Ben Martin said he couldn’t be more pleased with his team’s performance. “We were able to read our option a little better,” Martin said. “Kenny was able to, at times, give it Joe for long runs, and, of course, Kenny had a huge night for us.” In addition to an explosive offensive effort, the Raiders held Clarke to season lows in points and yards (304). “We ran our defense,” Martin said. “We run a 3-5 defense, and we’re constantly bringing pressure all the time. We tried to confuse them a little bit.” The Raiders ran through a “Revenge is Sweet” poster before the game in reference to last year’s playoff loss to Clarke County, and now, they’ll try to prevent Gretna from getting redemption against them. “I’m looking forward to it,” Scott said. “We beat them once, and we’re going to try and beat them again.” |











