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Chase Meyer can't stay away from baseball. Not for long, anyway.
The Dallastown senior was itching to get back on the mound for one more year. Last season, Meyer had forgone his junior campaign with the Wildcats to take a hiatus and focus on other sports. The longer he spent away from the team, however, the more he felt an urge to go back.
That year away only fueled his need.
Time passed, and the itch returned. Meyer missed playing for the Wildcats, he missed the culture and he missed playing baseball alongside his brother Carson, who's also in Dallastown's pitching rotation.
"I overplayed the sport too much in the summer, and I just lost the love for it," Meyer said. "Then I realized, outside of the sport itself, the culture here and the family is just amazing. I have a lot of brothers here that I love playing with, so I had to come back after last year."
Meyer didn't skip a beat Friday afternoon. In a cross-division bout with New Oxford, Meyer threw a one-hit shutout to guide the Wildcats to their seventh straight win.
Kennard-Dale vs. Susquehannock softball: Ashenfelter, Wetzel combine for 25 strikeouts in pitchers' duel
YAIAA Top Performers: Here are the top performances in the YAIAA for April 6-11
If there was any rust in his game, Meyer didn't show it. He struck out seven batters, gave up two walks and wrapped his seven-inning stint in 89 pitches. The only hit he gave up came in the first inning, when New Oxford's Gavin Haifley notched a leadoff single. After that, Meyer hit a groove. He'd eased back into the season after going four innings against Susquehannock on March 31. But Friday was his first complete game of the season.
"My slider was a great out pitch after the fastball," Meyer said. "I also learned how to throw a splitter a few days ago, so I incorporated that too and it was working. I only threw five or six, but I got four outs on them. You can't ask for anything more than that."
While Meyer worked away on the mound, Dallastown padded the lead. It scored all four of its runs in the third inning, spurred on after Peyton Seitz-Gemmill drove in Max Howard on a line drive single. With those four runs of support, Meyer settled in on the mound and closed the afternoon out.
Meyer's dominance through his senior year has provided a further boost to an already stacked Wildcats rotation. Dallastown has held all but one of its opponents under three runs through its first 10 games, and each of its pitchers has an ERA of 2.63 or less. Four of those pitchers have at least 14 strikeouts.
"We have a lot of arms, and we have confidence in those guys," Dallastown coach Greg Kinneman said. "I think certainly pitching and defense has been our mojo."
Kinneman knows the utility of having such a strong pitching rotation. Many of the Wildcats' wins were driven by whichever pitcher got the nod that afternoon. Meyer's performance Friday was a sample of that depth. Dallastown's pitchers have four combined shutouts on the year. Meyer hasn't missed a beat since his year off, and the rest of the Wildcats' rotation hasn't slacked either.
"At the end of the day, if we can pitch and defend, we have a chance to win every day," Kinneman said. "We want to score more runs and we showed a glimpse of that today. The third inning was fantastic, we just need to continue to build on that."
This article originally appeared on York Daily Record: Chase Meyer's return to Dallastown baseball bolstered pitching depth
Continue reading...
The Dallastown senior was itching to get back on the mound for one more year. Last season, Meyer had forgone his junior campaign with the Wildcats to take a hiatus and focus on other sports. The longer he spent away from the team, however, the more he felt an urge to go back.
That year away only fueled his need.
Time passed, and the itch returned. Meyer missed playing for the Wildcats, he missed the culture and he missed playing baseball alongside his brother Carson, who's also in Dallastown's pitching rotation.
"I overplayed the sport too much in the summer, and I just lost the love for it," Meyer said. "Then I realized, outside of the sport itself, the culture here and the family is just amazing. I have a lot of brothers here that I love playing with, so I had to come back after last year."
Meyer didn't skip a beat Friday afternoon. In a cross-division bout with New Oxford, Meyer threw a one-hit shutout to guide the Wildcats to their seventh straight win.
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Kennard-Dale vs. Susquehannock softball: Ashenfelter, Wetzel combine for 25 strikeouts in pitchers' duel
YAIAA Top Performers: Here are the top performances in the YAIAA for April 6-11
If there was any rust in his game, Meyer didn't show it. He struck out seven batters, gave up two walks and wrapped his seven-inning stint in 89 pitches. The only hit he gave up came in the first inning, when New Oxford's Gavin Haifley notched a leadoff single. After that, Meyer hit a groove. He'd eased back into the season after going four innings against Susquehannock on March 31. But Friday was his first complete game of the season.
"My slider was a great out pitch after the fastball," Meyer said. "I also learned how to throw a splitter a few days ago, so I incorporated that too and it was working. I only threw five or six, but I got four outs on them. You can't ask for anything more than that."
While Meyer worked away on the mound, Dallastown padded the lead. It scored all four of its runs in the third inning, spurred on after Peyton Seitz-Gemmill drove in Max Howard on a line drive single. With those four runs of support, Meyer settled in on the mound and closed the afternoon out.
Meyer's dominance through his senior year has provided a further boost to an already stacked Wildcats rotation. Dallastown has held all but one of its opponents under three runs through its first 10 games, and each of its pitchers has an ERA of 2.63 or less. Four of those pitchers have at least 14 strikeouts.
"We have a lot of arms, and we have confidence in those guys," Dallastown coach Greg Kinneman said. "I think certainly pitching and defense has been our mojo."
Kinneman knows the utility of having such a strong pitching rotation. Many of the Wildcats' wins were driven by whichever pitcher got the nod that afternoon. Meyer's performance Friday was a sample of that depth. Dallastown's pitchers have four combined shutouts on the year. Meyer hasn't missed a beat since his year off, and the rest of the Wildcats' rotation hasn't slacked either.
"At the end of the day, if we can pitch and defend, we have a chance to win every day," Kinneman said. "We want to score more runs and we showed a glimpse of that today. The third inning was fantastic, we just need to continue to build on that."
This article originally appeared on York Daily Record: Chase Meyer's return to Dallastown baseball bolstered pitching depth
Continue reading...