
Western Michigan-bound Liliana Janeczko leads Lockport as field general in state semifinals. ‘Unbelievably proud.'
PEORIA — She could have pouted. But she supported her teammates instead.
She could have folded, especially after an injury. But she healed, watched and learned, and eagerly embraced a glorious opportunity.
Lockport catcher Liliana Janeczko is having a remarkable senior season. She will be remembered as the field general on the first team for the Porters to bring home a state trophy since 2004.
The Western Michigan commit is pretty proud of that.
'Unbelievably proud,' Janeczko said. 'After the things I went through, I'm just so happy with myself for getting through them and not giving up during the hard times that I've had.'
Janeczko smiled as she and her teammates found solace in hugs following Friday's tough 1-0 loss in 10 innings to Barrington in a Class 4A semifinal game at the Louisville Slugger Sports Complex.
Colgate recruit Kelcie McGraw had two hits and struck out nine for the Porters (31-10), who will play Oak Park-River Forest at 2 p.m. Saturday in the third-place game. Alexis Vander Tuuk added a pair of hits.
Janeczko gave Lockport a chance to walk it off against Barrington (35-3-1) in the bottom of the ninth when she doubled with one out. Junior right-hander Katie Taraschewsky was able to wriggle out of it, though, by getting a fly out and a lineout.
They were oh-so close.
'I was so excited about that hit,' Janeczko said. 'I have been in a little bit of a slump, and I know I'm better than that. I have high expectations.'
Janeczko's journey during her high school career has been a tough one. Before her sophomore season, she underwent shoulder surgery.
'I was at a camp at Wisconsin,' Janeczko said. 'I dove and tore my labrum and dislocated my right shoulder.'
Janeczko came back strong as a junior, but Northern Kentucky recruit Brooke Keltner was in her senior season as a standout behind the plate.
Lockport coach Marissa Chovanec used Janeczko primarily as a designated hitter and runner. But Janeczko never stopped believing. And when she graduated, Keltner offered some encouraging words.
'At the end of last year, she told me, 'You've got this — it's nothing new for you,'' Janezcko said. 'We've been been catching since we were little. She told me to do what I do and it'll turn out great.'
Those words came true.
Janeczko entered the weekend hitting .328. She has 10 doubles and 27 RBIs.
'Liliana has done a great job for us behind the plate,' Chovanec said. 'She is a fighter and she loves the game. She has caught every inning of every game for us this season.
'We've had some really great catchers the last few years, and Liliana has done a fantastic job. I'm a catcher at heart, so any time I get one like Liliana, I relish it.'
The battery of Janeczko and McGraw have taken Lockport on an incredible playoff run. Even with Friday's setback, opponents have yet to score an earned run.
It seemed like they jelled quickly in Janeczko's lone varsity season, but their ties go way back.
'I'm so grateful I got to be here with her,' Janeczko said of McGraw. 'We've known each other since we were 5 years old and played on the same travel team for a while.
'It's crazy that we got to grow up together and be here together.'
Janeczko is also the catcher for McGraw during her pitching lessons.
'Liliana is a great leader on the field,' McGraw said. 'She is always there picking people up. And she is always there to keep me on my game.
'We have such a good bond that it helps pitching and catching. It's great to have.'

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Chicago Tribune
2 days ago
- Chicago Tribune
‘Better and better': Oswego's Jaelynn Anthony is the 2025 Beacon-News/Courier-News Softball Player of the Year.
Junior pitcher Jaelynn Anthony has come a long way and so has Oswego in softball, with players getting measured this week for state championship rings. It's no coincidence. The first time coach Paul Netzel saw Anthony three years ago at tryouts, he thought he had found a pretty good varsity candidate in the freshman right-hander. What he didn't see right away, however, was the complete player the outgoing youngster with the strong arm and ever-present smile would become. 'We were split on whether to bring her up,' Netzel said of his coaching staff. 'We knew we needed another pitcher we could use in the rotation to back up (sophomore) Aubriella Garza.' Netzel, a retired teacher who had coached a number of sports at various levels in high schools and colleges since 1967, felt confident Anthony could handle that role and made the call. Anthony also played in the infield. 'Then, all of a sudden, she started hitting,' Netzel said. 'I remember a home run at Geneva, a real blast, and all the kids were doing that 'she's a freshman' chant in the dugout. 'We were amazed as anyone about her hitting.' Indeed, her .483 batting average this season pushed her career mark to .409. Still, the Panthers primarily relied on stellar work in the circle by the Purdue-bound Anthony — the 2025 Beacon-News/Courier-News Softball Player of the Year — to win the Class 4A state title. Anthony set the program record for wins in a season, going 22-1 with a 1.55 ERA and 193 strikeouts in 139 2/3 innings as Oswego (38-2) won its first state title after taking third last spring. Unfinished business has been completed, led by Anthony in the team's 7-0 run to the title. 'She just keeps getting better and better,' said Annie Scaramuzzi, an Oswego alum who came aboard last season as pitching coach and then became the program's co-coach with Netzel. 'Jaelynn plays better in big games.' None were bigger than Oswego's seven postseason games. Anthony pitched all 48 innings and gave up just 23 hits and 16 walks for an excellent .812 WHIP, which is walks and hits per inning. She struck out 70 and allowed just five runs for a 0.70 ERA. She relied on a fastball that one radar gun had her topping out at a personal-best 72 mph in the state championship game against Barrington, along with a change-up, curve and rise. 'Last year she was dominant — this year even more so,' Scaramuzzi said 'This year, she really gained confidence after having done it last year. She wanted to go out and have fun.' Anthony, who also holds the program's career record for wins with 47, was especially impressive in three wins during the final week. It started Monday when she carried a no-hitter into the seventh inning of a 5-1 win over Marist, finishing with a one-hitter. She followed with a 13-2 rout in six innings over Oak Park-River Forest in Friday's semifinal and a four-hitter in a 4-1 win over Barrington in Saturday's final, both complete games. Anthony, who had two doubles and three RBIs in the semifinals, knows it's not just her, though. 'Jaelynn's quick to acknowledge she has a great offense backing her up along with a standout defense doing the same,' Scaramuzzi said. 'That stage in Peoria, there's a lot of pressure. 'It's why we emphasized so much work on our middle infield defense this season.' Anthony has taken pitching lessons from St. Charles-based Jill Waldron since she was 12. 'She's always positive and has a strong work ethic,' Waldron said. 'She's never not focused but always giddy. She laughs at her mistakes but instantly flips a switch and goes to work to fix them.' And here's a scary proposition for opponents. Anthony believes there's room for improvement. 'I've been trying to learn a drop ball and a drop curve,' she said. Even though Oswego has to replace six seniors from 10 starters, including the designated player, Anthony likes the Panthers' chances again. 'We will be back,' she said. 'It will definitely be tough, but we're gonna come back and win.'


Indianapolis Star
7 days ago
- Indianapolis Star
He thought his error was a season-ender... Then he scored winning run to send team to state final
MOORESVILLE – Evansville North left fielder Tyler Land seized the opportunity to atone for what looked like a season-ending mistake late Saturday night during the Class 4A semistate championship game against Center Grove. Land dropped a seventh inning fly ball from Grady Grant, allowing the runner to advance to second base. Grant moved to third on a wild pitch, putting the winning run 90 feet from home. Reliever Conner Watson got the Huskies out of the jam, forcing extra innings, but Land's redemption arc was not complete. Land led off the ninth inning with a single. Jake Wilke's double moved him to third, and Land came home on a wild pitch, scoring the eventual winning run and sending the Huskies to a 2-1 victory over the Trojans. Evansville North (25-8) advances to face Valparaiso (25-5) in the Class 4A championship game Saturday at Victory Field. "I was down, my head was down coming into the dugout and coach (Jeremy) Jones told me to keep my head up," Land said after his late-game error. "All my teammates had my back. They just said, 'flush it'. It didn't hurt the team, nothing to hang my head about, it was in the past." Overcoming Land's error was just one of the heroic efforts Evansville North used to hold off Center Grove. A walk and an error put a runner on third with no outs in the bottom of the eighth. With runners on the corners and one out, the Huskies moved their center fielder Mason Renfro to the infield, playing with just two outfielders to prevent anything on the ground from getting through. Reliever A.J. Baggett forced two fly ball outs, both to Land, ending the inning and setting up the Huskies' winning run in the ninth. "We talk a lot about culture and heart, and more than anything else — we don't kill the baseball, our defense is OK, pitching is pretty good, but more than anything else — we have heart," Jones said. "Ty made the mistake but we told him, 'That's OK.' For him to come up and hit that missile up the middle, I'm so proud of him." Land finished 2-for-4 with one RBI and one run scored. Daniel Cranick and Carson Conley added two hits each. Evansville North's ability to produce with runners in scoring position was something Center Grove failed to do all night. The Trojans left 12 runners on base and had just one hit with runners in scoring position. Carson Bush drove in Center Grove's lone run with an RBI single in the fifth. Evansville North starter Braden Perry, Watson and Baggett allowed just five hits and one earned run over nine innings. Kellen Thomson pitched five scoreless innings for Center Grove. Andrew Murphy took the loss, allowing one run and two hits over four innings, striking out five. "It's demoralizing," Center Grove coach Keith Hatfield said of the inability to score with runners in scoring position. "Six times we left two guys on, that's not normally what we do. ... To go through that and leave as many guys on base as we did, that's not characteristic." Heading to Victory Field puts Evansville North one win away from completing a Cinderella season. The Huskies started the season 2-2, pulled out three close wins before losing to Evansville Memorial 11-1. Evansville North went just 5-4 in the Southern Indiana Conference, but the Huskies caught fire when it mattered most and are heading to the championship game on a seven-game win streak. "It's never the same guy. It could be our 15th guy on the bench, it doesn't matter," Jones said. "These guys believe in each other, they love each other, they're truly a family. And I'm so proud of them."


Chicago Tribune
7 days ago
- Chicago Tribune
Six Oswego seniors start out in softball as Outlaws. They end up as Class 4A state champions. ‘Just so grateful.'
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