Panthers surprise, win county softball tournament

Published 8:58 pm Saturday, March 27, 2010

Jemison was an underdog in the Chilton County Softball Tournament, but coach Leighsa Robinson knew her team was close to turning its season around.

The Panthers had a 1-12 record, hadn’t won a county championship since 2005, and had to deal with a team—Maplesville–that made the state tournament last year and is ranked No. 9 in Class 1A this year and the defending county champion–rival Chilton County.

Surprising everyone except perhaps Robinson, tournament host Jemison won four straight games–including two one-run decisions against CCHS on Saturday–to claim the county championship.

“I knew we had it in us,” Robinson said after the final out had been made in a 2-1 win. “We’ve been playing good the past couple of weeks–one inning always snags us.”

Shelby Lopez doubled with one out in the fifth inning. After a sacrifice for the second out, Tabatha Cork drove Lopez home on a hit that glanced just off the glove of leaping Chilton first baseman Lauren Stewart.

Tournament Most Valuable Player Tiffany Guin doubled to plate Cork and give Jemison a 2-1 lead it wouldn’t surrender, but the possibility of that one inning that would doom Jemison always loomed.

CCHS got the game-tying run to third base with one out in the bottom of the fifth inning and had runners on first and second with no outs in the sixth. That’s when Lindsey Parrish hit a hard line drive right at Jemison shortstop Lopez, who caught the ball and was able to get out the runner leaning too far off second base and basically end the threat.

The seventh inning, meanwhile, was uneventful–until the celebration began.

“My group of seniors was hungry for this,” Robinson said about a class that includes Brandi Baker, Cork, Samantha Glass, Codi Mims, Amber Simmons and Dallis Vanderslice. “This tournament just proves the leadership I have on this team.”

Chilton scored its run in the bottom of the second inning when Macee Thomas singled with two outs to score Brooke Lewis, but Guin held the Tigers in check the rest of game, allowing only five hits.

In fact, Guin pitched all 28 innings the Panthers were on the field in the tournament and allowed only seven runs. She was on the mound when Jemison topped CCHS, 3-2, earlier in the day. Because of that result, CCHS would have had to beat Jemison twice to win the tournament.

“We wanted to win really bad,” said Guin, a sophomore. “I just tried to get as many three-up, three-downs as possible. I knew I had a great defense behind me.”

Check clantonadvertiser.com on Monday and Tuesday’s print edition for more on the tournament.