At 6’2 and 215 pounds, Cole Moody looks like a linebacker playing baseball. The Muhlenberg senior is an intimidating presence on the mound. Moody’s fastball touches 90 mph and he comes right after hitters. “He wants the ball, he’s a workhorse, and he’s very economical with his pitches. Coach [Jason] McCord does a great job calling the game,” said longtime Muhls’ head coach Brian Kopetsky. Moody fired a two-hitter with eleven strikeouts as #11 seed Muhlenberg beat #2 seed Ephrata 2-0 on Thursday night at War Memorial Field. The (16-8) Muhls will face fifth-seeded Chambersburg for the District 3-6A Championship on Monday at 6:45pm at Penn Medicine Park in Lancaster. Moody is (9-0) this season with an eye-popping eight complete games. “He has worked at his craft; the time and the effort and the energy that he put in in the off-season. This is the stuff that he’s worked for and he’s gonna continue to get better,” emphasized Kopetsky. Moody, who’s going to Northampton Community College, entered the contest with a 1.10 ERA. He walked two batters, hit two others, and finished with 104 pitches. “I’m not gonna lie, I didn’t feel my best. It’s the mentality, that’s all it is,” noted Moody.
The Mounts’ ace, Camryn Simes, was unavailable after pitching in their 2-1 quarterfinal victory over Mechanicsburg on Monday. Simes (5-3, 0.88) has held opponents to 25 hits in 47.2 innings this spring. The Millersville commit is a four-year starter with 300 career strikeouts. Ephrata ended Muhlenberg’s season last year. The Mounts defeated the Muhls 2-0 in the opening round of the District 3-6A tournament. Kopetsky expected another low-scoring affair with Moody and Collin Miller on the hill. Miller came into the semifinal with a (5-1) record and a 2.10 ERA.
Ephrata had men on first and second in the bottom of the third, but Chase Prange grounded out to shortstop to end the inning. Miller, who cruised through five frames, ran into trouble in the sixth. The junior righty hit Carter Burr and his older brother, Cooper, to begin the inning. Miller was replaced on the mound after 74 pitches by Prange. Marvin Frias got down a sacrifice bunt to put runners on second and third. Carter Burr scored the first run on a passed ball. Gavin Moody then delivered a RBI double to right field for a 2-0 advantage. Moody had struck out and popped out in his previous two at-bats. “I walked up to him and said you’re the No. 3 hitter. You’re one of the best hitters on the team, just go out there and be one of the best hitters on the team. He went up there and put a great at-bat together,” replied Kopetsky.
The (16-6) Mounts put men on first and second with one out in the sixth. After Cole Moody hit Prange and walked Landry Weidner, Simes lined out sharply to center field. Ethan Gockley then struck out for the third time. Moody added two more strikeouts in the bottom of the seventh. He retired Ephrata in order as Muhlenberg won for the ninth time in its last ten games. “It’s who gets hot late. The Muhls are hot right now,” said Moody. Miller was charged with two runs on one hit in five innings. He hit four batters and struck out three. Prange allowed three hits over the final two innings with a pair of strikeouts. Carter Burr, Cole Moody, and John Martin singled for Muhlenberg. Jake Buckwalter and freshman leadoff hitter Hayden Mietelski had singles for the Mounts. Their five-game winning streak came to a halt.
The Muhls took down Lancaster-Lebanon League champion Manheim Township 6-3 in the first round. They made the long trip to third-seeded Waynesboro on Monday and returned to Laureldale with a 9-7 victory. After shutting out Ephrata, Muhlenberg is one win away from its fourth District 3 title. The last time the Muhls hoisted the trophy was in 2008. “The kids look at each new game as a challenge and they’re playing confident. They’re kind of feeling like why not,” remarked Kopetsky.
Berks Sports Report Paul Roberts