Ohio: Elyria gets softball win over Illinois' Bartlett

By Matt Florjancic Apr 17, 2010, 12:00am

Key pitching and timely hitting came in handy for Elyria in their 2-1 high school softball win.

ASHLAND, OHIO The Elyria softball team lost a lot of experience from their 2009 state championship team, but that has not stopped the three upperclassmen from being key parts of the Pioneersearly success in 2010.

Elyria improved to 8-2 overall with a 2-1 win over IllinoisBartlett (7-4) Friday night at the 17th annual Wendys Spring Classic Softball Invitational at the main field of Ashlands Brookside Park.

"Im real happy," said Elyria coach Ken Fenik. "Weve been struggling a little bit, trying to get stuff fine-tuned. Its a project in the works. We still do a lot of things wrong. Today, we did enough things to win. Defensively, they made a lot of good plays out there today.

"That was an awesome softball game," he added. "Thats what you want when you play a softball game. Im sure the fans enjoyed it, but Im happy. Ill take it."

Junior pitcher Kristen Boros gave up just one run and struck out seven Hawks, but it was her ability to work out of trouble which made her invaluable to the Pioneers.

After cruising through the first three innings, Bartletts Lisa Matsie earned a walk to start the fourth. A single from Kelsey Warrick and a walk to Katie Popovich loaded the bases with two outs. However, Boros got a ground ball and a fielders choice ended the threat. In the seventh inning, Boros again found herself working with the bases loaded. A groundout and fly out to left field sealed the win for the Pioneers.

"Early in the game, we struggled with the high pitch," said Bartlett coach James Wolfsmith. "We kept chasing up; we kept chasing up. We did a much better job of laying off the stuff up. Shes got great pitches, moves the ball real well. You force any great pitcher to come into the strike zone and youre going to get better cuts at it.

"Unfortunately, we couldnt get the big hit when we had the chance."

Boros was quick to credit her team for calling timeout when the bases were loaded to give her a minute to regain composure in the seventh inning.

"My team had my back," said Boros. "They saw when I got frustrated; they came and helped me. That helped a lot just to get my nerves to calm down. They didnt really say anything; they just know to just let me have my time and Ill be fine."

Fenik was equally impressed with his players, especially senior Ashley Stolarski who signaled the timeout.

"We didnt crumble," said Fenik. "The girls came together on their own and I tell them, This is your team; its not my team.Each year, I try to have a team make its own identity and theyre starting to make their own identity."

While Boros controlled the circle, junior shortstop Cynthia Woodard came up with the big play offensively. Woodard led off the fourth inning and crushed the 1-0 pitch from Callie Dennison over the centerfield fence.

"I just saw a meatball high in the zone and I just went with it," said Woodard. "I guess it helped a lot. It came down to the last inning and the last runner on third."

In the first inning, Woodard reached base when a pop fly was dropped on the lip of the outfield grass. It was Bartletts second error of the inning and it led to Elyrias first run of the game, which was scored on a wild pitch.

"The challenge isnt a big deal because getting a team like Elyria, we know how good they are," Wolfsmith said. "That helped that we knew who we were playing and what they were capable of. If we come in and play somebody that maybe wasnt as good or that we didnt know, then that would have been more of a challenge.

"The first inning was a little bit tight, probably for sitting around for so long," concluded Wolfsmith. "I thought we tightened up after that first inning, made some nice plays and made real nice catches on a windy day. Its tough in the outfield to catch balls in the wind."

Matt Florjancic is a freelance reporter and sports announcer for WOBL and WDLW Radio.