Schalick dumps top-seeded Audubon to win first South Jersey Group I baseball title in 33 years, grabbed early lead, turned back threat in seventh
GROUP I SECTIONAL FINALS
Thursday
South: Schalick 4, Audubon 3
Central: Middlesex 7, Point Pleasant Beach 1
North I: Midland Park 1, Wallkill Valley 0
North II: Brearley 8, Verona 0
STATE SEMIFINALS
Monday
Schalick (22-2) at Middlesex (21-5)
Brearley (15-9) at Midland Park (20-8-1)
STATE FINALS
Saturday
At Veterans Park, Hamilton, 1 p.m.
By Al Muskewitz
Riverview Sports News
AUDUBON — “Somewhere” in the display cases that line the hallways at Schalick High School there’s a 33-year-old trophy gathering dust commemorating one of the greatest accomplishments in the school’s sports history.
But it’s been in there for so long the folks who regularly walk those halls aren’t really sure where it is.
Not to worry. There’s a new, shinier version about to go in the case and everyone will know where it will be.
The Cougars won their first South Jersey Group I baseball title since 1992 Thursday when they held off top-seeded Audubon 4-3 in a game that really was all it was cracked up to be. They now travel to Central champion Middlesex (21-5) in the state semifinals Monday.
“This is the main goal the whole entire year,” starting pitcher Luke Pokrovsky said. “This was the first thing (talked about) when we first walked in the first practice of the year. After beating Woodstown (in the semifinals) we knew we could do it.”
“We’ve worked hard for it and we definitely deserved it,” shortstop Eli Cummings added.
The underdog Cougars (22-2), now the winningest baseball team in school history, a distinction they wrestled from that 1992 team, took the lead early and held it the rest of the game, although they had to survive some seventh-inning Green Wave drama to make it happen.
Pokrovsky once again was brilliant. The senior left-hander gave up four hits and struck out 12, including his 100th of season, and seemed to thrive on the jibes coming from the other side, throwing harder as the game went on.
He wanted to go the distance, but had to come out in the seventh after 113 pitches and Audubon getting the first two batters on with the top of the order coming up. Cougars coach Sean O’Brien went with his most experienced option, bringing in Lucas D’Agostino from right field to close it out, and the senior right-hander didn’t flinch.
He induced dangerous leadoff man Tyler Wiltsey to hit a ball up the middle that that Cummings turned into a double play – and more importantly held the lead runner and tying run at third – and got Nick Kalogiros on a foul pop to first baseman Rico Hatz to end the game.
What made Wiltsey even more dangerous in that situation is he took Pokrovsky deep for a two-run homer in the third that cut Schalick’s lead to 4-3. “He got me pretty good,” Pokrovsky said.
“At first I was relieved because that guy showcased his power early in the game so I was relieved as soon as he hit it and it was on the ground,” D’Agostino said. “It’s been this way the whole year: I trust my defense completely. Once I saw that ball up the middle on the ground and I saw Eli was in perfect position I knew what we had going for us.”
“As soon as I knew that ball was hit to me I knew I was turning that double play,” Cummings said. “Coach OB prepares us for those kind of moments. I knew as soon as it was hit to me, I’ve gotta move. That kid going down the line is quick and he made a close play so I knew I had to come up throwing.”
Hatz called it “a beautiful ball” that Cummings delivered to first.
“I was over at first base praying for a double play so our prayers were answered,” Hatz said. “And to get that final out, it was a feeling of victory.”
The Cougars took a 3-1 lead with three runs off Kalogiros in the second from the bottom third of the lineup. Hatz had a game-tying RBI double, J.T. Fleming dropped the go-ahead RBI single into short left field and Cummings made it 3-1 with a sacrifice fly. They are the 7-8-9 hitters in the Schalick order.
“That’s been kind of like our M.O.,” O’Brien said. “It’s like if the top of the order isn’t doing anything, the bottom of the order does it. It’s been happening all year. We beat some good teams. We beat Cherry Hill West and Rancocas Valley and those guys carried us in those games. That’s why we’re so good because 1 through 9 we compete.”
The Cougars added what proved to be the winning run in the third on D’Agostino’s sacrifice fly after Jamari Whitley doubled Evan Sepers to third. Whitley and Sepers both had two hits in the game.
The coach of that 1992 sectional championship team, Chuck Tortella, was at the game and gave O’Brien some words of encouragement beforehand, words said to be similar to the colorful message Tortella gave his team before they beat Audubon in the ‘92 game.
O’Brien had been to this stage of the playoffs twice before with the Cougars (2019 and 2021) but came up empty both times. This time, they went home celebrating and carried a shiny new piece of hardware for the trophy case with them.
“It’s been a long time coming,” O’Brien said. “We kind of went into those (other two) games not wanting to lose; today, these guys showed up ready to win. They were going to take it.”
“I like the history of the game and especially in my own high school,” D’Agostino said. “I’m very glad we could put some more hardware back in the trophy case and when they look at that team they can say, hey, that’s pretty good.”
| Schalick (22-2) | 031 000 0- | 4 | 7 | 2 |
| Audubon (20-7) | 102 000 0- | 3 | 4 | 0 |
