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Redbird Baseball established new Benchmarks in 2015 - AdVantage News 2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Alton baseball set some new benchmarks in ‘15

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Every Step of the Way - The Telegraph - 6/13/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Recruiting process brought Hudson, Haug closer

Last updated: June 14. 2015 12:36AM - 3388 Views 

 


 

Alton High School head baseball coach Todd Haug, left, and pitcher Bryan Hudson, who was selected Tuesday by the Chicago Cubs in the third round of the Major League Draft.
Billy Hurst | For The Telegraph
Alton High School head baseball coach Todd Haug, left, and pitcher Bryan Hudson, who was selected Tuesday by the Chicago Cubs in the third round of the Major League Draft.
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STLToday - Alton pitcher stands tall as draft prospect - 6/3/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Alton pitcher stands tall as draft prospect

 
 
7 hours ago  •  

Standing atop a 10-inch pitcher’s mound, 6-foot-8 Bryan Hudson is an imposing sight for high school hitters, even before he begins his motion and his hand releases a baseball from roughly nine feet above ground level.

And if Hudson is throwing his nasty curveball, it is apt to drop to a hitter’s ankles, a phenomenon that helped the Alton High senior accumulate more than 300 career strikeouts.

“It’s a pitch high-schoolers aren’t accustomed to seeing,” Alton coach Todd Haug said. “This isn’t his coach saying this, but Baseball America and some in the major leagues say it’s the best high-school curve in the country.”

All of that and more have made Hudson the area’s best high school prospect and a player who is projected to be selectedin the top three rounds of next week’s major league draft.

Hudson finished the season with a 10-2 record, 0.47 ERA and 152 strikeouts, which broke his own single-season school record. He allowed 35 hits in 75 1/3 innings. He has signed with Missouri, but the outcome of the draft will help determine if he ever makes it to Columbia.

Hudson is listed at No. 71 on mlb.com‘s list of the top draft prospects, and he is No. 100 as rated by Baseball America. And it’s that curve that gets talked about everywhere.

 

“The only thing promised to me right now is going to Mizzou,” Hudson said. “Me and my adviser have talked about it and have a set (dollar) number. It’s not a matter of what round. If it’s not what I want, I’m going to Mizzou.”

Alton’s season ended Monday when the Redbirds and Hudson were defeated by Edwardsville in the regional championship game 5-2 as the Tigers scored three unearned runs in the fifth inning. It was a tough ending to a record-breaking high school career.

Haug first saw Hudson when he was in the sixth grade. However, he was not exceedingly tall at that point. As a lefthander, though, he warranted monitoring.

He arrived in high school at about 6-1 and took off between his freshman and sophomore years, growing at least four inches.

“It happened real quick and I was kind of uncoordinated,” Hudson said. “My sophomore year it took a while to adjust. But it kind of helped with everything. The arm angle and everything changed.”

Hudson throws his fastball in the 90-92 mph range with a teenager’s build, carrying 220 pounds. Haug said he is projected to reach upward of 250. He said if that is the case Hudson’s velocity could increase to the mid-90s or faster.

Since his sophomore year, keeping up with his size has not proved to be a problem.

“He’s a tremendous athlete,” Haug said. “He’s not a typical gangly, oafish tall pitcher. He’d be a Division I basketball player if he wanted and would be our center fielder if we weren’t trying to protect him.”

But Haug took advantage of Hudson’s bat. He hit .436 with four home runs and 49 RBIs in 37 games.Exactly half of his 48 hits went for extra bases.

But really, it’s all about his arm. The MLB site called him the best pitching prospect from Illinois since 2010.

“Hudson is an extremely athletic and projectable lefthander, whose stock continues to improve as the draft approaches,” said the website’s analysis. “He’s a safe bet to go in the top three rounds, with some talk that he could become a supplemental first-rounder.”

Haug said it became apparent during Hudson’s sophomore year that he was a big-time prospect. He wasn’t recording a lot of strikeouts, but it was the year that suddenly no one could make solid contact. The crowd of scouts at his games began and continued to grow until he had the likes of Chicago Cubs president Theo Epstein watching.

That stuff, though, doesn’t seem to faze Hudson. Haug said the most impressive thing about the entire process has been his player’s ability to look past the attention. Hudson doesn’t attempt to exploit the fear factor of his size, but rather is openly friendly with opponents.

Haug called Hudson a throwback to the 1980s and 1990s when players didn’t have an entourage in tow.

“He’s a very legitimate, once-in-a-coaching-career type player,” Haug said “You don’t have to be this imposing figure to be successful. It just so happens that he is.”

Redbird Baseball drops Regional Title to Edwardsville - AdVantage News - 6/1/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Tigers top Redbirds for regional title

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Redbirds Baseball Falls to Edwardsville in Regional Final 5-2 - The Telegraph - 6/1/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Mistakes too much for Redbirds to overcome

Last updated: June 01. 2015 9:21PM - 650 Views 

 


 

Edwardsville's Jordan Hovey reacts after diving across home plate safely while scoring from first base on two Redbirds throwing errors in the fifth inning of the Edwardsville Class 4A Regional at Tom Pile Field. Hovey's run put the Tiger up 5-0 and they went on to a 5-2 victory.
Billy Hurst / For The Telegraph
Edwardsville's Jordan Hovey reacts after diving across home plate safely while scoring from first base on two Redbirds throwing errors in the fifth inning of the Edwardsville Class 4A Regional at Tom Pile Field. Hovey's run put the Tiger up 5-0 and they went on to a 5-2 victory.
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STLToday article on Baseball Regional Championship - 6/1/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Edwardsville, Lloyd handcuff Alton to win regional crown

 

Tigers top Redbirds in Baseball Regional in front of 1,500 - Riverbender.com - 6/1/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Edwardsville tops Alton 5-2 for regional title in front of 1,500 fans

 
 
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There were several close calls during the Edwardsville-Alton game and this was one of them at second base. (Photo by Dan Brannan)
There were several close calls during the Edwardsville-Alton game and this was one of them at second base. (Photo by Dan Brannan)

 

Going in, Monday's rain-delayed IHSA Class 4A Edwardsville Regional final between the host Tigers and Alton seemed to be the most anticipated high-school baseball matchup in the Metro St. Louis area in quite some time.

It was easy to see why; the Redbirds' Bryan Hudson would be given the ball against Tiger ace Daniel Lloyd. And given the thrilling outcome of the 2014 regional final between the two teams – a 1-0 EHS win in the bottom of the seventh – anticipation was high.

 

Alton fireballer Bryan Hudson lets loose of one of his fastballs against Edwardsville on Monday night. (Photo by Dan Brannan)
Alton fireballer Bryan Hudson lets loose of one of his fastballs against Edwardsville on Monday night. (Photo by Dan Brannan)

 

It was enough to draw an estimated 1,500 fans to Tom Pile Field, and they weren't disappointed.

In the end, it was a pair of errors in the bottom of the fifth that led to three runs that was the difference as Edwardsville advanced to this week's Bloomington Sectional with a 5-2 win over Alton. The Tigers will take on O'Fallon, 10-0, five-inning winners over Belleville East in the Granite City Regional final, at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday at a venue in the Metro-East area; the site had not been announced on the IHSA web site Monday night.

“There were two good teams competing today,” said Redbird coach Todd Haug. “What it came down to was execution, and their execution is outstanding.”

“Our guys competed well,” said Tiger coach Tim Funkhouser. “We were able to execute a safety squeeze to get a run home, and executed well on a second-and-third situation, kept the ball in play and got some runs from it.”

The Tiger execution certainly helped them on Monday. That, and a couple of key defensive plays from left fielder Fahd Shakeel, especially one in the third inning that kept the Redbirds off the board when Shakeel raced to his left and got to a fly ball off Derrick Allen's bat that seemed ready to fall and give AHS a lead, diving to make the play.

“That was a big play by Fahd,” Funkhouser said. “We do a lot of work out there every day and there's a lot of trust that we'll get there and make the plays when we need them.”

It certainly was as both starting pitchers Bryan Hudson and Daniel Lloyd otherwise had no trouble going through the other team's order the first time up, Lloyd only walking Steven Nguyen and Hudson giving up a hit to Joe Wallace.

Edwardsville broke on top first in the fourth when Collin Clayton drew a walk and Aaron Jackson singled to put runners at first and third. Jackson then stole second and, after a Matt Zielonko strikeout, Jake Garella hit into a fielder's choice that brought in a run, and Shakeel grounded to Hudson for the second out, but Jackson came home for the Tigers' second run.

In the fifth, Bailey Zimmer and Mitchell Krebs singled to start the inning and both advanced on a well-executed Wallace sacrifice. Jacob Hovey was intentionally walked to load up the bases and Hudson got Clayton to strike out. Jackson then came up and grounded to shortstop Drake Hampton, but Krebs, leaping to avoid being hit by the ball, somehow also disrupted Hampton, who threw wildly to first to score Zimmer and Krebs. Hovey, seeing the ball get away, broke for the plate and first baseman Jacob Kanallakan, trying to get Hovey, threw wildly to allow the run to score and Jackson to move to second.

That gave Lloyd some breathing room, and despite giving up two runs in the sixth when Jacob Skrabacz scored on a wild pitch and Matt Hopkins scored on a grounder to second, maintained the lead.

Lloyd lasted until giving up a double to Nguyen with one out in the seventh, when he was lifted for Garella, who got Steven Patten to ground to third and struck out Skrabacz to send the Tigers to the sectional.

While the loss was disappointing, the Tigers gained some supporters from the Alton side. “It's a rivalry, yes, but a friendly rivalry,” Haug said. “There's no bad blood between us and we're hoping they can bring some hardware back to Southern Illinois.”

“They had a 30-win season and it was an outstanding season for them, so we tip our caps to them,” Funkhouser said.

With the Tigers about to face the Panthers for a third time – the first game was a 2-1, 11-inning thriller at Tom Pile Field In April – Funkhouser and the Tigers are going to stick with what works for them.

“We'll enjoy this one, then start getting ready for O'Fallon,” Funkhouser said. “We'll be ready to go.”

 

 

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Baseball Redbirds Rally in 7th to top Quincy - The Telegraph - 5/28/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Skrabacz walkoff hit caps Alton rally in seventh

Last updated: May 28. 2015 8:01PM - 588 Views 

 


 

Teammates rush Alton's Jacob Skrabacz as he rounds second after hitting a walkoff single Thursday night in Edwardsville during the regional semifinal game with Quincy.
James B. Ritter | For The Telegraph
Teammates rush Alton's Jacob Skrabacz as he rounds second after hitting a walkoff single Thursday night in Edwardsville during the regional semifinal game with Quincy.
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A Scrappy Win for Alton - AdVantage News - 5/28/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

A Scrappy win for Alton

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Redbirds Baseball pulls one out vs. Quincy - Riverbender.com - 5/28/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Redbirds sneak past Quincy 4-3; move to title game against Edwardsville

 
 
 
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It wasn't looking good for Alton's baseball team Thursday afternoon.

The Redbirds had basically been shut down by Quincy pitcher Drake Gordon through six innings of their IHSA Class 4A Edwardsville Regional semifinal match at Tom Pile Field. Only one Redbird baserunner had even gotten to third all day long and the Blue Devils were just three outs away from pulling off what would be a stunning upset.

 

 

Alton had other ideas, and a leadoff homer from Aaron Bonnell sparked what turned into a four-run, game-winning rally, capped off by a two-run single from Jacob Skrabacz, that gave the Redbirds a stunning 4-3 win and a berth to the regional final Saturday morning, where they'll be facing host Edwardsville in a matchup many had been anticipating.

Given the circumstances and the way it happened, though, Redbird coach Todd Haug was pretty ecstatic after the game. “This has to go down as the biggest win of my career here,” Haug said. “I was telling the kids that's the beauty of the game; it can be a love-hate thing, but you play 21 hard outs, seven strong innings, you figure out a way and you go home happy.”

Part of the Redbird strategy was saving pitching ace Bryan Hudson for a potential showdown with the Tigers; they gave the ball to Ben Cusac, but he lasted just three-plus innings, giving up three earned runs (two in the second and another in the fourth) and five hits before being lifted in the fourth for Jacob St. Peters.

Not that Haug had any regrets. “We decided to roll the dice,” Haug said. “We've got full confidence in Ben; things just didn't work out today.”

St. Peters stepped in and retired the first three Blue Devil batters he faced with a runner at second and a run in, then got some key defensive plays the rest of the way to help keep Quincy at bay.

“Jake was outstanding today,” Haug said. “He comes at right-handed batters at a nasty angle; he was our unsung hero today.”

Still, Gordon also kept the Redbirds in check; the closest the came to scoring came in the fifth, when Steven Nguyen reached on a fielder's choice, stole second and got to third on a Gordon wild pitch, but Carter Hayden struck out and Skrabacz grounded to short to end the threat.

St. Peters and the Redbird defense came up big in the sixth and seventh as well, St. Peters striking out Ben Mara and getting Matt Tossick to fly to right to end the threat, then inducing Johnny Reckers to ground into a double play and Carson Frye to fly to center to set up the dramatic bottom of the seventh.

It started when Bonnell launched a 2-2 pitch from Gordon over the fence in left to cut the lead to 3-1. It was seemingly a small thing, but it suddenly gave the Redbirds a big lift.

“It was definitely a tough situation,” Bonnell said, “but I got a good pitch to hit and got it out of the park. It really got the bench up.”

It also got the Alton supporters in attendance fired up too, and with new life, the Redbirds came alive. Drake Hampton followed Bonnell's shot with a double to the fence in center and Steven Nguyen walked to put runners at second and third.

Up came Hayden, who attempted to lay down a sacrifice bunt. The ball was fielded by Gordon, who fired to first, but the throw was high and brought in Hampton and put Hayden at second and Nguyen at third to bring up Skrabacz, who wasted no time, connecting with a 0-1 fastball through the hole at short to bring in both Nguyen and Hayden and set off a huge celebration.

“That was a rough game for awhile,” Skrabacz said, “but Aaron's bomb and Drake's shot really got us going.”

The showdown between the Redbirds and Tigers begins at 11 a.m., with the winner advancing to the Illinois Wesleyan Sectional in Bloomington next week; the semifinal game against the Granite City Regional champion will be played in the Metro-East area at a site to be determined.

“We're in a tough region,” Haug said, “but I like our chances.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Bonnell is Key to Redbirds Success - AdVantage News - 5/23/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Bonnell is a key to Alton’s success

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AdVantage News - 5/21/2015 - Redbirds Baseball tops Jersey 1-0


Updated on 06/10/2022

Redbirds top Panthers, set new program wins mark

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Baseball defeats Jersey 1-0 - The Telegraph - 5/21/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

PREP BASEBALL: Alton beats Jersey 1-0, set wins record
Hudson shuts out Jersey, Redbirds get record at 29

Last updated: May 21. 2015 8:26PM - 473 Views 
By Greg Shashack - gshashack@civitasmedia.com

Alton's Matt Hopkins, right, slides in safely ahead of the tag by Jersey catcher Hunter Bryant during the fifth inning Thursday at Ken Schell Field in Jerseyville. Alton won the game 1-0.
Billy Hurst | For The Telegraph
Alton's Matt Hopkins, right, slides in safely ahead of the tag by Jersey catcher Hunter Bryant during the fifth inning Thursday at Ken Schell Field in Jerseyville. Alton won the game 1-0.
     

Billy Hurst | For The Telegraph
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JERSEYVILLE – Todd Haug is certified as a teacher of both world and American history.


Thursday afternoon at Ken Schell Field, the Alton High teacher and baseball coach offered a brief tutorial on Redbirds baseball history.


“Ninety-three years, it’s been 93 years if you go back in our history since Alton baseball started,” Haug said. “We don’t take anything away from our past, we’ve had some tremendous teams at Alton High.


“But we’re savoring this one. This is a really big one for us – 29.”


The Redbirds’ 1-0 victory over the Jersey Panthers set a school record for victories in a season with their record at 29-6, eclipsing marks set at 28-11 in 2001 and 28-10 in 2013.


“It’s pretty unbelievable,” said Alton senior Matt Hopkins, who had two of the Redbirds’ four hits and scored the game’s only run. “At the beginning of the year, in sports psychology, we talked about what record we wanted this year and we predicted 29-6. So coming into today, I was extremely excited and extremely hopeful to be a part of history.


“You can’t get any better than that. Senior year, going out last regular-season game and breaking the school record for wins. … I’m glad that I was a part of it.”


With the IHSA-allotted maximum of 35 regular season games played, the Redbirds will prep for a week before meeting Quincy in the semifinals of the Edwardsville Class 4A Regional next Thursday at Tom Pile Field.


But postseason concerns would wait a day while the Redbirds finish basking in the achievement of 29 wins in a season.


“It means a lot more than what people think,” Alton senior Bryan Hudson said. “We’ve been working really hard for a really long time, before the season, preseason workouts even. This was our goal.


“Hey, we made history.”


So did Hudson. The 6-foot-8 left-hander went the distance for a three-hit shutout that lowered his ERA to 0.44 and raised his record to 10-1. Hudson’s 10 wins match the school-record set by Jason Roberts in 2011.


“Hopefully, we’ll get one more,” said Hudson, whose next start projects to be against top-seeded Edwardsville in the regional title game should both teams advance.


Hudson, Alton’s career leader in strikeouts (320) and wins (25), walked three and struck out 16 in a 112-pitch outing. “Tremendous effort from, in my opinion, the best player in the state,” Haug said of Hudson, who struck out all 11 Panthers he faced.


Alton, which beat Jersey 12-0 in five innings on March 23 in Alton, plated the game’s lone run in the fifth inning when Matt Hopkins singled and scored on Hudson’s double. The RBI was Hudson’s 49th of the season, moving him within two of Pat Gibson’s school-record 51 set in 2002.


“This is a good team, they’ve gotten a lot better since the first time we faced them,” Hudson said of Jersey. “(Kimble’s) a great pitcher. We were the better team today.”


Senior right-hander Crick Kimble (5-4) took the tough-luck loss for the Panthers. Jersey’s ace limited the Redbirds to four hits, while walking three and striking out six.


“What’s really going to get overshadowed in this game,” said Jersey coach Darren Perdun, whose team takes a 17-14 record into Friday’s regular-season finale at Collinsville, “is just how good Crick Kimble is. If Hudson’s the best pitcher in the area, I’d say Crick Kimble has got to be a No. 2.


“Our kid pitched well. … You walk away from this one and you say, hey, we just got beat by somebody that is better than us.”


ALTON 1, JERSEY 0


Alton 000 010 0 — 1 4 0


Jersey 000 000 0 — 0 3 1


Alton (29-6) – Hopkins 2-3, Hudson 1-2 2B RBI, Bonnell 1-2. WP-Hudson IN-7.0 H-3 R-0 ER-0 BB-3 K-16.


Jersey (17-14) – Witt 1-3, Kimble 1-2 2B, Bryant 1-3. LP-Kimble IN-7.0 H-4 R-1 ER-1 BB-3 K-6.


Greg Shashack may be reached at 618-798-1486 or on Twitter @gregshashack

Redbirds fall to O'Fallon in Baseball - AdVantage News - 5/19/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Holba and Panthers too much for Redbirds

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Baseball Redbirds drop SWC Finale to O'Fallon - The Telegraph - 5/19/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

O’Fallon puts Redbirds record on hold

Last updated: May 19. 2015 8:46PM - 487 Views 

 


 

Alton coach Todd Haug's Redbirds were denied school-record win No. 29 on Tuesday in O'Fallon. Alton will get another shot at 29 on Wednesday when they send ace Bryan Hudson to the mound at Jerseyville.
Scott Kane / For The Telegraph
Alton coach Todd Haug's Redbirds were denied school-record win No. 29 on Tuesday in O'Fallon. Alton will get another shot at 29 on Wednesday when they send ace Bryan Hudson to the mound at Jerseyville.
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Redbirds win at Busch - The Telegraph - 5/17/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Last updated: May 17. 2015 2:36PM - 672 Views 

 


 

Alton's Nick Cauley throws a pitch during the second inning of the Redbirds game with Mascoutah at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Cauley, the second of seven Redbirds pitchers that each worked one inning, got the win.
Billy Hurst / For The Telegraph
Alton's Nick Cauley throws a pitch during the second inning of the Redbirds game with Mascoutah at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Cauley, the second of seven Redbirds pitchers that each worked one inning, got the win.
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Alton Blanks Belleville West - Belleville News-Democrat - 5/14/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Alton’s Hudson brings show to West, blanks Maroons 3-0

 
 

By now, the cluster of big league scouts that follow Bryan Hudson from game to game have become part of the landscape for the Alton senior pitcher.

They've been following him since he pitched at a regional tournament when he was still just a sophomore. And they were there again Thursday, clustered in the metal bleachers behind home plate at Belleville West to see how the 6-foot-8 left hander's 93 mph fastball and sharp curve matched up against the Maroons' hitters.

Hudson showed them what they came to see, zoning out the battery of radar guns aimed at his delivery, and striking out 13 West batters in a 3-0 Southwestern Conference victory.

The Maroons got just three hits off Hudson, one of which made it past the pitcher's mound.

"Obviously he's a stud. He's the most elite pitcher I've ever seen and pretty much everybody around here has seen," said West senior catcher Jacob Wilson. "He throws hard and that curve ball is just freaking nasty. Sometimes he throws it harder and gets a little more movement on it, but it's always sharp."

There was plenty to distract Hudson, including a persistent 15 mph wind out of the south. And then there all those radar guns.

"(The attention) was new to me, for sure, but once I got used to it I was able to dial it in and focus on doing my thing," he said.

West didn't get its first hit until the fifth inning when Luke Glaeser bounced a chopper to Hudson high enough to beat out the throw. Sophomore Logan Betz also reached on a slow roller to no-man's land between third base and the pitcher's mound.

Cal Kossina got the Maroon's third hit in the sixth, a solid line drive into center field.

Hudson faced just four more batters than the maximum 21.

"We thought he was sharp, even in these elements with the wind and the dust that can sometimes blow in your eyes," said Alton coach Todd Haug. "What people don't know is that he was battling a pretty serious injury. He rolled an ankle a couple of days ago and has it taped up."

West senior pitcher Matt Klosterman lost a 1-0 decision to Hudson in the second week of April. He got the tough assignment again Thursday and was up to the challenge before leaving the game in the fourth with some tightness in his throwing arm.

He surrendered a run in the third when he hit Alton lead-off hitter Matt Hopkins who scored on an RBI single by — who else — Hudson. It was the only run he surrendered, while allowing three hits and giving up two walks. He struck out six.

"It's a hard assignment to go up against a lot of the pitchers in our conference and he could say 'coach, I don't want to,' but he never does," said West coach Todd Baltz. "Matt is a competitor and he's the kind of kid who wants the hard assignments."

Kossina and Luke Valladingham also pitched for the Maroons who, in total, struck out 10 Alton batters in the game.

Alton added a pair of runs in the sixth. Aaron Bonnell led off with a double and scored on an RBI single by Jacob Skrabacz. Steven Pattan later scored from third on a throwing error.

West falls to 11-17 with six games left ahead of the Class 4A Belleville East Regional. Alton is 26-5 with four games left to play.

Hudson is now 9-1. He entered the game at West with a .43 earned run average. He'll almost certainly hear his name called when Major League Baseball begins its draft on June 8, but he's not counting gis chickens.

"I'm not really sure what's going to happen, but as of right now I'm going to Missouri," he said.

Sports Editor Todd Eschman can be reached at teschman@bnd.com or 239-2540. Follow him on Twitter: @tceschman.


Read more here: http://www.bnd.com/sports/high-school/prep-baseball-softball/article21058197.html#storylink=cpy

 

Baseball defeats Belleville West - The Telegraph - 5/14/15


Updated on 06/10/2022

Last updated: May 14. 2015 8:36PM - 302 Views 

 


 

Bryan Hudson
Bryan Hudson
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Baseball has big inning to defeat Granite City - Riverbender.com - 5/7/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Alton's bats explode in fifth inning to topple Granite City 19-6

 
 
 
 

 

 

Once Alton's bats get going, they can be pretty difficult to stop.

Granite City can attest to that.

The Redbirds, who trailed twice in the game, took the lead back in the fifth inning with a three-run burst, then sent 10 men to the plate in the sixth and seventh, scoring six times in each inning, to take a 19-6 Southwestern Conference win over the Warriors Thursday at Babe Champion Field.

“I was really proud of the effort today,” said Redbird coach Todd Haug. “This isn't an easy place to play as a visiting team; you have to be ready for anything here and be ready to play.”

The Redbirds' Drake Hampton swung the biggest stick on the day; he was 4-for-5 with five RBIs and three runs scored, including a two-run double in the fifth and a two-run triple in the sixth that helped break the game wide-open.

“Drake was outstanding today,” Haug said.

The sixth and seventh innings for the Warriors was kind of symbolic of how their season has gone; Granite held leads after the first and fourth innings but gave up 15 runs the final three innings. “Alton's a good-hitting club,” said GCHS coach Scott Smallie. “There's no easy outs up and down the lineup; their sixth and seventh hitters really take a good approach to their at-bats, and once the shoe dropped, it was hard to stop them.

“Once one or two guys got hits, it snowballed on us. Hitting's contagious; once someone gets started, it can get up and down the lineup. That's baseball for you.”

Alton broke on top early, getting a run when Jacob Kanallakan singled in Derrick Allen for a 1-0 lead in the first, but the Warriors countered with a pair of runs in the home half of the first when Gabe Jarman singled in D.J. Miller and David Pulley hit a sacrifice fly to score Bruce Drennan. The Redbirds bounced right back when Allen singled home Matt Hopkins and Hampton to put Alton back on top at 3-1.

Alton scored again in the fourth when Allen hit a sacrifice fly to center to score Hampton, who opened the inning with a single, to make it 4-2. The Warriors bounced back in the bottom of the inning when, with two out, Carter Hall and Miller reached on errors and Drennan singled home Hall to cut the lead to 4-3. Ryan Steen then stroked a triple to the deepest part of the park to score Miller and Drennan to give Granite the lead back at 5-4.

Alton grabbed the lead back right away, starting with walks to Kanallakan, Aaron Bonnell and Hopkins. A Hampton two-run double gave the Redbirds the lead back, and a Brendan Phillips groundout to short brought home another run. The floodgates finally opened up in the sixth when Alton scored six times, the big blow coming from Hampton, who had a two-run triple; Bryan Hudson also had a RBI double in the inning to help get the ball rolling.

Six more runs came in in the seventh, with Hudson stroking a RBI double, Bonnell a two-run triple and Phillips a RBI double. But the highlight was Carlos Anderson coming in as a pinch-hitter and stroking a RBI single to bring in Phillips to end the Redbird scoring. Pulley hit a RBI single to score Drennan in the bottom of the seventh for a consolation run for the Warriors.

The Redbirds host East St. Louis at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, then travel to Belleville West for a 4:30 p.m. Thursday clash.

 

 

 

 

Send your news tips to news@riverbender.com or on twitter @RiverBenderNews

 

Redbird Baseball defeats Kahoks - The Telegraph - 5/5/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Last updated: May 05. 2015 8:21PM - 846 Views 

By Louie Korac For The Telegraph

 


 

Bryan Hudson
Bryan Hudson
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Hudson leads Redbirds past Kahoks - AdVantage News - 5/5/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Redbirds’ Hudson beats Kahoks again, 5-1

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STL Today article on Baseball DH with Lindbergh - 5/2/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Alton holds off Lindbergh twice, sweeps doubleheader

 

SAPPINGTON • Neither the Alton High or Lindbergh High baseball teams were able to use their top two pitchers on Saturday because of games earlier in the week and critical games next week.

That meant a lot of offense as the Redbirds posted 9-8 and 10-8 victories in a nonconference doubleheader at Lindbergh.

In the first game, Lindbergh (16-8) scored five runs in the bottom of the seventh to tie it 8-8, but Alton (21-4) rallied to score the game-winner in the top of the eighth.

The second contest featured plenty of scoring from both offenses.

Alton scored first in the top of the first. Derrick Allen reached on a error and scored on a sacrifice fly off the bat of Jacob Kanallakan.

Lindbergh scored twice in its half of the first using a hit-by-pitch, two hits, two stolen bases, and three walks. The big hits were RBI singles by Richard Ounanian and Tyler Coleman.

 

"The first one was exactly like the second," Lindbergh coach Darin Scott said. "We didn't throw any of our top guys because of the games earlier in the week. Offensively, I thought we took a step forward today. We had some really good at bats. We didn't get the win, but it was a really nice comeback in game one. But there's a reason Alton is ranked where they are ranked. They are a very good team."

The Flyers stretched the lead to 3-1 in the second when Ounanian earned a two-out walk and scored on John Halstead's double.

In the top of the third, Alton, the No. 3 team in the STLhighschoolsports.com large-schools rankings, took control of the game.

It put together nine consecutive hits to score seven times and take an 8-1 lead. Sophomore shortstop Steven Nguyen started the uprising with a single and added an RBI after his team batted around.

"We were pretty successful with our offense," Nguyen said. "Lindbergh didn't stop fighting, but we were able to stop them when we needed to the most."

Lindbergh battled back scoring three times in the fourth to shave the lead to 8-6. Alton added two insurance runs in the sixth.

Kanallakan reached on a fielder's choice with one out and scored on a double by Matthew Hopkins. Brandon Phillips followed with another double to make it 10-6.

In the seventh, John Hoevelmann singled in Ben Kelsh and Ounanian followed with a bases-loaded walk to make it 10-8. The Flyers had the bases loaded, but Halstead's drive to center was run down by Allen to end the game.

"It was a nice day for baseball," Alton coach Todd Haug. "It was nice to get away for a little while and play a tough team on a quality field. We have some obstacles still to overcome, but any day you can take two from a team like Lindbergh is a good day. It was a tough, long week. We played five games and some big ones next week too."

Redbird Baseball gets two from Belleville East - The Telegraph - 4/30/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

Last updated: April 30. 2015 9:16PM - 308 Views 

By Louie Korac For The Telegraph

 


 

Alton coach Todd Haug, shown here during a game earlier this season, had reasonto smile Thgursday after his team got a pair of wins over Belleville East.
Billy Hurst | For The Telegraph
Alton coach Todd Haug, shown here during a game earlier this season, had reasonto smile Thgursday after his team got a pair of wins over Belleville East.
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Wierd Day Ends in Euphoria for Redbirds - AdVantage News - 4/30/2015


Updated on 06/10/2022

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Redbirds Stumble at Edwardsville 4-0 - AdVantage News 4/28/2015


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Baseball defeats Granite City - AdVantage News 4/24/2015


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