Up & Coming Weekly

June 12, 2018

Up and Coming Weekly is a weekly publication in Fayetteville, NC and Fort Bragg, NC area offering local news, views, arts, entertainment and community event and business information.

Issue link: http://www.epageflip.net/i/993458

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 24 of 32

24 UCW JUNE 13-19, 2018 WWW.UPANDCOMINGWEEKLY.COM HIGH SCHOOL HIGHLIGHTS Jack Britt makes history with softball title run by EARL VAUGHAN JR. For a team that had won the first North Carolina High School Athletic Association 4-A fast-pitch softball championship in Cumberland County history, Jack Britt coach Sebrina Wilson said her players were surprisingly quiet on the ride home from NC State's Dail Softball Stadium a little over a week ago. at changed when assistant coach Joe Myrtle pulled the white Cumberland County Schools activity bus off Interstate 95 at the Hope Mills off-ramp and saw a Hope Mills Police Department cruiser waiting to give them an escort back to the Jack Britt campus. e team rolled down the windows of the bus and began hanging out, cheering and taking pho- tos. It would continue several minutes later when they arrived at the Rockfish Road school and were greeted in the bus parking lot by a jubilant throng of the Britt faithful. "at's when it set in,'' Wilson said of the history- making title. "It's a special moment.'' Britt won the title series 2-1, beating South Caldwell 3-2 and 6-3 while losing the middle game 3-0. It was the end to what was a truly rollercoaster ride of a season for the Buccaneers. Although Britt wound up as state champion, it didn't win the Sandhills Athletic Conference title, finishing second to a Richmond Senior team that beat them three times. Britt was also swept in two straight games in the Western 4-A Regional final by its state finals opponent, South Caldwell. At one stretch in March, Britt lost three in a row and four of five to league opponents. The Buccaneers finished the season 25-6, with five of their six losses coming to conference op- ponents. But it was that tough league race that steeled Britt for the postseason. When the final MaxPreps state 4-A softball rankings came out last week, Britt and three of its conference foes, Rich- mond Senior, Purnell Swett and Lumberton, were among the 20 highest ranked 4-A softball teams in the state. Even after winning the first game of the state finals against South Caldwell, Britt was no-hit in the second game and facing elimination in a deciding game later in the day. But the Buccaneers got a huge break when rain fell after Saturday's first game and forced a post- ponement until Sunday. Carlie Myrtle, the freshman who had pitched all but one inning for Britt up to that point, said the delay was huge. "I was really tired after the second game,'' Myrtle said. "It was really nice to get another day of rest before going out there and playing.'' Mackenzie George, who saw limited action pitch- ing during the regular season, stepped in to start the final game on Sunday and made it to the sec- ond inning before Myrtle finished the final 5.1 in- nings, shutting out South Caldwell the rest of the way on two hits, one walk and one strikeout. "ey had already seen me twice,'' Myrtle said. "I knew I had to either step it up or show them some- thing different.'' Myrtle started by throw- ing all inside pitches, which she said South Caldwell was thankfully of- ten taking for strikes. "My changeup wasn't working very well, but it comple- mented my fastball pretty nicely and that was what held them at bay,'' she said. Myrtle praised her defense, especially third baseman Savannah Rod- dey. "Savannah made five amazing plays,'' she said. "Big shout out to Savan- nah because she saved my butt.'' George took Most Valuable Player honors in the state championship series for the Buccaneers, par- ticularly for her efforts at the plate in the final game, going 3-for-4 with an RBI and getting a single to start the game after Britt was no-hit the day before. "She had an awesome tournament,'' Wilson said of George. "She put the ball in play, and she gave me something to make them think we have another pitcher. It gave them somebody else to look at.'' While George appreciated the MVP award, she said it wasn't hers alone. "It was a team effort,'' she said. "Anybody could have gotten it.'' Myrtle heads a group of talented freshmen that will return for Britt next season and make them an immediate contender for the 2019 state title. But no one is thinking about that just now. ere is too much to celebrate. "I cried so much,'' Myrtle said. "I love this team. I love that I won it with this team. Every single girl I've bonded with on this team. "I loved them to death and I'm so glad I was able to do this with them.'' Carlie Myrtle Mackenzie George Jack Britt softball coach Sebrina Wilson (left) and assistant coach Joe Myrtle (right) display the state championship trophy. EARL VAUGHAN JR., Sports Editor. COMMENTS? EarlUCWSports@ gmail.com. 910-364-6638.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Up & Coming Weekly - June 12, 2018