Taunton Cousins Dominate in the Circle and at the Plate

Taunton Softball
Taunton senior Ava Venturelli and her cousin, junior pitcher Sam Lincoln got to experience winning a state title together, as Taunton won for the third season in a row. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

AMHERST, Mass. – Taunton senior outfielder and junior pitcher Sam Lincoln have experienced a lot together on the softball field. They play together on the same travel team and both have impressed on the diamond enough that both will be playing Div. I college softball as well (Lincoln at Texas Tech and Venturelli at Louisville).

On Sunday afternoon at UMass Amherst’s Sortino Field, the cousins shared a new experience, winning a state title together.

“Even though we’re family and we’ve played for Taunton since we were younger, it’s our first time ever playing together, which is really special,” Venturelli said. “She’s one of my best friends, and family, so it’s just awesome to be able to play with her and do this with her and she’s going to kill it again next year. I’m so excited to see what she does.”

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Lincoln added, “It’s so fun. We’re on the same travel team as well, so we’ve played a lot of softball together and experienced a lot of the same stuff. We’ve never experienced this together, first time, so it was fun.”

In the final, both players made their mark. Venturelli stepped up with two runners on and one out in the third inning. Taunton led just 1-0 at the time. Generally teams look to pitch around but this time she got a 3-2 pitch out over the plate and she didn’t miss, sending the ball flying over the fence in straightaway center to put the Tigers up four.

That turned out to be the winning hit, as Taunton, which didn’t allow more then two runs in a game all season, allowed Lincoln to pitch with a cushion.

It wasn’t a typical performance from Taunton’s ace. She didn’t strike anyone out until the third and had seven for the game, which is low for someone that is usually in double digits. She walked a couple of batters and hit four. But, through it all she only allowed one hit and one run and never really allowed top-seeded Central Catholic to get comfortable.

“I was getting really squeezed today, so I didn’t know where to go up or down,” Lincoln explained. “One time she would call it up, one time she would call it down, so I was relying on my drop ball a lot to produce ground outs. I had the ball in play a lot, but my defense made the plays.”

Taunton coach Michelle Raposo added, “That was the biggest thing was keep the ball in the park. I knew they had some power hitters, so we worked around them. We worked around where their power zone was and Sam did an impeccable job.”

For Venturelli and Lincoln, it hasn’t been a standard four-year high school career.

Venturelli played as an eighth grader but sat out two years before returning last spring as a junior. She has now won back-to-back state titles. Lincoln saw some time during the regular season as a freshman but played travel ball during her sophomore year. She also returned as a junior, college commitment in hand, and won the D1 championship.

“It’s so awesome,” Venturelli said about winning it all. “It never gets old really, knowing that you’re the best and you did it with some of your best friends. I think was extra special this year because I’m a senior now so this is kind of a last hurrah and I was with some of my best friends who I’ve played with since I was eight years old.”

Asked about what the Taunton program has meant to her as a player, Venturelli added, “It’s brought me everything. It’s made me the person I am and the player I am. Since I played at TGSL (Taunton Girls Softball League) when I was five years old until this year, I’ll always be a Tauntonian and, especially going so far away for college, I’m really attached to my roots and where I’m from so no matter where I go I’ll always be a Taunton Tiger.”

Being able to share this experience with Lincoln added a different dimension to this season’s success. Venturelli wasn’t surprised to see her cousin step into the circle and perform like she has this year (Taunton allowed only 17 runs in 25 games) and she was excited to add another important component to a program already brimming with talent.

“We have a great pitching staff without her but to put that over the edge with her,” Venturelli said. “Sam coming in was amazing and really helped us out just to know we have the support of such a great pitcher who has such great composure no matter the situation.”

Lincoln was thankful for the support of her teammates this year, especially her cousin. While her teammates were celebrating what, for many of them, was a second or a third straight title, Lincoln was soaking in her first chance to lift the trophy.

“It feels good,” she said. “It’s really fun and exciting.”

There will be only one cousin on the field next spring, as Venturelli will be plying her trade ACC next season, but Lincoln and the Tigers will be hoping that fun never ends.

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Dynasty Continues, Taunton Wins Third Straight D1 Title

Taunton Softball
Taunton celebrates its win over Central Catholic in the D1 state title game, the third straight title for the Tigers. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

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AMHERST, Mass. – Taunton may not have been the top seed for Sunday afternoon’s state championship game at UMass Amherst’s Sortino Field, but the Tigers entered the game as the favorite. Having won three of the previous four Div. 1 titles, including two in a row, Taunton had already achieved an unprecedented level of success.

The Tigers weren’t ready to slow down because winning never gets old.

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Behind a one-hitter from junior pitcher Sam Lincoln and a three-run homer from senior Ava Venturelli, Taunton (24-1) rolled to a 6-1 victory over top seed Central Catholic. As freshman Mia Torres hauled in the final out in right field, Taunton raced onto the field to celebrate its three-peat, savoring the moment as though it was the first time.

“It never gets old, this feeling, the camaraderie between teammates, them fighting for each other to win a state championship,” said Taunton coach Michelle Raposo, who has experienced state titles as a player at Taunton and now as a coach. “It’s not easy to do and to be here three years in a row is kind of unheard of. To be able to win it all, it just goes to show how much resilience the kids had and how much fight they had to win it.”

Senior catcher Kaysie DeMoura, a member of all three title teams, added, “It’s absolutely unreal. It’s been a dream of ours to keep breaking records, keep making history, and we went out there today ready to do it. Senior year, finishing it off like this, nothing more you could ask for.”

Like the state semifinal against King Philip, Lincoln struggled to find the strike zone in the first inning. She walked one and, with two outs, hit a batter to put two on base. A comebacker ended the Raiders’ threat.

Taunton grabbed the lead in its second at-bat. With one out, Brooke Aldrich lined a pitch from Julia Malowitz into the gap in right center. Aldrich aggressively rounded second and headed to third, sliding in just ahead of the throw, which bounced away from the third baseman and allowed Aldrich to scamper home.

It wasn’t the typical Lincoln performance. Central Catholic was making contact, so the strikeout number didn’t reach its usual level but the Tigers were solid in the field behind her. First baseman Hayley Krockta opened the second by staying with a tough bloop and flipping the ball to Mia Fernandes, who read the play from second and covered the bag.

The game broke open in the third. With one out, Kyleah Plumb took a pitch off the top of her helmet and Bella Bourque worked a walk. Venturelli was up next. The Louisville-commit pushed the count full before getting a good pitch to hit and drilling it over the fence in straightaway center for a 4-0 lead.

“I knew it was coming,” Raposo said. “I knew if they gave Ava a pitch that she was going to take it. I knew as soon as it left the bat that it was going over and that’s the momentum that we needed. The one run gave us a little insurance but Ava’s home run solidified that we could relax at the plate, find our pitch, and make stuff happen.”

A four-run lead felt decisive, as Taunton had yet to allow more than two runs in a game all season. Lincoln came out for the third and struck out the first two batters. After a walk, Torres made a grab in right to end the inning.

Aldrich reached on an error to start the fourth, getting all the way to third before the inning ended. In the bottom half, Lincoln hit a batter with one out. Aldrich and Fernandes got the lead runner on a grounder but Lincoln hit her third batter of the night to put two on with two outs. The Texas Tech-commit refocused and painted the corner for a inning-ending strikeout.

Malowitz quickly got the first two outs in the fifth and the Raiders elected to intentionally walk Venturelli. Taunton took advantage. DeMoura singled into right center, taking second on a throw to third. Krockta, as she did in the semifinal, came through a big hit, singling to center and bringing in a pair of runs to extend the lead to six.

Raposo said, “They talk about it wasn’t a line drive hit, well it was a laser in the book. It doesn’t matter how it works, you put the ball in play then you make things happen.”

Following a single by Aldrich, the Raiders brought Elisabeth Kearny out of the pen and she got the final out to make sure it didn’t get any worse.

Things felt pretty comfortable for the Tigers at that point and Lincoln posted a quick 1-2-3 inning. Bourque made a nice throw from third for the first out and Krockta flicked a backhand toss to Fernandes, who managed to keep a toe on the bag, for the second out. A lazy fly to Plumb in left sent Taunton to the final two innings up by six runs.

“We trust in her,” DeMoura said of Lincoln. “The past two games I’ve let her have full control on calling [pitches]. She knows what she wants to throw, she knows what’s good for her to throw, and I’ll catch whatever she wants to throw. The connection that we have, we trust each other. Everybody on the team, we had full trust in her all year.”

Central Catholic tried to make it interesting. Moekel was hit by a pitch for the second time (fourth hit batter of the game for Lincoln) to lead off the sixth. After a strikeout, Ava Perotta drew a walk. DeMoura did a great job of hanging onto a tip for another K, but Amelia Ovalles grounded one off the end of the glove of Fernandes and into center.

It was Central Catholic’s only hit of the day and cut the lead to five. Bourque, an eighth grader, came up with another nice play at third, cutting off a bouncing ball and firing a strike to first to get out of the inning.

Taunton nearly answered right back. Bourque walked to start the seventh and Venturelli reached on an error (her fourth time on base in the game). Both moved up on a wild pitch, putting two in scoring position with no outs. The Raiders got a generous call at the plate to cut down the first runner and Krockta dropped a perfect bunt for a hit to load the bases.

Aldrich hit a fly ball to center that looked deep enough to bring in a run, but Venturelli delayed tagging up and got caught in a rundown.

It was only a momentary lapse for the Tigers. Lincoln went back out to the circle and struck out the first two batters of the seventh. Torres settled under a fly ball in right, pulling in the final out and setting off raucous celebrations on the bench and with the large contingent of fans wearing black and orange.

“It’s so awesome,” Venturelli explained. “It never gets old really, knowing that you’re the best and you did it with some of your best friends. I think was extra special this year because I’m a senior now so this is kind of a last hurrah and I was with some of my best friends who I’ve played with since I was eight years old.”

Raposo has won titles as a player, assistant coach, and now in her first year as a head coach. They are all special, but this one felt a little different, particularly since she was coaching her daughter (Torres).

“It means so much more to me,” she said. “To be able to be here and to coach alongside of [Mia], it means a lot. D-Lew (former Taunton coach Dave Lewry) has been an idol for me my entire life. He was my coach, so to come back and coach under him and take over the program from him means a lot to me. His philosophies have stuck with me and I’ve tried to preach that to the girls.”

It is a philosophy that has paid off yet again, as the Taunton dynasty added another trophy to the case.

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Taunton Uses Fast Start to Beat Franklin, Repeat as Champs

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Taunton baseball celebrates its second straight D1 state championship after beating Hock rival Franklin. (Ryan Lanigan/HockomockSports.com)
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WORCESTER, Mass. – There are few secrets between league rivals. When Franklin and Taunton squared off at Polar Park on Sunday night for the Div. 1 state championship (a rematch of the 2022 title game), it was the third meeting of the year and sixth in the past two seasons. Both teams knew exactly what they were up against in the final.

Going up against Franklin ace Alfred Mucciarone, Taunton’s strategy was to be aggressive, not allowing the Hockomock MVP to get up in counts and to try and get on the board first. The strategy worked perfectly.

Taunton (21-4) took advantage of uncharacteristic defensive lapses from the Panthers, got clutch hitting from the top of the order, and scored six runs in the opening two innings to support a stellar pitching performance from sophomore Jonny Escobalez. It all came together in a 7-2 victory, a second straight D1 crown, and the program’s third title in the past four seasons.

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“With Mucciarone, he’s the best pitcher in the state, we knew we were going to be aggressive,” said Taunton coach Blair Bourque. “If he could get ahead, we knew we’d be in trouble, so we were trying to be very aggressive, barrel balls up, get guys on, we were able to capitalize.”

“This is crazy, winning it two years in a row,” said senior Dawson Bryce. “It’s something very few people can do. We played how we always do throughout this season and even in this game, we stuck to what we know. That’s what you have to do in games like this.”

The Tigers wasted no time putting pressure on Franklin (23-4). Braden Sullivan led off the game by ripping a single to left. He was forced out on a grounder by Brayden Cali, but it set the tone. Bryce chased Ryan Gerety deep into center for the second out, but Ryan MacDougall dropped a base hit into shallow left and Cali was flying around the bases to come all the way home.

After Escobalez pitched around a Gerety single in the first, Taunton took control of the game in the second. Mucciarone had back-to-back throwing errors. The first allowed AJ Lewis to get to second base and the second, on a Dwayne Burgos bunt, brought Lewis in to score.

Mucciarone came back with a strikeout, but then walked Andrew Cali. A throwing error on a pickoff attempt moved two runners into scoring position. Sullivan came through again, his second hit in as many at bats would plate a pair. Brayden Cali followed with a single and Bryce shot a double right over the first base bag to bring in two more runs.

“Any time you play a team like Taunton, you can’t make mistakes against them and unfortunately we played our worst inning of the year in the second inning of a state title game,” said Franklin coach Zach Brown. “We made some uncharacteristic plays and that led to a crooked number and we were kind of chasing it the rest of the way.”

The five-spot that Taunton put up in the second gave Escobalez a six-run cushion with which to work, taking some of the edge off for the young pitcher. He allowed a one-out single to Luke Sidwell in the second but made a nice play to knockdown and stick with a Tyler Bellan line drive and got out of the inning.

“He’s been awesome,” Bryce said about Escobalez. “As soon as he came up to varsity, he’s been lights out. He’s been a great addition to the team and he’s going to be really dominant again next year.”

MacDougall added, “Today, you couldn’t keep him sitting down. He was amped all game, pitched amazing, the game of his life, and I don’t think you could throw a better game as a sophomore.”

Franklin got one back in the third. Rex Cinelli reached on an error. Escobalez came back with a strikeout and Sullivan atoned for his miscue with a nice charge of a slow bouncer and throw on the run. He nearly made an even better play to end the inning when he picked a hard hit ball by Eisig Chin up the middle, but the throw wasn’t handled and Cinelli came in to score.

Taunton tried to answer back, as Sullivan got his third hit of the day. With Austin Campbell in to relieve Mucciarone, Bellan made a great play after taking a while to find a pop up behind the plate. Sullivan tagged and went to second, but got caught in a rundown after leaving the bag.

Bryce followed with a double that one-hopped the wall in right and back-to-back walks loaded the bases. Campbell got a grounder to Sidwell at second to escape the jam.

“Those guys have been hitting well for the last couple games,” Bourque said about the top of his order. “They perform when the pressure is on and on the biggest stage, so those guys are clutch and that’s why they’re on top right now.”

In the fifth, the Tigers grabbed an insurance run. Burgos started it with a walk and Shawn Cali got a free pass right behind him. Campbell came back with a pair of strikeouts, but Brayden Cali made sure Taunton cashed in, ripping an RBI-double into the gap in left center.

Escobalez was in cruise control. He retired the side in order in the fourth and fifth innings. Henry DiGiorgio finally gave the Panthers a base runner with a one-out single in the sixth. A wild pitch moved him to second and Sidwell singled to center to drive in a run.

“A seven-inning game goes fast,” said Brown. “You have one bad inning and you’re behind the eight-ball. It’s extremely difficult. These guys have played tremendous baseball all year and more importantly they’re just tremendous young men.”

Things looks so comfortable for Escobalez, who came back out to close the game in the seventh. He struck out the first batter and then got fly balls to right and left, sealing an impressive win on the biggest stage and clinching another title for the Tigers.

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Bourque was asked what the common thread has been through the three titles that the Tigers have won. He replied, “A lot of talent. I try to stay out of the way. Those guys are phenomenal players. They are able to do their thing and when the lights are the brightest they perform their best.”

Sullivan added, “We knew this year was going to be harder than last year. We knew we had what it took if we went in and did our job, we’d have a shot. We came out on top today, that’s all I can ask for. I couldn’t ask for anything more junior and senior year, winning the championship, it’s awesome.”

It was an extra special day for Bourque. Hours before leading the baseball team in a state championship, he was in Amherst to watch his daughter Bella, an eighth grader on the Taunton softball team, bring home the D1 title.

“I haven’t really let it sink in yet, but it’s super cool,” he reflected. “I’m going to remember this day for a long time. I told her at the beginning of the year, you just want to make varsity. Whatever happens, make varsity, be on that team because they were very talented, great coaching, they were going to go far. I didn’t know it was going to happen on the same day or on Fathers Day, but here we are and I couldn’t be happier.”

King Philip Falls Short In Final Against Top Seed Milton

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King Philip senior Tommy Martorano reacts after driving in the opening run of the D2 state final against Milton. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

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WORCESTER, Mass. – It was like déjà vu. For the second season in a row, King Philip was able to push through the gauntlet of the Div. 2 tournament, winning its last three games by two runs or fewer, and reached the state title game. But, standing in the way of a trophy was top seed Milton.

A new season and a new venue, but the result was the same.

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The defending state champion Wildcats scored three times in the third inning and tacked on two insurance runs in the sixth to pull out a 6-2 victory at Polar Park.

“I thought we were pretty locked in,” KP coach Jeff Plympton, Jr. explained. “We were excited to be back and to play in a venue like this is awesome. The guys were super pumped.

“It didn’t go our way. We’re playing one of the better teams in our division….it happens. I’m super proud of these guys.”

Although KP was disappointed to be leaving with runners up medals for the second year in a row, to be able to reach the final stage in back-to-back seasons is an impressive accomplishment in its own right.

“Absolutely, it’s not an easy thing,” Plympton, Jr. said. “I think that the schedule that we play, playing in the Hockomock League, helps us get back. Moving up to Div. 1 next year isn’t an easy thing, but we’re looking forward to the challenge.”

KP got off to a great start. Max Robison led off the game by ripping a single up the middle against Milton ace Owen McHugh, who responded by striking out the next two batters. With two down, Drew Herlin lined a single to center. Tommy Martorano followed by knocking a base hit into left and bringing in the game’s opening run.

Milton tried to answer right back in the bottom half of the inning. McHugh drew a leadoff walk against KP starter Rudy Gately and stole second. Brendan Sencaj made a nice play to cut off a bouncer between third and short. After a fly ball to center that moved McHugh to third, Gately closed out the first with a strikeout.

Gately started the second with a single to right and, after another McHugh strikeout, Cam Hasenfus reached on an error. McHugh didn’t allow the Warriors to build additional momentum by striking out a pair and ending the threat.

With two outs in the bottom of the second, Ryan Kelly beat out an infield single that went off the glove of Robison’s dive at first. Tommy McLeish ended any rally by making a nice diving grab on a sinking liner at short.

Matthew Kelley had a single in the third, but KP weren’t able to get anything going against McHugh. In the bottom half, Milton grabbed control of the final.

Harrison Hinckle, MIlton’s No. 9 hitter, started things by ripping a double into left center. McHugh followed with a single and then stole second. Jimmy Fallon walked to load the bases and Scott Longo drew a free pass to tie the game. A grounder to McLeish got the runner at second, but a throwing error would allow two runners to come home.

Gately got a grounder and a strikeout to limit the damage, but Milton led 3-1. He then reached on an error in the fourth, but was caught in a rundown trying to take third on a grounder to short. Milton went around the horn on a double play to end the inning.

Things looked comfortable in the bottom of the fourth after two quick outs, but the Wildcats rallied. Hinckle again got things going with a single and then stole second. McHugh turned on an 0-2 pitch and pushed the lead to 4-1.

Robison got a leadoff walk in the fifth, but McHugh ripped off three straight strikeouts. Martorano took over on the hill for the Warriors. A one-out error put a runner in scoring position, but he bounced back with a couple of strikeouts.

KP kept battling and had an opportunity to get into the game in the sixth. With one out, Aidan Astorino drew a walk. Gately reached for the third time, dropping a single into shallow left. McLeish went the other way, knocking a hit between first and second to score Astorino. A wild pitch allowed McLeish to put the tying run at second.

McHugh struck out his 11th batter of the night to put the Wildcats on the edge of escaping the jam. With Robison coming up, Milton turned to lefty Tommy Mitchell out of the pen. A 2-2 pitch got away from catcher Jack Finnegan and Gately tried to take advantage. Although Gately got a good jump, Finnegan pounced quickly and made a perfect toss to Mitchell to get the out at the plate.

Plympton, Jr. said, “It’s tough to get runs and we were at the heart of our lineup and I trust Rudy to make decisions. I support him on that. I thought he got a decent jump and they made a great play. We’re looking to get runs and I can’t fault him for being aggressive.”

The Warriors were only down two, but momentum was fully with Milton. With one out in the bottom of the sixth, Jack Sullivan singled to right and stole second. After Hinckle drew a walk to reach base for the third time, a wild pitch moved both into scoring position. Milton continued to make those situations count. Following a strikeout, Fallon lined a single to left to score one.

Fallon appeared to slip while taking his lead with the intention of drawing a throw over. Once Martorano went to first, Hinckle broke for the plate. The throw home got away allowing the second run to score, but Leo Dowling was able to recover and throw out Fallon, who attempted to go first to third on the play.

Mitchell sealed the win for Milton. He got a groundout and a pair of strikeouts before being surrounded by his teammates on the mound, celebrating a second consecutive state title.

“McHugh is an awesome pitcher and Mitchell coming in is like us bringing in Martorano, so we knew they had velocity and I was happy how we responded in that first inning putting a run up,” Plympton, Jr. said. “We went a little flat there and were threatening there at the end but just couldn’t get the hit that we needed.”

King Philip finished the year at 17-8.

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Taunton Edges King Philip and Will Play for a Three-Peat

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Hayley Krockta, who drove in the game-winning run, celebrates after scoring Taunton’s second run in a 2-0 state semifinal win over rival KP. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

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DARTMOUTH, Mass. – One of the things that has made Taunton a perennial state title contender is its depth. There are no weak links. Even when you shut down the stars, the players that regularly steal the headlines, someone else is there to deliver the big hit or make the big play in the field.

That was on display again Thursday afternoon at UMass Dartmouth. Facing its biggest rival, in a state semifinal, Taunton’s ability to get contributions throughout the lineup proved decisive.

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Hayley Krockta and Brooke Aldrich delivered the run-scoring hits, Sam Lincoln continued her stellar season in the circle, and freshman Mia Torres and eighth grader Bella Bourque made timely plays in the field, as Taunton pulled out a 2-0 win against King Philip (23-3) that decided the season series between the Kelley-Rex co-champs and sends Taunton to its third straight state title game.

“All our players are producing,” said Taunton coach Michelle Raposo. “Kids deeper in the lineup have produced a lot for us offensively. It means a lot that these kids, one through nine in the batting order, fight for each other. That’s what makes a team so great, the camaraderie here. I’m just so proud of this team.”

It’s not unusual for this rivalry to extend beyond the league campaign and the regular season. These teams have established themselves as among the most consistent programs in the state and produce teams and games worthy of a state title game, not just a semifinal.

“They’re my favorite game of the year,” said Krockta. “It’s probably the best softball we see in Massachusetts. It’s amazing to play them every year.”

KP coach Kate Fallon Comeau said, “This was a definitely a state title battle. Arguably two of the best teams in the state going head-to-head for the third time this season.”

Freshman McCoy Walsh got off to a shaky start in the top of the first. Having allowed only one run in the postseason so far, Walsh started the game with a strikeout but then walked Bourque and Ava Venturelli. Bourque attempted to steal third and appeared to beat Maddie Paschke’s throw only for Ava Kelley to stay with the eighth grader as she slid just past the bag. It was a big second out and Walsh escaped unscathed on a pop up wide of first.

Lincoln also had a tough start to the game. Sarah Cullen led off by lining a single into left. A one-out walk to Libby Walsh put two on, but Lincoln followed with her first strikeout of the day and then got a grounder to Bourque at third to end the inning.

The pitchers settled in after that first frame, turning the game into the expected low-scoring duel. Walsh fanned a pair of batters in the second and Lincoln struck out one and got a pair of grounders. Walsh was even better in the third, striking out the side. Lincoln got the first batter of the third looking and then induced a pair of grounders to second baseman Mia Fernandes to make it eight straight batters retired.

With one out in the fourth, Venturelli drew her second walk of the game. The Louisville-commit hit a pair of homers in the first meeting between the teams and missed the second, so it was no surprise to see the Warriors pitch carefully to the Taunton slugger.

Kaysie DeMoura, who was the hero with two homers in last year’s state semifinal against Methuen, dropped down a sac bunt, which Walsh showed great agility to field and turn into an out, moving the runner into scoring position with two outs. Krockta delivered. She looped a ball into shallow left that Charlotte Raymond nearly snagged on the slide but it dropped just in front for a hit.

“That’s all I was looking for,” Krockta said about her game-winning hit. “The first at-bat she had been working me in and out, so I wanted to drive that outside [pitch] but when she came on the inside I wanted it and just put the barrel on it as best I could and it thankfully fell in.”

The ball got away from Raymond, allowing Krockta to advance to second. Aldrich followed with a bloop hit of her own, finding space in shallow center. Krockta slid in just ahead of Cullen’s throw for a 2-0 advantage.

Lincoln made quick work of KP in the bottom half of the inning, helped by a nifty backhand stab by Fernandes at second.

“Sam’s really, really, really good,” Krockta said. “I love Sam in the circle, but also it’s the defense behind her. They had to help a lot too, so that’s always good to have. Being up 2-0 we just want to limit their base runners.”

Taunton had an opportunity to put the game away in the fifth. Case transfer Morgan Fitzgerald lined a leadoff single to center. Torres dropped down a perfect sac bunt and reached on a throwing error, which allowed both runners to get into scoring position with no outs. This was the chance to break things open, but Walsh locked in. The rookie struck out the next three batters to get out of the jam and keep KP within two.

Momentum was short-lived, as Lincoln struck out the side in the bottom of the inning. Aldrich smacked a two-out double off the wall in left in the sixth but Walsh came back with a strikeout.

“We gave up two kind of bloop singles and the hardest hit ball of the day didn’t result in anything,” Fallon Comeau said about Walsh. “It’s a tough pill to swallow. She threw a great game, just feel bad that we weren’t able to get any runs to back up that wonderful performance she had.”

Jordan Bennett gave KP life to start the sixth. She beat out an infield hit to leadoff the inning. Liv Petrillo dropped down a sac bunt to move Bennett into scoring position. After a strikeout, Libby Walsh lined a single to center. The throw to the plate forced Bennett to hold and allowed Walsh to advance to second. Not getting a run home was costly, as Lincoln struck out the next batter to keep the shutout.

The Tigers nearly added an insurance run in the seventh. Fitzgerald had her second hit of the game, a single into right, and moved to second on a Torres bunt. Kyleah Plumb also dropped down a bunt and McCoy Walsh hesitated allowing both runners to be safe.

Bourque hit a fly ball out to left, which looked like it might be deep enough to score the run. Raymond threw a dart to home and Fitzgerald’s slide took her past not only the tag, but also the plate. Paschke stayed with the runner and secured the out.

KP needed base runners and Kelley nearly provided one but Torres came flying in and made a nice grab on the sinking liner for the first out. A grounder to Bourque put the Tigers on the brink and Lincoln closed out the game with her 10th strikeout, sending Taunton flying off the bench and on its way back to Amherst for the state title game.

“For the whole season we stuck with the ‘take it one game at a time, one pitch, one inning’ and we just wanted to continue that for the entire season,” Krockta explained. “Ultimately, our goal was to get back to the state final, but we wanted to stay humble and stay with it the entire way.”

Raposo added, “Just because we’ve been there doesn’t mean we don’t want it again. I think we want it more having been there and knowing what it feels like. To be able to go back for a third time in a row is uncommon, so they need to realize that we’ve had a lot of success so far, but we need to produce for one more game.”

Taunton (23-1) will face No. 1 Central Catholic at UMass Amherst’s Sortino Field on Sunday at 12:00.

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Franklin Shuts Out Methuen to Continue Title Quest

Franklin Baseball
Franklin is back in the state title game after a 4-0 win over Methuen and will get a rematch with league rival Taunton. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

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WORCESTER, Mass. – When the Franklin players watched Taunton celebrate at Holy Cross University’s Fitton Field in the final game of last season, the Panthers committed to giving themselves another chance at bringing home a state title.

On Tuesday night, at the same location as last year’s final, Franklin made sure its quest for a championship would go right to the end.

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Austin Campbell and Dillon Cashin combined for a shutout and Eisig Chin had two hits and scored two runs, as the Panthers avoided the upset against No. 21 Methuen, pulling out a 4-0 win and setting up a rematch with the Tigers in the title game.

“I think we have great leadership,” Franklin coach Zach Brown said about what it has taken for his team to get back to this stage. “We have 15 seniors and all of them are tremendous leaders in their own way and they’re all great kids. These guys have stayed the course, they’ve stayed connected, and I’m really proud of their effort on a day-to-day basis.”

Chin admitted that last year’s defeat has stayed on Franklin’s mind all season. He said, “We were so motivated this year. After last year, obviously we didn’t get the result that we wanted, but that just gave us all a driving factor. We all want to win a state chip before we leave and that’s why we work so hard in practice every day.”

Franklin hasn’t been a prolific offensive team in the playoffs, grinding out at bats and manufacturing runs. The first inning was a good example of that approach.

With two outs, Chin lined a single to right off Methuen starter Daremin Escano Vargas. He advanced to second on a balk and to third when Henry DiGiorgio’s bouncer up the middle went off the pitcher’s glove and dropped into no-man’s land. A wild pitch brought Chin home with the game’s first run.

The Panthers weren’t done. Ben Jarosz drew a walk and Luke Sidwell dropped down a perfect bunt for a base hit that loaded the bases. Tyler Bellan battled his way to a walk and an RBI, as DiGiorgio came in to make it 2-0.

Although that would turn out to be all the scoring that Franklin would need, Methuen had some chances to get on the board. In the second, Campbell hit the first batter and with one out gave up a single to G’Andrey Canario. TJ Mullen hit a line drive that was curling towards the corner but Rex Cinelli laid out to make a diving grab. Campbell closed the inning with a strikeout.

In the third, Campbell had some issues finding the strike zone. After a strikeout, he walked leadoff hitter Ronnal Marizan, but a good move to first caught Marizan trying to steal. With two down, Campbell then walked the next three hitters to load the bases. He escaped on a pop up to short.

Methuen’s wasted opportunity looked even more costly in the bottom half, as Franklin tacked on another run. Sidwell worked a one-out walk and moved to second on a wild pitch. Bellan walked for the second time and Ethan DePaolo got a free pass to load the bases. Against reliever Owen Sullivan, Cinelli hit a grounder to short, but beat out the double play attempt to drive in the third run.

“Each inning is its own inning and we’re trying constantly trying to put as many base runners in scoring position as possible and give our guys a chance to knock them in,” Brown said about the team’s offensive approach. “Whichever way that ends up happening, that’s how it unfolds. Overall, I thought the guys were relentless. We left some meat on that bone, but we found enough runs to get the ’W’ and move on.”

Campbell had his lone clean inning in the fourth, striking out a pair. Chin led off the bottom half of the inning by lining a double that one-hopped the wall in left. DiGiorgio grounded one to the left side to move Chin to third and Jarosz got the run home with a fly ball out to center.

Marizan continued to be a pest, doubling with one out in the fifth. After a grounder to second, Campbell walked a batter, but then painted the corner to get a strikeout and get through five innings without allowing a run.

Brown said, “Today is an example of how favor Soup (Campbell) has come. A year ago, once he doesn’t really have the command, I don’t know if he is able to get all the way through the fifth. He just found a way. At one point it was his fastball, at another it was his slider. He just kept competing.”

Cashin took over in the sixth and walked the first batter he faced. Canario hit a ball hard into the gap in left, but Cinelli was there with a nice running grab for the first out. After a single put two on base, Cashin started dealing and struck out the next two hitters.

In the top of the seventh, Cashin struck out the leadoff batter and then got a bouncer to third. Jarosz made a nice read to charge the ball and a great throw across his body to get the second out. A fly ball to center would end it. Franklin was back in the state title game, a yearlong effort realized, although there is another step (and a familiar foe) left to tackle.

“I have all the respect in the world for [Taunton coach] Blair [Bourque] and the Taunton baseball program,” Brown said, acknowledging that there are a lot of similarities between the teams. “People say, ‘iron sharpens iron,’ and they’re in our league and we’ve been butting heads for years. They’re kind of a measuring stick program. You want to play the best programs and they’re certainly right up there every year.”

Chin was blunt when asked about if he’s excited about facing Taunton again in the final. He replied, “A thousand percent. I wouldn’t want to play anyone else in the state final.”

Franklin (23-3) will face No. 2 Taunton in the title game at Worcester’s Polar Park at a date and time to be determined.

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