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Quick start lifts Lake Mead to win over Indian Springs

With history in mind, Lake Mead baseball coach Doug Johnson warned his players to expect a wild game against Indian Springs on Friday.

By the time the two teams had combined for 28 runs, 27 hits, nine errors, one ejected player and an ejected fan in a three-hour game, Johnson wore an "I told you so" grin.

That might have had something to do with the fact that his team had just defeated the Thunderbirds 18-10 in the second round of the Class 1A state baseball tournament at Arbor View.

The win lifted the Eagles into today's 1 p.m. championship game and dropped Indian Springs into the losers' bracket, where the Thunderbirds later were eliminated by Carlin.

"We really didn't expect a pitchers' duel," said Johnson, whose squad outlasted Indian Springs for a 20-19 victory in last week's regional tournament. "But we got the lead, and we kept the lead."

Indeed, Lake Mead responded to the Thunderbirds' two-run first by erupting for five runs in the bottom of the inning. The Eagles opened with three consecutive hits and capped the inning with an RBI triple by Drew Erickson.

Indian Springs fought back, grabbing a brief lead by taking advantage of three walks and three hits for five runs in the fourth inning to go ahead 9-7. That was shortly before things really got out of hand.

Midway through the Eagles' eight-run fourth inning, a call was disputed at the plate. Thunderbirds catcher Nick Vandever, the team's top player, was tossed after arguing with an umpire. Fans got involved from the stands, and the game was held up for more than 10 minutes.

With a 15-10 lead and Vandever stationed in the parking lot, Lake Mead seized momentum and cruised to victory.

"From top to bottom, we hit the ball well," said Johnson, who declined to comment on the fourth-inning ruckus.

He instead elected to focus on the fact that his team was glad to get out of the sun while Indian Springs and Carlin played a subsequent losers' bracket game to determine the tournament's other finalist.

"Fatigue will be important" in the championship, he said.

Josh Bratton went 3-for-4 with a double for Lake Mead.

Carlin 6, Indian Springs 4 -- With Vandever out of service, the Thunderbirds blew several key opportunities on the way to a loss to the Muckers.

Patrick McClean went 2-for-3 with a double and an RBI to lead Indian Springs.

SOFTBALL

Carlin 2, Pahranagat Valley 1 -- At Majestic Park, Sam Salisbury tossed a one-hitter in the winners' bracket final as the Railroaders (19-8-1) advanced to the title game.

Carlin scored single runs in the fourth and fifth innings. The Panthers scratched out a run in the seventh but came up short. Mary Higbee's sixth-inning single was Pahranagat Valley's lone hit.

The teams will meet again at 10 a.m. today, and the Panthers, the two-time defending state champions, must win to force a decisive game.

Pahranagat Valley 15, Wells 1 -- Molly Hansen went 3-for-4 with a double and a run, and the Panthers (20-9-1) scored seven runs in the first inning on their way to a run-rule victory over Wells (16-14-1) in the losers' bracket final.

Wells 14, Lake Mead 13 -- Margaret Wright's two-run double in the bottom of the eighth inning allowed Wells to oust Lake Mead (14-18-1).

Janae Willis, Sam Herman, Mallory Baker each had two hits for Lake Mead. The Eagles scored four runs in the top of the seventh to extend the game and took the lead in the top of the eighth before Wright's game-winning hit.

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