Westfield’s eight uncharacteristic errors doom district opener in 14-3 loss to Calvary Christian

Unfortunately for Westfield (6-4, 0-1 GIAA District 5-4A/3A) error after error piled up in the third inning as Calvary Christian (3-7, 1-0 District) scored 10 runs to seal their 14-3 win in the district opener.

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Westfield shortstop Brock Johnson (11) reaches behind to his left in attempt to tag a runner out during the Hornets’ district opener against Calvary Christian. (Clay Brown/HHJ)

PERRY — As Westfield head coach Ryan Wetherington said after Tuesday’s region opener, defense is something the Hornets pride themselves on.

Unfortunately for Westfield (6-4, 0-1 GIAA District 5-4A/3A) error after error piled up in the third inning as Calvary Christian (3-7, 1-0 District) scored 10 runs to seal their 14-3 win in the district opener.

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“I thought the other four innings we played decent defense, not our best. That one inning is what killed us,” Wetherington said. “I think they had two balls that were hit out of the infield that inning [when they] scored 10 runs. I don’t know if it was lack of mental focus…but we pride ourselves in good defense and obviously that didn’t happen tonight.”

“Our pitcher’s up there battling, doing everything they can and we let him down…We’re going to rebound. We’ll get back after it again tomorrow at practice and hopefully go in Thursday with a better outcome.”

This was the Hornets’ fourth game with multiple errors, but eight was by far the highest total this season.

The infield had trouble fielding ground balls and a pair of hit-by-pitches didn’t help. The Knights scored their 10th run after a diving outfielder couldn’t come up with the ball, clearing the loaded bases and giving Calvary Christian a seven-run margin.

After getting the final strikeout, Westfield lined out and struck out twice in four at-bats; Brock Johnson popped up but got on because the shortstop dropped it.

The miserable inning seemed to go as quickly as it came. The offense didn’t find their first-inning juice again, but the very next inning the Hornets made defensive plays they hadn’t just three outs ago.

Two infield grounders resulted in outs and Carter Black picked off the sole runner to quickly dampen the Knights’ offense.

But that ended up being the difference.

Westfield followed a rough defensive top of the first inning by scoring all three of their runs. Brooks Bentley and Win Hoots drew a hit-by-pitch and a walk respectively for Brock Johnson, who knocked a single into left field to put the Hornets up 2-1 after a wild pitch scored Bentley. Matt Molina’s sacrifice fly scored the third and final run, but after that they couldn’t capture that same production.

“[Colton Silvestri] did a good job at keeping the ball down in the zone, and I’m not sure exactly what pitch it was, some type of off-speed pitch that we kept chasing out of the zone,” Wetherington said. “We didn’t make a good adjustment on that pitch, and when we did hit it [we got] weak contact fly outs here or there. Just got to do a better job of stringing some things together.”

One positive, despite a short 2.2 innings on the mound, was Cooper Kennedy’s competitiveness.

The first inning wasn’t easy and Kennedy came off of the mound frustrated. But when he returned in the second he earned three strikeouts in five at-bats. He only allowed one earned run in his time.

At one point the freshman drew his defense in for a mound visit, a testament to his efforts at being a leader regardless of his age and varsity experience.

“Cooper has done great for us all year, and he did it again [tonight], pounding the zone. He’s just a freshman and goes out there and is a leader, tries to lead and do what he can,” Wetherington said. “It’s easy in a situation like that, when your defense isn’t behind you, they’re constantly making mistakes, runs are scoring on you, to get a bad attitude or show yourself. He didn’t. He stayed composed, tried to keep pounding the zone and tried to get us out of it…I was proud of how he pitched today and I thought he did a good job.”

UP NEXT

Westfield will get back at it in the doubleheader at Calvary Christian on March 19 at 5 p.m.

Westfield’s Carter Black pitched 2.1 innings in relief during the Hornets’ district opener against Calvary Christian. Black struck out two batters and only allowed one earned run. (Clay Brown/HHJ)
Hornets first baseman Brooks Bentley (10) jumps up to attempt and secure an errant throw while a Calvary Christian runner approaches. (Clay Brown/HHJ)
Westfield’s Blake Loden (white) reaches down to scoop up an infield grounder against Calvary Christian. (Clay Brown/HHJ)
Westfield third baseman Will Canterbury tosses the ball to first base with a Calvary Christian runner on the way. (Clay Brown/HHJ)
Hornets center fielder Win Hoots moves to scoop up a ball in the outfield during Westfield’s district opener against Calvary Christian. (Clay Brown/HHJ)
Westfield’s Matt Molina follows through on his swing during a 14-3 district loss to Calvary Christian. (Clay Brown/HHJ)
Hornets outfielder Brett Yawn (8) gets the ball in after a hit to the outfield. (Clay Brown/HHJ)
Westfield catcher Rhodes Bledsoe (white) opens his glove for the pitch during the Hornets’ district opener against Calvary Christian. (Clay Brown/HHJ)
Westfield freshman Cooper Kennedy only allowed one earned run in his 2.2 innings on the mound against Calvary Christian, a 14-3 loss for the Hornets in their district opener. (Clay Brown/HHJ)

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Author

Clay Brown is the Sports Editor for the Houston Home Journal. His career started as a freelance journalist for the Cairo Messenger in Cairo, Georgia before moving to Valdosta and freelancing for the Valdosta Daily Times. He moved to Warner Robins with his fiance, Miranda, and two cats Olive and Willow in 2023 to become Sports Editor for the HHJ. When not out covering games and events Clay enjoys reading manga, playing video games, watching shows and trying to catch sports games.

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