Author: Saul Berrios-Thomas

Hidalgo’s Cantu does it all; from pageants to sports to studies

BY TJ GARCIA | SPECIAL TO THE MONITOR

HIDALGO – Karla Cantu is strong and solid as a rock.

At 5-foot-8, 150 pounds and muscular, she was the Hidalgo Lady Pirates enforcer on the basketball court. The all-district pick and four-year varsity player was the team’s top defender, rebounder and all around banger in the lane. Some teams were flat-out scared of her.

“Well, I guess they were,” Cantu says sheepishly. “I am aware that I am quite strong, so I liked using my muscle. If you’re going to have it, why not use it?”

But for Cantu, her motivation for muscle belies the crowns she wears on many weekends.

Cantu, the driven three-sport star who bikes 10 miles almost daily, was named Miss Hidalgo 2015. She was also Duchess of International Goodwill 2016 at the Texas Citrus Fiesta in Mission and was the first Miss Hidalgo to win a title in the Texas Citrus Royal Court.

And now, for good measure, the 18-year-old beauty queen is Princess of Orange Blossom 2017, representing the Citrus Fiesta with puffy dresses, royal parade waves, floats and all. Not bad for self-proclaimed muscle girl who was named District 30-4A Defensive Player of the Year.

Cantu reconciles sports’ toughness with the congeniality of pageantry. She is the living, breathing antithesis of one-sport, one-way high school athletes today, reflecting those who can put a lot on their plate and flourish. Cantu has managed to marry the opposites of a spectrum.

The Hidalgo beauty queen played volleyball, basketball and is now is in track. She would have done soccer, but there were no more jerseys. She is in the top 20 percent of her class, has a weekend job at La Plaza Mall and will have an associate’s degree by the time she graduates in May.

And, most proudly, Cantu is a multi-time pageant winner traversing the state representing the Rio Grande Valley. Although spiritual and humble, Cantu is inspired by success whether on hard court or in a royal court.

“In pageants, as well as sports, you want to win. You want to strive for greatness and be on top,” said Cantu, who is bound for Texas State University and its nursing program. “What I like about pageants is that you gain more confidence.”

And while pageants are a most unlikely route for a sporty girl to pursue, Cantu said they were a natural fit for her desire to serve as a role model for children.

Her father, Mentor, a Pharr firefighter, said Karla has always been someone kids in their neighborhood have looked up to. But even he admitted he was thrown aback when Karla, who had never been in a pageant before, came to he and his wife three years ago with the desire to compete in the Miss Hidalgo contest.

“We were very surprised when she came and told us what she wanted to do,” Mentor Cantu said. “We told her that she was in a lot of stuff and busy with sports already and asked her how she was going to do all these things. But she’s the kind of person that when she wants to do something, she’s going to do it. She’s very special.”

Though things are coming easier for her now, it wasn’t always that way for the senior. Karla Cantu and her basketball coach Saul Arjona said she often struggled as an underclassman to communicate or take direction from others.

Once she decided to compete in the pageants, that all changed. Karla Cantu said she became friendlier, more collegial and matured enough to handle criticism. The process wasn’t easy, but she learned and grew and not only became a good player for Arjona, but a trusted team leader.

“I love that girl like a daughter,” said Arjona, who has two daughters on the basketball team. “I don’t think I’ll ever get someone like her in the program again. Her spirit. Her work ethic is just incredible. No one was going to outwork her.”

Arjona said Karla Cantu did not have an athletic period, so she arrived to school early and lifted on her own. Her father, Mentor Cantu, said laughing that Karla sets her own schedule and clues in her parents. They simply follow orders.

Arjona added that a great example of what Karla Cantu can do when she focuses took place in a 52-50 double-overtime playoff loss to Crystal City in the second round of the playoffs. She scored 24 points and hauled in 16 rebounds in what Arjona said was the greatest performance of her career.

Karla Cantu said she typically listens to Christian music before games, and she took her father’s bible with her on the playoff road trips this year to keep her zoned in and peaceful. Cantu said she’s moved by different things, depending whether the setting is the classroom, court or stage.

“What motivates me before a big game is just being able to help my team get the victory,” said Cantu. “I feel like I have to do well at whatever it is that I’m doing, because I am a (pageant) title holder and you never know who’s looking at you. I think I need to show them the kind of person I can be when I perform at the best of my abilities.”

Her teammates just think of her as the beauty queen with big guns.

“It’s funny,” Cantu said of her teammates’ ribbing.

Again, strong and solid as a rock.

Big inning helps McAllen High beat Memorial

BY TJ GARCIA | SPECIAL TO THE MONITOR

McALLEN — The McAllen High Bulldogs used a seven-run fifth inning to thwart a comeback and blow by the McAllen Memorial Mustangs in a 12-8 District 30-6A victory Friday night.

Roy Quintanilla hammered a three-run home run in the first, Josh Zapata went 3 for 4 and Bobby Maldonado scored three times to highlight McHi’s offensive efforts. The win keeps the Bulldogs undefeated in district at 2-0 (14-2 overall), while Memorial remains winless in district with the loss, falling to 0-3 (9-4 overall).

Left-handed pitcher Ray Maldonado pitched five innings to pick up the victory, and heralded freshman Aaron Nixon notched the save, allowing one run and getting three strikeouts in the three-hour long game.

McHi coach Eliseo Pompa said he’ll take the victory, but it wasn’t the Bulldogs’ best performance.

“We instill in our players not to lose their poise and to keep their heads in the game,” Pompa said. “It’s not over until it’s over, and we kept our poise, and that’s exactly what happened tonight.”

After the Bulldogs jumped out to a 4-0 lead behind Quintanilla’s homer, the Mustangs scored two runs in the second, then exploded for five runs in the third to take a 7-4 lead into the fourth inning.

McHi, however, bounced right back and scored seven of its own in the top fifth. The Bulldogs scored with small ball, hitting five singles and batting around the order. Memorial added one more run, but the damage had been done.

Five Bulldogs had a multi-hit game and seven of their nine batters scored runs. Everyone contributing is what the team strives for, senior second-baseman Keola Zamora said.

“It’s a balanced attack,” Zamora said. “Whoever steps up to the plate can hit, and we have confidence in them.”

Memorial catcher Nick Tovar had an outstanding performance behind and in front of the plate for the Mustangs. The junior went 3 for 4 with a double and an RBI.

#RGVBaseball scores, schedule and box scores 03.17.17

VALLEY-BASEBALL SCHEUDLE

Thursday, Mar. 16

District 30-6A

Mission High 5-4 La Joya Juarez-Lincoln 4, 8 innings

District 31-6A

Edinburg Vela 14, Edinburg High 10, 9 innings

Edinburg Economedes 4, PSJA Memorial 2

District 32-6A

Los Fresnos 14, Weslaco East 7

Harlingen High 12, Weslaco High 1

District 32-5A

Brownsville Veterans 5, Edcouch-Elsa 4, 11 innings

Brownsville Porter 12, Donna North 2

Donna High 11, Brownsville Lopez 8

Friday, Mar. 17

District 30-6A

McAllen High 12, McAllen Memorial 8

La Joya Palmview 4, McAllen Rowe 1

District 31-6A

PSJA High 6, PSJA North 2, 8 innings

Edinburg North 12, PSJA Southwest 1, 5 innings

District 31-5A

Sharyland High 8, Sharyland Pioneer 7

Valley View 11, Laredo Cigarroa 1

Laredo Martin 3, Roma 0

Rio Grande City 8, Laredo Nixon 4

District 32-4A

Hidalgo 3, Zapata 1

Port Isabel 8, Grulla 4

Tuesday, Mar. 21

District 30-6A

McAllen Memorial at La Joya High, 7 p.m.

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

McAllen Rowe at Mission High, 7 p.m.

District 31-6A

Edinburg Vela at PSJA Southwest, 7 p.m.

PSJA Memorial at Edinburg High, 7 p.m.

PSJA High at Edinburg Edonomedes, 7 p.m.

Edinburg North at PSJA North, 7 p.m.

District 32-6A

Brownsville Hanna at Los Fresnos, 7 p.m.

Harlingen High at Weslaco East, 7 p.m.

Brownsville Rivera at Weslaco High, 7 p.m.

District 31-5A

Rio Grande City at Mission Veterans, 7 p.m.

Valley View at Sharyland Pioneer, 7 p.m.

Sharyland High at Laredo Nixon, 7 p.m.

Laredo Martin at Laredo Cigarroa, 7 p.m.

District 32-5A

Edcouch-Elsa at Mercedes, 7 p.m.

Brownsville Porter at Donna High, 7 p.m.

Donna North at Brownsville Pace, 7 p.m.

Brownsville Lopez at Brownsville Veterans, 7 p.m.

District 32-4A

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

Grulla at Rio Hondo, 7:30 p.m.

VALLEY-BASEBALL BOX SCORES

Friday’s Games

District 31-6A

EDINBURG NORTH 12, PSJA SOUTHWEST 1

PSJA Southwest 000 1 — 1

Edinburg North 211 8 — 12

WP: Marc Esquivel 5 innings, 10 strikeouts, 1 hit, 0 earned runs.

EDINBURG NORTH (12) — Argelio Guajardo 2-4, homerun, 2 RBI; Willy Oyervides 2-3, 2 RBI; Saul Garza 1-3, RBI.

PSJA SOUTHWEST (1) — Albert Portilla 1-2.

RECORDS: PSJA Southwest 2-10, 0-2; Edinburg North 8-2, 2-0.

District 31-5A

SHARYLAND HIGH 8, SHARYLAND PIONEER 7

Sharyland High 004 0102 — 7

Sharyland Pioneer 102 0212 — 8

WP: Leo Salinas 1 inning, 2 strikeouts.

SHARYLAND HIGH (8) — Juan Lopez 3 hits; Abraham Alvarez RBI.

SHARYLAND PIONEER (7) — Pedro Tovias 2 hits, 2 RBI; Evan Maldonado 3 RBI; Alberto Garza 2 hits.

RECORDS: Shayrland High 7-9, 2-3; Sharyland Pioneer 5-11, 1-4.

Men in the middle leading Valley View

BY SAUL BERRIOS-THOMAS | STAFF WRITER

PHARRValley View juniors Ricardo Sanchez and Fernando Rodriguez have been playing baseball together for the last seven years.

Their bond goes way deeper than varsity ball, and it showed Friday, as their play helped propel the Tigers to an 11-1 win over Laredo Cigarroa.

Sanchez is a slick-fielding shortstop. Rodriguez often plays second, but can also play the outfield. They love playing next to each other because their chemistry has developed over the years.

“I’m way confident when he is next to me,” Sanchez said. “(Rodriguez) is fast, and he knows how to work with his hands and his feet.” Playing next to Sanchez is a treat for Rodriguez, as well. Sanchez is a stellar defender. His range was tested on several plays against Cigarroa, and each time he fielded the ball cleanly and came up with a rifle right on target to the first baseman. His actions are fluid and his footwork is superb.

Combine that with his prowess at the plate, and Valley View coach Mario Gonzalez said Sanchez has the makings of a five-tool talent. The five tools for a prospect in baseball are speed, arm, glove, hitting and power.

“For the last three years, he has been one of the best players in our district,” Gonzalez said through a translator.

Even when they aren’t with the Tigers, Sanchez and Rodriguez have been together for years. They used to play for a travel team called the South Texas Knights. They routinely took trips to Houston, Dallas and other parts of the state for tournaments. The pair has shared a lot of good times on the road, both with the Knights and with the Tigers.

“We have a lot of fun,” Rodriguez said. “We just play around and we do our thing.”

For Sanchez and Rodriguez, the key is to have fun.

“It’s all about having fun,” Sanchez said. “It’s a game. We don’t ever take it personal. It’s high school ball. We just have fun and let it go.”

One of the fun things they do together on the field is a collection of complicated handshakes. On Friday, they met at second base and went into a series of fist bumps and hand grips.

“We’ve been doing a lot of handshakes, but that one is today’s,” Rodriguez said.

“That’s our routine,” Sanchez added. “It’s something we always do. We just have a little bit of fun on the diamond.”

Rodriguez was the mastermind behind Friday’s shake, but they have each come up with several.

Of course, it’s not all fun and games, and it’s also good to have each other during tough times. About two weeks ago, Rodriguez injured his non-throwing shoulder. He had to miss a few games, which pained him even more. Sanchez was there to cheer him up. Rodriguez says that is something they have come to expect from each other.

“If you are down, (Sanchez) picks you up, or if he’s down I pick him up,” Rodriguez said. “We just tell each other things and make each other laugh.”

With the win over Cigarroa on Friday, Valley View improves to 5-0 in District 31-5A. Sanchez is eager to get back on the field and keep the momentum.

“Right now, our goal is to stay undefeated,” he said.

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#RGVBaseball standings and top 10

STADNINGS

District 30-6A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

La Joya Palmview 4 5 2 0 —

McAllen High 13 2 1 0 .5

McAllen Rowe 6 6 1 0 .5

La Joya High 5 8 1 1 1

Mission High 5 8 1 1 1

McAllen Memorial 9 3 0 2 2

La Joya Juarez-Lincoln 2 9 0 2 2

District 31-6A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

PSJA High 11 2 1 0 —

Edinburg North 6 2 1 0 —

Edinburg Economedes 6 3 1 0 —

PSJA Memorial 6 5 1 0 —

PSJA North 7 4 0 1 1

Edinburg High 4 8 0 1 1

PSJA Southwest 2 9 0 1 1

Edinburg Vela — — 0 1 1

District 32-6A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Los Fresnos 10 1 2 0 —

Harlingen High 7 3 2 0 —

Brownsville Hanna 6 5 2 0 —

Weslaco East 5 7 1 1 1

Weslaco High 3 8 1 1 1

San Benito 1 4 0 1 1.5

Harlingen South 2 5 0 2 2

Brownsville Rivera 2 6 0 2 2

District 31-5A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Mission Veterans 12 2 4 0 —

Valley View 11 3 3 0 .5

Sharyland High 6 9 1 3 1.5

Roma 6 6 2 2 2

Laredo Cigarroa 3 10 2 2 2

Rio Grande City 7 6 2 2 2

Sharyland Pioneer 5 9 1 2 2.5

Laredo Martin 4 8 1 3 3

Laredo Nixon 3 9 0 3 3.5

District 32-5A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Brownsville Veterans 5 4 2 0 —

Edcouch-Elsa 4 7 2 0 —

Mercedes 4 5 1 1 1

Brownsville Pace — — — — —

Brownsville Lopez — — — — —

Brownsville Porter — — — — —

Donna North — — — — —

Donna High — — — — —

District 32-4A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Grulla — — 1 0 —

Progreso 6 4 1 1 .5

Hidalgo 4 10 1 1 .5

La Feria — — — — —

Zapata — — — — —

Rio Hondo — — — — —

Port Isabel — — — — —

Raymondville — — — — —

District 32-3A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

Santa Rosa — — — — —

Lyford — — — — —

Edinburg IDEA Quest — — — — —

Brownsville IDEA Frontier — — — — —

Monte Alto — — — — —

District 32-2A

Overall District

Team W L W L GB

San Isidro — — — — —

Lasara — — — — —

Santa Maria — — — — —

San Perlita — — — — —

La Villa — — — — —

TOP TEN

Rank,Team Record Previous
1, Mission Veterans 12-2 1
2, Edinburg North 6-2 2

3, McAllen High 13-2 NR

4, Los Fresnos 10-1 3
5, La Joya Palmview 4-5 5
6, PSJA High 11-2 7
7, Harlingen High 7-3 NR
8, Edcouch-Elsa 4-7 NR
9, Brownsville Veterans 5-4 8
10, Weslaco High 3-8 NR

#RGVBaseball notebook: Perez excelling thanks in part to Moneyball tactics

BY SAUL BERRIOS-THOMAS | STAFF WRITER

La Joya Palmview is bringing “Moneyball” to the Valley.

The popular book by Michael Lewis details the way the Oakland Athletics organization used data and statistics to make decisions about every part of the game. The data informs decisions about player development, lineup construction, allocation of funds and more.

Those tactics have helped Palmview ace Leonel Perez.

Perez is a star pitcher and hitter, and the Lobos have made him even stronger on the mound by teaching him how to throw a cutter.

“He has a lot of movement on his cutter,” Palmview coach Rick Garcia said. “My pitching coach threw a cutter in high school. It helped him by not putting a lot of pressure on his elbow. A lot of times, a lot of coaches teach the curveball, and sometimes the kids don’t last that long. So, we teach the cutter to avoid putting too much pressure on the elbow. We are able to throw that in any count.”

The pitch helps Perez now and is meant to help lengthen his career. The cutter has been very effective for Perez this year. In 17 innings pitched, he has a 1.24 earned run average and 26 strikeouts.

Palmview’s lineup is constructed with him in mind. Perez hits third — the spot typically reserved for the best hitter on a team.

“As a coaching staff, we knew that Leo was no longer going to be pitched to,” Garcia said. “So, we are trying to put the best guy right behind him, to help him out. And I think we are doing that. The other teams are finding out that our number four hole is coming around. To start district, Jesus Guzman is 7-for-8, so that’s not too bad. Now teams are thinking about, ‘Do we walk Leo, or do we pitch to him?’”

Guzman is hitting .545 from the DH spot. He has seven RBIs on the season.

The first and second batters in the lineup also benefit Perez.

“Andrew Puente is our leadoff guy because he works the counts,” Garcia said. “He’s one of the best that I have seen at working the pitchers. We know that when goes up there, he can get eight or nine pitches out of the pitcher. … Last week, in the McAllen Memorial game, our one and two hitters made their pitcher throw 16 pitches. That puts us in a very good situation. If those two guys can do that every time, and we come out of that with maybe one or two guys on and Leo up to bat, the pitcher is going to have to throw at least 20-25 pitches to start the game.”

While these adjustments aren’t just for Perez, they have paid off for him so far.

Perez is hitting .526 with six RBIs, a triple and a home run.

“The young man is a very coachable kid,” Garcia said of Perez. “He works hard. He’s one of those kids where, you would like for all nine of your ballplayers to be like that. I know that isn’t going to happen, but he carries himself as a leader, and the kids follow him.”

CHANGING THE TUNE

With Edcouch-Elsa’s ace from last year, Jacob Martinez, graduating over the summer, some teams saw the Yellowjackets as prime candidates for a step back this season.

Edcouch-Elsa didn’t help matters by struggling a bit at its early tournaments. But the Yellowjackets are 2-0 to start district and have been getting what they needed from their key players.

Filling the shoes of Martinez is junior pitcher and shortstop Joseph Gonzalez. Gonzalez has thrown just under 30 strikeouts in three outings, including one in relief. He pitched two innings Tuesday against Donna High, and he fanned all six.

Another player who took a major step forward this year is senior catcher Steve Perez, who was sparked by a move to the leadoff spot.

The obvious question is: does a catcher have the speed to bat leadoff?

“He does not. He’s not very fast,” Edcouch-Elsa coach Ryan Garza laughed.

Many advanced sabermetricians believe a team’s best hitter should bat first. The concept is very simple: the first person in the order will inevitably get the most at-bats, and giving more at-bats to a team’s best player can be expected to yield more production.

While only time will tell if Perez is the Yellowjackets’ best hitter, the move gave him a confidence boost, which has turned into production.

“We had him in the three spot, early in the year,” Garza said. “The middle and bottom of the lineup wasn’t producing as much. So, we started off with him, and he would get on just about every game. He’s been hot, right now, but now the middle of the lineup has been helping him out and bringing in runs.”

The number of at-bats for Perez isn’t the only benefit.

“Seeing a runner on second, to start the game, and then we play a little small ball, a bunt or a hit-and-run and you have a runner on third with one out,” Garza said. “That really helps everyone else in the lineup. And it takes pressure off of our pitchers.”

Perez has also played a part defense, catching Gonzalez’s nasty curveball.

“He’s been throwing it really well,” Garza said. “He’s been throwing it with some confidence. He’s the type of kid that full count, bases loaded, he’s going to throw that curveball. He’s either going to throw it for a strike, or he’s going to hit his spot and he’s going to get the batters chasing.”

The only way Gonzalez can throw that curveball, especially low, is to trust Perez to stop it.

“Steve is the best catcher that I have seen in our district since I have been coaching,” Garza said. “He’s an animal behind the plate. We work on blocking every single day. He hardly lets anything get by him. We are confident when he is behind the plate.”

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#RGVBaseball scores, schedule and box scores 03.14.17

VALLEY-BASEBALL SCHEUDLE

Tuesday, Mar. 14

District 30-6A

Mission High 14, McAllen Memorial 1, 5 innings

McAllen High 5, La Joya High 3

La Joya Palmview 8, La Joya Juarez-Lincoln 2

District 31-6A

Edinburg North 8, Edinburg Vela 0

Edinburg Edonomedes 7, Edinburg High 5

PSJA Memorial 5, PSJA North 2

PSJA High 7, PSJA Southwest 0

District 32-6A

Los Fresnos 6, Harlingen South 3

Harlingen High 10, Bronwsville Rivera 1

Bronwsville Hanna 7, Weslaco High 4

Weslaco East 8, San Benito 3

District 31-5A

Laredo Martin 5, Sharyland High 3

Mission Veterans 18, Laredo Cigarroa 0, 5 innings

District 32-5A

Edcouch-Elsa 10, Donna High 5

Brownsville Veterans 5, Mercedes 2

Brownsville Lopez at Donna North, not reported

Brownsville Pace vs. Brownsville Porter, not reported

District 32-4A

Progresso at Hidalgo, not reported

Grulla at Zapata, not reported

Wednesday, Mar. 15

District 31-5A

Mission Veterans 5, Laredo Nixon 0

Rio Grande City 17, Sharyland Pioneer 9

Sharyland High 2, Laredo Cigarroa 0

Valley View 6, Roma 5

Thursday, Mar. 16

District 30-6A

Mission High 5-4 La Joya Juarez-Lincoln 4, 8 innings

District 31-6A

Edinburg Economedes 4, PSJA Memorial 2

District 32-6A
Los Fresnos 14, Weslaco East 7
Harlingen High 12, Weslaco High 1
District 32-5A

Brownsville Porter 12, Donna North 2

Brownsville Veterans at Edcouch-Elsa, not reported
Donna High at Brownsville Lopez, not reported

VALLEY-BASEBALL BOX SCORE

Tuesday’s Games

District 30-6A

MISSION HIGH 14, McALLEN MEMORIAL 1

McAllen Memorial 000 01 — 1

Mission High 064 4X — 14

WP: Rick Elizondo, 5 innings, 5 hits, 4 walks.

McALLEN MEMORIAL (1) — Danny Villarreal 2 for 3, double, RBI.

MISSION HIGH (14) — Steve Villarreal 1 for 4, 3 RBIs; Mario Alaniz 2 for 2; Andy Martinez 1 for 3, double, 4 RBIs.

RECORDS: Mission High 5-8, 1-1 in district.

McALLEN HIGH 5, LA JOYA HIGH 3

La Joya High 000 003 0 — 3

McAllen High 110 003 x — 5

WP: Aaron Nixon .

McALLEN HIGH (5) — Luis Keola Zamora 2-3, 2 RBI; Robbie Maldonado 1-3, RBI.

MISSION HIGH (14) — Steve Villarreal 1 for 4, 3 RBIs; Mario Alaniz 2 for 2; Andy Martinez 1 for 3, double, 4 RBIs.

RECORDS: Not reported.

District 31-6A

PSJA HIGH 7, PSJA SOUTHWEST 0

PSJA High 000 511 0 — 7

Laredo Cigarroa 000 000 0 — 0

WP: Marc Castillo 6.2 innings, 0 hits, 15 strikeouts.

PSJA HIGH (7) — Marc Castillo 2-4; Juan Zambrano 2-3.

LAREDO CIGARROA (0) — Not reported.

RECORDS: Not reported.

District 31-5A

MISSION VETERANS 18, LAREDO CIGARROA 0

Mission Veterans 077 31 — 18

Laredo Cigarroa 000 00 — 0

WP: Cristian Ramos.

MISSION VETERANS (18) — Ricky Llamas 1-1, double, 3 RBI, 3 runs; Noel Vela 2-4, double, triple, 3 RBI; Eddie Galvan 3-4, double, 3 RBI; Angel Nunez 1-3, doubel, 2 RBI.

LAREDO CIGARROA (0) — Not reported.

RECORDS: Mission Veterans 12-2, 4-0 in district.

Gonzalez spins a gem, seven-run fifth fuels McAllen Memorial

BY KEVIN NARRO | SPECIAL TO THE MONITOR

McALLEN — McAllen Memorial’s hitters needed a few innings to find to their groove. But when it clicked, it clicked. A seven-run fifth inning was more than enough run support for junior pitcher Daisy Gonzalez, who stymied McAllen High with a shutout performance. McAllen Memorial improved to 3-0 in District 30-6A with a 12-0 win in six innings against McAllen High on Monday night.

With Monday’s game being made up from this past Friday due to weather, McAllen Memorial’s offense stalled until a big inning shifted the momentum in its favor.

Clinging to a one-run lead in the fifth, McAllen Memorial’s rally began on back-to-back RBI singles from Jalene Rodriguez and Janira Ibarra. The monster inning was later capped by a two-run double from Sasha Uribe, thus putting the game out of reach at 8-0. The Lady Mustangs sent 12 batters to the plate while racking up six hits and seven runs in the frame.

Leadoff hitter Kayla Dow finished 3 for 4 at the plate with a run and an RBI, while Rodriguez went 2 for 2 with an RBI and two runs. The Lady Mustangs pounded away for 12 runs on 16 hits.

“Anytime we face McAllen High, it’s always going to be a pitcher’s duel,” Memorial coach Audra Benavidez said. “These girls have played each other for the last three years, so we knew what to expect. That fifth inning was a game changer for us, We needed to be more patient at the plate, and drive the ball the other way, and I thought we were able to do that.”

While the offense provided a late-inning spark, Gonzalez dominated the circle for the Lady Mustangs.

Gonzalez twirled a complete game gem, tossing a six-inning shutout. Gonzalez yielded just three hits, walked one and struck out seven. At one point, Gonzalez retired 12 batters in a row between the second and sixth inning. The second hit of the night came on a one-out single from Kayla Davis in the sixth inning.

“I had my fastball working tonight, and I would throw in my changeup here and there to keep them guessing,” Gonzalez said. “It’s always big when we play McAllen High. That helped me get ready for tonight. The weather hasn’t been helping much either, but everyone has adjusted and showed up on time.”

McAllen Memorial will now shift its focus to La Joya High on Tuesday night, while McAllen High will square off against McAllen Rowe.

Offense, Garcia keep playoff hopes alive for Pioneer

BY NATHANIEL MATA | SPECIAL TO THE MONITOR

MISSION — The easiest way for Sharyland Pioneer to qualify for playoffs is to win out. The team started on the right foot Monday with a 5-1 win over Laredo Martin.

The win sets up a win-and-get-in situation for the Diamondbacks in their final game Thursday on the road against Roma.

Offense came early and often for Pioneer in a virtually must-win game. The Diamondbacks won in blowout fashion, scoring four first-half goals to put the game away long before the final whistle.

Sammy Garcia, who notched a hat trick, said that has team improved as the season has gone on.

“We know we shouldn’t be barely getting in, because we have a real good team,” Garcia said. “We were slacking at first. Then, we started thinking about playoffs, and we got our heads into playoff mode.”

After the first round of District 31-5A games, the Diamondbacks were 3-5 with 11 points. Now they sit at 23 points and control their playoff scenario, inching to the front of a clump of four teams fighting for two playoff spots. Those four teams entered the day separated by four points.

“The extra motivation comes from us needing a win in order to make the playoffs,” coach Alex Lopez said after the win. “These guys have been working really hard toward that all season. Obviously that’s the best of the scenarios when you’re fighting for fourth place. I feel fortunate that it’s going to be in our hands. I feel confident moving forward to the next game.”

Garcia deposited Pioneer’s first two goals of the match.

His first came via the counterattack after forcing a Martin turnover. Pioneer was off to the races on a 2-on-1, and Rodrigo de la Rosa found Garcia in open space with a pass. Garcia easily beat the goalkeeper. His score turned out to be foreshadowing for the rest of the match.

With 16:03 to play, Pioneer doubled its lead. Garcia scored again, this time off a give-and-go with midfielder Axel Monroy. Martin’s goalie got a glove on the ball but not enough to keep the shot out.

Pioneer played well with the lead in the first half. The Diamondbacks’ defensive strategy stemmed around keeping the ball away from Laredo and keeping the pressure up.

With 10 minutes to play, junior Leonardo Aguilar got in on the goal scoring. He converted on a long pass, tipping the ball past Martin’s keeper.

On the prettiest goal of the afternoon, Garcia was the distributor. He chipped a pass from the corner that somehow found Aguilar in a crowd. He sent home his second goal just a few minutes after his first.

“All season long, we’ve been struggling to bond together, but now our team chemistry is getting better and better,” Aguilar said. “We’re going to have more confidence.”

In the second half, the only drama left was if one of the two-goal scorers could record a hat trick and if keeper Jose Perez could keep a clean sheet.

In the early minutes, of the second half, Garcia laced his third goal of the match, extending the lead to 5-0.

Laredo Martin did get on the board, however, with a goal in the final two minutes of the game.

Pioneer will look to get revenge for a season ago, when Roma secured the fourth and final playoff spot by one point, leaving the Diamondbacks as the last team out.

“We’re not going to take them easy,” Aguilar said. “Last year, it was a hard year for us. We could have made playoffs. The seniors were destroyed. This year, we’re going to do it for the seniors, beat them and make playoffs.”

#RGVBaseball scores, schedule and box scores 03.13.17

VALLEY-BASEBALL SCHEDULE

Monday, Mar. 13

District 31-5A

Mission Veterans 6, Sharyland Pioneer 3

Sharyland High 1, Roma 0

Valley View 5, Laredo Martin 2

Rio Grande City 12, Laredo Cigarroa 0

Tuesday, Mar. 14

District 30-6A

McAllen Memorial at Mission High, 7 p.m.

La Joya High at McAllen High, 7 p.m.

La Joya Juarez-Lincoln at La Joya Palmview, 7 p.m.

District 31-6A

Edinburg North at Edinburg Vela, 7 p.m.

Edinburg High at Edinburg Edonomedes, 7 p.m.

PSJA Memorial at PSJA North, 7 p.m.

PSJA High at PSJA Southwest, 7 p.m.

District 32-6A

Los Fresnos at Harlingen South, 7 p.m.

Harlingen High at Bronwsville Rivera, 5 p.m.

Bronwsville Hanna at Weslaco High, 8 p.m.

Weslaco East at San Benito, 7 p.m.

District 32-5A

Edcouch-Elsa at Donna High, 7 p.m.

Brownsville Lopez at Donna North, 7 p.m.

Mercedes at Brownsville Veterans, 7 p.m.

District 32-4A

Progresso at Hidalgo, 7:30 p.m.

Grulla at Zapata, 7:30 p.m.

VALLEY-BASEBALL BOX SCORE

Monday’s Game

District 32-5A

MISSION VETRANS 6, SHARYLAND PIONEER 3

Sharyland Pioneer 300 000 0 — 3

Mission Veterans 200 112 x — 6

WP: Noel Vela 12 strikeouts.

SHARYLAND PIONEER (3) — Johnny Lungo 1-2; Alex Garcia 1-3.

MISSION VETERANS (6) — Noel Vela 1-2, double, 3 runs; Anthony Gonzalez 3-4, double, 4 RBI.

RECORDS: Not reported.