Tate Freshmen Beat Gulf Breeze; Northview Baseball, Softball Reschedule Games
April 11, 2019
Tate 7, Gulf Breeze 3 (Freshmen)
The Tate High Freshmen beat Gulf Breeze 7-3 Wednesday night to improvie to 9-0-1 on the season.
Conner Wright pitched the win, going four innings, allowing one run on two hits and striking out five. Chase Lombardo came in for the save.
Tucker Griffin, Dagan Guy and Warren Henke each had a couple of hits to lead Tate at bat.
The Tate Freshmen will be in action next Monday in a home game against Navarre.
NORTHVIEW SCHEDULE CHANGES
Northview Softball
Thursday, April 11 – Away at Paxton 4pm JV, 6 pm Varsity
Friday, April 12 – Home vs. Jay 4pm JV, 6 pm Varsity
April 22 — Home vs. Paxton 4pm JV, 6 pm Varsity (senior night)
Northview Baseball
Northview will play at Baker on Tuesday, April 23, and Baker will be a Northview on Thursday, April 25. Both games are at 6 p.m. and are varsity only.
Wahoos Homer Their Way To A Home Opener Win
April 11, 2019
The Pensacola Blue Wahoos picked up a 5-4 win over the Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp on Wednesday evening, using three home runs and seven extra-base hits in the opening game of the newly-announced Seafood Buffet Series.
Jorge Alcala started on the mound for Pensacola and provided a strong outing, going 5.0 innings and allowing two runs on five hits while striking out four.
The Blue Wahoos took an early lead on a towering home run by Drew Maggi to left leading off the second inning. Following the homer, the next two hitters, Brian Schales and Jimmy Kerrigan, each doubled to put Pensacola up 2-0.
The Wahoos extended their lead to 3-0 in the fourth on a solo shot by Schales to left.
Jacksonville battled back into the game in the fifth, using a double, sacrifice, hit by pitch, RBI groundout, and RBI single to score twice and cut Pensacola’s lead to 3-2.
The Blue Wahoos answered in the bottom half of the inning with their third home run of the game, a solo shot to left by Jaylin Davis.
The two teams traded runs in the seventh. Jacksonville loaded the bases against reliever Jovani Moran, who then hit a batter to plate a run and pull the Shrimp within one. With the bases still loaded and just one out, manager Ramon Borrego turned to Jeff Ames out of the pen, who proceeded to strike out the next two hitters to escape the jam.
It was Schales again in the bottom of the seventh helping Pensacola to answer, drilling a two-out double to score Davis from first and put the Wahoos up 5-3.
With one out in the eighth, Jacksonville put runners on the corner with just one out against Ames. The Wahoos turned to Ryan Mason, who retired the first batter he faced on a ground out while a run scored, making it 5-4.
With a runner on second, the following batter Bryson Brigman knocked a single to left that looked like it would tie the game, but Pensacola leftfielder Ernie De La Trinidad made a perfect throw home from the outfield to gun out the runner at the plate and save Pensacola’s lead.
Mason set the side down in order in the ninth, striking out a pair, to earn his first save of the year and give Pensacola a 5-4 win in their home opener. Alcala (2-0, 1.80 ERA) earned the win while McKenzie Mills (0-1, 7.20 ERA) was saddled with the loss.
The two team’s will continue their five-game set at Blue Wahoos Stadium Thursday.
T.C. Venom, Pensacola Jets Suspended By League After Century Shooting
April 10, 2019
As the investigation continues into shots fired following an adult football game in Century, both teams have been suspended by their league.
The suspension for the T.C. Venom, which plays in Century, and the Greater Pensacola Jets, is “until further notice,” the Amateur to Professional Developmental Football League told NorthEscambia.com Tuesday night.
After the Pensacola Jets beat the host team T.C. Venom at Anthony Pleasant Park, a brawl broke out and at least three shots were fired by someone on the field Saturday night at Anthony Pleasant Park in Century. There were no injuries. [Click here for more details, shooting video ...]
“The Amateur to Professional Developmental Football League has a zero-tolerance policy when it comes to any and all types of violence no matter how big or small it may be. This is and has always been reflected in our leagues rules and bylaws,” APDFL President Anastasia Hunt and Commissioner Bernard Hunt said in a statement. “As this most recent event has been brought to our attention, we feel it necessary to acknowledge that neither the Greater Pensacola Jets nor TC Venom, are present active members of the Amateur to Professional Developmental Football League.”
“We expect more of ourselves and I demand more than that from TC Venom. We are not done. We will be back sooner than many expect,” Venom head coach and owner Luis Waters said after the suspension announcement. ” … my guys deserve to play football. And we will. I stick to my word about more security at our home games. It’s my duty to assure that our fans are protected and I will do that from now on. That’s a promise.”
If the suspension is lifted, the Venom’s next scheduled game is April 27 at the South Alabama Dolphins in Mobile.
NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.
Baseball Wins For Northview, Tate; Tate Softball Takes Two From Pace
April 10, 2019

BASEBALL
Northview 10, Central 3
The Northview Chiefs beat Central 10-3 on the road Tuesday night.
Tanner Levins went three innings for Northview, allowing one hit with no runs, striking out four and walking one.
The Chiefs had 15 stolen bases during the game, including five by Nick Venable, who went 3-5 with two runs at the plate.
Also for Northview: Seth Killam 2-4, 2RBI, R, 2B, 3B; Adam Aliff 3-5, 3R, RBI, 2B; Jacob Bryant 1-4; Jackson Moore 2-4, 2R, RBI; Taylor Wilson 1-2, R; Ben Wilson R, 2RBI; Bricen Love 1-4.
Tate 8, West Florida 3 (Freshmen)
The Tate Aggies Freshman team beat west Florida 8-3 Tuesday night after a strong six run sixth inning.
Josiah Glodfelter earned the victory for the Aggies, lasting five and a third innings, allowing two hits and three runs while striking out 10 and walking one. Chase Lombardo threw one and two-thirds innings in relief out of the bullpen.
Saxon Hill Hill, Warren Henke and Jaxson Stafford collected two hits each to lead Tate. Tucker Griffin, Wiley Griffin, Dagan Guy, Henke, Hill, Kirk Mosley, Stafford and Paul Whitson all had an RBI.
SOFTBALL
Tate 7, Pace 3
Tate defeated Pace 7-3 Tuesday night.
Avery Beauchanie pitched a complete game, allowing eight hits and three runs while striking out one.
Hannah Halfacre led the Aggies at the plate, going 4-4 with two runs.
Tate 14, Pace 7 (JV)
The Tate Lady Aggies beat Pace 14-7 Tuesday.
Courtney Lundquist went one inning on the mound giving up no, no runs, committing no errors and walking three. Aaliyah Jordan pitched one and a third innings allowing no hits, and six runs while walking nine and striking out one. Ella Little pitched one and two-thirds innings giving up one hit and one run.
NorthEscambia.com file photo.
Tate Tennis Defeats Gulf Breeze
April 10, 2019
The Tate Aggies girls tennis team defeated Gulf Breeze 4-3 in a hard fought match Tuesday.
Several players overcame early deficits to win their matches and maintain their seeding into the district tournament on April 15.
Their next match is at Pace on Wednesday, and the Aggies will finish their regular season Friday at Milton.
Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.
Northview Senior Bryant Offered Troy University Fishing Scholarship
April 9, 2019
Northview High School senior Jacob Bryant has been offered a fishing scholarship by Troy University. He is currently a member of the Panhandle Youth Anglers and plays varsity baseball for the Chiefs. . He recently won “biggest fish” at a state qualifier at Lake Talquin. Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.
Wahoos Fall To BayBears 2-1 In Extra Innings
April 8, 2019
Griffin Jax continued the season-opening mastery by Pensacola Blue Wahoos starting pitchers, but Sunday became the first without a desired ending.
The Mobile BayBears got a walk-off hit from Roberto Pena in the 11th inning for a 2-1 victory to end the Blue Wahoos (3-1) perfect start at Mobile’s Hank Aaron Stadium.
The final score was Mobile’s first time in the lead the entire weekend.
“The offense unfortunately was not good,” said Blue Wahoos manager Ramon Borrego after the game. “We had a couple chances with runners in scoring position, but didn’t do any damage. But you know, that’s baseball. We have been playing really good.”
This was the second extra-inning game of the series. Under the minor league rules adopted before the 2018 season, all extra inning, regular-season games begin with a runner on second base. The Blue Wahoos twice stranded their runner on third in the 10th and 11th.
Well before the game reached that point, Jax, an Air Force Academy graduate, had kept the BayBears in check with his array of breaking stuff and grit. He stranded baserunners in all five innings he worked, before exiting with a 1-0 lead.
It’s been four games with four terrific lines for the Blue Wahoos’ starters. They have combined for a 0.45 earned run average, allowing just one run in 20.0 innings. The foursome recorded 26 strikeouts. They’ve allowed just one run and 12 hits in four games.
“I’m just so happy right now with the pitching staff, especially the starters,” Borrego said. “Griffin was great. He gave us a really solid outing, but unfortunately we didn’t back it up with offense.”
After the Blue Wahoos missed a scoring chance in the ninth, reliever Dusten Knight, who got the extra-inning save Friday night, returned to throw a pair of scoreless innings. He retired Mobile in order in the ninth, then worked out of a bases-loaded, one out situation in the 10th with a strikeout and a ground out to force another inning.
The Blue Wahoos scratched across their only run in the fifth after an infield single from Drew Maggi, who went to second on an error, moved to third on a ground out, and beat a throw to the plate on a fielder’s choice grounder.
Unlike the past four games, the Blue Wahoos did not manage an extra base hit and finished with only four hits in the game.
Even after the loss, Borrego was positive about the team’s outlook and 3-1 start.
“This weekend has been fantastic for us,” Borrego said. “It is our first year in Pensacola and so far I like how our guys compete…pitching, offense, defense. When we match all that together you will have a really good game.”
Right hander Sean Poppen will try to complete the trend in the series finale Monday night at 6:35 PM in Mobile. After that, the focus will turn to Wednesday’s highly anticipated home opener against Jacksonville at Blue Wahoos Stadium.
Looking ahead for the Blue Wahoos, they will have an off day on Tuesday before their home-opening debut Wednesday at 6:35 PM in Blue Wahoos Stadium against the Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp. It will begin a new era in Hoosville as the Minnesota Twins affiliate.
Pictured: Griffin Jax on the mound for the Wahoos. Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.
Lady Aggies Take Second In Kissimmee Klassic In Lightning Coin Toss
April 7, 2019
The Tate Lady Aggies finished second in the annual Kissimmee Klassic Tournament Saturday night — due to lightning.
The Lady Aggies went undefeated through three games, scoring 21 runs while allowing only one earned run through the weekend. The championship game was decided by a coin toss due to lightning.
Earlier in the day, the Lady Aggies shut out Keystone Heights 5-0.
Abbie Burks earned the win in the circle. She surrendered no runs on five hits, had no errors and had two strikeouts.
Ryleigh Cawby and Gabby Locke had three hits each for Tate.
Photo for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.
Wahoos Get Shutout Win Over Mobile
April 7, 2019
After Blue Wahoos starting pitchers Jorge Alcala and Brusdar Graterol combined to allow just one run over 9.2 innings and strike out 12 batters during Friday evening’s doubleheader sweep in Mobile, Devin Smeltzer had a tough act to follow during his Saturday night start at Hank Aaron Stadium.
If the bar was set high, he raised it.
The 23-year-old lefty opened his season with one of the finest outings of his professional career, carrying a perfect game into the fifth inning and finishing the night with nine strikeouts over 5.2 two-hit innings.
Smeltzer was sharp from the beginning, striking out BayBears’ top prospect Brandon Marsh to open the game in a 1-2-3 first inning. The strikeouts kept coming in the second inning, as he struck out the final two batters of the inning before opening the third with two more strikeouts.
After another K in the fourth, he opened the fifth having not allowed a baserunner to reach. The leadoff hitter in the inning, Jhoan Urena, quickly ended the no-hit bid with a ground ball single through the right side, but Smeltzer was unfazed, striking out two more to strand Urena.
Opposing Smeltzer, BayBears starting pitcher Patrick Sandoval was also strong, striking out four in the first two innings. The Blue Wahoos manufactured a run against him in the third, with Jordan Gore reaching on a dropped third strike and then coming all the way around to score from first on a throwing error by Mobile third baseman Roberto Baldoquin.
The 1-0 score held until the fifth inning when the Blue Wahoos offense broke out. Jimmy Kerrigan led off the inning with a towering home run to left, his second in as many days to make it 2-0 in Pensacola’s favor. The Wahoos then strung together a walk and hits by Caleb Hamilton, Gore, Brian Schales, and Taylor Grzelakowski to score twice more.
With a 4-0 lead, Smeltzer cruised into the sixth inning. He allowed his second hit of the game with one out in the inning but struck out Jahmai Jones for the second out before turning the ball over to reliever Adam Bray.
Smeltzer finished with a line of 5.2 innings pitched, two hits, no runs, one walk, and nine strikeouts. With the strong effort by the lefty, Blue Wahoos starting pitchers now have a 0.59 ERA through three games, having allowed just one run in 15.1 innings while striking out 21.
Pensacola extended their lead to 5-0 on an RBI single by Jaylin Davis in the seventh inning while Bray combined with Ryan Mason to throw 2.1 scoreless innings of relief to secure the victory and the second shutout of the year by the Wahoos.
With the win, the Blue Wahoos improve to 3-0 on the season. Pensacola and Mobile will continue their five-game series at Hank Aaron Stadium Sunday.
Courtesy photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.
FHSAA Moves Football Championship Games To Tallahassee, Daytona Beach
April 6, 2019
The road to the state football championship will be a shorter one for 1A-3A teams and a change of scenery for other classes.
The FHSAA announced Friday that the 1A-3A state championship games will be played in Tallahassee for at least the next three years, and the 4A-8A games will be held in Daytona Beach.
“I think this was a great move by the FHSAA,” Northview head coach Derek Marshman said. “The FHSAA is starting to listen more to schools’ requests, and this is a big step in what schools and coaches want. Over 90% of the 1A schools are from Pensacola to Jacksonville, so this makes sense.”
For Northview High School, for instance, the distance to a state championship game drops from about 450 miles to Orlando to about 200 miles to Tallahassee. That means a much easier trip for teams and fans, Marshman said.
When Northview defeated Trenton for the 2012 1A state championship in, over 3,000 Northview fans were on hand in Orlando in what was then known as the Florida Citrus Bowl. It’s now called the Camping World Stadium and holds 65,000 people.
The 1A-3A championship games will be played December 5-7 this year on the artificial turf in the 6,500 capacity Gene Cox Stadium.
“The smaller stadium will make a big difference in the feel of the game,” Marshman said. “There’s no way for a 1A team to fill the stadium in Orlando. But in Gene Cox in Tallahassee, teams can look up and it will be a big time feel with a stadium that’s nearly full.”
The 4A-8A games will be placed December 11-14 at Daytona Stadium, capacity 15,000.
“After listening to feedback from our membership, we felt having two locations stretched out over two weeks made the most sense,” FHSAA Executive Director George Tomyn said. “This new schedule gives families and fans the most flexibility when it comes to supporting their student-athletes.”
Both venues recently underwent significant renovations. Daytona’s $20 million renovation included new field turf, remodeled locker rooms, an open-air VIP club, VIP space with theater seating and a completely redesigned expansive concourse area. Gene Cox Stadium underwent an $800,000 renovation featuring installations of completely new field turf and a pair of HD video boards.
For a Pensacola area team, such as Tate High School, the distance to Daytona Beach and Orlando are essentially equal.
Pictured: The Northview Chiefs won the 2012 1A state championship in Orlando. NorthEscambia.com file photos, click to enlarge.

















