Beatty opens league play with doubleheader sweep of Spring Mountain

Richard Stephens/Special to the Pahrump Valley Times Senior pitcher Geo Maldonado delivers agai ...

Spring Mountain’s status as part of the Clark County Juvenile Justice System and recent dominance in football and basketball has led to something of a movement to get the school pushed up and out of Class 1A.

But this is spring, and, to paraphrase Tennyson, in the spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of beating the Golden Eagles at something.

Beatty High School’s baseball team had no trouble doing that Friday, sweeping a doubleheader in convincing fashion.

Junior infielder Austin McKenzie opened the scoring with a three-run double in the first inning and capped it with a home run in the sixth as the Hornets rolled to a 17-7 victory in the opener, and McKenzie followed that up with a 4-for-4 game with three RBIs to back five no-hit innings on the mound by junior Fabian Perez in an 8-4 win in the second game Friday at Keith K. Koerner Memorial Field.

“I reached for a couple, but most of them were there and I swung at the ones that were there,” McKenzie said. “I didn’t want to pass them up.”

Perez might have surprised himself with his effort in the second game. He entered the first game in the fifth inning and walked three of his first five batters before settling down, but as a starter in the second game, he walked just two in five innings, striking out five while allowing one run.

“I didn’t expect that today,” Perez said. “It’s the things that our coach taught me, all the mechanics. That’s why I got better.”

“He got his 110 (pitches) in today, just shy of that, and he didn’t poop out,” Beatty coach Leo Verzilli said. “He did a great job. And he plays a great shortstop.”

Perez also reached base six times in nine trips during the doubleheader, scoring four runs and hitting a double and a triple.

“He’s our lead-off batter, lightning speed,” Verzilli said. “He gets on base and before you know it he’s standing at third and usually scores on a passed ball. If we can get him on, he’s a run.”

That’s especially true with senior Jacob Henry and McKenzie batting the way they did Friday from the third and fourth spots in the batting order.

“Austin McKenzie played the game of his life, two games of his life,” Verzilli said. “He’a three-year player, and his fielding is just phenomenal. He’s also really come a long way with his pitching, and his bat’s come alive. He’s finally getting good hip rotation, and he’s just nailing the ball.

“Jacob Henry is the backbone of the team. He’s a four-year player, he’s our senior. We can count on him to just lead, and he plays a great first base. He probably saves us five outs a game with the miraculous recoveries he makes on throws.”

Henry finished 2-for-4 with 2 runs in the second game after a 3-for-4 day with 3 RBIs. McKenzie drove in 7 runs in the first game, while the Hornets’ first four batters — Perez, senior Geo Maldonado, Henry and McKenzie — scored 3 runs apiece. Maldonado started the opener, striking out nine in four innings.

The wins got the Hornets back on track after a disappointing doubleheader sweep at the hands of Beaver Dam. The Diamondbacks had rolled to 19-4 and 8-4 wins Tuesday.

“Against Beaver Dam, it was just a total collapse of our pitching,” Verzilli said. But Friday marked the first Class 1A Central League games of the season, and the Hornets find themselves 2-0 in the league.

With two wins over the Golden Eagles and Green Valley Christian and Round Mountain struggling early, it might not be too early to point to Beatty and Tonopah as the league’s contenders.

“I think we’ll be pretty good, better than last year,” Perez said.

“I think we’re going to do really well,” McKenzie added. “It’s going to be a lot better.”

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