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Awards given at Bowie

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The 2017-18 school year was full of super big highs and really tough lows for Bowie High School athletes and every moment was honored at the annual sports banquet Monday night.
The Lady Rabbit and Jackrabbit of the Year awards, voted on by coaches, went to two athletes who just returned from the University Interscholastic League Class 3A track meet.
Lady Rabbit of the Year recipient Kamryn Cantwell has competed in four sports during her high school career and advanced to the state cross country meet twice, the state track meet twice and just last week finished fifth in long jump and second in the 400-meter at the state championship.
This year alone, Cantwell was selected all-state cross country, all-state basketball and all-state track. Her athletic career is far from over as she heads to Southeastern Oklahoma State this fall to play basketball.
Kason Spikes received the prestigious Jackrabbit of the Year award. Spikes competed in three sports this year and was a member of the state championship basketball team. He also was selected all-state basketball and was the regional champion in high jump and advanced to the state track meet.
Fan of the Year was awarded to two recipients, the Bowie Rural Volunteer Fire Department and the City of Bowie Volunteer Fire Department. The award is given to the fan who shows the most love, support and heart for the Jackrabbits and Lady Rabbits.
“This year’s fans have been fans for a long time. They’re at every parade send off, every welcome home and even the late night welcome homes. Our Rabbits and Lady Rabbit spirit would not be the same without them,” said Bowie Booster Club President Jill Jones.
Booster of the Year was awarded to Ray Jones for his dedication to the booster club and the long hours spent organizing a team to set up the 30-foot inflatable Jackrabbit used by the football team.
Coach Jody Steele was awarded the Assistant Coach of the Year for her time not only as a coach but for her time spent working and volunteering to help the high school athletes.
Longtime Bowie coach Gayno Shelton presented the Hutto Award, which honors the coach of the year, to Bowie Jackrabbit Head Basketball Coach Doug Boxell.
“I have seen excellence everywhere in this community, in these athletes and the supporter of those athletes,” said Shelton. “We are blessed in so many ways with tradition. We are blessed with leaders and I am blessed to have been here in this community and seen it time after time. This year is no exception.”
Shelton said if he had one word to describe the Bowie High School athletic program, it would be class.
“We had dedicated folks out there who gave it their all and didn’t end up with a state championship or with a trophy, but did their very very best and are great kids. Now we have state championships that will go on the memorial.
“If I were to have one word of this team and coaching staff I would say class. They have class. We all know they’re winners but they are winners in so many ways. These are great kids and great coaches. I have seen some great coaches in high school basketball but no better than Doug Boxell,” said Shelton.
The coach also awarded the state championship rings to each member of the basketball team, coaching staff, administration and managers during a ring ceremony conducted at the banquet.
The banquet also saw the creation of a new boy’s track award, named in honor of Trent Walker, a Bowie High School senior who tragically passed away two weeks ago.
Track Coach Justin Prescott had planned to award Walker with the perseverance award during the night’s ceremonies.
“Webster dictionary defines perseverance steadfastness in doing something despite difficulty. That is the best way I can think to describe Trent. He didn’t know how to quit,” said Prescott. “He was not the most gifted of athletes. He didn’t wake up in the morning and he was fast. He had to work hard for everything he got. He was going to get my perseverance award, but I thought what better way to do it than to name it after him so this will be the first annual Trent Walker perseverance award.”
Prescott presented the first annual award to Joey Crawford, an athlete he said never listened to anybody else.
“The only word he ever heard was supposed to. He wasn’t supposed to make it out of district. He wasn’t supposed to make it out of area. He wasn’t supposed to make it to regionals. He wasn’t supposed to make it to the regional finals. He wasn’t supposed to place at the regional track meet. This man goes out and works hard, maintains his grades and holds down a job. If that’s not perseverance I don’t know what is,” explained Prescott.
Walker was honored with a memorial at the ceremony and his younger brothers, Mackenzie and Landyn, were in attendance to accept their big brother’s cross country and track awards.
The Bowie Booster Club awarded more than $37,000 in coaches requests this year to help high school athletes, club president Jill Jones reported.

For pictures, pick up a copy of the mid-week edition of the Bowie News.

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Baseball Roundup

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Nocona
The Nocona Indians ended their regular season with a sweep of Alvord to secure a number one seed heading into the playoffs.
The Indians won 13-6 and 3-1 to earn the top seed in the big school division in the playoffs.
With that much on the line despite already securing a playoff spot the previous week, Nocona had a lot to play for in its final regular season series.
The Bulldogs got on the board first with two runs, but the Indians answered with nine runs in the bottom of the first inning to retake the lead 9-2.
Both teams scored one run in the third inning before Nocona scored three runs in the fourth inning to go up 13-3. Alvord was able to extend the game and avoid getting run-ruled by scoring two runs in the fifth and one in the sixth inning.
The Indian bats were cold in the final three innings, but the defense bounced back to shut out the Bulldogs in the seventh inning to win 13-6.
RJ Walker and Jayce Lehde each drove in three runs to lead the team while Ladon Fatheree and Zyrus Moreno both drove in two runs. Nocona finished with nine hits and drew nine walks during the game.
On the mound, Walker Murphey pitched six innings and allowed six runs (five earned) on 12 hits while striking out one and walking two.
The second game was more a pitcher’s duel that had far less action scoring runs.
The Indians scored first in the second inning with one run, but Alvord tied the game with one run in the fourth inning. Nocona answered with two runs in the fifth inning and held on to win 3-1.
Lehde and Fatheree drove in one run each while Murphey scored the other run on the basepaths thanks to a wild pitch. Nocona had only two hits while the team drew seven walks.
Walker helped carry the team on the mound, pitching the whole game while giving up one run on four hits and striking out 13 batters. The defense committed no fielding errors.

Bellevue
The Bellevue Eagles ended their season on Monday this week, losing some tough games on the way out before closing with a win.
The Eagles lost to Perrin-Whitt 13-1, to Bryson 17-2 before beating Saint Jo 7-2 to end the season on a high note.
Bellevue struggled against the two other 1A teams in its district in its previous matchups as both teams are heading towards the playoffs. Both the Pirates and Cowboys proved it once again in the final matchup on April 22 and Monday before playing a team more on its level.
The Eagles and Panthers were 1-1 against each other this season. Playing after Bellevue’s loss to against Bryson right before on Saint Jo’s home field, the Eagles wanted revenge.
Bellevue got it with a 7-2 win against the Panthers to end both team’s season and this year improve the series 2-1 in the Eagles favor.
River Trail led the team with two RBIs while Hunter Blackburn had a team high two hits.
The team finished with seven hits and drew 10 walks.
On the mound, Bryce Ramsey allowed two runs on nine hits while striking out seven and walking five. The defense committed one fielding error.

Saint Jo
The Saint Jo Panthers had a tough final week to their disappointing season.
The Panthers lost to Bryson 10-4 before losing to Bellevue 7-2 to close out their season.
Saint Jo knew it was out of the playoff hunt and was playing for pride as it hoped to end the season with its head held high.
The Panthers played the Cowboys on April 22 and were put behind the eight ball when Bryson rallied off seven runs in the third inning. Saint Jo closed the game well, but could not overcome that bad inning as it lost 10-4.
Sam Martin, Charlie Evans, Mathew Sampson and Jayden Curry each drove in one run each. Saint Jo had nine hits and drew six walks during the game.
Unfortunately, Saint Jo’s defense allowed 10 hits and nine walks while committing five fielding errors.
The Panthers then waited a week before ending their season on Monday, due to rain causing the game to be rescheduled, against Bellevue. Each team had beaten the other so far this season and with both teams out of the playoffs, it was a game about local pride more than anything.
Unfortunately for Saint Jo, it did not go its way on Monday. The Eagles scored in every inning besides the first and seventh inning while the Panthers only scored in the fourth inning. Bellevue won 7-2.
Devin Stewart led the team with two RBIs on a double he hit. The team finished with eight hits and drew six walks, but it was not enough to hang with the Eagles.
The pitching staff allowed only four hits, but three fielding errors and nine walks allowed Bellevue to rack up the runs.

To read the full story, pick up a copy of the weekly edition of the Bowie News.

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Jackrabbits end season with series sweep

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Bowie baseball Coach Jason McCoy picked up his 100th career win during the team’s senior night win last week.

The Bowie Jackrabbits finished their season last week with a dominant series sweep against Vernon.
The Jackrabbits won both games by run-rule 13-2 and 11-1 against the Lions.
Bowie came into the week with its playoff hopes shot after splitting with Holliday. The Jackrabbits were playing for pride and knew they had what it took to win decisively against Vernon and made sure to show it.
Game one did not start off great as the Lions scored two runs in the first inning, but Bowie answered with three runs of its own in the same inning, taking the lead 3-2 and never looking back.
The Jackrabbit defense shut down Vernon the rest of the game while scoring three runs in the second and fourth innings and four runs in the third inning.
It was enough to end the game early after four and half innings, Bowie winning 13-2 in its final home game on senior night.
Edmond De Leon led the team with four RBIs while Boston Farris, Trae Seigler and Jorge De Leon each had two RBIs. The team finished with 10 hits and drew seven walks as the team consistently found ways to score every inning of the game.
Farris got the start on the mound and allowed two runs on six hits while striking out seven and walking four during five innings of work. The defense committed no fielding errors.
The second game was on the road, but the Jackrabbits made sure not to start slow like they did in game one. Edmond De Leon blasted a three-run home run in the first inning to put Bowie up 3-0.
After a scoreless second inning, the Jackrabbits scored three runs in the third and fifth innings and two runs in the fourth inning. With the Lions scoring only one run in the third inning, that was all the run support Bowie needed to end the game early again after five innings.
The Jackrabbits won 11-1.
Edmond De Leon led the team with three RBIs while hitting a home run and a triple. Seigler and Austin Cheney drove in two runs. Bowie finished with 10 hits and drew six walks.
On the mound, Seigler pitched four innings and allowed one run (zero earned) on two hits while striking out and walking one batter. The defense committed three fielding errors.

To read the full story, pick up a copy of the weekly edition of the Bowie News.

For pictures from the last home game, click here https://www.dotphoto.com/go.asp?l=bnews1&AID=6874727&T=1

For pictures from senior night, click here https://www.dotphoto.com/go.asp?l=bnews1&AID=6874728&T=1

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Saint Jo softball loses to Knox City 21-7 in the playoffs

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Saint Jo catcher Tatum Morman tags a Knox City player out at home base to prevent a run from scoring.

The Saint Jo Lady Panthers season ended on Thursday night in the bi-district round of the playoffs against Knox City.
The Houndettes won by run-rule 21-7 after six innings, ending the Lady Panthers year since the series was condensed to just one game.
Saint Jo came into the series after winning the district title, but knew Knox City would be tough. Still, the Lady Panthers had played in and won several games with high scores which gave them hope they could hang with whatever the Houndettes to could bring.
Knox City got on the board first, scoring on a three-run triple to go up 3-0. Saint Jo answered in the same inning with Kamron Skidmore driving in two runs on a single to cut the lead to 3-2.
In the third inning the Houndettes drove in five runs on a single, double and home run to increase their lead to 8-2. The Lady Panthers got one run back in the same inning thanks to a fielding error at third base that drove in one run to make it 8-3.
After a scoreless fourth inning, Knox City added to its lead in the fifth inning. A fielding error allowed one run to score and a three RBI triple added three more to make it 12-3.
In the sixth inning, the Houndettes reeled off nine runs to as it looked like the end was near for Saint Jo. Down 21-3, the Lady Panthers needed to score nine runs to avoid getting run-ruled.
Down to the final out, Saint Jo started a two-out rally. An error at short stop resulted in two runs to score. Jordyn O’Neal then ripped off a two RBI triple as the Lady Panthers had more than doubled their score.
Unfortunately that is where it would end. The next batter grounded out for the final out.
Knox City won 21-7.
Skidmore led the team with three RBIs while O’Neal was second with two. The team finished with seven hits and drew two walks, but it was not enough to keep up with the Houndettes who had 13 hits and drew 12 walks. Saint Jo committed two fielding errors.

To read the full story, pick up a copy of the weekly edition of the Bowie News.

For more pictures from the game, click here https://www.dotphoto.com/go.asp?l=bnews1&AID=6874729&T=1

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