
Griz win on Friday walk-off
3/22/2019 8:21:00 PM | Softball
The Montana softball team rallied not just once on Friday but twice to come through with a walk-off 6-5 victory over Nevada at Grizzly Softball Field in Missoula.
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The Grizzlies, who have won four of their last five, fell behind 2-0 in the first and 5-4 in the fifth before tying it in the sixth with a sacrifice fly and winning it in the seventh on a Lexi Knauss walk-off double.
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Montana will try for the series sweep on Saturday.
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"They have a lot of confidence in each other right now, and it's growing," said coach Melanie Meuchel. "I knew it would take a little bit of time this season because everything was so new for people.
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"It's really exciting to watch them start to step up and take ownership and take pride in this team and this program."
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It was Knauss's double to left-center, her first extra-base hit since March 8, that won it for the Grizzlies by scoring Anne Mari Petrino from first, but it was her at-bat two innings before that set Knauss up for her end-game dramatics.
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Her single down the left-field line in the bottom of the fifth didn't lead to anything, but it put an end to a 3-for-28 slump that began at Fresno State's tournament and continued into the current home stand.
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"It's no secret I've been struggling the last couple series," she said. "After the hit I had (in the fifth), I was like, okay, I'm fine, I'm in a rhythm, so I felt good going into that at-bat."
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Petrino, who's found a home in the No. 9 spot in the order, came to bat in the seventh with one out and nobody on. She was already 3 for 3 on the day.
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She only has three extra-base hits for her career -- two doubles and a triple -- so she knew she wasn't going to end it with a single swing. She kept it simple and dropped one into left-center for the first four-hit game of her career.
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"I know my role. My job is to get on base. I didn't go up there trying to do anything out of my comfort zone," said Petrino, whose .105 batting average going into the game would seem to hint at a player struggling to find a groove. Statistics don't always tell the entire story.
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"My stats are not great right now, but I've been having a lot of good at-bats. I've been seeing the ball really well all year. I've just been hitting it to people. I knew I was going to start finding the holes. It just took a little longer than I wanted it to."
Â
And so the stage was set. Score tied 5-5, the potential winning run on first base, one out. It was a hero's moment, which is not at all how Knauss looked at it as she walked to the plate.
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She knew Brooklyn Weisgram, who had a two-run home run in the first, and Cami Sellers, who had her eighth multiple-hit game of the season on Friday, were waiting behind her.
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"I wasn't even thinking of it as that kind of situation," Knauss said. "I knew whatever I did, there would be someone behind me who would do the job."
Â
All Weisgram and Sellers would need to do was start the rush to the plate to celebrate the win after Knauss drove one to the fence in left-center and Petrino scored all the way from first.
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The throw from the cutoff was on target but didn't arrive until Petrino was sliding across the plate.
Â
"I know Mel, so I kind of had a feeling she was going to send me," said Petrino. "She almost ran with me."
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But to focus only on the game's final play would be to overlook all the key moments that led up to it.
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After Nevada jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the top of the first with an over-the-scoreboard home run off Montana starter Michaela Hood, Weisgram answered right back in the bottom half of the inning, clearing the fence in left-center that drove in Knauss, who had opened the inning with a walk.
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It was Weisgram's second home run of the season, her first since Feb. 15.
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The Grizzlies went up 3-2 later in the first on an infield error and scored again to make it 4-2 when Petrino singled through the right side with the bases loaded.
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That kind of response was big for Meuchel. Even better: putting Nevada down in order in the top of the second after taking the lead.
Â
"They score off us early, we come back with it. It's been a while since we put a zero on the backside of our score," she said.
Â
"That was exciting. That was a victory for us. We're starting to take some of those victories that we've focused on and we're starting to put it together a little bit. We're making steps forward in areas where maybe early in the season we were trying to force a few things."
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Montana finished with a season-high 13 hits, but they were stuck on four runs until the sixth largely because the Grizzlies left 11 runners on base through the first five innings.
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That allowed the Wolf Pack to inch their way back into it. They made it 4-3 in the third on an infield single, tied it in the fourth on a Montana infield error and retook the lead, 5-4, in the fifth on a sacrifice fly.
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Montana left the bases loaded in the bottom of the fifth, and Nevada threatened to expand on its lead in the sixth, putting two on with one out against Hood.
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With the game at a crucial spot, Meuchel went to Colleen Driscoll, and the senior came through, getting a strikeout, then snagging a line drive that was headed back up the middle to put down the threat.
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Knauss and Petrino weren't the only players to come out of the tournament portion of the team's schedule locked in a struggle.
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Freshman Maygen McGrath, a Big Sky Conference Player of the Week in February who was at one point batting .455, entered the Nevada series with just four hits in Montana's previous 13 games.
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She went 2 for 4 in Thursday's win, with two doubles. She had a single in the first, then led off the sixth with a double down the right-field line on Friday.
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"I got super sick (at the Stanford tournament), so I've been trying to come back from that and fight for my team," said McGrath. "A lot of it is a mindset. I'm trying to have more positive energy in my head and know that I'm here for a reason and that I can do it."
Â
It was a textbook approach to evening the score at 5-5. Jessica McAlister lined out to right, which allowed McGrath to tag up and advance to third. The next batter, Maddy Stensby, flew out to deep center, a sacrifice fly that scored McGrath.
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"We talk about taking pride in the small things," said Meuchel. "It's not always going to be a home run. It's not always going to be a hit off the fence.
Â
"We've got to be able to have a complete offense and work a complete offense."
Â
Nevada led off the top of the seventh with a single up the middle, but Driscoll worked her way through it, getting the lead runner at second for the first two outs. A groundout to second sent the game into the bottom of the seventh tied.
Â
Not to be overlooked in those heated moments: a small but vocal group of fans who urged the home team on.
Â
"The fans were amazing today," said Meuchel. "They were loud. I think they really pushed us forward and inspired our players."
Â
After Kylie Hayton led off the bottom of the seventh with a groundout, it was Petrino with a single, Knauss with a double and Montana with a second consecutive victory.
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"I feel so good (about this team)," said Knauss. "Even when we're down, there is never anything negative coming out of anybody's mouth.
Â
"It's exciting coming to the field knowing you have people behind and beside you that are willing to do whatever it takes to win every single game."
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Montana and Nevada will play the series finale on Saturday starting at 1 p.m.
Â
The Grizzlies, who have won four of their last five, fell behind 2-0 in the first and 5-4 in the fifth before tying it in the sixth with a sacrifice fly and winning it in the seventh on a Lexi Knauss walk-off double.
Â
Montana will try for the series sweep on Saturday.
Â
"They have a lot of confidence in each other right now, and it's growing," said coach Melanie Meuchel. "I knew it would take a little bit of time this season because everything was so new for people.
Â
"It's really exciting to watch them start to step up and take ownership and take pride in this team and this program."
Â
It was Knauss's double to left-center, her first extra-base hit since March 8, that won it for the Grizzlies by scoring Anne Mari Petrino from first, but it was her at-bat two innings before that set Knauss up for her end-game dramatics.
Â
Her single down the left-field line in the bottom of the fifth didn't lead to anything, but it put an end to a 3-for-28 slump that began at Fresno State's tournament and continued into the current home stand.
Â
"It's no secret I've been struggling the last couple series," she said. "After the hit I had (in the fifth), I was like, okay, I'm fine, I'm in a rhythm, so I felt good going into that at-bat."
Â
Petrino, who's found a home in the No. 9 spot in the order, came to bat in the seventh with one out and nobody on. She was already 3 for 3 on the day.
Â
She only has three extra-base hits for her career -- two doubles and a triple -- so she knew she wasn't going to end it with a single swing. She kept it simple and dropped one into left-center for the first four-hit game of her career.
Â
"I know my role. My job is to get on base. I didn't go up there trying to do anything out of my comfort zone," said Petrino, whose .105 batting average going into the game would seem to hint at a player struggling to find a groove. Statistics don't always tell the entire story.
Â
"My stats are not great right now, but I've been having a lot of good at-bats. I've been seeing the ball really well all year. I've just been hitting it to people. I knew I was going to start finding the holes. It just took a little longer than I wanted it to."
Â
And so the stage was set. Score tied 5-5, the potential winning run on first base, one out. It was a hero's moment, which is not at all how Knauss looked at it as she walked to the plate.
Â
She knew Brooklyn Weisgram, who had a two-run home run in the first, and Cami Sellers, who had her eighth multiple-hit game of the season on Friday, were waiting behind her.
Â
"I wasn't even thinking of it as that kind of situation," Knauss said. "I knew whatever I did, there would be someone behind me who would do the job."
Â
All Weisgram and Sellers would need to do was start the rush to the plate to celebrate the win after Knauss drove one to the fence in left-center and Petrino scored all the way from first.
Â
The throw from the cutoff was on target but didn't arrive until Petrino was sliding across the plate.
Â
"I know Mel, so I kind of had a feeling she was going to send me," said Petrino. "She almost ran with me."
Â
But to focus only on the game's final play would be to overlook all the key moments that led up to it.
Â
After Nevada jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the top of the first with an over-the-scoreboard home run off Montana starter Michaela Hood, Weisgram answered right back in the bottom half of the inning, clearing the fence in left-center that drove in Knauss, who had opened the inning with a walk.
Â
It was Weisgram's second home run of the season, her first since Feb. 15.
Â
The Grizzlies went up 3-2 later in the first on an infield error and scored again to make it 4-2 when Petrino singled through the right side with the bases loaded.
Â
That kind of response was big for Meuchel. Even better: putting Nevada down in order in the top of the second after taking the lead.
Â
"They score off us early, we come back with it. It's been a while since we put a zero on the backside of our score," she said.
Â
"That was exciting. That was a victory for us. We're starting to take some of those victories that we've focused on and we're starting to put it together a little bit. We're making steps forward in areas where maybe early in the season we were trying to force a few things."
Â
Montana finished with a season-high 13 hits, but they were stuck on four runs until the sixth largely because the Grizzlies left 11 runners on base through the first five innings.
Â
That allowed the Wolf Pack to inch their way back into it. They made it 4-3 in the third on an infield single, tied it in the fourth on a Montana infield error and retook the lead, 5-4, in the fifth on a sacrifice fly.
Â
Montana left the bases loaded in the bottom of the fifth, and Nevada threatened to expand on its lead in the sixth, putting two on with one out against Hood.
Â
With the game at a crucial spot, Meuchel went to Colleen Driscoll, and the senior came through, getting a strikeout, then snagging a line drive that was headed back up the middle to put down the threat.
Â
Knauss and Petrino weren't the only players to come out of the tournament portion of the team's schedule locked in a struggle.
Â
Freshman Maygen McGrath, a Big Sky Conference Player of the Week in February who was at one point batting .455, entered the Nevada series with just four hits in Montana's previous 13 games.
Â
She went 2 for 4 in Thursday's win, with two doubles. She had a single in the first, then led off the sixth with a double down the right-field line on Friday.
Â
"I got super sick (at the Stanford tournament), so I've been trying to come back from that and fight for my team," said McGrath. "A lot of it is a mindset. I'm trying to have more positive energy in my head and know that I'm here for a reason and that I can do it."
Â
It was a textbook approach to evening the score at 5-5. Jessica McAlister lined out to right, which allowed McGrath to tag up and advance to third. The next batter, Maddy Stensby, flew out to deep center, a sacrifice fly that scored McGrath.
Â
"We talk about taking pride in the small things," said Meuchel. "It's not always going to be a home run. It's not always going to be a hit off the fence.
Â
"We've got to be able to have a complete offense and work a complete offense."
Â
Nevada led off the top of the seventh with a single up the middle, but Driscoll worked her way through it, getting the lead runner at second for the first two outs. A groundout to second sent the game into the bottom of the seventh tied.
Â
Not to be overlooked in those heated moments: a small but vocal group of fans who urged the home team on.
Â
"The fans were amazing today," said Meuchel. "They were loud. I think they really pushed us forward and inspired our players."
Â
After Kylie Hayton led off the bottom of the seventh with a groundout, it was Petrino with a single, Knauss with a double and Montana with a second consecutive victory.
Â
"I feel so good (about this team)," said Knauss. "Even when we're down, there is never anything negative coming out of anybody's mouth.
Â
"It's exciting coming to the field knowing you have people behind and beside you that are willing to do whatever it takes to win every single game."
Â
Montana and Nevada will play the series finale on Saturday starting at 1 p.m.
Team Stats
Pitching:
W: Driscoll, Colleen (5-7)
L: FRITZ,Kendall (5-4)
Batting:
3B: BURDA,Haley 1
HR: GOINS,Kenzi 1
RBI: GOINS,Kenzi 2 ; WARNER,Kwynn 1 ; MENDEZ,Alyssa 1
SF: MENDEZ,Alyssa 1
Base Running:
RUNS: MCALISTER,Sadaria 2 ; GOINS,Kenzi 2 ; BURDA,Haley 1
SB: MENDEZ,Alyssa 1
HBP: MILLWOOD,Dallas 1

Batting:
2B: Knauss, Lexi 1 ; Sellers, Cami 1 ; McGrath, Maygen 1
HR: Weisgram, Brooklyn 1
RBI: Knauss, Lexi 1 ; Weisgram, Brooklyn 2 ; Stensby, Maddy 1 ; Petrino, Anne Mari 1
SH: McGrath, Maygen 1
SF: Stensby, Maddy 1
Base Running:
RUNS: Knauss, Lexi 1 ; Weisgram, Brooklyn 1 ; Sellers, Cami 1 ; McGrath, Maygen 2 ; Petrino, Anne Mari 1
SB: Hayton, Kylie 1
HBP: Weisgram, Brooklyn 1
Game Leaders
Players Mentioned
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