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Cubs earn another state win, move on to final weekend

Staff photo by Travis Rosenau Courtland Cubs’ Jackson Bode points to second base after Nolan Drill doubled to bring him home during Sunday’s Class C Minnesota State Amateur Baseball Tournament second-round game against Isanti at Tiger Park in Belle Plaine.

BELLE PLAINE — With six shutout innings from starting right-hander Jackson Bode and a 14-hit attack at the plate, the Courtland Cubs proved once again why they’re a true contender in the state tournament.

Benefiting on a little bit of everything on Sunday, the Cubs rolled to an 8-1 win over the Isanti Redbirds in a Class Minnesota State Amateur Baseball Tournament second-round game at Tiger Park.

Bode got the win in six innings of shutout ball, allowing just three hits and five walks while striking out six.

While he mixed up his pitches from time to time, Bode found much of his success by challenging hitters with his fastball.

“Breaking pitches were missing high all day, fastball missing high, too, but I located it later in the game and it worked out,” Bode said. “Changeup started working later, too. Our game plan was to work outside on most of the hitters right away, but it kind of ended up everywhere [laughs].”

Staff photo by Travis Rosenau Courtland Cubs’ Carter Lang (3) and Nolan Drill (77) greet Teddy Giefer (middle) at home plate after Giefer’s homer in the sixth inning of Sunday’s Class C Minnesota State Amateur Baseball Tournament second-round game against Isanti at Tiger Park in Belle Plaine.

Bode also pitched four innings in relief of Teddy Giefer in the Cubs’ state-opening win against Richmond on Aug. 17. He struck out seven there and allowed just three hits and a walk for one earned run.

A week later against the Redbirds, Bode was given the start.

“I think I was told on Wednesday by Chase [Meyer],” Bode said of getting the start. “He texted me, he was like, ‘It’s yours if you want it.’ I wanted it, I got it.”

Bode also racked up four hits for his team at the plate, going 4 for 6 with a double and an RBI. Nolan Drill was 2 for 4 with a double and three RBIs, while Cade Bushard was 2 for 4, Maddox Mortensen was 2 for 5 with an RBI and Evan Wiltscheck was 2 for 5.

Giefer was 1 for 5, but his one hit was the biggest one of the game as it was a two-run homer over the fence in right field to give the Cubs a 6-0 lead in the sixth.

Staff photo by Travis Rosenau Courtland Cubs’ Chase Meyer pitches in the ninth inning of a Class C Minnesota State Amateur Baseball Tournament second-round game against Isanti on Sunday at Tiger Park in Belle Plaine.

“I just missed a fastball right before that,” Giefer said of his home run. “Then he kind of hung a slider and that was it, just got a hold of it.”

Leavenworth draftee Jackson Huiras pitched two innings in relief, allowing one earned run on a hit and three walks while striking out three. Cubs head coach and player Chase Meyer also got involved by pitching the ninth, allowing just one hit and no walks while striking out three.

Sunday’s game had an added special moment for Meyer as it was the first time he was able to pitch in a state tournament game with Courtland.

“That was a cool moment,” Meyer said. “I had one other opportunity where I threw at state with Stark, but this was the first time throwing on a Courtland Cubs uniform and actually pitch for the Cubs in the state tournament, so that was a really cool feeling.”

Left-hander Phil Bray got the start and took the loss on the mound for the Redbirds, pitching 5 2/3 innings. He allowed eight hits and a walk for six runs, four earned, while striking out seven.

Hinckley draftee Isaiah Brennan pitched two innings in relief for Isanti, allowing two hits and two walks for two earned runs while striking out three. Mora draftee pitched 1/3 of an inning and allowed two hits while fanning one, while Hinckley draftee Ben Sickler pitched the ninth and allowed two hits.

Bode led off the game with a single before Drill singled him in for a 1-0 Cubs lead. The Cubs got another run in the top of the second after back-to-back errors put Teagan Kamm and Bushard on base, allowing Bode to add another hit to his total with an RBI single that scored Kamm.

In the fourth, a single by Bushard and a double by Bode was followed up with a line-drive, two-run double by Nolan Drill to give the Cubs a 4-0 lead. The Cubs went up 6-0 in the sixth after Nolan Drill was hit by pitch and brought home on Giefer’s two-run homer.

The Redbirds got their lone run of the game off of Huiras in the bottom of the seventh after Jake Rantz reached on a bases-loaded fielder’s choice to score Brent Tholen. The Cubs got that run back plus one in the top of the eighth on an error that scored Nolan Drill and a Mortensen RBI single that scored Jaden Drill, who reached earlier on a fielder’s choice.

After the Cubs won their first-round state tournament game last weekend against Richmond 10-5, that win gave them their first state tournament win since Sept. 13, 1945, when they defeated Pierz 5-4 in 12 innings.

Now with a second state tournament win in 2024, the Cubs will play in the third-and-final weekend of the state tournament this coming weekend when they take on the Red Wing Aces at 4 p.m. in Green Isle on Saturday. A win there would move the Cubs to Sunday, Sept. 1, where they will need two wins to advance to Monday’s state championship.

“Honestly we expected to be in the state tournament this year,” Giefer said. “Glad that we could be a part of it and doing what we can now to just keep it going. Fun group of guys.”

Bode said winning another game at state was awesome and he thinks the Cubs can make some more noise in the final weekend of the state tournament.

“I think we have pitching to do it, we’ve got depth there, our hitters are coming around,” he said. “What, 14 hits today? We hit the ball hard and they made the mistakes, last game we made mistakes, but we still came out with it.”

Meyer said a big part in keeping this special run going will depend on the team’s confidence in one another, something they’ve shown all season.

“I think the biggest thing is staying relaxed and believing in the guy to the left or to the right of you,” Meyer said. “A lot of these guys grew up playing ball together, all the way from 10 years old to now. They have good communication and the guys just really kind of thrive and build off of each other.”

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