Monday, March 31, 2008

Daily Pooch Punt: 3/31/08

Who says the Little Giant baseball team is still looking for swagger?

With veteran coach Jim Critzer looking for someone to step up and walk with an air of cockiness that comes hand in hand with playing baseball, freshman Drew DeMoss teamed with Joseph Lucas (a perfect 3-0 on the mound so far this season) and chucked a one-hitter in the Giants’ 10-0 win over Broadway on Friday. It would have been a no-hitter, but a hot shot went just out of the reach of Jay Thompson. Forget about that for a second folks, because the Little Giants, once again, played great defense and look to be erasing a lot of the fears that came with their two-game, nine-error performance during the first week of the season.

“[We] just had a good ball game and played great defense,” Critzer said. “We had a lot of ground balls …” And nine putouts thanks to those grounders. So, yeah, looks like defense won’t be a problem anymore for the Little Giants. And, by the looks of it, swagger shouldn’t be either.

So, we’re wondering, if pitcher Jeremy Hahn was waiting for the Little Giants’ break-out game, was Friday’s win over Broadway exactly what he was looking for?

OK, so is Joseph Lucas coming into his own or what? Of course Thompson, the Little Giants’ hit machine, went 2-for-4 with a pair of RBI, but Lucas, whilst doing it on the mound, decided to go 4-for-4 from the plate and drove in three runs. Folks, for those of you not in the know, that’s called helping yourself. You’ll be tested on this later in the week.

OK, so you’re Riverheads softball, right? And, you head up to Harrisonburg to take on the Group AA Blue Streaks, follow me? Then, you go out there and knock the ‘Burg around and score 10 runs, still with me? But there’s a problem, you give up 16 and you lose. Just thought I’d throw that you for your. That is all.

There are four words that always seem to be used together in the English language: Don’t Doubt Derek McDaniel. So give the guy the benefit of the doubt when, four games into the season, the first-year Wilson Memorial baseball coach is still looking for a dominant arm to chuck on the mound.

“We are using this time right now to find the right mix,” he said. Again, just throwing that out there for you.

Waynesboro’s boys soccer has played three matches and haven’t been on the pitch since March 17. They scored seven goals on the season. The problem? Six came in a win over Wilson Memorial. That can’t be good, can it?

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/31 at 01:23 PM

Friday, March 28, 2008

Can I interview myself?

Why no blogs yesterday?

Um, I was called into service on the news side for all that Interstate 64 stuff.

Oh, so you’ll be back today?

No, I pulled a long day yesterday and will be going home and sleeping when I leave today around noon.

Oh, so you’ll be back to blogging next week?

You know it. Every day. Sorry.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/28 at 07:55 AM

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

The Daily Pooch Punt: 3/26/08

When he slapped R.E. Lee leadoff man Ryan Shull with an inside pitch, you could have heard the collective groan of Giantdom from the other side of Afton Mountain.

But Waynesboro starter Jeremy Hahn quickly recovered, induced two Lee batters into easy outs and took care of another himself with his first strikeout of the game.

You heard the sigh after that wacky, wild first inning that began somewhere in the third circle of hell for Hahn, but by the seventh the Giants were in heaven with their second straight Southern Valley win and the added boost of confidence that comes with it.

“If we play our ‘A’ game, I don’t think anybody is going to touch us,” Hahn said after his seven strikeout, two-hit performance in Tuesday’s 5-1 win over the Leemen.

How’s that for swagger, coach?

The most important thing about Tuesday’s win, and trust us, pitching on this team is going to be pretty darn important, was the lack of errors. After a two-game total of nine errors last week, the Little Giants were flawless in the field Tuesday. Though veteran coach Jim Critzer, in so many words, told everybody to keep their pants on when it came to jumping on the defensive-problems-had-been-fixed bandwagon. Hahn’s new-look, off-speed pitch got six Leemen to fly out and the pitcher took care of most of the rest — picking off a runner at first to go with his seven Ks.

“I think he did a great job,” Critzer said of Hahn. “He did a whale of a job the other night against Spotswood. He was cruising in that game …” Until, well, we all know what happened there.

And another thing: With the addition of the off-speed pitch (thanks to some off-season work with former Waynesboro MLBer Reggie Harris), Hahn is quickly finding it to be his favorite. “I go to it more than my curve ball now,” he said. “It’s good now. It’s in there. That’s my pitch.”

A pitch that sent Shull to first when Hahn plopped him to open the game. “Shully, I know, struggles with the off-speed,” Hahn said, “so I was figuring I was going to get an off-speed call, but I got a fastball call so I was changing it up in my grip and it just slipped out my hands, got away from me.”

Few pitches got away from him the rest of the way.

Wouldn’t you like to have this problem? Critzer has three catchers to choose from, all of which, he says, are pretty even when it comes to defense. So the veteran skipper, who is looking for some extra pop in his lineup, has decided that the sticks may decide who gets to set up shop behind the plate. “We’re going to find out who swings the bat,” he said.

Jordan Weatherholtz, Jimmy Eavers and Kendall Wolfe, your table is ready.

Another problem you’d like to have: Hahn starts to get tired in the sixth inning and, when he started getting tired, “he starts getting the ball up,” Critzer said. So the coach brings in Joseph Lucas, you know, the kid whose older brother played a sport or two before he left for Clemson (or so we’ve heard) and was a dangerous lead-off man for the Giants (at least that’s what people tell us), and he strikes out three in the ninth (including freezing Lee’s Chandis Geoff) to end the game.

A problem Southern Valley opponents are going to have: Jay Thompson drove in a run with a triple to the wall then, in his next at bat, brought another run home with a double. Surprise, surprise, he walked in his third at bat.

Yeah, a lot of coaches would like to have those problems.

Hey, look who kicked in three goals and helped Wilson Memorial boys soccer win its first match of the season. Then, Josh Miller (despite those three goals, remember) shakes the credit off himself and toward the rest of the team. “It’s really everybody,” he said.

Sure, Turner Ashby’s powerhouse softball program (yes, they’re good in that up there as well) hammers away at Stuarts Draft 17-0 and picks up its second no-hitter of the season. And Knights coach Craig Miller says, “We have a different team. We lost a lot of our power, but we have a lot of speed.”

A speedy Turner Ashby softball team? Man, I bet we may have found the one sport that’s happy with the Valley split.

But, then again, if you’re in the Southern Valley, you’re stuck with having to beat Fort Defiance. A team with two returning players — one saddled on the bench with an injury — that’s hasn’t looked too shabby. Oh, and freshman Lindsey Shifflett drove in two runs in the Indians’ 3-0 win over Broadway.

“[Shifflett] is doing really well with her hitting,” said Fort coach Max Hill. Um, yeah. Ya’ think?

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/26 at 09:54 AM

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

The Daily Pooch Punt: 3/25/08

So it’s Spring Break and with no local sports happening until later today after the long weekend, what’s an all-local, daily sports blogger to do?

Well, the same thing all bloggers do when they have nothing to write about — time to dip into the e-mails and comments with the hopes that they can hold the blog together for just one day. Pinch your nose, we’re diving in.

Say What?

Just wanted to say “Thank You” for the excellent article you did on Jacob Hutchinson and Jeremy Heizer. I know I have been critical of you about some coverage but this was great and the two young men really enjoyed it. — Randal Almarode

Seriously, people say “thank you” for doing something you enjoy doing. As I said in last week’s column and blog, sitting down for an interview with Riverheads’ two Bridgewater-bound athletes (Heizer for hoops, Hutchinson for football) was less an interview and more a comedy hour. These to guys are down to earth, sincere and very funny. They made for an enjoyable story and were a blast to cover for four years. Just think, we get one more season of Heizer who doubles as the goalkeeper for the always strong Riverheads boys soccer team. As for the critical part. Trust me, people have said a lot worse than what Mr. Almarode ever said for wrote.

The battle last year between the “boro” and TA at Waynesboro was the best high school baseball game I have ever seen, and it will be a while before you see two talented teams of the caliber play like the again. — Bob Buckley

Agreed, but up at Turner Ashby they just seem to reload. In Waynesboro, it takes time to get back to the top. But Waynesboro has a nice one-two punch with its pitching in Joseph “I’m-Not-Just-James’-Little-Brother” Lucas and Jeremy Hahn. The Little Giants made it very clear last week that they can win games in the Southern Valley and, more importantly, will be one of the top three teams in the district. Oh, and yes they can field. Not surprising that under veteran coach Jim Critzer the defense cleaned up its act in the field.

I have noticed that there has been quite a stir about Waynesboro’s coach not being named “Coach of the Year”! Having coached, I attended district and regional votings. If a coach did not show up for any of those votings, then I would have a hard time voting that person as “Coach of the Year” unless that individual had a very valid reason for not being in attendance. Tim Byars (Former Wilson Memorial girls basketball coach)

I still don’t understand what attendance at a meeting has to do with how good of a season you had as a coach. I just don’t get it. If someone coaches his or her team to an undefeated district season after years of mediocrity, that coach doesn’t need to show up to get my vote.

[Waynesboro freshman LaToya] Diggs is not the best guard in the state. Spotswood and TA both have better guards than her. As well does Hidden Valley. All teams that beat them at one point this year, all because they forced turnovers off of the freshman. By her senior year, she could be the best in the state—but only time will tell. — Brad

Don’t tell me. Tell coach Secrett Stubblefield. Though I will say for a 15-year-old, her defense on the Siegel Center floor was nothing less than tenacious. I’m sure when Hidden Valley’s Abby Oliver saw that a freshman was going to be guarding her in the Group AA championship game, she started to salivate. But Diggs held the Richmond-bound guard to her season average of 16 points. Not too shabby. I’m sure, over time, the turnovers will take care of themselves since Diggs is a student of the game and has a Liberty-bound cousin (Devon Brown) to look up to and ask for advice.

I still haven’t heard why the VHSL puts such an emphasis on sportsmanship but yet Secrett Stubblefield can demonstrate a poor example of it and be lauded by the media. — Old Fart

The VHSL also won’t let students use body paint during the state championship games, they couldn’t hold up signs or use artificial noisemakers. Fans also can’t do any “mooing (really? Mooing? Seriously?), barking” and you can’t use the time-honored cheers of “you, you, you” after a foul, “over rated” when your knocking off the state’s best team or “warm up the bus” during a game’s waning moments. I don’t know how much emphasis the VHSL puts on sportsmanship, it seems more like they want to turn high school sports into a funeral. (Seriously, you can’t make this stuff up. You can read it for yourself here.)

I’m just saying.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/25 at 10:26 AM

Monday, March 24, 2008

Sacco will return Tuesday

Sports blogger Jim Sacco is off today (Monday) and will return with the Daily Pooch Punt on Tuesday.

Got a problem with that? Then e-mail him at jsacco@newsvirginian.com and give him heck.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/24 at 04:13 PM

Friday, March 21, 2008

The Daily Pooch Punt: 3/21/08

You don’t step on Superman’s cape.

You don’t spit in the wind.

You don’t wear an authentic Yankee jersey into the heart of Boston.

And, when you have Turner Ashby baseball on the ropes you totally, unequivocally and with authority, have to slam the door on the perennial state power. These are all things you need to know in life.

Really? You don’t believe me? Then ask the R.E. Lee baseball team that held a 2-1 lead over the Knights heading into the sixth inning Thursday at Moxie Stadium.

“We didn’t get beat today,” said first-year Lee coach Bobby Humphrey. “We lost this game. We just gave it to [TA].”

That’s seems to be the problem for Augusta County teams in recent years, namely last season when the Little Giants did the same thing at the KC in their first meeting with the Knights. Sure, that game in 2007 had a lot more meaning since, back then, Waynesboro and Turner Ashby were in the same district. (Cue reminiscing music as you slowly turn your head toward the sky, let out a deep sigh and whisper, “Ah, the old Valley District.” ) But, and this is the truth, yo.  It doesn’t matter what you call it, the Southern Valley (bleh), the Massanutten (a little better), the Shenandoah (tops, baby. Tops.) or whatever, if you want to establish yourself as a legitimate state-title contender then, when the Knights and that minor league baseball program they call a varsity team, come to your house you do not give the game away.  The Leemen learned that Thursday.

And another thing: “We missed our opportunities today,” Humphrey said. Um, yeah. You think?

Hey look: Waynesboro baseball commits only two errors (down from five and four in the last two games) and manages to hammer Rockbridge 13-1 for its first Southern Valley win. Connect the dots, people.

OK, after striking out seven batters in five innings whilst giving up only four hits in the win, can we stop calling Joseph Lucas James’ little brother?

“You can’t ask anything better from a kid,” coach Jim Critzer said of his No. 1 gun. “That kid doesn’t brag, he doesn’t tell you what he’s going to do, he does it.”

Hey, I just said we can stop calling him James’ little brother. I never said he wouldn’t act like his older brother.

Sure, it’s forgone conclusion that Fort Defiance will run away with the Southern Valley softball title (barring nuclear war, injuries and a SARS outbreak), but I thought football season didn’t start until August? What, you ask? The score people. Indians 24, Blue Streaks 7. Wow.

If Waynesboro softball is looking for some legitimacy to its 1-0 district and 2-1 overall record, guess who the Little Giants have to beat? Yep, you guessed it.

At least we now know Waynesboro can win a softball game and a Whiffle Ball contest.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/21 at 11:30 AM

Thursday, March 20, 2008

The Daily Pooch Punt: 3/20/08

The only time the interview got serious was when Jacob Hutchinson thought about his four-year career as a football player at Riverheads High School. Forget about Hutch and Heizer heading to Bridgewater.

That’s when the laughing stopped.

“I could go on forever,” he said.

Go ahead, Hutch. We got all day.

That’s when he broke into one of those serious smiles (you know what we’re talking about) and started to talk.

You could almost hear AC/DC’s “Back In Black” resonate through the small conference room we packed into, mirroring off his mind and against the walls. Heizer, No. 40, and Hutchinson, No. 4, donned in the Riverheads’ black uniforms running out onto the field with thousands of fans screaming.

Fireworks in the air and the future Mayor of Greenville, arms folded, trolling the sidelines. (For those of you not in the know, we’re talking about coach Robert Casto here.)

Then you look over to the fence, where the fans stand two, and sometimes, three deep because there wasn’t enough room in the stands. “And there’s your dad,” Hutchinson said, still lost in his thoughts and memories, “smiling.”

Heizer, not known for being the quietest of guys, couldn’t think of a better way to describe it. So he pointed at the quarterback to his left and could only muster a “Just like he said,” to describe his feelings.

And, to think, most student-athletes in Augusta County (and most definitely the cities of Waynesboro and Staunton) play for four years and never get to experience something like that once. Heizer and Hutchinson got to enjoy it every home game.

“It’s a whole new level of adrenaline,” Hutchinson said.

We know, Hutch. We’ve been there.

And another thing: For the record, yes, Hutchinson and Heizer together should be a comedy hour. Seriously, I’m not kidding. You know you’re at a good interview when someone has to use a crowbar to get you out of the seat. If I was drinking milk while talking to these two, it would have come out of nose at some point.

And why is it: That when coaches at Riverheads lose players to graduation, like Casto and basketball coach John Corbett, they talk like they’re losing a son, not a once-a-season playmaker?

“We’ve got good people here,” Casto told me once during the basketball season. “We’re a different breed.”

Coaches, schools and community support should all be cut from the same cloth as Riverheads. Alas, they are not.

Last question: Miss these two yet? Don’t worry, you will.

Casto and Corbett do already.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/20 at 11:51 AM

The Sports Desk: 3/20/08

Jim Sacco and Corine Gatti talk about Waynesboro loss in the Group AA girls championship to Hidden Valley. Oh, and they touch on Stuarts Draft boys soccer as well.

Then ...

Robert and Jim talk about the two teams that won—Buffalo Gap girls and Nelson County boys. Of course, there’s a smattering of baseball too.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/20 at 08:21 AM

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

The Daily Pooch Punt: 3/19/08

Errors. Errors. More errors.

The Little Giants baseball team, a season removed from its Group AA Final Four appearance, can’t get the hang of something out in the field. Mainly fielding.

Waynesboro put five errors on the board against Charlottesville on Monday but somehow managed to sneak away from the KC with the win. On Tuesday, it committed four miscues against old Valley District foe Spotswood and it came back to bite the Giants. Big time.

“I don’t have a whole lot of comments about it,” said veteran Waynesboro coach Jim Critzer. “But it will be corrected.”

Darn skippy it’s going to be corrected because, and let’s be honest here, if the Giants have any hope of competing in a Southern Valley that may be Stuarts Draft’s to lose, the errors must stop.

Of course, having Critzer as your skipper gives Waynesboro an added advantage. As he said above, “it will be corrected,” and if the years of the Jim Critzer era have proven anything, it’s that he can fix things wrong with a team.

Errors. Errors. More Errors. That’s what wrong with this team right now.

And another thing: Since we just talked about Draft, wasn’t the problem last year with the Cougars hitting? Well, let’s take a look at how well they swung the stick in their 12-7 hammering of Harrisonburg on Tuesday: Ricky Dimitt 2-for-4; Stephen Showalter 3-for-3, two runs scored, two RBI; Zach Marion 2-for-5 with three runs and an RBI; Mickie Holbert 3-for-5 with two doubles.

So, yeah, I don’t think hitting is a problem anymore in Draft.

Speaking of Final Fours: Chris Key scores four goals in Riverheads’ boys soccer win over Parry McCluer. Sure, it was the Blues, not exactly known around these parts as a soccer powerhouse and, sure, it’s only the second game of the season for Dickie Bell’s Gladiators. But did you see who scored four goals? Chris Key. Yep, he was on the team last year. He knows what it’s like to win and head down to Radford.

Let’s go back to Draft: Tielor Detrich and Alex Wood both score hat tricks for the Cougars. The team has 12 seniors left over from a 2007 squad that looked like it was on the cusp of winning the then-Valley district. Now in the Southern Valley, the Cougars could be favorites to win this thing too (you know, kind of like baseball), but leave it to second-year coach Chris Loomis to remind everybody of where the power is still at.

“We’re not assuming anything,” he said. “We are in the same district as Waynesboro.”

Southern Valley soccer fans along the Target Turnpike, you best get your soccer-watching shirts on.

One last thing: Football, futbol. It doesn’t matter to Draft’s Chris Mahanes.

Say What?

Still haven’t heard why Secrett Stubblefield didn’t go to the All District Voting or Regional Voting for that matter. Is anybody going to clue me in?

— Jack

Don’t know what this has to do with her turning around a moribund basketball program and leading the Little Giants to an undefeated district record, the tournament title, the Region III title (including an upset of then-No. 1 Turner Ashby) and an appearance in the Group AA title game. That should make her coach of the year, not attendance at a meeting. Am I wrong? Didn’t think so.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/19 at 10:14 AM

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

The Daily Pooch Punt: 3/18/08

With the loss of two of their big arms — James Lucas and Jake Peeling — it’s not a feeling in your gut that somebody has to step up on the mound for the Little Giants baseball team. It’s a fact. (A thread-locking fact, mind you.)

So it just seems right that a familiar last name took to the hump, struck out five of the nine batters he faced — including back-to-back Ks that ended a one-out, bases-loaded threat in the fifth by Charlottesville — and, as an added bonus, whiffed Black Knight David Chamber on three pitches to end the game.

Yeah, so your brother is all graduated and such and down at Clemson which means your table is ready Joseph Lucas.

And another thing: Lucas showed a ton of mettle in the Little Giants’ non-district win. With a defense committing five early-season errors behind him (Giantdom hopes that changes and, knowing skipper Jim Critzer, it’s OK to be confident it will), and the Giants’ inabilty to produce late-inning runs from their bats (the game-winning run came off a bases-loaded walk in the sixth), the lefty had to shut down the Knights. He did, picking Charlottesville’s Charlie Murry off at first in the seventh.

“I was feeling good,” Lucas said, “and just shut them down.”

Really? You think, Joseph? Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, baseball fans of all ages, that quote is a spring entry into the “Understatment of the Year Award.”

Is Charlotteville this bad in softball or are the Little Giants finally, after years of feeding off the dregs of the then-Valley District, building its team up? Time, and Kayla Bartley (struck out four and slapped three hits in a 17-3 win over the Black Knights) will tell.

Speaking of pitchers:Have you met Riverheads’ Cody Montgomery? Covington did, and it wishes it never had. (Then again, if someone strikes out 13 of your batters on 82 pitches, would you want to meet him? Yeah, thought so.)

Now how about the pitch: The way the Waynesboro boys JV soccer team was running over opponents last season, don’t be surprised if you’re not the only one wondering how they lost their first match of the season.

And if you watched that JV team play last year, then you shouldn’t be surprised with the team’s 6-0 win over Wilson Memorial Monday night.

The Little Giants controlled the tempo most of the match and got the only goal they would need from Martin Mandujano.

Um, yeah of course an Ostrander was in on the the assist. This is Waynesboro soccer we’re talking about.

So an exchange student Kakistan gets a goal for Waynesboro and doesn’t take any credit at all.

“That was a pretty cheap goal,” said Baur Alibekov, “it was the defender’s fault.”

Man, this kids got a lot to learn about being in America.

Baur, it’s OK to take credit for things over here. (But you gotta love how he said the goal was the “defender’s fault.” That’s fantanstic.)

Of course, if we mention the first name “Bree” and the last name “Simonsen,” you know it’s followed with “had a foot on every goal the Little Giants scored.”

Against Wilson on Monday, the junior did — scoring two goals of her own from 20 and 12 yards out. All of this after assisting sophmore Kasie Miller with the match’s first goal.

“We’re still very young, suffering from injuries, not fully playing as a team yet and haven’t even gotten close to our potential,” coach Robin Hersey said.

And I’m thinking, with this young, veteran team (you can say “veteran” because, yeah, they’re young, but most of these players have been on varsity for while), once they reach that potential, it could be fun over at Waynesboro.

But, of course, only time (and Simonsen and Company) will tell.

One last thing: Still haven’t heard how Secrett Stubblefield wasn’t named the Southern Valley DoesStink’s Coach of the Year. Is anybody going to clue me in? I’m just asking.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/18 at 10:56 AM

Monday, March 17, 2008

The Daily Pooch Punt: 3/17/08

Even as I type this, I still have clue how Devon Brown found Kiawna Berry down low.

No idea, but she did. The experts call it court presence, the jealous call it luck, the professional sports watchers call it one heck of a pass. The kind you wish your buddy would make to you in a pick-up game on the local blacktop. The kind you’d almost be afraid to take, hoping against hope you don’t blow the layup so that pal of yours can get that sweet assist he or she has been looking for.

But there it was, with six minutes left to play Thursday at the Virginia Commonwealth University Siegel Center in Richmond, Devon Brown did what Devon Brown always does — drove the lane with authority — and the defense did what defenses always do when Devon Brown does her thing — it collapsed around her. It left Berry, a long-forgotten player that was molded into a great second option for the Little Giants in her senior season, wide open.

And somehow Brown managed to slip the pass through. Berry went up for the layup, banked it high off the glass and in it fell.

It was the last assist I’ll ever see Brown make in a Waynesboro uniform.

OK, so it’s the Group AA state semifinal and Brown is doing her thing (you know, driving the lane like I just wrote a few paragraphs ago) and a little point guard from Bruton steps in front of Brown. The Waynesboro senior lowers her shoulder (like she always does when she’s driving the lane, you know, the reason why she’s not paying a dime to get an education at Liberty University) and, SLAP!, skin hits skin as the two girls collide underneath. Of course it’s the smaller point guard, not Brown, that goes flying through the air and hits the floor hard.

Brown gets called for the charge, Waynesboro fans boo. Brown helps the girl up and moves back on defense. The Bruton coach cheers the girl for taking the charge. The Bruton fans give the girl a round of applause for holding her ground and taking the hit from She Who Should Be the Group AA Player of the Year.

And the whole time I’m thinking, if this happened at Fort Defiance, you’d have a parent getting in Secrett Stubblefield’s face (once again) about how tough Brown plays.

It’s called basketball, folks. If you don’t like it, take your kids off the court. It’s a pretty simple concept. Either that, or package your daughter in bubble wrap before you send her to practice. Either way works, really.

And another thing: How about Jolie Dudley? Really, I’m not kidding. Berry gets charlie horse in her leg after a hard foul in the state semis (no, this isn’t Fort Defiance and her mother didn’t come down to confront the girl) and the little-used Dudley (a freshman) comes off the bench cold and calmly sinks Berry’s free throws for a 55-40 lead.

Sure, that may not have meant much to you, but it meant something to an 11-year-old girl decked out in purple and gold beads with a purple and gold band in her hair all the while wearing a purple Waynesboro practice jersey and, believe it or not, purple shoes. When Dudley hit the second one, this wide-eyed girl slapped her hands together wildly. Why should she have? It was Jilly Dudley watching her big sister hit two free throws on the floor of the Siegel Center in the Group AA girls semifinal.

Did that put a smile on your face? It should of you heartless thing, you.

Still think Secrett Stubblefield is a glory hound who does her not-so-wild antics to draw attention to herself? Well, she had tears in her eyes after the Little Giants lost to Hidden Valley on Saturday in the Group AA title game and wouldn’t begin her post-game news conference until Berry, who she had lauded all season long, regained her composure enough to enter the room.

Still a doubter? Then don’t let the door hit you on the way out.

Nelson County’s Thomas Brown. Great basketball player. Great athlete. Great kid. ‘Nuff said.

Hey, did anybody tell you that one of the best defensive players in the Southern Valley District (we’re not ready to agree with Stubblefield on the whole “best in the state” part) is only a freshman. She’s only 15. Her name? LaToya Diggs and she played lights out under the bright lights on the Siegel Center floor.

Did we mention she’s only 15 and should be wearing the purple for three more years?

My first year on the job, I was typing and coding agate. Chad Coffey, in his first year on the job, led a group of Bison to a state title.

What did you do your first year on the job?

High School baseball and softball season start today. Really? Are you kidding me?

And finally: Don’t care what you write me, don’t care what you tell me when you corner me in the aisles of Wal-Mart and/or Martin’s. Don’t care who played girls basketball in the past for Waynesboro, none of those past names sit on top of the Group AA all-time scoring list. So, that makes Devon Brown the best girls basketball player to ever don a Little Giants jersey. Hope you saw her play once or twice, because she’s gone. And now, you’ll have to travel to Liberty to see her.

Let me say it again. The best the school has ever seen.

Lock. The. Thread.

The last bucket I saw Devon Brown make? It was a free throw.

Yeah, I’ll learn to live with that.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/17 at 11:34 AM

Saturday, March 15, 2008

That’s the game

Giants finish the season 26-4 and will be the Group AA runner ups after falling to Hidden Valley 59-45

Devon and La’Shanda brown embrace with Devon sobbing, finishing her final game as a Little Giant.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/15 at 08:07 PM

Titans 56, Giants 43

A minute to go and unless a tornado hits the Siegel Center the Little Giants will go home with the runner up trophy.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/15 at 08:02 PM

Titans 54, Giants 40

Berry gets a second chance

Oliver is fouled hits both shots

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/15 at 07:57 PM

Titans 52, Giants 38

Brown hits a bucket
and draws a charge on Beecher

TV time out with 3:31 left in the game.

Posted by Jim Sacco on 03/15 at 07:54 PM
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