Chattanooga Times Free Press

Shootout loss ends great run for CSAS

- BY PATRICK MACCOON STAFF WRITER

As David Poss met with his heartbroke­n Arts & Sciences girls’ soccer team after Wednesday’s shootout loss to Westview in a TSSAA Class A state quarterfin­al, he made sure the Lady Patriots left the field at GPS with their heads held high.

“I told the girls there is no one in CSAS history who can say they have been to the state tournament three times as a soccer team,” said Poss, who has been coaching at the school since 2010. “They certainly have built a foundation and left a remarkable legacy. This really was a unified group off the field as much as it was on the field. They were bought into not our program, but soccer as a whole.”

The Lady Patriots lost 6-5 on penalty kicks after the match ended both regulation play and the two 10-minute periods for overtime tied at 2. Those 100 midday minutes that set up the shootout were tightly played, with CSAS finishing with a 15-14 advantage in total shots.

CSAS senior Zeva Phillips, a set-piece extraordin­aire, was remarkable one final time for the Lady Patriots (12-10-3) as her powerful right foot provided a pair of goals that nearly lifted them to Thursday’s semifinals. The Lady Patriots held a 2-1 lead from the 57th minute until the 75th, when freshman Ashlee Brent’s second goal brought Westview (17-1) even.

Phillips’ free kick from the left sideline from in front of the corner arc curled into the back right of the net for the game’s first equalizer in the 45th minute. Just 12 minutes later, Phillips drilled a 45-yard free kick from straight on that sailed over the keeper’s outstretch­ed hands and into the goal for a 2-1 lead.

“Scoring from that distance, Zeva should be trying out for field-goal positions (in football),” Poss said. “She has scored from that distance over and over and over in her time here. I was proud of how she and our girls played and tied 2-2 with a team after 100 minutes of soccer.”

CSAS looked bound and determined to build a multigoal lead, but three shots in a minute’s span in the 65th from the senior star tandem of Ella Hurst and Cheyenne Frye

Tell the truth: How many people picked the Arizona Diamondbac­ks and Texas Rangers to meet in the World Series?

The potential matchup had 1,750 to 1 odds when wagering opened last fall.

But in an era when 12 teams make the MLB playoffs, sustained excellence over the six-month regular season has become a boarding pass, not the journey, leading to a long-shot World Series that opens Friday night at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas.

“Once you get into the big dance, anything can happen,” Diamondbac­ks manager Torey Lovullo said before Tuesday night’s 4-2 road win against the Philadelph­ia Phillies in Game 7 of the National League Championsh­ip Series, which advanced Arizona to its first appearance in the Fall Classic since 2001. “Throw it all out the window. The teams that get in deserve to be in.”

All the glamour teams are watching at home: The Atlanta Braves and Los Angeles Dodgers stumbled in NL Division Series matchups, the Houston Astros’ bid to repeat as World Series champions was ousted by Texas in an American League Championsh­ip Series that went seven games and wrapped up Monday, and the storied New York Yankees didn’t even make it to the postseason.

Instead, Major League Baseball has its third all-wild card meeting in the World Series, a Grand Canyon versus Lone Star State finale of second-place teams played in air-conditione­d ballparks under retractabl­e roofs — potentiall­y the first all-indoor Fall Classic.

“I thought it would take a little more time,” Diamondbac­ks rookie outfielder Corbin Carroll said. “So to be able to do it in this first year just makes it all the more special.”

Both of the previous allwild card matchups went seven games. The AL’s Los Angeles Angels beat the NL’s San Francisco Giants in 2002, and Bruce Bochy’s Giants defeated the Kansas City Royals in 2014 for their third title in five years.

The Diamondbac­ks and the Rangers are both two years removed from last-place finishes in their respective West Divisions and 100-loss seasons. Arizona was the No. 6 seed in the NL this year, with Texas the No. 5 seed in the AL.

“Sometimes, one of the last hurdles to get over is that winning feeling, attitude, when you’ve been losing for a few seasons,” Bochy said.

Bochy, 68 and in his 26th year as an MLB manager, joined the Rangers last October. He is going for his fourth title, which would tie Walter Alston and Joe Torre for fourth place behind Joe McCarthy and Casey Stengel (seven each) and Connie Mack (five). All prior managers with three or more are in the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

“I don’t think about me. I’m riding their backs, trust me,” Bochy said. “It’s unreal that I’m here, to be honest. Sitting at the house for three years, and think, here I am going to a World Series. Yeah, that’s special. But it’s more about them and trying to find a way to get a ring for those guys.”

Texas started play as the expansion Washington Senators from 1961-71 and has played 10,028 games without a title (9,964 regular-season games, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, plus 64 in the postseason). That’s the second-longest MLB drought behind Cleveland, which last won in 1948.

After losing in the World Series in 2010 and 2011, the Rangers are among six teams without a title, joined by the Colorado Rockies, Milwaukee Brewers, San Diego Padres, Seattle Mariners and Tampa Bay Rays.

Arizona’s only title came on Luis Gonzalez’s ninth-inning single off Yankees closer Mariano Rivera in Game 7 of the 2001 World Series.

Texas headed into these playoffs with the sixth-highest payroll at $228 million. Arizona was 20th at $127 million.

Both teams rallied and earned their World Series berths on the road. It was the first time road teams won Games 6 and 7 in both leagues since the two championsh­ip series expanded to a best-of-seven format in 1985.

Without veteran pitcher Jacob deGrom after a seasonendi­ng elbow injury, the Rangers acquired Jordan Montgomery and Max Scherzer to join a rotation that included Nathan Eovaldi and Andrew Heaney. Adolis García has seven homers and 20 RBIs in the playoffs, leading a lineup also powered by 2020 World Series MVP Corey Seager, Mitch Garver, Josh Jung and Marcus Semien.

Arizona’s rotation is led by Zac Gallen, Merrill Kelly and Brandon Pfaadt, and its offense has been sparked by Carroll, Lourdes Gurriel Jr., Gabriel Moreno, Ketel Marte and Christian Walker. Lovullo, 58, is in his seventh season as Diamondbac­ks manager and in the playoffs for the first time since his 2017 team was swept by the Dodgers in an NLDS.

Texas is 8-0 on the road in the postseason but has homefield advantage because it won 90 games during the regular season to Arizona’s 84 — which could be the second-fewest for a World Series champion in a nonshorten­ed season behind the St. Louis Cardinals’ 83 in 2006. The Diamondbac­ks split two games at Texas in May and swept a pair at home in August, including an 11-inning win on consecutiv­e doubles by Geraldo Perdomo and Tommy Pham off Will Smith.

The Rangers hold a 28-25 edge in all-time regularsea­son matchups between the franchises.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Art & Sciences senior Zeva Phillips controls the ball as Westview’s Crislyn Warren defends during a TSSAA Class A state quarterfin­al Wednesday at GPS. Westview won 6-5 on penalty kicks in a shootout.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Art & Sciences senior Zeva Phillips controls the ball as Westview’s Crislyn Warren defends during a TSSAA Class A state quarterfin­al Wednesday at GPS. Westview won 6-5 on penalty kicks in a shootout.
 ?? AP PHOTO/DAVID J. PHILLIP ?? The Texas Rangers celebrate after Game 7 of the AL Championsh­ip Series against the Houston Astros on Monday night. The Rangers won 11-4 to advance to the World Series for the first time in more than a decade.
AP PHOTO/DAVID J. PHILLIP The Texas Rangers celebrate after Game 7 of the AL Championsh­ip Series against the Houston Astros on Monday night. The Rangers won 11-4 to advance to the World Series for the first time in more than a decade.

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