If the past several seasons have proven anything, it’s that what happens during the regular season between Fernley and Fallon doesn’t mean anything. Fallon coach Kasey Chu is counting on that to hold true again this year.
Fernley swept a doubleheader from Fallon Tuesday afternoon, 6-4 and 4-0, to take the season series and tighten its grip on first place in the Northern 3A.
Fernley moved to 17-1 in league play, while Fallon dropped to third place at 12-3, behind Lowry, which is second at 16-2.
But the Lady Wave and Lowry will face each other in a three-game series this weekend in Fallon, and one of the teams will lose at least two games and fall off the pace. Friday’s game is at 3 p.m., and the Saturday doubleheader begins at 11 a.m.
Fallon and Fernley have ruled the Northern 3A in recent seasons, but regular season outcomes have not foreshadowed postseason results. Last year, Fallon beat Fernley five consecutive times, three in the regular season and two in the regional tournament, before Fernley won two meetings in the state tournament to bring home the championship.
“That’s what I just told them,” Chu said. “This is done and over with, and we’re going to see them again in some crucial games, and that’s what’s going to count.”
In the first game, Fernley scored all six runs in the first inning, a rare outburst against Fallon’s Faith Cornmesser, a pitcher who has been a difficult matchup for the Vaqueros in the past. In this season’s earlier meeting, Cornmesser had a no-hitter going until Reese Jones broke it up with a home run in what would become a 2-1 Fernley win.
This time, the Vaqueros combined a couple of well-placed hits with couple of uncharacteristic wildness from Cornmesser and turned it all into six runs, after Fallon had taken a 1-0 lead in the top of the first inning.
A single by Skylar Gothan, an infield hit by Macie Kirk and a pitch that hit Jones loaded the bases with nobody out, then Cornmesser walked Colby Johnson to tie the game. Natalie Stewart followed with a little blooper that dropped just beyond the infield dirt in left field to plate Kirk, then Jones scored on a bunt by Lexi Nelson, when Jones upended Fallon catcher, who couldn’t hold onto the ball.
One out later, Hannah Curtis followed with a two-run single for a 5-1 lead, and finished the rally with a run-scoring single to make it 6-1.
Fallon scored first on an RBI-single by Stacy Kalt, driving in Caitlyn Welch, who had singled and taken second on a wild pitch. But Kalt was caught in a rundown trying to go for a double, ending Fallon’s chances for a big inning.
Fallon got a run back in the third, on a single by Welch that drove home Lorynn Fagg, and had runners on second and third with one out, but the next two batters hit foul pop outs.
“We have to make those adjustments at the plate to do our job to get those runner around,” Chu said. “We had a lot of runners on at different times, but couldn’t get them in.”
In the top of the seventh, Kalt hit a sacrifice fly with runners on second and third and no outs, cutting the lead to 6-3, and another run scored on a wild pitch, but the game ended when Macie Anderson was thrown out rounding first base after a single.
“Our hitting didn’t come alive until later in the game, and you’ve got to jump on these good teams a lot sooner than that,” Chu said. “These teams get out against you, it’s hard to come back that much.”