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STANDISH — Sam Dexter stood in center field at Larry Mahaney Diamond and did something he’d never done with a baseball before. He signed it.

“That’s a first, man,” Dexter, Messalonskee High School’s shortstop, said. “But it’s a first state championship.”

Actually, it was the second baseball state championship for the Eagles, but the first in Class A, and the first since winning Class B in 1973. At St. Joseph’s College on Saturday afternoon, Messalonskee beat Scarborough 6-3. The Eagles capitalized on seven Scarborough errors, scoring no earned runs.

“We made 11 errors in 16 games,” Scarborough (17-3) coach Mike Coutts said. “It’s just one of those things.”

The Eagles (15-5) won the same way they the closed the season with a 10-game win streak: Clutch hitting, strong pitching, and by making defensive gems.

“From the get-go, it’s been really solid defense,” Messalonskee coach Ray Bernier said.

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Right fielder Reid Nutter chased down a pair of fly balls, one to the foul pole in the sixth inning, and one in foul territory for the first out of the seventh inning. Freshman catcher Trevor Gettig recorded the game’s final out by snagging a high pop foul to the screen, and the Eagles infield turned a pair of double plays.

It was the second double play that fans will talk about for years. After Devin Warren walked Sam Terry to open the bottom of the fifth inning, Scarborough’s Greg Viola hit a ground ball that appeared headed to left field for a base hit.

Dexter dove to stop the ball, then fired a perfect throw to his younger brother Jake Dexter at second base for one out. Jake “Boomer” Dexter turned and made the throw to Nick Mayo at first for the double play, ending the Red Storm’s threat.

“I saw the hops that (Scarborough shortstop Joe) Cronin was getting. I was trying to stay back a little bit, keep my eye on the ball, and the rest is really history,” Sam Dexter said. “Boom made a good throw on the feed.”

Added Bernier: “I’ve had Sammy for four years, and he does things you normally don’t see from a high school ballplayer.”

Messalonskee’s defense helped Warren, a sophomore, settle down after Scarborough scored a run in the first and a run in the second to take a 2-0 lead.

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“Our defense is so good,” said Warren, who allowed three hits, walked five and struck out five before Jake Dexter came on in relief with one out in the seventh inning. “Sam, on one of those plays, it’s crazy. That’s him. That’s the nature of Sam. I knew I had the stuff all year, and these guys are no different than any team. They’re just boys like us, and that helped calm me down.”

Scarborough starting pitcher Ben Greenberg was perfect for three innings, before Jake Dexter led off the fourth with a sharp single to left field. Travis St. Pierre and Nutter also had singles in the fourth, but three Scarborough errors led to four unearned runs.

“We all know that we can have that one inning where we can bust it out,” Sam Dexter said. “That second time around, we knew what he had. He didn’t throw a lot offspeed. We knew we’d jump on the fastball…. We didn’t panic. Boomer did a great job leading off with that hit. Put the ball in play, and good things happen.”

Messalonskee added two more runs in the sixth, and again, the common denominator was three Scarborough errors. St. Pierre, Warren and Nutter hit consecutive singles to start the inning, but the Red Storm threw the ball around, all the Eagles to advanced and scored.

Scarborough scored one run in the bottom of the seventh. Nick Bagley led off with a double down the left field line, went to third when Nutter caught a ball in foul territory in right, and scored on Terry’s goundout back to the mound.

 

Travis Lazarczyk — 861-9242

[email protected]

 

Travis Lazarczyk has covered sports for the Portland Press Herald since 2021. A Vermont native, he graduated from the University of Maine in 1995 with a BA in English. After a few years working as a sports...

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