
Grace Riggs, a sophomore who doesn't play travel or club, gets job done for Waubonsie Valley. ‘Working so hard.'
In an era of nearly universal specialization for high school athletes, Waubonsie Valley's Grace Riggs is definitely old school, but the sophomore second baseman is getting the job done.
Riggs, who's very good defensively, is batting ninth for a second straight year on varsity. She doesn't, however, play summer travel or fill winter weekends working out in the batting cage.
'I like having my free time and not having all that traveling,' said Riggs, who seems to realize it could come at a cost. 'I started off bad this season, I think, because I don't play outside of this.
'I hadn't hit in a while before coming back.'
By Thursday, yet another bone-chilling, windy spring day in Aurora for the Warriors' DuPage Valley Conference matchup at neighboring rival Metea Valley, that was hard to tell.
Riggs looked to be in midseason form, emerging as the star of the game at the plate and in the field during a remarkable 8-7 come-from-behind victory for Waubonsie Valley.
Ssenior pitcher Charlie Benesh was cruising with a 7-0 lead on a one-hitter through four innings for Metea Valley (2-8, 0-1), but Riggs produced singles in a three-run fifth and one-run sixth.
She then came up with the game-winning hit for the Warriors (4-2, 1-0) with a two-run, two-out single in the top of the seventh that capped off a four-run rally.
'I just knew I had to hit it,' Riggs said. 'I like to open my shoulders, so I had to make sure to keep my shoulder in and hit it. I was just trying to get it in play.
'I guess I just got used to her pitching. I had been looking for change-ups, but she didn't throw as many as last year, so I was just going up looking for strikes.'
It made a winner of senior right-hander Samantha Wiertelak, who pitched the final three innings and gave up no runs and no hits in relief of freshman starter Molly Quinn.
Sophomore outfielder Dezirae Kelly added a two-run double for Waubonsie. Benesh notched an RBI triple and senior catcher Sydney Eakin had a two-run double and three RBIs for Metea.
'She's been working so hard with her hitting,' Waubonsie coach Valerie Wood said of Riggs. 'I know that's been a point of contention with her. She's been working on her confidence, and (Thursday) kind of solidified that.
'I told her it was gonna come because at that point we had played only two games and everyone was struggling. We've worked a lot with the whole team on mentally just getting over things and stepping back. It showed — she had a heckuva game.'
Only three of Waubonsie's runs were earned and just two of Metea's runs were earned, although Riggs handled nine total chances without an error.
She did bobble one of two seventh-inning grounders but scooped it up in time to sophomore shortstop Aislee Morgan for a force-out. She also snared a line drive and stepped on second for an unassisted double play in the second inning.
'We talk a lot about finishing the play and that's always our focus,' Wood said. 'It transferred over (Thursday), and Grace didn't give up on the bobbled ball and could have easily enough.
'She stuck with it and got the out. Grace and Aislee are best friends and work well together.'
The 5-foot-7 Riggs also plays volleyball and was an outside hitter last season for the school's sophomore team. She doesn't play club in volleyball, either.
Whether that continues for both sports remains to be seen.
'My mom's always saying, 'Other people play outside and you don't and don't get as much practice, so it's good you've been doing as well as you are,' Riggs said.

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Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
‘There's really no stopping' Creighton commit Ava Drehs, the 2025 Naperville Sun Softball Player of the Year
Ava Drehs had recently moved from Aurora to Naperville when she and her father, Wayne, started exploring their new environs. She was about to begin first grade when she first saw Neuqua Valley. 'I had just started softball, so I wanted to see the schools,' Drehs said. 'Me and my dad drove past the Neuqua fields, and it was like, 'Oh, look at the awesome softball field.' 'I thought, 'Wow, if I could play softball for Neuqua, that would be amazing. It would be so cool if I could even make the varsity team one day.'' Drehs not only made the varsity team. She made history. 'She's amazing,' Neuqua Valley coach Danielle Asquini said. 'She's just gotten better every school year, and you can see that in her stats and the success that she's had. 'It's been amazing to watch her, and we're definitely going to miss it.' Drehs, the 2025 Naperville Sun Softball Player of the Year, was better than ever this season. The senior pitcher went 16-6 with a 1.54 earned-run average and a 0.87 WHIP for the DuPage Valley Conference champion Wildcats (17-15, 12-3). In 154 1/3 innings, Drehs struck out 278 and walked just 27. The Creighton recruit broke her single-season program record for strikeouts and also set the career strikeout mark with 670. Those records had been held by Hannah Meeks, who was the player of the year in 2021 and 2022 and pitches at Illinois State. 'She was super talented, and when she was a senior, I was a freshman, so I always looked up to her,' Drehs said. 'So to be able to know that I competed with the records that she held means a lot.' Drehs, the DuPage Valley Conference pitcher of the year and an all-state second-team pick, competed hard every time she played, never easing up. 'Ava is always ready to go and up for a challenge,' Asquini said. 'Even in relief, she's warmed up and ready. We can exchange a glance and know that her time might be coming. 'She is so excited, so hyped up every single time she's stepping in the circle.' Drehs didn't only overpower hitters. She also outsmarted them. 'Something that's really special about Ava is that she's constantly adjusting,' Neuqua Valley senior catcher Krista Waldusky said. 'So if she sees they're gonna chase that outside pitch, then she's like, 'I'm gonna push them further and further and further off the plate. I'm not gonna give them a good pitch to swing at because I know that they're gonna chase it.' 'If the first rise ball doesn't really break as much as she'd like it to, the next one will. She is constantly making those adjustments to make herself the hardest pitcher to hit.' Drehs did it with pinpoint control. She never walked more than two batters in any outing, so if she got ahead in the count, hitters always seemed to chase. Drehs is always chasing greatness by thinking ahead. 'This year, one big example of that is in our regional semifinal game against Oswego East,' she said. 'We won, but I wasn't really proud of the way I pitched. I feel like they were making a lot of contact, and I wasn't too happy about it 'So before our next game, I talked to coach, and we figured out some adjustments. When I brought that to Krista, I said, 'Look, I think we should try this.'' Drehs broke out a two-seam fastball and pitched a six-hitter with no earned runs in the Wildcats' 6-0 loss to Oswego, which won the state title on June 14. 'I had seven strikeouts, and five of them were on that new pitch,' Drehs said. 'So we're constantly adjusting what we're doing. It's never the same.' Indeed, Drehs is never standing still. She knows she will have to improve at Creighton, and Asquini doesn't doubt she will. 'As she gets older, I think she's going to get stronger,' Asquini said. 'That's what she wants, and when someone is as motivated as she is, there's really no stopping her at that point.' Drehs will major in elementary education and wants to return to Naperville as a first grade teacher. It would be a full-circle moment for someone who may already have inspired someone who could try to break her records. Drehs' sister Zoe, who will begin sixth grade in the fall, plays softball and soccer. 'I'm so excited,' Drehs said. 'I've always wanted to be a teacher. I have a little sister who is seven years younger than me, and I used to prop her up on chairs and teach her like we were in school.'


Chicago Tribune
08-06-2025
- Chicago Tribune
Sophomore Shane Torres takes control behind plate for Waubonsie Valley. But he can hit, too. ‘Irreplaceable for us.'
Shane Torres, who caught 25 games on the varsity as a freshman last spring, has been an anchor defensively for Waubonsie Valley throughout its surprising playoff run. And that's not a shock. Pitching has been key for the Warriors, but what happens behind the plate is just as important. 'He's one of the best there is,' Waubonsie coach Bryan Acevedo said of Torres. 'I truly believe that. He's able to handle all of our different pitchers and block everything in the dirt. 'We can have confidence we can throw anything in any count. Even with a guy on third base, we know it's not getting by him. And this year, he's added the offense. He's irreplaceable for us.' High praise, especially for a sophomore like Torres. And he was at it again Saturday. Torres handled a gem thrown by senior right-hander Nick Lambert as the 10th-seeded Warriors upset Downers Grove North 5-0 in the Class 4A Lockport Sectional final at Ed Flink Field. The 5-foot-10, 190-pound Torres, who bats left-handed, also led the offense for surging Waubonsie (23-12) with two singles, a walk and two RBIs. 'He does an amazing job,' said Lambert, who did likewise in pitching a five-hitter with three strikeouts and no walks on just 75 pitches. 'He's a good framer, good blocker. 'He keeps the run game down, which really helps.' The Warriors also had just five hits, but took advantage of seven walks issued by three pitchers for the top-seeded Trojans (30-8), who didn't help their cause with three errors. Waubonsie didn't make an error behind Lambert, who followed up the first-rate effort in the semifinals by ace Owen Roberts. 'Nick has been unbelievable for us on the mound this year,' Acevedo said. 'He's gotten better every single time out. He threw some last year, and we talked in the offseason. He asked what he had to do to be in the rotation. 'I said, 'You're stuff has to be a little sharper,' and, jeez, did he do that. Owen gets a lot of notoriety, but Nick has been equally good. We play good defense behind him and find ways to score runs. It's special.' Last season, Waubonsie lost 3-2 to Downers Grove North in the sectional final on a walk-off homer in the seventh. Lambert, who last week pitched the Warriors to the regional title, didn't pitch that game in 2024 but still remembered. 'It gave me a little confidence,' Lambert said of winning the regional. 'But I did come in here pretty nervous. I try to work quick, throw strikes, let them put the ball in play and trust my defense.' Lambert finished it in style for the Warriors — who play Monday at 6 p.m. in the Illinois Wesleyan Supersectional against Normal Community (35-4), a 10-8 winner over O'Fallon — by fielding a comeback grounder and running it to first base himself. That clinched the program's first sectional title since Michael Bowden, who went on to play for the Chicago Cubs, led Waubonsie to the Class AA quarterfinals in 2005. 'We came in understanding we're playing with a little house money,' Acevedo said. 'We're not supposed to be here and that's helped us play loose. Having been here last year helped, too.' Senior right fielder Josh Hung also drove in two runs with a sacrifice fly and single. Roberts, playing second base, scored twice after reaching base three times. Torres, an academic all-conference pick who uses a wide stance at the plate that he developed on his own, said Waubonsie's approach was to be patient and not chase. And it worked out well. 'For me, it's a case of more simple, less movement,' Torres said. 'There's less head movement which helps me see the ball better.' Torres had a narrow stance with a huge leg kick in eighth grade. 'It didn't really work well, so I simplified it and came by it myself,' he said. 'With two strikes, I'd widen up a little bit and I'd hit better, so I thought, 'Why don't I just stay there?'' Little wonder his coach said of Torres, 'He's special.'


Chicago Tribune
06-06-2025
- Chicago Tribune
Hiroshy Wong chips in as Indiana State recruit Owen Roberts does it all for Waubonsie Valley. ‘Anything to help.'
Welcome to the club, dude. That's what Waubonsie Valley's Hiroshy Wong, approached Thursday by a reporter for a postgame interview, seemed to be thinking as he flashed a knowing smile when the first question focused on the performance of Indiana State-bound pitcher Owen Roberts. Of course it was. Wong, a senior third baseman and the team's leading hitter Thursday, was once again up close to to witness another standout performance by the senior ace and hard-throwing right-hander. 'He's very confident in the first place,' said Wong, who was brought up to the varsity for the final four games of his freshman season and has started since his sophomore year. 'He knows what he has to do and he also knows, as a defense, we're going to make plays for him to make it easy. 'Owen is always very good. He's always throwing strikes and trying to get the quick innings.' That held true again Thursday night as 10th seeded Waubonsie Valley cruised to a 4-1 upset of the second-seeded hosts Porters in a Class 4A Lockport Sectional semifinal at Ed Flink Field. The pitching and hitting of Roberts led the way for the Warriors (22-12), who advanced to play at 11 a.m. Saturday against Downers Grove North (30-7) in a rematch of last year's sectional final, won 3-2 by the Trojans on a walk-off home run in the seventh. Roberts, meanwhile, carried a no-hitter into the fifth inning and handcuffed the Porters (24-14) on two hits with seven strikeouts and two walks. He hit one batter. 'We give him the ball at the beginning and tell him we'll get it back at the end of the game,' Waubonsie coach Bryan Acevedo said. 'That's what he's done for two years now. 'He's been really special for us. Any time he's on the mound, we've got an opportunity to win.' Roberts (8-2), who went 10-0 last season, also is the team's No. 2 hitter. He drew a walk and singled and scored twice as the Warriors took a 3-0 lead after three innings. Wong, who bats third and leads the team with a .390 average, was in the thick of those rallies, advancing Roberts with two of his three singles. In the seventh, Roberts gave himself some insurance with his second home run of the season, clearing the left field fence and doinking the ball off the scoreboard beyond it. 'That felt good to get it over the fence,' Roberts said. 'We came out a little slow this season, but we're starting to find our identity. Our pitching has been great all year. 'We're scrapping a few runs together and the defense has been amazing.' That was evident from the start, when junior left fielder Aidan Kornak ranged far to his right and made a sliding catch on the first Lockport hitter. Wong went far to his left, charging a slow grounder past the mound in the sixth and throwing the batter out, ending up on the right side of the infield. 'I have pretty good range,' Wong said. 'I've actually been moving around. I play second and third base and also play in the outfield, too. Anything to help my team. 'I'm mainly a utility guy. I play everything.' He also upped his career hit total to 125, five short of the program record of 130 held by former major leaguer Michael Bowden. Lockport coach Scott Malinowski said Roberts, who needed only 90 pitches, was as good as his team has seen. 'He throws hard, but what separates him from most hard throwers at this level is he fills up the strike zone,' Mallinowski said. 'There were a lot of short at-bats and short innings. It's why he was easily able to go a complete game.' On top of that, Acevedo pointed out that the Warriors have come around, going 9-1 in their last 10 games after being 13-11 when seeding took place. 'All the pressure has been on the other teams since we're the 10th seed,' Wong said. 'We were looking forward to getting a rematch with Downers Grove. We're playing good baseball now. 'We just started doing all the little things right and aren't making those little mistakes.'