The Jenkins County War Eagles will face off against the Glascock County Panthers at 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday. Jenkins County will be strutting in after a victory while Glascock County will be coming in after a loss.
On Thursday, Jenkins County made easy work of McIntosh County Academy and carried off a 12-5 win. The victory made it back-to-back wins for the War Eagles.

Noah Griffith
| 04/08/26 @ Montgomery County | 4 |
| 04/09/26 vs McIntosh County Academy | 2 |
| 04/07/26 @ McIntosh County Academy | 2 |
| 03/31/26 @ Portal | 2 |
| 04/02/26 vs Portal | 1 |
| + 3 more games |
Jenkins County got a massive performance out of Noah Griffith, who went 2-for-4 with three RBI, two runs, and one triple. Griffith is becoming a predictor of the War Eagles' success: when he posts at least two runs the team is 3-1 (and 4-17 when he doesn't). Justin Wright was another key player, going 3-for-4 with three runs, two RBI, and one double.
They weren't the only ones making solid contact: Jenkins County kept the outfield on their toes and finished the game with 12 hits. That's a new trend for them: they were averaging 4.1 hits per game earlier this season, but in their last 15 games they've averaged 9.6.
Brentwood hit Glascock County with a seven-run sixth inning on Friday, which goes a long way in explaining the final result. The Panthers came up short against the War Eagles, falling 12-2. That's two games in a row now that the Panthers have lost by exactly ten runs.
Glascock County saw three different players step up and record at least one hit. One of them was Caden Swint, who went 1-for-2 with one run.
Jenkins County's victory bumped their record up to 7-18. As for Glascock County, this is the second loss in a row for them and nudges their season record down to 8-10.
Article generated by infoSentience based on data entered on MaxPreps