Power Park hosts 8-game high school showcase

By: Staff Reports | Posted: Mar. 20, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail (Full Article)

Sixteen West Virginia prep baseball teams are set to participate this weekend in the fourth Suddenlink High School Baseball Showcase at Appalachian Power Park in Charleston.

Two defending state champion teams are scheduled to compete in the three-day event — St. Albans (Class AAA) and Charleston Catholic (Class A).

The eight-game showcase begins Thursday with a pair of games — Clay County versus Gilmer County at 4 p.m., followed by Riverside and Huntington at approximately 7.

On Friday, it’s Hurricane against Elkins at 4 p.m., followed by Charleston Catholic and Summers County at 7. The four-game set on Saturday finds Herbert Hoover and Nitro playing at 10 a.m., with Notre Dame-Buffalo at 1, South Charleston-St. Albans at 4 and Capital-Ripley at about 7.

Tickets are priced at $6 for students and seniors (65 and over), and $8 for general admission.

Game-winning double sparks softball to 3-2 win over Oakland

Posted: Mar. 19, 2018 | Source: The Morehead News

Senior designated player Kylie Holton cranked an RBI double off the right centerfield wall in the sixth inning, and that proved to be the winning margin as the Morehead State softball team edged Oakland 3-2 in the final game of the Eagle Classic at University Field Sunday.

The Eagles moved to 16-6 in 2018, while the Golden Grizzlies slid to 6-14.

“We have been in quite a few tight games this year, and when we get in those games I feel our team has the confidence that we are going to pull it out,” said head coach David Williams. “We challenged them to go ahead and get that go-ahead run in the sixth. We got people on and we moved runners and got good at-bats. I think there is a quiet confidence with our team. They believe no matter what the situation is that someone will come through.”

Freshman right-fielder Paige Scruggs got the go-ahead inning kick-started with a one-out single. She stole second, and junior first baseman Allison Rager moved down to her position on a free-pass walk. Following a fielder’s choice ground out, Holton lifted a 2-0 pitch high and deep to right field. Oakland’s outfielder made a stabbing attempt for the ball at the wall, but it ricocheted off and allowed Scruggs to trot home with the eventual winning run.

Scruggs also collected the opening RBI of the game with a ground out in the first, and senior third baseman Ellen Barrett singled home center-fielder Aubrey Bennettto make it 2-0.

Senior pitcher Chelsea McManaway made the lead hold up until the top of the sixth when OU tied it with back-to-back RBI hits. McManaway improved to 11-2 with 11 more strikeouts today.

Six different Eagles tallied a hit apiece.

Morehead State is scheduled to host nationally-ranked Kentucky on Wednesday at 3 p.m. ET. Check MSUEagles.com, Twitter and Facebook (MSUEagles) for updates to the schedule due to incoming inclement weather.

WVU dominates Marshall, storms into Sweet 16

West Virginia forward Esa Ahmad (23) dunks during the second half against Marshall on Sunday in San Diego. AP photo

By: Mitch Vingle, Staff Writer | Posted: Mar. 19, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

SAN DIEGO — Jarrod West Sr. was in the Viejas Arena here on the campus of San Diego State University for Sunday night’s special matchup between Mountain State teams West Virginia and Marshall.

It was almost 20 years to the day he helped WVU stun then-Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins and the Bearcats with a 25-foot bank shot, sending the Mountaineers into the Sweet 16.

On Sunday, however, with West’s son Jarrod Jr. in Marshall’s lineup, there was no buzzer-beater. There was, in fact, very little drama whatsoever.

That’s because the Mountaineers (26-10) thoroughly dominated the Thundering Herd in the paint and everywhere else in a 94-71 rout, sending West Virginia to its third Sweet 16 appearance in the last four years. The fifth-seeded Mountaineers will now travel to Boston for a Friday matchup with No. 1 seed Villanova. The Big 12 will be sending one quarter of the teams to the Sweet 16, with WVU, Kansas, Kansas State and Texas Tech all going.

Sunday’s late affair was somewhat surprising not because West Virginia won — the Mountaineers were, after all, a 12.5-point favorite — but because of the decisiveness. After MU stunned No. 4 seed Wichita State here Friday, many expected a tight, emotion-filled battle. It turned out, however, to be much like the prior game before the controversial ending to the series. Back in 2015, Jevon Carter had 15 points to lead the Mountaineers to an 86-68 victory. MU standout and Charleston native Jon Elmore was then held to 14.

This time it was much of the same — and more for WVU. Carter led the Mountaineers in scoring with 28 on 10-of-18 shooting, while Elmore was held down for most of the game and finished with 15. West Virginia outrebounded Marshall 40-24.

“My teammates did an unbelievable job of getting me open,” Carter said. “I came off a lot of screens. I just played within the game. I just let the game come to me. I just let my defense turn into offense.”

“You’ve got to give them credit,” said MU coach Dan D’Antoni of WVU. “They’re tough.”

In sum, it was a runaway.

With 5:58 remaining, WVU was up by 31. And perhaps two second-half plays symbolized this one.

The first was when WVU was coming out of a timeout at the 13:46 mark. Junior Esa Ahmad threw an alley-oop pass to sophomore Sagaba Konate for a thunderous dunk.

The second was with 8:13 remaining. It was when red-hot Carter, deep in the left corner, took a pass, put up a trey and was fouled by Ot Elmore. The shot went in. And Carter gave a death stare to the crowd. He completed the 4-point play to give West Virginia a 30-point 77-47 lead.

The only bad note for the Mountaineers was Wes Harris’ clash with MU’s Jannson Williams at 8:21 of the first half. Harris was held out the rest of the game with concussion-like symptoms and Williams was reportedly sent to the hospital.

Otherwise, the night was almost completely owned by WVU.

“We did it for the state,” said Mountaineer forward Lamont West, who finished with 18. “We just wanted to go out there and play hard. We didn’t want to go home with an ‘L.’ We just did what we do. We played hard and came out with a ‘W.’”

As has been the case, it seems, in every WVU game of late, the Mountaineers had a cold hand shooting early. Marshall, meanwhile, hit three of its first four attempts – all treys – and moved out to an 8-point, 16-8 lead on a Darius George 3-pointer at 13:56.

The icebreaker for West Virginia, though, was Lamont West’s three right after that of George.

The Mountaineers were then off and running, both figuratively and literally.

The press was working to the tune of 11 first-half Marshall turnovers, which turned into 15 points. Also, Sagaba Konate’s presence at the back end of the press appeared to bother Marshall’s shooters. The Thundering Herd converted just 8 of 26 (30.8 percent) of their shots in the span and failed to score a field goal in the last 4:14.

West Virginia, meanwhile, got 3-pointers from West, James “Beetle” Bolden, Daxter Miles and Carter to fuel a 23-2 run (which, on the back end, was 19-0), completed on an Ahmad tip-in. MU’s C.J. Burks hit a pair of free throws at 4:39 to snap the run.

West Virginia, though, wasn’t done. The Mountaineers stretched their lead to 42-25 points at the end of the half. They took 38 shots in the half compared to the Herd’s 26. They outrebounded Marshall by a whopping 27-11 and had 18 points in the paint. Carter had 11 points to lead seven WVU players in first half scoring. The Herd’s leader, Jon Elmore, was 1 of 5 shooting and had but three points. MU’s lowest first-half point production before West Virginia was 26 versus Old Dominion.

West Virginia outscored MU in the second half by 52-46.

“Just happy to be able to keep playing,” Carter said. “This is March. We did what we came here to do. But we don’t want to just go to the Sweet 16, we want to win it all. We’re going to watch a lot of film and get ready for the next one.”

All-time, West Virginia now leads the series with Marshall 34-11.

Mitch Vingle can be reached at 304-348-4827 or mitchvingle@wvgazettemail.com. Follow him on Twitter@MitchVingle.

NCAA tournament: WVU thumps Murray State, to face Marshall in 2nd round

West Virginia forward Teddy Allen (13) shoots as Murray State forward Terrell Miller Jr. (0) defends during WVU’s win over the Racers on Friday in the NCAA tournament’s first round. Photo by: Denis Poroy

By: Staff Reports | Posted: Mar. 16, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

The Capital Classic lives again, albeit in California.

WVU got 21 points and eight assists from Jevon Carter to cruise past Murray State 85-68 in the first round of the NCAA tournament in San Diego. That sets up a second-round showdown with in-state rival Marshall, a game that hasn’t been played since 2015, but will have its highest stakes Sunday.

The winner of Sunday’s matchup earns a berth in the NCAA’s Sweet 16.

Return to wvgazettemail.com later this evening for more coverage of this game.

Contact Derek Redd at 304-348-1712 or derek.redd@wvgazettemail.com. Follow him on Twitter @derekredd.

Marshall shocks Shockers for first NCAA win in program history

Marshall coach Dan D’Antoni reacts during the first half of a first-round game against Wichita State at the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament, Friday, March 16, 2018, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

By: Doug Smock, Staff Writer | Posted: Mar. 16, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

SAN DIEGO — For perhaps the first time in his 70 years on this Earth, Dan D’Antoni didn’t know what to say.

(more…)

WVU hoping for hot start, win in NCAA tournament

By: Mitch Vingle, Staff Writer | Posted: Mar. 15, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

SAN DIEGO — The WVU’s men’s basketball team had no problems getting to the Pacific Coast and this sun-splashed city.

It’s landed. It’s practiced. It’s met the media.

Now, though, the goal of the No. 5 seed Mountaineers is simply to make a splash at the NCAA tournament — beginning at approximately 4 p.m. Friday at the Veijas Arena on the campus of San Diego State University. The game will be televised by TNT.

“We’re ready,” said WVU guard James “Beetle” Bolden. “We talked a little bit as a team. We’re focused and I think we’re ready to go out there and play.”

The Mountaineers (24-10) enter with a final Associated Press ranking of No. 15 and a current USA Today coaches poll ranking of No. 14. WVU’s opponent is No. 12 seed Murray State (26-5), which won the Ohio Valley Conference regular-season and tournament championships.

The focus in WVU’s camp, however, has been squarely on the practices leading into the first round. Mountaineer coach Bob Huggins this week pointed back to 2016 and the less-than-stellar practices heading into the loss to Stephen F. Austin. On Thursday, though, he seemed somewhat pleased.

“We’re better than we were then,” he said. “They could have been better. They could have been worse. … We were OK [Wednesday]. Actually, I thought we were pretty good. Most of us. Everybody wasn’t, but most of them were.”

Where it appears West Virginia will have to be very good on Friday is against Murray State’s trio of 3-point shooters. The Racers are led by point guard Jonathan Stark, the OVC Player of the Year and tournament MVP. He led Murray State’s league in scoring for a second straight year at 21.8 points a game.

Also, though, Terrell Miller, a 6-foot-8 wide body, can step out and hit the trey. He’s averaging 14.7 points and 8.2 rebounds. MSU as a team is hitting 37.9 percent of their 3-point attempts (WVU is at 35.3), but Stark (41 percent), Miller (39.2) and Hawkins (39.5) combine to hit 40.2 percent of the time.

“We worked a lot on getting back in transition,” said Mountaineer forward Teddy Allen. “Getting to the shooters. Know who the shooters are. We went over the scouting report a lot, so we know who can shoot and who we need to find in transition.”

On the other end, Murray State will have to handle West Virginia’s press. The Racers run a two-point-guard offense, which should help break that, but MSU coach Matt McMahon said Thursday his team must be prepared.

“We haven’t played anyone to the level of what they do,” McMahon said of the Mountaineers. “They’re second in the country in forced turnover percentage — and they hit you for 40 straight minutes. We’ve played against pressing teams, but we know this will be different.”

WVU is now No. 10 nationally in turnovers forced at 16.5 a game. Murray State is averaging 11.9 turnovers.

McMahon, meanwhile, pointed to rebounding as a key.

“I think it’s a big factor in winning,” he said. “We’ve been a good rebounding team all season long. Now this is about to be another level.”

West Virginia is No. 5 nationally in offensive rebounds, averaging 14 a game.

In addition, there are individual matchups. WVU team leader Jevon Carter and Daxter Miles will have to contain Murray State point guards Stark and Ja Morant. And vice versa. Also, Mountaineer sophomore Sagaba Konate will have to handle Miller. And vice versa.

“He’s a big body,” Miller said of Konate. “He plays hard. That’s all I’ve seen on him on film.”

Aside from all, though, there’s a matter of how each team handles the spotlight of March Madness.

“I think that’s been one of our strengths of our team,” McMahon said of MSU. “The ability to focus on the next most important thing, the task at hand, not getting too caught up in the moment and the hoopla that surrounds this great tournament.”

Huggins was asked about the hype as well as the travel.

“I think if anybody is equipped to do it, we can do it after what we do in our [Big 12] league,” Huggins said. “We fly across the country constantly, so our guys are pretty used to it.”

Last year, the Mountaineers were eliminated in the Sweet 16 in San Jose, California, by tournament runner-up Gonzaga, 61-58. It was West Virginia’s seventh Sweet 16 appearance since 1998 and 10th overall.

Mitch Vingle can be reached at 304-348-4827 or mitchvingle@wvgazettemail.com. Follow him on Twitter @MitchVingle.

NCAA tournament: Marshall trying to overcome Wichita State’s experience

Marshall guard Jon Elmore – AP photo

By: Doug Smock, Staff Writer | Posted: Mar. 15, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

SAN DIEGO — The degree of advantage in talent 16th-ranked Wichita State men’s basketball team may have over Marshall can be debated, but this cannot: The Shockers have an enormous edge in experience.

When the Thundering Herd takes the Viejas Arena floor at 1:30 p.m. Friday, it will do so with two freshmen starting and one other in the seven-man rotation.

And there is this: The entire team is playing its first NCAA tournament game, as the program has not sniffed the Big Dance in 31 years. Even Rondale Watson, who began his career at Wake Forest, has not played in the event.

Wichita State (25-7), a double-digit favorite in this 4-vs.-13 matchup, has a mountain of experience. This is the seventh consecutive trip to the NCAAs under coach Gregg Marshall, but that doesn’t tell the whole story.

The Shockers have six seniors, including four regular starters and two who have started at least two games. Nine of the 10 players who saw NCAA action last year are back, and six current Shockers have played in multiple tourneys.

Big man Shaquille Morris, Zach Brown and Rashard Kelly are playing in their fourth tournament in a Wichita uniform, and Connor Frankamp is also playing his fourth tourney, the first coming while he was a freshman at Kansas.

Wichita State’s Marshall is coaching his 14th tourney, including seven at Winthrop, so he has the experience advantage on most coaches. And he admits this is one of the easier teams he has coached.

“Yeah, this is a very experienced group,” Marshall said Thursday. “You have six seniors [and] Markis McDuffie and Landry Shamet are in their third years, so we have a lot of college basketball experience. This group, they know what they’re trying to do as well as the coaching staff.

“We’ve had a lot of good senior classes in the last seven, eight years, and their group has been very special in their own right, and now it would be nice to put a bow on top and make a deep run.”

The Herd (24-10) aims to halt that, and knows the size of the task ahead. But MU is riding a four-game winning streak, including a bye-capturing win over 24th-ranked Middle Tennessee and a Conference USA championship game thriller over Western Kentucky.

Certainly, the Herd has grown up in the past four months.

“I would say it’s a matter of focus,” said top scorer Jon Elmore. “With our young guys and kind of early on in the season, we had our bumps. But as the season progressed, you see those young guys learning. They’re sharper, more fluent in what we want to do, are more fluid.”

What the Herd will throw at the Shockers is its NBA-style offense that opponents don’t face often. The Shockers’ are playing at a faster pace this season, but …

“I’m not sure we play as fast as them,” said Shamet, the point guard who leads the team in scoring with 15 points per game. “In film, we have seen them come down and take the first semi-open look they get. They play a unique style of basketball which is not very identical to ours.”

Marshall compared MU’s pace to those at Savannah State, Oklahoma and South Dakota State. The Shockers pounded Savannah 112-66 and beat South Dakota State 95-85, but lost 91-83 to Oklahoma.

“Teams that get up and shoot 3s, we struggled with all three of them. It’s hard to guard,” Marshall said. “When they play at that tempo and have that skill across the front line and into the backcourt, it’s difficult to guard.

“You have to be a tremendous defensive team.”

MU has to continue its improved defensive play, but that will not be easy. Shamet and Morris are all-American Athletic Conference performers, and the 6-foot-8, 279-pound Morris may present the most problems.

When the Herd loses, it is often because of stellar inside play by the opposition. Some examples:

William & Mary’s Nathan Knight scored 31 points and pulled down 12 rebounds against the Herd;

Western Kentucky’s Dwight Coleby and Justin Johnson combined for 45 points and 22 boards in a Hilltopper rout, a game where WKU scored 70 points in the paint;

Coleby hit for 18 points and 13 boards in the regular-season rematch;

In the Herd’s last loss, Alabama-Birmingham’s Chris Cokley and William Lee combined for 38 points and 20 rebounds.

MU will have to match up with Wichita’s muscle and “Play Angry” mentality. It must match up with all that experience.

“They come into the tournament like this and expect to win and make a run deep,” Elmore said. “That is what we’re expecting to do, but we know it is going to be a tough matchup. But we are excited. We think we match up pretty well.

“Hopefully, it is a high-scoring affair and we come out on top.”

Doug Smock can be reached at dougsmock@wvgazettemail.com. Follow him on Twitter @dougsmock, and read his Inside Marshall Sports blog at blogs.wvgazettemail.com/dougsmock.

 

West Virginia statewide boys basketball sectional schedule

By: Rick Ryan, Prep Sports Reporter | Posted: Mar. 2, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

Sectional schedules

All games at 7 p.m. unless noted

(Numbers indicate seeds)

Class AAA

Region 1 Section 1

Wednesday: John Marshall 53, No. 3 Brooke 30

Friday: No. 1 Wheeling Park 42, No. 2 John Marshall 38, OT; Wheeling Park wins sectional

Region 1 Section 2

Wednesday: University 104, No. 4 Preston 57; Morgantown 83, No. 3 Buckhannon-Upshur 58

Friday: No. 1 University 58, No. 2 Morgantown 55; University wins sectional

Region 2 Section 1

Wednesday: Martinsburg 84, No. 4 Spring Mills 32; Musselman 68, No. 3 Hedgesville 63

Friday: No. 1 Martinsburg 68, No. 2 Musselman 65, OT; Martinsburg wins sectional

Region 2 Section 2

Wednesday: Jefferson 53, No. 3 Hampshire 34

Friday: No. 1 Washington 61, No. 2 Jefferson 49; Washington wins sectional

Region 3 Section 1

Wednesday: Capital 66, No. 4 St. Albans 52; George Washington 71, No. 3 South Charleston 45

Friday: No. 2 George Washington 69, No. 1 Capital 63, OT; George Washington wins sectional

Region 3 Section 2

Wednesday: Woodrow Wilson 75, No. 4 Greenbrier East 40; Princeton 53, No. 3 Riverside 40

Friday: No. 1 Woodrow Wilson 79, No. 2 Princeton 45; Woodrow Wilson wins sectional

Region 4 Section 1

Wednesday: Parkersburg 84, No. 3 Ripley 43

Friday: No. 1 Parkersburg South 52, No. 2 Parkersburg 50; Parkersburg South wins sectional

Region 4 Section 2

At Cabell Midland

Wednesday: Hurricane 62, No. 3 Spring Valley 50; Huntington 63, No. 4 Cabell Midland 41

Friday: No. 1 Huntington 63, No. 2 Hurricane 57; Huntington wins sectional

Class AA

Region 1 Section 1

Monday: Frankfort 68, No. 6 Petersburg 50; Keyser 60, No. 5 Grafton 49

Wednesday: Berkeley Springs 51, No. 3 Frankfort 40; Philip Barbour 71, No. 4 Keyser 52

Friday: No. 1 Philip Barbour 59, No. 2 Berkeley Springs 54; Philip Barbour wins sectional

Region 1 Section 2

Saturday: Weir 61, No. 4 Oak Glen 56

Tuesday: Fairmont Senior 116, No. 5 Weir 49; North Marion 80, No. 3 East Fairmont 69

Friday: No. 1 Fairmont Senior 97, No. 2 North Marion 54; Fairmont Senior wins sectional

Region 2 Section 1

All games at Davis & Elkins

Wednesday: Liberty Harrison 54, No. 4 Lincoln 46

Friday: Bridgeport 65, No. 5 Liberty Harrison 53; Robert C. Byrd 58, No. 3 Elkins 44

Saturday: No. 1 Bridgeport 53, No. 2 Robert C. Byrd 44; Bridgeport wins sectional

Region 2 Section 2

Saturday: Lewis County 58, No. 6 Herbert Hoover 51; Clay County 61, No. 5 Roane County 48

Tuesday: Nicholas County 77, No. 3 Lewis County 66; Braxton County 78, No. 4 Clay County 53

Friday: No. 1 Braxton County 66, No. 2 Nicholas County 54; Braxton County wins sectional

Region 3 Section 1

Friday: Independence 53, No. 5 Liberty Raleigh 46

At Beckley-Raleigh Co. Convention Ctr.

Tuesday: Westside 58, No. 3 Wyoming East 51; Oak Hill 75, No. 4 Independence 59

Thursday: No. 2 Westside 64, No. 1 Oak Hill 63; Westside wins sectional

Region 3 Section 2

Friday: River View 55, No. 5 PikeView 54

Tuesday: Shady Spring 87, No. 3 James Monroe 31; Bluefield 75, No. 4 River View 32

At Brushfork Armory

Saturday: No. 1 Bluefield 65, No. 2 Shady Spring 57, OT; Bluefield wins sectional

Region 4 Section 1

Monday: Sissonville 78, No. 6 Point Pleasant 33; Wayne 76, No. 5 Poca 46

Wednesday: Nitro 75, No. 4 Wayne 50; Winfield 77, No. 3 Sissonville 71

Friday: No. 2 Winfield 71, No. 1 Nitro 64; Winfield wins sectional

Region 4 Section 2

Saturday: Lincoln County 72, No. 4 Scott 65; Logan 87, No. 6 Man 41

Tuesday: Chapmanville 87, No. 5 Lincoln County 48

Wednesday: Logan 42, No. 2 Mingo Central 35

Friday: No. 1 Chapmanville 57, No. 3 Logan 40; Chapmanville wins sectional

Class A

Region 1 Section 1

Saturday: Valley Wetzel 61, No. 5 Hundred 46

At John Marshall Field House

Tuesday: Cameron 52, No. 3 Madonna 40; Wheeling Central 92, No. 4 Valley Wetzel 52

Friday: No. 1 Wheeling Central 71, No. 2 Cameron 44; Wheeling Central wins sectional

Region 1 Section 2

Saturday: Ritchie County 75, No. 5 Paden City 57

Tuesday: Tyler Consolidated 56, No. 4 Ritchie County 48; St. Marys 57, No. 3 Magnolia 47

Friday: No. 1 Tyler Consolidated 56, No. 2 St. Marys 51; Tyler Consolidated wins sectional

Region 2 Section 1

Saturday: Tygarts Valley 67, No. 4 Clay-Battelle 63; South Harrison 42, No. 6 Doddridge County 40; Trinity 96, No. 7 Gilmer County 45

Tuesday: Notre Dame 95, No. 5 Tygarts Valley 51; Trinity 62, No. 3 South Harrison 41

Friday: No. 1 Notre Dame 61, No. 2 Trinity 58; Notre Dame wins sectional

Region 2 Section 2

Tuesday: Paw Paw 88, No. 7 Harman 57; Moorefield 60, No. 3 East Hardy; Pendleton County 74, No. 5 Union 51

Thursday: Tucker County 54, No. 4 Pendleton County 52; Paw Paw 72, No. 6 Moorefield 61

Saturday: No. 1 Tucker County 61, No. 2 Paw Paw 52; Tucker County wins sectional

Region 3 Section 1

Monday: Pocahontas County 83, No. 7 Richwood 41; Charleston Catholic 73, No. 6 Fayetteville 53; Webster County 74, No. 5 Midland Trail 57

Tuesday: Webster County 67, No. 1 Valley Fayette 56; Pocahontas County 84, No. 3 Charleston Catholic 81

Thursday: No. 4 Webster County 67, No. 2 Pocahontas County 61; Webster County wins sectional

Region 3 Section 2

Monday: Greenbrier West 82, No. 6 Montcalm 40; Summers County 56, No. 5 Meadow Bridge 54

Wednesday: Mount View 60, No. 4 Summers County 52; Greater Beckley Christian 64, No. 3 Greenbrier West

Friday: No. 2 Greater Beckley Christian 56, No. 1 Mount View 49; Greater Beckley Christian wins sectional

Region 4 Section 1

Saturday: Williamstown 79, No. 6 Wahama 45; Calhoun County 35, No. 4 Wirt County 31

Tuesday: Ravenswood 103, No. 5 Calhoun County 53; Parkersburg Catholic 56, No. 3 Williamstown 52

Friday: No. 1 Ravenswood 52, No. 2 Parkersburgh Catholic 47, OT; Ravenswood wins sectional

Region 4 Section 2

Saturday: Van 80, No. 7 Hannan 47; St. Joseph 53, No. 6 Tolsia 36; Sherman 57, No. 5 Buffalo 40

Tuesday: Tug Valley 74, No. 4 Sherman 35; Van 64, No. 3 St. Joseph 56

Friday: No. 1 Tug Valley 96, No. 2 Van 39; Tug Valley wins sectional

xxxxxxx

Regional co-finals

Winners advance to state tournament

Note: All games at 7 p.m.

Class AAA

Tuesday’s games

Region 1

John Marshall at University; Morgantown at Wheeling Park

Region 2

Jefferson at Martinsburg; Musselman at Washington

Region 3

Capital at Woodrow Wilson; Princeton at George Washington

Region 4

Parkersburg at Huntington; Hurricane at Parkersburg South

Class AA

Thursday’s games

Region 1

North Marion at Philip Barbour; Berkeley Springs at Fairmont Senior

Region 2

Robert C. Byrd at Braxton County; Nicholas County at Bridgeport

Region 3

Shady Spring at Westside; Oak Hill at Bluefield

Region 4

Logan at Winfield; Nitro at Chapmanville

Class A

Wednesday’s games

Region 1

St. Marys at Wheeling Central; Cameron at Tyler Consolidated

Region 2

Paw Paw at Notre Dame; Trinity at Tucker County

Region 3

Pocahontas County at Greater Beckley Christian; Mount View at Webster County

Region 4

Parkersburg Catholic at Tug Valley; Van at Ravenswood

Elk River Boxing Club holds grand opening for new Elkview location

Megan Emmett of St. Albans spars with Brad Mullins at the Elk River Boxing Club’s new location in Elkview. The club moved recently from downtown Clendenin, to provide more convenience for its members. Photo by Ben Calwell, Metro

By: Clint Thomas, Metro Staff | Posted: Mar. 2, 2018 | Source: WV Gazette-Mail

Elk River Boxing Club owner Rob Fletcher and his staff introduced current and potential members and guests to the club’s new location in Elkview on Thursday.

Previously located in downtown Clendenin, the Elk River Boxing Club is now open at 5522 Elk River North in Elkview, behind the former worksite of Wally’s Rope.

“We wanted some place that was a little more convenient for our members,” Fletcher said of the move from the Clendenin locale it has occupied for the past two years. “We’ll be seven miles south of the last location. We have members coming from Elkview, Big Chimney, Charleston, Hurricane and St. Albans — that seven miles means a lot. Some people had to drive for 45 minutes or an hour to get to the old location.

“It’s a nice facility,” he said, “and a little more centered to our members’ location.”

The new Elkview gym and fitness center “has more use-able space. The last building was bigger, but I couldn’t use the facility the way I wanted to. It was in a 120-year-old building and I had some problems with that,” Fletcher explained.

The new location will still provide the classes and training the Clendenin one did, he said. These include children’s boxing classes for ages 5 to 8 and regular boxing, kickboxing, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, and mixed martial arts classes.

Fletcher said his gym has a core membership of about a dozen people, who come from Kanawha, Putnam, Roane and Clay counties to hone their fighting and self-defense skills, as exercise for some and competitive training for others.

“We have all ages — from 10 up to their 60s — taking classes. We have a retired Marine from Clendenin who comes for physical fitness. He can do more pushups than any teenager you’ve ever seen,” Fletcher said.

Thursday’s grand opening celebration offered demonstrations of some of the disciplines members undertake, along with refreshments for newcomers and longtime members. Sign-up opportunities were available during the evening, as well.

For more information about the Elk River Boxing Club, contact Rob Fletcher at 681-313-6001.

Metro reporter Clint Thomas can be reached at cthomas@cnpapers.com or by calling 304-348-1232.