Author: Saul Berrios-Thomas

PSJA North ready to roll with Soza and Cienfuegos reunited

BY SAUL BERRIOS-THOMAS | STAFF WRITER

PHARR — In 2002, current PSJA North coach Rene Soza was coaching at Valley View. When Guillermo Cienfuegos showed up as a freshman, Soza saw potential right away.

“Looking at his size as a freshman, I knew he could be a starter for four years,” Soza said. “With his height and his knowledge of pitching, he dominated.”

The big-framed flamethrower rose to prominence as the Tigers’ ace during his freshman year. Valley View reached the postseason for the first time ever in baseball, prompting a run of domination that catapulted the program to the top of the Valley.

During his sophomore season, Cienfuegos made a major change in his game, which helped him become a pitching coach for Soza all these years later at PSJA North.

“He had a great fastball,” Soza said. “But, after his freshman year, he said, ‘Wait a minute. Maybe I do need to add a couple of pitches.’”

Cienfuegos went on to pitch at the college level. He played in the Junior College World Series and pitched in front of 10,000 fans during his collegiate career. After that, he played in Mexico for a year before returning to the Valley and focusing on his career in information technology. He began working for PSJA ISD at the central office.

“I had my degree, so I decided to hang ‘em up and go work,” Cienfuegos said. “I ended up getting a job with PSJA. I do all of the IT, so it has nothing to do with sports.”

“I was like, ‘Man, we need to get him in here,’” Soza said of Cienfuegos’ hiring process. “I said, ‘It’s not going to happen, because he works at the central office.’ … (PSJA superintendent) Dr. (Daniel) King looked at him and said, ‘Aren’t you Guillermo Cienfuegos who pitched for Valley View?’ Dr. King was superintendent at Hidalgo at the time. … He said, ‘You are not coaching?’ Guillermo said, ‘No sir,’ and Dr. King said, ‘Well, you need to start.’”

And with that, it was done. An IT job opened up at PSJA North, and not long after, Cienfuegos filled the position. PSJA North principal Liza Diaz made the transition very easy, according to Cienfuegos.

Once Cienfuegos got to PSJA North, he went to work with coach Soza, grooming young arms to compete in a tough District 31-6A, and eventually — hopefully — at the next level.

Cienfuegos still thinks back to his sophomore season.

“I try to teach these kids the mental part,” Cienfuegos said. “The one pitch that I would have loved to learn in high school is the circle change-up. I threw a split. My pitches got me by, but when you get to the college level, you have to have a change-up. If you can dominate a change-up, you will be successful. The rhythm of keeping the hitters off-balance with the change-up is so critical.”

Since joining the Raiders, Cienfuegos has helped some of North’s best pitchers get even better.

“I haven’t pitched since middle school,” senior Justin Cantu said. “I came in throwing a lot of pitches, and (Cienfuegos) said, ‘That is too many for you to throw.’ He taught me how to control it, and the process of pitching. … He gave me a change-up. We worked on how to use it and when to throw it to catch the batters off guard.”

“He’s helped me learn how important different pitches are in different situations,” junior Damian Rodriguez said.

Reunited, Cienfuegos and Soza have the Raiders ready to compete this year.

“This season has gone good,” Cantu said. “We have a good team, and I think we will be in the mix for district this year.”

“We have been doing great as a team,” Rodriguez said. “We have been playing together better than we have in the past. I think we have shown progress this year.”

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Gonzales ready to continue Mission Veterans dynasty

BY SAUL BERRIOS-THOMAS | STAFF WRITER

When Ben Gonzales took over the Mission Veterans baseball program, he knew that the winning culture and tradition were already deeply intertwined into the roots of the program.

His goal was to “continue that tradition, but with my own stamp on it.”

“I was excited about the opportunity,” Gonzales said. “It was exciting to take over a program that was successful because of what they have done over the last couple years. … I do believe we have the athletes here to continue that tradition.”

The Patriots (6-11, 3-2 in District 31-5A) got off to a hot start, winning five of their first six games, but have struggled a bit since.

“We started off, right off the bat,” Gonzales said. “After that, we kind of stumbled a bit there. We were in all the ball games we lost. It’s like I told the guys, ‘You have to come to play seven innings. You can’t play six and overcome one bad inning.’ That has been our downfall so far in a lot of our losses.”

Still, the Patriots boast a solid defense, and junior ace Alex Guajardo is a threat every time he pitches.

“When Alex is on, he throws a pretty good game,” Gonzales said. “He’s young. He didn’t throw too many games last year. I couldn’t ask anything more from him.”

The key for the Patriots will be the bats. In their losses, they leave small villages on base, and they can’t get runners in from second and third with less than two outs. But in their wins, they get rolling and can’t be stopped. If they can hit like they have in their wins, they can compete in a District 31-5A that is all bunched up.

“(The district) is wide open,” Gonzales said. “If we show up to play like we are capable of, I think we can put our necks in there and make a run for it.”

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#RGVBaseball top ten and standings 03.20

RGVSports.com Baseball Top Ten
Team W-L Prev.
1. McAllen High 15-1 1
2. PSJA High 8-5 2
3. Edinburg Vela 11-4 3
4. Los Fresnos 13-4 4
5. Valley View 10-7 6
6. Weslaco High 15-1 10
7. Brownsville Veterans 7-6 5
8. Edcouch-Elsa 6-6 7
9. Sharyland High 16-3 NR
10. La Joya High 12-5 NR

District 30-6A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

*-McAllen High 15 1 2 0 —

McAllen Rowe 9 7 2 0 —

**-Mission High 6 8 2 1 .5

La Joya High 12 5 1 1 1

McAllen Memorial 12 7 1 2 1.5

*-La Joya Palmview 6 10 1 2 1.5

La Joya Juarez-Lincoln 4 12 0 3 2.5

District 31-6A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

***-PSJA High 8 5 2 0 —

Edinburg Vela 11 4 1 1 1

**-PSJA North 10 5 1 1 1

**-Edinburg North 7 8 1 1 1

*-Edinburg High 5 9 1 1 1

Edinburg Economedes 4 10 1 1 1

*-PSJA Southwest 7 9 0 2 2

PSJA Memorial 3 12 0 2 2

District 32-6A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Weslaco High 15 1 2 0 —

Los Fresnos 13 4 2 0 —

Brownsville Rivera — — 2 0 —

*-Harlingen High 6 5 1 1 1

Harlingen South 5 4 1 1 1

Brownsville Hanna 8 2 0 2 2

Weslaco East 6 10 0 2 2

*-San Benito 4 11 0 2 2

District 31-5A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Sharyland High 16 3 4 1 —

*-Valley View 10 7 4 1 —

*-Rio Grande City 8 6 3 1 .5

Mission Veterans 6 11 3 2 1

*-Laredo Cigarroa 8 11 4 2 1.5

*-Sharyland Pioneer 13 6 2 3 2

Laredo Martin 9 8 2 3 2

**-Roma 2 9 1 3 2.5

*-Laredo Nixon 5 13 0 5 4

District 32-5A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Brownsville Veterans 7 6 3 0 —

*-Brownsville Lopez 5 3 2 0 .5

*-Edcouch-Elsa 6 6 2 1 1

Brownsville Pace — — 1 1 1.5

Mercedes 6 4 1 2 2

Donna High 7 11 1 2 2

Donna North 5 8 1 2 2

Brownsville Porter — — 0 2 2.5

District 32-4A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Progreso 7 5 3 0 —

Zapata 7 5 3 0 —

Rio Hondo 5 8 2 1 1

Grulla 7 7 2 1 1

Port Isabel 2 10 1 2 2

Raymondville 8 5 1 2 2

*-La Feria 4 9 0 3 3

Hidalgo 3 10 0 3 3

District 32-3A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Santa Rosa — — — — —

Lyford — — — — —

Edinburg IDEA Quest — — — — —

Monte Alto — — — — —

District 32-2A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Riviera-Kaufer — — — — —

Freer — — — — —

Ben Bolt — — — — —

Benavides — — — — —

La Villa — — — — —

San Perlita — — — — —

Premont — — — — —

Lasara — — — — —

Bruni — — — — —

San Isidro — — — — —

Martinez playing for late uncle, La Joya High

BY SAUL BERRIOS-THOMAS | STAFF WRITER

LA JOYA — When people see La Joya High sophomore Jonathan Martinez play, they see his elite talent.

But Martinez is not the type to hog the spotlight. Instead, the most important word for him in or out of baseball is “family.”

Martinez wears jersey No. 85 for La Joya (12-5, 1-1 in District 30-6A). That’s been his number of choice since he first had the chance to pick at 4 or 5 years old.

“My uncle used to be a receiver for the La Joya Coyotes, and he wore No. 85,” Martinez said. “Wearing that number on my back, it means family to me. I feel like there is an angel helping me play and helping me to do my best on and off the field.”

Jonathan Martinez’s uncle Joey Martinez passed away in a car accident when Jonathan was very young.

“He would take care of me when I was little,” Martinez said. “I have memories of him watching me.”

Ever since, Martinez has not stepped on the field without taking 85, and his family, with him.

That word, family, goes even deeper for Martinez.

Many of the current Coyotes grew up playing together. Seniors Ray Alaniz and Julian Castillo have been teammates since they were 5.

“Growing up, all our weekends would be dedicated to baseball,” Castillo said about he and Alaniz. “To this day, it feels very natural to be on the field together.”

Martinez has also played with most of his teammates, including Castillo and Alaniz, since he was little. Martinez said traveling with the Coyotes feels more like a family road trip than a team trip.

“We are all close, even the coaches. We are all together,” Martinez said. “We all play together. We live near each other. We have all been playing together since we were small. It’s just like family to me.”

Just like any family, the Coyotes have roles. Alaniz or his double-play partner, junior shortstop Anthony Peña, get to pick the tunes. Alaniz has a handshake with everyone on the team.

“It’s amazing, honestly,” Martinez said. “We are all clowns together. We do a lot of crazy stuff, just having fun.”

The Coyotes are not just a fun and close family. They are good at baseball, too.

Martinez is a third baseman and pitcher. His most consistent pitch, his fastball, is at least a very appropriate 85 mph most days, but he can hit the low 90s. He also has several off-speed offerings that continue to improve.

“It takes a lot of focus to pitch in high school,” Martinez said. “You can’t just throw the ball anywhere, because everyone is a good hitter. So, you have to hit your spots and work on location. It’s tough to pitch.”

Castillo is a power-hitting first baseman who bats cleanup. Last year, Castillo was the designated hitter for much of the year, but during his senior season, he couldn’t miss the chance to step between the white lines every inning.

“He has been doing well,” La Joya skipper Mario Flores said. “He has a lot of pop in his bat. Hopefully, he gets even better in district.”

Alaniz and Peña hold down the middle of the defense. Alaniz was the 30-6A Defensive MVP last season. This year, Alaniz is focused on upping his offensive production.

“I was working really hard this summer,” Alaniz said. “Almost every day, I went to the cages. I woke up at 8 in the morning to go work with the trainer.”

Carlos De Leon has also sacrificed for the betterment of his game, and the team’s potential. Senior Irving Garcia was a contributor for the Coyotes last year, but he decided not to play in 2018.

“I know Irving was a big loss,” Flores said. “I needed outfielders. We put (De Leon) in right field, and he has been doing a heck of a job. That is one of the big changes that we made.”

De Leon, a senior, has the speed and arm strength to be a quality corner outfielder, but a recent breakthrough has brought his game to another level.

“I have gotten in a lot of reps,” De Leon said. “The bunny hop is what I am trying to practice. Because I have been side stepping. I tried the bunny hop, and that has been working good.”

De Leon has good range in right and combines with junior center fielder JR Rodriguez, who is a dynamo on defense, to keep balls from dropping in the La Joya outfield.

Martinez’s family, both blood and diamond, knows what he wants everyone else to know about his team.

“We are very hardworking,” he said. “We are a group of brothers that are working hard and doing our best to represent La Joya.”

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#RGVBaseball scores, schedule and box scores 3.16.18

VALLEY HS BASEBALL SCHEDULE

Friday, March 16

District 30-6A

McAllen Rowe 12, La Joya Palmview 2

McAllen High 11, McAllen Memorial 6

Mission High 11, La Joya Juarez-Lincoln 10

District 31-6A

Edinburg North 8, PSJA Southwest 2

Edinburg Vela 19, Edinburg High 2, 5 innings

PSJA High 11, PSJA North 1, 6 innings

District 32-6A

Weslaco High 16, Weslaco East 0

Harlingen High 6, Harlingen South 2

San Benito at Los Fresnos, not reported

District 31-5A

Rio Grande City 3, Laredo Nixon 0

Sharyland High 6, Sharyland Pioneer 2

Laredo Martin 3, Roma 1

Valley View at Laredo Cigarroa, not reported

District 32-4A

Progreso 3, Raymondville 2

Rio Hondo 14, La Feria 9

Zapata 11, Hidalgo 0

Grulla 4, Port Isabel 1

Saturday, March 17

Non-District

Zapata at Laredo LBJ, noon

VALLEY HS BASEBALL/SOFTBALL BOX SCORES

Friday’s Game

District 31-6A

EDINBURG VELA 19, EDINBURG HIGH 2, 5 INNINGS

Edinburg High 010 10 — 2

Edinburg Vela 782 2x — 19

WP: Nico Rodriguez 5 innings, 10 stikeouts, 5 hits.

EDINBURG VELA (19): Ramsey Amador 2-3, 6 RBIs, 2 HRs; Yulean Torrellas 3-4, 3 runs; Eric Martinez 2-3, 3 RBI, 2 doubles, 2 runs; Matt de la Cruz 2-4, 2 runs, RBI; Aaron Galvan 1-1, 2 RBIs, 3 runs, 3 BBs.

RECORDS: Edinburg Vela 11-4, 1-1.

District 30-6A

MISSION HIGH 11, LA JOYA JUAREZ-LINCOLN 10

LJ Juarez-Lincoln 211 013 2 — 10

Mission High 008 000 3 — 11

WP: Steve Villarreal.

MISSION HIGH (11): Andy Martinez 3-5, 3 runs, 6 RBI, 2 triples, HR; Steve Villarreal 2-4, 1 run, 2 RBIs, HR.

RECORDS: Mission High 6-8-2, 2-1; La Joya Juarez-Lincoln 0-3 in distirct.

Weslaco High completes sweep of Weslaco East

BY SAUL BERRIOS-THOMAS | STAFF WRITER

WESLACO — Weslaco High senior pitcher Rico Avila toed up the rubber for the first time on Friday with a four-run lead already on the board.

That was all the support Avila needed in a 5-inning complete game shutout, as the Weslaco High Panthers rolled past the Weslaco East Wildcats 16-0 in District 32-6A action.

“Right off the bat, I knew it was going to be a good little rivalry game,” Avila said. “As soon as I started warming up, I was ready. I knew what they had on the other side, and I’m thankful for my teammates helping me out.”

After Weslaco High beat East 6-1 on Tuesday, Friday’s win gave the Panthers the series sweep.

“Leading off the district season with a sweep is a good feeling,” Weslaco High coach Eddie Serna said. “The kids were feeling it, and we just hung in there and got it done.”

Avila was strong from the start on Friday, according to his catcher, senior Luis Longoria.

“I’ve been playing with Rico a long time, and he looked pretty good today,” Longoria said. “I know he is always going to throw well. He is a good pitcher.”

The two started playing together when they were 7, and they have been a battery ever since.

“I know he has my back,” Avila said of his backstop. “We are always on the same page. We have little gear shifts that always keep me rolling.”

Longoria knows just what to say to his pitchers to get them out of a jam or help them regain focus. He knows when to be serious and when to bring a little levity.

“Some get a little frustrated, but I know it is good for them to have someone to back them up,” he said. “I just go out there and try to calm them down or keep them ready for the next batter.”

Longoria didn’t get to gun out any runners on Friday, but his arm has been true all year, and the number of runners willing to take that risk against him continues to shrink.

“They didn’t run on him tonight, because he’s thrown everybody out,” Serna said. “He’s been very reliable back there.”

Unable to get a glove on a low pitch to his right side, Longoria stuck out a leg and blocked it with his pad, slowing the ball and giving him a better angle on a would-be throw. The throw wasn’t necessary on Friday, but Longoria still chased the ball with the same intensity.

“I’ve been catching a long time, and I hate to give runners free bases,” Longoria said. “I want to help my pitchers out there, because I know they are working hard. My mindset is I will do anything for them. So my reaction is get something on the ball — any body part I can.”

Longoria credits much of his quickness to the work he does with assistant coach Homer Llanas.

Avila pitched all five innings, allowing only three hits and three walks. He had only one strikeout, but he didn’t need any more on Friday. Every ball put in play was gobbled up by the Panthers’ defense.

“That’s a typical start for him,” Serna said. “He pounds the strike zone and controls the tempo.”

Avila worked inside early against the East hitters, which allowed him to vary his location later in the game and force swings and misses.

Just about everyone in the lineup contributed on offense. The Panthers batted around in the first and gave Avila a 4-0 lead. The Panthers added one each in the second and third, before exploding for eight more runs in the fourth to put the game out of reach.

“It’s amazing when we get rolling like that,” junior shortstop Axel Camanera said. “Hitting is the best part of baseball. There is nothing more fun than an inning like that.”

Camanera was a menace on the basepaths in the second. He reached on a single and then stole second and third before scoring on a sac fly from Longoria.

“Its so much fun,” Camanera said. “I love running the bases and reading the pitcher.”

District 32-6A implemented a schedule that gives every team a two-game series every week. Friday wrapped up the first series for Weslaco.

“We learned a lot from this first series,” Avila said. “We just need to focus on our bats. We are trying to be consistent, because if we have that, our defense is solid, so we will be good. Just little-by-little, hit-by-hit, we find a way to pull through.”

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#RGVBaseball mid-week scores and weekend schedule 3.15.18

VALLEY HS BASEBALL SCHEDULE

Friday, March 9

Non-District

Wednesday, March 14

Non-District

Weslaco High 12, PSJA Memorial 2

District 31-5A

Mission Veterans 5, Laredo Nixon 2

Rio Grande City 4, Sharyland Pioneer 2

Sharyland High 12, Laredo Cigarroa 2

Valley View 11, Roma 4

Thursday, March 15

District 31-6A

Edinburg Economedes 14, PSJA Memorial 4, 5 innings

District 32-5A

Brownsville Lopez 7, Donna High 6

Brownsville Veterans 1, Edcouch-Elsa 0

Mercedes 13, Brownsville Pace 10

Friday, March 16

District 30-6A

McAllen Rowe at La Joya Palmview, 7 p.m.

La Joya Juarez-Lincoln at Mission High, 7 p.m.

McAllen Memorial at McAllen High, 7 p.m.

District 31-6A

Edinburg North at PSJA Southwest, 7 p.m.

Edinburg High at Edinburg Vela, 7 p.m.

PSJA North at PSJA High, 7 p.m.

District 32-6A

Weslaco High at Weslaco East, 6:30 p.m.

San Benito at Los Fresnos, 6:30 p.m.

Harlingen High at Harlingen South, 6:30 p.m.

District 31-5A

Laredo Martin at Roma, 2 p.m.

Laredo Nixon at Rio Grande City, 6 p.m.

Valley View at Laredo Cigarroa, 7 p.m.

Sharyland High at Sharyland Pioneer, 2 p.m.

District 32-4A

Hidalgo at Zapata, 7:30 p.m.

Grulla at Port Isabel, 7:30 p.m.

Saturday, March 17

Non-District

Zapata at Laredo LBJ, noon

Gonzalez’s no-hitter paces Edinburg High in district opener

BY SAUL BERRIOS-THOMAS | STAFF WRITER

EDINBURG — Edinburg High junior starting pitcher John Gonzalez beat the Edinburg Economedes Jaguars by himself.

Gonzalez pitched a no-hitter and drove in the game-winning run as the Bobcats topped the Jags 4-0 in both teams’ District 31-6A opener.

“Losing to these guys last year, it feels good to redeem ourselves this year,” senior center fielder Christian Medina said.

“We were able to cash in on some two-out hits, and that was really the difference,” Edinburg High coach Robert Valdez said.

Gonzalez got the ball to start the game, and he promptly mowed down the first two batters before getting the third to pop out to right. The frame was a sign of things to come.

“That start felt really good,” Gonzalez said. “It gave me a lot of confidence, which helped me hit my spots as the game went on.”

“He was able to locate his fastball tonight, and that is what got him the win,” Valdez said. “We are going to go as we pitch, and John set the tempo tonight. He was able to get some early strikeouts and get comfortable in there.”

Gonzalez went all seven innings with 11 strikeouts and two walks.

The game-winner came in the bottom of the third. Junior right fielder Roy Rodriguez reached on a single smashed off of a hanging curveball from senior Econ starter Pablo Juarez, then picked up a steal to get into scoring position.

“I was just trying to trust my coach and read the signs,” Rodriguez said. “The ball beat me, but I slid in a way that the tag came late and I was safe.”

Gonzalez came up later with Rodriguez at second. A nearby ice cream truck provided the soundtrack to Gonzlez’s winning hit.

“Two outs, but I knew we had to score first,” Gonzalez said. “It was a fastball outside, and I drove it (to the opposite field).”

“He’s a veteran, as a junior, and we expect him to get it done on both sides,” Valdez said. “He put it together well tonight.”

Senior shortstop Jesse Garcia drove in Gonzalez, and the 2-0 lead was more than enough.

“He’s our stallion, our stud,” Medina said. “If he’s on like he was tonight, everybody tries to play up to their expectations. We know we can trust him to get it done.”

Gonzalez was coming closer to the pitch-count limit as the sixth inning wrapped up, but there was no doubt he would be out there for the seventh with the chance to seal the no-hitter.

“It was his to finish,” Valdez said. “He’s been in that situation before, and it was his game to lose after what he did on the mound and at the plate. We weren’t going to take that away from him.”

Gonzalez flirted with a perfect game, but two walks and an error led to the Jaguars’ three base runners. Gonzalez even took care of one of those with a caught stealing. The error was a painful one. With a Jaguar headed to third, a pop-up came toward junior third baseman EJ Alanis. He watched the ball almost all the way into the glove, but at the last second the ball popped out, and both runners were safe. Some lackadaisical running from the Jaguars cost them a run on the error.

The Bobcats added a run in the fifth, when Rodriguez reached on a catcher’s interference call and was later driven in by Gonzalez for his second RBI of the game.

The final run came from Alanis, who atoned for his earlier error with a double. Senior first baseman Chris Nieto drove in Alanis.

The youthful Bobcats are still maturing, but the foundation is in place to get them to the next level.

“We need to work on our consistency,” Gonzalez said. “Sometimes we do good hitting, but some games we don’t. We are a young team, so I feel like we will get better at that as we go along.”

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#RGVBaseball scores and schedule 03.13.18

VALLEY HS BASEBALL SCHEDULE

Tuesday, March 13

District 30-6A

McAllen High 11, La Joya High 2

La Joya Palmview 3, La Joya Juarez-Lincoln 2

Mission High 13, McAllen Memorial 3

District 31-6A

Edinburg North 10, Edinburg Vela 9

Edinburg High 4, Edinburg Economedes 0

PSJA High 15, PSJA Southwest 1, 5 innings

PSJA North 14, PSJA Memorial 2, 6 innings

District 32-6A

Weslaco High 6, Weslaco East 1

Los Fresnos 7, San Benito 5, 8 innings

Harlingen South 7, Harlingen High 5

District 32-5A

Edcouch-Elsa 5, Donna High 3

Brownsville Veterans 11, Mercedes 4

District 32-4A

Progreso 6, Hidalgo 5, 9 innings

Zapata 2, Grulla 1

Port Isabel 6, La Feria 4

Wednesday, March 14

Non-District

Weslaco High 12, PSJA Memorial 2

District 31-5A

Mission Veterans 5, Laredo Nixon 2

Rio Grande City 4, Sharyland Pioneer 2

Sharyland High 12, Laredo Cigarroa 2

Valley View 11, Roma 4

Thursday, March 15

District 31-6A

PSJA Memorial at Edinburg Economedes, 6 p.m.

District 32-5A

Brownsville Lopez at Donna High, 7 p.m.

Edcouch-Elsa at Brownsville Veterans, 7 p.m.

Mercedes at Brownsville Pace, 7 p.m.

Friday, March 16

District 30-6A

McAllen Rowe at La Joya Palmview, 7 p.m.

La Joya Juarez-Lincoln at Mission High, 7 p.m.

McAllen Memorial at McAllen High, 7 p.m.

District 31-6A

Edinburg North at PSJA Southwest, 7 p.m.

Edinburg High at Edinburg Vela, 7 p.m.

PSJA North at PSJA High, 7 p.m.

District 32-6A

Weslaco High at Weslaco East, 6:30 p.m.

San Benito at Los Fresnos, 6:30 p.m.

Harlingen High at Harlingen South, 6:30 p.m.

District 31-5A

Laredo Martin at Roma, 2 p.m.

Laredo Nixon at Rio Grande City, 6 p.m.

Valley View at Laredo Cigarroa, 7 p.m.

Sharyland High at Sharyland Pioneer, 2 p.m.

District 32-4A

Hidalgo at Zapata, 7:30 p.m.

Grulla at Port Isabel, 7:30 p.m.

Saturday, March 17

Non-District

Zapata at Laredo LBJ, noon

Where are they now?: PSJA High’s Sanchez bringing the lumber at Texas Southern

BY TJ GARCIA | SPECIAL TO THE MONITOR

Texas Southern first baseman Christian Sanchez could easily be a first-string linebacker on the Tigers’ football team.

The imposing 6-foot-1, 230-pound PSJA High alum is a baseball beast. He was a 2014 All-Area First-Team selection by The Monitor after his senior football season. Fast forward a few years, and power is still the name of the game for Sanchez.

After starting out slow as a freshman at Texas Southern, Sanchez improved his batting percentage 79 points to .293 as a sophomore. He led the team in RBIs with 30 in 2017, and he added five home runs while striking out just 27 times in 137 at-bats.

Through 14 games this year — mostly at designated hitter — Sanchez continues to improve. His batting average is .291, and he already has six home runs and 10 RBIs through barely one-third of the schedule.

“The focus is to always to be better than the prior season, and always work on a goal,” Sanchez said. “This year, I set a goal on hitting 15 to 20 home runs.”

Sanchez and his home runs played a key role in the Tigers’ 2017 run to the SWAC Championship. Texas Southern is a Division I historically black college in Houston and faces teams such as Prairie View A&M, Grambling State and Southern during the conference season. Even with a below .500 record last year in conference play, TSU barnstormed the tourney and took the title, qualifying for the NCAA Tournament.

The Tigers typically have a stout nonconference schedule, and this year is no different. They face Mississippi State, Kansas, Houston, Texas, Baylor and this week have a series against Oklahoma. The strength of schedule helps the team get ready for conference play, and playing bigger schools exposes Sanchez to more Major League Baseball scouts, who he’s already beginning to hear from.

“My heart is all in the game,” said Sanchez, who is scheduled to graduate in December. “This (college ball) has long been a dream for me, and with the process, I hope to make it big someday. Making it to the pros is definitely a goal I am aiming for.”

PSJA SOUTHWEST’S GARCIA NAMED ARTHUR ASHE FINALIST

PSJA Southwest grad Uriel Garcia has been named a top-20 male semifinalist for the 2018 Arthur Ashe Jr. Sports Scholar Award. Garcia, a senior soccer player from Houston-Victoria, is among the more than 1,000 outstanding minority student-athletes nationwide nominated by their respective institutions.

In addition to their athletic ability, students named Arthur Ashe Jr. Sports Scholars must maintain a cumulative grade-point average of at least 3.2, be at least a sophomore academically, and be active on their campuses or in their communities. Garcia, a defender for the NAIA Jaguars, was named to the President/Dean’s list for earning a 4.0 GPA last fall semester.

The activities he has been involved in include volunteering with Samaritan’s Purse for Hurricane Harvey Relief, helping at the animal control center, raising money for men’s health research and for the past three years helping with UHV soccer blood drives.

MEMORIAL’S SEGREE IN THE CIRCLE FOR NAVARRO

The Navarro Junior College softball program is one of the best in the country. The Bulldogs have won 10 NJCAA Region XIV titles and qualified for the national junior college championship tournament four times in the last 20 years.

McAllen Memorial’s Megan Segree knew that. The all-district pitcher and all-around player signed with Navarro last spring, and so far, 5-foot-8 freshman has had a positive experience. Segree, who is primarily pitching for Navarro, has appeared in eight games, starting three. She is 1-0 with a 3.06 ERA in 34 1/3 innings and has pitched two complete games. Navarro is 10-8 on the year.

EDINBURG NORTH’S DENNETT LEADING IMPROVEMENT AT CONCORDIA

Haley Dennett entered college softball with a splash two years ago at Austin’s Concordia University, a Division III school. Dennett, the former all-area and all-district pick from Edinburg North, batted .308 and collected 36 hits for the Tornados while also picking up some all-conference accolades. Last year, she hit .271 with 30 singles, five doubles and 22 RBIs.

Evidently, the 5-foot-6 shortstop was just setting the table for this year. Dennett is helping lead Concordia’s renaissance after four consecutive losing seasons. Through 2018’s first 10 games, Dennett is batting .394 — second best on the team among players with at least 20 at bats. The right-hander, who bats lefty, has a .429 on-base percentage. In the field, the junior has a near perfect .967 fielding percentage, handling all but one of her total chances.

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