3 minute read
SPORTS
from 6.3.21
‘Game Changer’ Plummer was a difference-maker for Hoover’s girls track team Page 26
OTM soccer players turn in noteworthy performances leading their teams to a state title Page 27
Thursday, June 3, 2021 ❖ OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL
Hoover’s bid for the AHSAA Class 7A title ended with a one-run loss to Auburn in the deciding third game on May 20 at Riverwalk Stadium.
Hoover Baseball Title Quest Falls Short, but Coach Moseley Still Proud of Team’s Accomplishments
Hoover mounted a rally when Lucas Steele, above, led off the seventh inning with a triple and scored on Carter Short’s one-out single.
By RuBin E. GRant
Hoover baseball coach Adam Moseley sounded more upbeat than disappointed a few days after the Bucs’ quest for the AHSAA Class 7A title ended with a one-run loss in the deciding third game.
The Bucs had scored twice and had the bases loaded with two outs in the top of the seventh inning, but Auburn reliever Ryan Olson struck out ‘A long time Hoover’s Cade Carr to preserve the Tigers’ 7-6 victory and clinch the school’s fourth state title. from now, what
Hoover was denied its first title since 2017 we’ll talk about after a remarkable run in the state playoffs. “It was an especially gratifying season,” is the run they Moseley said. “I tell people all the time that I wish made. I loved they could have spent one day in our dugout because this was an amazing and fun group to be being around around.” them.’ Coming into the season, Moseley expected to have a team capable of making a run at the Class 7A title, even though the Bucs lost 13 seniors, including several who are now playing in college, ADAM MOSELEY, HOOVER BASEBALL COACH off their 2020 team that had its season cut short because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Bucs stumbled to a 3-9 start to begin this season.
“It was one of those things where we had so many inexperienced play-
Striking Change
Indian Springs’ Nabors Excels After Switching Positions, Leads Boys Soccer Team to a State Championship
By RuBin E. GRant
Indian Springs boys soccer coach Rik Tozzi considers junior forward Jackson Nabors his surrogate son.
That’s because Nabors has grown up with Tozzi’s son Nathan, a junior midfielder, and the two are like brothers.
Tozzi also is good friends with Nabors’ parents, especially his dad, Jason Nabors.
Their close relationship is why Tozzi went to the Nabors and convinced them that Jackson, who just happens to be 6-foot-8, should change positions on the Indian Springs soccer team this year.
“For his entire life, Jackson had been a defender,” Tozzi said. “But I told them that Jackson was a striker. Just look at his athleticism, the way he runs, his fluid motions, his foot work and the way he controls the ball. I told them he should be playing up top.”
Tozzi’s sales job worked. Jackson Nabors moved to forward this season and the results were better than even Tozzi imagined.
Nabors scored 53 goals and had 23 assists, leading Indian Springs to a 24-2-1 record and the AHSAA Class 4A-5A state championship.
He was especially dominant and impressive in Indian Springs’ two games in the state tournament May 6-7. He assisted on both of Indian Springs’ goals in a 2-0 semifinal victory over Montgomery Academy and scored both goals in a 2-0 victory over Russellville in the championship game, preventing the Tigers (19-1) from completing an undefeated season.
Nabors was named the tournament MVP, but he credited his teammates.
“I don’t even know what to say,” Nabors said See NABORS, page 27