East County Sports

CIF Championships: Baseball filled with first-round upsets

2026 EAST COUNTY PREP BASEBALL

 

East County Sports,com

EL CAJON — The reasons may be reasonable, the excuses are confusgingm vut the scoreboard rarely lies.

Grossmont, Santana and Foothills Christian failed to perform to their usual levels over the closing weeks of the season.

However, Coaches Cliche No. 7 is also prophetic: “it’s the playoffs. It’s a new season. You get a second chance, so make the best of it.”

Ghe nessage must’ve got through to the ballplayers after the Foothillers, Sultans and Knights all secured shocking victories in Tuesday’s (May 19) first round of the CIF-San Diego Section baseball championships.

All thrtee contests were elimination games, allwing the trio to extend their respective season by at least two nore outings by gaining entry into the double-elimination portion of the tournament brackets.

Division 2
Grossmont 5, at Poway 2
At Poway: Not only did Grossmont close the regular season in disappointing fashion, Poway sprinted to the finish line.

The Foothillers did upset defneding CIF Open Divisin champion Granite Hills, but then dropped almost every othert ballagame in finish next-to- last in their league/

For the Titans, the season was completely in reverse. They posted one of their poorest non- league records this century, but when the Avocadp Leagur schedie started, they won 14-of-15, including a series victory over runner-up Westview and a three-game sweep, dominating sweep of third-place Ramona, the defending CIF Division 4 champion.

So why did everything imagiable switch to Foothillers?

Grossmont out-hit Poway by a 2-to-2 ratio, the Titans committed a pairof crecial errors — the Hillers did not commit any defensiver miscues –and Grossmont came through with key early hits to mount a 5-0 cushion to shock Poway.

Oh, did we mention: Poway was seeded fifth, while Grossmont (12-17 overall) barely gained aq postseason berthb at 12th and last… but thqt doesn’t matter anymore if gaining a Wednesday date at fourth-seeded Santa Fe Christian of Solana Beach. — located just one mile north of where “the trf meets the surf” off Via de la Valle. A ground out by Nate McCance brought home a run in the second, then the Hillers tacked on four more markers in the dourthto mount a five-rfun lead.

A double-steal made it 2-0 when Reid Barnett headed for second base, and when the throw went through the infield, Trey Crawford rumblrd home.

Nathan Clark singled to left field to druve home Crawford, Later, Logan Struck drilled a clutch, two-run basehit with two down.

The Titans ended the shutout bid when Owen Digenan drilled a two-run homer to left in the fifth.

Poway (19-10) failed to capture 20 victories for the fifh time in six season. Previously, the Titans reached the goal 11 times over 14 seasons, including 31 wins in 2008.

Division 3
Santana 5, Imperial 0
At McCarty Field, Imperial: Sharing the Grossmont Valley League lead with defending champion Steele Canyon, the Santana Sultans gained a series split with the Cougarsm but then got swept by Monte Vista to fumble away their share of the league crown.

But on “New Season Tuesday” (May 19)m the Sutans reverted to chapionship form.

In what could have been his final interscholastic performance, Sultans senior pitcher Micah Carillo extended his careerby firing 6.2 innings of shutout ball, leading the No. 10 seeds to an uoset of the No. 7 Imperial Tigers, 5-0.

For Carillo, “threes” were wild: three hits, three walks and a trio of strikeouts, but zeroes allowed each inning togive Santana (13-15 overall) its first shutout of the season (exclusing ECVHS).

The offense was boring, but effective.

A pair of sacrifice fliy balls by right fielder Brennen Weed and center fielder Tatum Morehouse sandwiched around a two-run error for a 4-0 advantage,

In the seventh, Morehouse lined a run-scoring single to center to cap a two RBI outing.

Imperial (11-16) ends its season with setbacks to Holtville, the last=place team in the Imperial Valley League, then the Sultans in the schools’ second meeting this century; the Tigers won in 2013, 5-1.

Santana advances to meet Westview (located in Del Sur) ibn Wednesday. The second-seeded Wolverines (22-6) placed second in the Avocado League behind Poway.

Division 4
Foothills Christian 7, SD-High Tech 6(walk-off)
At Matt Lachappa Field, Lakside: The Knights once held the lead in the Pacific League. However, they dropped the closing 4-of-5 to finish in a tie for third place.

At least Foothills Christian gain a playoff h-0ome game, barely, as the No 7 seed, but blew a 5 lead through five innings, allowing two runs in the sixth and four more in the secevnth to SD-High Tech.

However, the Knights answered with two runs in the inning’s home-half to stymie the Storm, 7-6.

Foothills Christian (18-11 overall) advances to Wednesday’s second round at second-seeded Mountain Empire, the twotime defending Summit League titlists.

Leading 5-2, the Kngiths were three outs away froma victory, but everything went sideways.

The one-out rally saw Trevor Cchrum get hit by a piytch, followed by singles from “Captain” Jack Morgan and Anthony Garcia to koad the bases.

Then with two down, Grant Canto wa;led on four pitched to force home the game-tying run. Moments later, on a 1-0 pitch, Morgan raced home on on  wild pitch to defeat the City Conference opponent.

Garcia, the right fielder, led the Knights by batting 2-for-3, including a two-run double.

On the mound, Morgan registered 15 strikeouts over his 6.1 innings. Overall,FCHS gained 17 of 21 outs on strikes.

For the Storm (17-7), senior pitcher Neal Griswold and junior first baseman Julian Acevedo both drove in a pair of runs.

— Nick Pellegrino

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