2023 Hockomock League Softball All Stars

Below are the official 2023 Hockomock League Softball All Stars, selected by the coaches in the league.

Hockomock League MVP

Kelly Colleran, North Attleboro

Hockomock League All Stars

Sara Maher, Attleboro
Lily Routhier, Attleboro
Riley Camacho, Attleboro
Kailyn Durham, Canton
Emma Callahan, Foxboro
Sarah Boozang, Franklin
Callie Lake, Mansfield
McCoy Walsh, King Philip
Maddie Paschke, King Philip
Libby Walsh, King Philip
Charlotte Raymond, King Philip
Sarah Cullen, King Philip
Cae Pellegrini, Milford
Olivia Paglione, Milford
Kelly Colleran, North Attleboro
Maddie Homer, Oliver Ames
Katie Melendy, Oliver Ames
Alyssa Edwards, Stoughton
Ava Venturelli, Taunton
Bella Bourque, Taunton
Kaysie DeMoura, Taunton
Hayley Krockta, Taunton
Samantha Lincoln, Taunton

Honorable Mentions
Lauren Eby, Attleboro
Jessica Wright Canton
Vittoria Cuscia, Foxboro
Avery Chalk, Franklin
Ali Gill, King Philip
Molly Kucharski, Mansfield
Maeve Driscoll, Milford
Arianna McDavitt, North Attleboro
Devon Morris, Oliver Ames
Ally Foulsham, Sharon
Anna Hobbs, Stoughton
Mia Torres, Taunton

Below are the official 2023 Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Softball All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. 2023 Hockomock League Softball All Stars

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.”

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

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.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

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.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

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

Taunton softball
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.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

King Philip Blanks Feehan To Earn Spot In D1 Final Four

King Philip softball Libby Walsh
King Philip senior Libby Walsh celebrates her two-run home run in the bottom of the fourth inning to give the Warriors the lead. (Ryan Lanigan/HockomockSports.com)
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 PLAINVILLE, Mass. – Strong pitching, flawless defense, and timely hitting turned out to be the perfect recipe for success for the King Philip softball team on Sunday afternoon.

The second-seeded Warriors used all three in a Division 1 state quarterfinal showdown with #7 Bishop Feehan and it resulted in a 4-0 shutout win, completing a three-game season sweep of the Shamrocks and earning KP a berth in the state semifinals for the first time in 2016.

“We’re in the nitty-gritty right now,” said King Philip head coach Kate Fallon-Comeau. “This is the end [of the season], there’s only four teams left now. You need to put up that good defense and [have] timely hitting.

“They are always playing together and they are always supporting one another. It’s not always the same person that gets it done, it’s someone different each time.”

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

Senior Libby Walsh clubbed two home runs – a two-run shot in the fourth and a solo blast in the sixth – and sophomore Liv Petrillo added a solo shot in the sixth to pace the offense.

Freshman McCoy Walsh tossed a complete game shutout, scattering just two hits – a two-out single in the first and a leadoff single in the fifth – and issued just two walks. She worked around four hit batters to toss a complete game shutout win.

And maybe the biggest play of the game came in the top of the fifth. With the Warriors hanging onto a 2-0 lead, Feehan senior Trinidy Tavares had a lead-off single, and junior Sarah Dupre drew a two-out walk; a passed ball sent pushed the runners forward, putting the tying run at second.

A hard-hit grounder from sophomore Maddie Coupal looked destined to get through on the right side of the infield but Petrillo made a terrific diving play to her left and fired a toss from her knees, getting the runner at first – on a nice grab from junior Taylor Regan – for the third out and preventing a pair of runs from crossing.

“We kind of live to make those big plays,” said Libby Walsh. “[Petrillo’s] a shortstop playing second base and we’re very lucky to have such a great infield. I knew she had that play, I was kind of running off the field already.”

McCoy Walsh had to work around an early threat in the first inning after two reached with two outs after a hit by pitch and a single, but Walsh got the second of her 10 strikeouts to end the first. Tavares was hit by a pitch in the second but Walsh got a strikeout and catcher Maddie Paschke quickly fired to second and caught the runner for the third out.

“The defense today…I’m just so proud of them,” Fallon-Comeau said. “That diving play that Liv makes, throws her out by a half step at first. I think the outfield made all of their catches. They were solid today and had McCoy’s back. [Bishop Feehan] fouled off a lot of pitches, they had some great at-bats but McCoy battled through every at-bat right up to the end.”

Meanwhile, Feehan starter Mylee Ramer had kept KPs bats quiet for the first three innings. She retired the side in order on strikes, set the Warriors down in order in the second, and got three straight outs in the third with the help of left fielder Breslin Findlen, who made a terrific catch at the fence in left to take away a hit from KP junior Jordan Bennett.

Freshman Ali Gill was KP’s first base runner of the game when she was hit by a pitch in the bottom of the fourth. After falling behind 0-2, Libby Walsh smashed an off-speed pitch deep over the fence in left-center for a two-run home run, giving the Warriors a 2-0 edge.

KP had a chance to add some insurance in the fifth inning but left two on base. Paschke had a single to left and Regan followed with a single to center, but Ramer got a big strikeout and induced a pair of popups to escape further damage.

In the bottom of the sixth, Walsh got ahold of another one and sent a high fly ball over the fence in center field to extend the lead to 3-0. Ramer got two outs but Petrillo drilled the first pitch she saw to right center to make it 4-0.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

“They’ve been up for every single game and all of them have been very competitive,” Fallon-Comeau said. “We couldn’t ask for better competition throughout the tournament, and it’s only going to get tougher from here.”

The Shamrocks put a runner on with two outs in the top of the seventh but McCoy Walsh put an end to the game with her 10th strikeout to secure the win.

The win sets up a Division 1 state semifinal matchup with Hockomock League rival Taunton. The Warriors and Tigers split the regular season, each team winning at home. The two state powerhouses will face off at 5:00 on Wednesday at UMass Dartmouth.

Walsh and Defense Carry KP into Sweet Sixteen

King Philip Softball
Freshman McCoy Walsh is congratulated coming off the field. Walsh struck out 15 in her first playoff game, helping KP beat Needham to advance. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

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PLAINVILLE, Mass. – King Philip was in a groove at the end of the regular season. Although the final game was an extra innings loss to Bridgewater-Raynham, the Warriors had won the previous 10, including a title-clinching victory over Taunton, with eight shutouts.

It is hard to carry momentum into the playoffs when you’ve been waiting 10 days between games.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

On Tuesday afternoon at the PAL Fields, KP showed more than a little rust at the plate, but got another stellar pitching performance from freshman McCoy Walsh, allowing two hits and one run while striking out 15, and a couple of solid plays in the field to put away No. 31 Needham and advance to the Div. 1 Sweet Sixteen.

“We do some live pitching obviously at practice for BP and stuff and we do soft toss but there is that game situation piece that you are kind of missing,” KP coach Kate Fallon-Comeau admitted. “We did do postseason scrimmages but you don’t know when you’re going to play and you don’t want to schedule too many and it turned out we sat for quite a while.”

While the KP bats may need a game to warm up, Walsh looked ready to go right from the start. She struck out 10 of the first 11 batters that she faced. Needham hit a fly ball to left to start the second and then got its first hit with two outs in the fourth on a single by Kelsey Pittman. Walsh got Maddie Baker to ground out to second to end the inning.

“It was a little frustrating not to be able to get those insurance runs and you’re used to having that little cushion, but I thought McCoy did great in the circle,” Fallon-Comeau said. “She really stepped up for us.”

The Warriors wasted no time getting in front but wasted a chance to break the game open. Sarah Cullen led off with a single to right and stole second. With one out, Cullen came in to score on a base hit to right by Libby Walsh. Charlotte Raymond followed with a single and the two advanced on a pitch in the dirt.

Ava Kelley reached on a fielder’s choice to the third baseman, who tried to draw Walsh off the bag before throwing across the diamond. Amanda Ferreira got a strikeout and a comebacker to get herself out of the jam.

In the second, Taylor Regan’s long fly to right center found the grass and ended up as a leadoff triple. Again, Ferreira was able to bear down with a runner in scoring position, getting a grounder to second and a hard hit liner right at the shortstop. Freshman Ali Gill came through with two outs, singling to left to make sure KP got the run home for a 2-0 lead.

KP continued to get base runners without looking particularly comfortable or dangerous at the plate. Kelley beat out an infield single in the third but was caught stealing. The following inning, Jordan Bennett was aggressive with two outs, turning a hit in shallow left into a double, but a grounder to second ended the inning.

Fallon-Comeau said, “We were just missing it, hitting it right at people. Kudos to the Needham pitcher, she pitched herself a great game today.”

With two outs in the fifth, KP put together a little two-out rally. Raymond dropped a single into right and then Kelley hustled to get an infield hit, but again Ferreira escaped as Liv Petrillo made solid contact but her deep fly to center stayed in the park.

The Warriors weren’t helping out Walsh offensively, but they were flashing the leather. Raymond made a nice running grab in left center to end the fifth, Walsh helped herself with a diving snag of a popped up bunt in front of home plate with a runner on in the sixth, and Gill tracked a long fly ball to just in front of the warning track to end that inning.

KP added an important insurance run in the sixth. Maddie Paschke ripped one past the shortstop for a leadoff hit. With Ava Lanza in as a courtesy runner for the catcher, she moved to second on a bouncer back to the mound. Bennett stung a liner right at the third baseman, whose attempt to double off Lanza ended up in right field.

With a runner at third, Cullen hit a roller up the first base line that wasn’t fielded cleanly and allowed the run to score.

As the rain rolled in and the temperature dropped, Gill made another great grab to start the seventh, snaring a sinking liner to right. The next batter, Baker, turned on a Walsh pitch and crushed it over the fence in left to cut the lead to two.

Fallon-Comeau explained, “I knew that kid could rake, and I thought whatever, 3-0 lead, seventh inning, throw to her because [McCoy’s] going to have to face good hitters like that a lot, and I think she kind of grooved one there for her and she put it well over the foul pole.”

There was no need to be too concerned about Walsh or the lead, as the rookie struck out the next two Needham hitters to close out the win and send KP to the next round.

“Hopefully we’ve dusted the cobwebs off a little bit and we’ll be ready to go tomorrow,” Fallon-Comeau said. “Not much time in between after sitting for so long, but it is what it is. It’s the playoffs, we’re just happy to be here and hopefully we can take care of business.”

King Philip (21-2) will have a quick turnaround, as the Warriors host No. 15 Chelmsford at the PAL Fields on Wednesday.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.