Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Go West, Young Cardinals

FARMINGTON STEPS UP TO 5A COMPETITIO­N

- MARK HUMPHREY IS A SPORTS WRITER FOR THE ENTERPRISE­LEADER. Mark Humphrey

FARMINGTON — With the new classifica­tion numbers, Farmington is in a sense being told by the Arkansas Activities Associatio­n to “Go west,” — that is into the 5A West Conference.

In a literal sense the Cardinals, young in their first season at the 5A Classifica­tion, can’t go very far west without traveling out of state. Only two schools, their U.S. 62 rivals, Prairie Grove and Lincoln; stand between them and the Oklahoma state line 18 miles away. But the Arkansas Activities Associatio­n may say the move, which began at the end of the 201314 school year, is not about a geographic­al direction.

According to the Arkansas Activities Associatio­n the move is all about Farmington’s increased enrollment projected at 501 in April, 2013, making Farmington the 60th most populated high school in Arkansas and larger than only four other 5A schools including 5A West week seven football opponent, Morrilton (494); and private school Little Rock Christian (410) a week four football opponent.

In week three, Farmington will take on 7A Van Buren, enrollment 1,349 and the 14th largest school in Arkansas, in a non- conference matchup resembling one of Hootens Football Kickoff Classic confrontat­ions between various classifica­tions. Despite the numbers difference, Farmington prefers not to have an open date on the calendar. Most football coaches subscribe to the philosophy of you can’t improve if you don’t have a game, a point well-illustrate­d by baseball and softball non-conference competitio­n in recent years.

Twice in the last three baseball seasons Huntsville has traveled to Farmington to play unschedule­d games.

During the 2012 season, senior night at Farmington was rained out and the scheduled opponent chose not to play the game leaving Cardinal baseball coach Jay Harper with a dilemma. Seventeen phone calls later the issue was resolved when then Huntsville head baseball coach Brian Garrett agreed to bring his squad to Farmington for a non-conference contest in the last week of the regular season.

This year an April 8 nonconfere­nce baseball game was originally scheduled to be played at Huntsville but Eagles’ coach Zach Wiggins decided to move the contest to Farmington and get the competitio­n even when that meant surrenderi­ng homefield advantage.

“It’s real important in a spring like this where it’s probably going to be really wet to try to get a game in any way that you can,” Wiggins said. “If our field’s too wet and we can go play somewhere else that’s what we need to do.”

Wiggins said the Eagles were looking forward to rejoining the 4A-1 Conference.

“We’re excited about it. The biggest reason is we’re not going to have to take 3-hour bus rides anymore to places like Greenbrier and Vilonia and being able to get back with coaches we’re familiar with. Being here local and close that’s going to be the biggest part of it, so, we’re excited.”

On the opposite side of that coin is Farmington trading conference­s with Huntsville.

Randy Osnes, Farmington softball coach, talked about the transition into the 5A West after the spring season. According to Osnes, 5A has all the tools mentioning Greenbrier that’s been in the state championsh­ip the last couple of years. Farmington played both Greenbrier and Vilonia this year and Osnes noted those two schools ended up playing for a conference title.

Osnes recalled the Lady Cardinals were successful against Vilonia ( 6-5) and competed against Greenbrier winning 3-2 in the Farmington/Fayettevil­le tournament at home in a rain-shortened contest.

“Three innings in the tournament play really doesn’t make much. Seven inning games are what counts,” Osnes said.

“The travel will be a lot different. We figured it up with our basketball situation and it could be the same thing with spring sports if we have to play a [Farmington] home and [opponent] home then that would be almost 1,500 additional miles that we drive next year compared to what we drove this year.”

Still, despite difference­s in school enrollment and extended travel Osnes believes mastering fundamenta­ls and executing on the field are keys to success.

“This sport, whether you’re 7A or whether you’re 2A, if you got a dynamite kid in the circle you can compete. If you have nine kids that can go out there on a daily basis and work hard and get better defensivel­y then you can make up for some misgivings in the circle but you got to have kids that can hit. You got to have kids that can run and you got to have kids that understand the game and be able to play in tough situations.”

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