Michael Cesar and the Juneau-Douglas High School baseball team celebrates their state championship win in Anchorage. (Michael Dinneen | For Juneau Empire)

Michael Cesar and the Juneau-Douglas High School baseball team celebrates their state championship win in Anchorage. (Michael Dinneen | For Juneau Empire)

JDHS baseball captures state title

Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly identified a Juneau-Douglas hitter in the fifth inning as Garrett Bryant. The hitter was Riley Griffin. The article has been updated to reflect the change.

With the game on the line in the last inning, the Juneau-Douglas High School baseball team had just who they wanted coming to the plate.

Senior Luke Mallinger — who had accounted for both the team’s RBIs already — could give the Crimson Bears their first lead of the game with another one.

Mallinger grounded the ball up the middle of the infield and just past the mitt of a diving Reid Brock. Sliding safely into home plate was Michael Cesar, who jumped in the air in celebration, foreshadowing a much bigger celebration a half inning later as JDHS defeated South Anchorage High School 3-2 to capture the ASAA state baseball championship Saturday evening at Mulcahy Stadium in Anchorage.

“When I was on second base and Luke hit that ball and I finally touched home plate I just jumped up and I was so happy,” Cesar said. “We’re all happy and we’re all enjoying it.”

Mallinger went 2-2 with three RBIs and senior Kasey Watts went 2-2 at the plate to lead JDHS.

“I’ll remember this for the rest of my life,” Mallinger said. “The moment when we all threw our mitts in the air and threw our hats and all piled up, that was so much emotion and so much happiness. Definitely remember that for the rest of my life.”

Watts pitched six innings, allowed two runs on two hits while walking six and striking out three. Senior Donavin McCurley pitched the final inning, allowing no hits, walking one and striking out another.

Junior Jacob Woodall pitched a complete game for the Wolverines, surrendering three runs on eight hits.

Facing Woodall in the first inning, JDHS appeared ready to jump out to an early lead, something they had done in their prior two tournament games. Woodall struck out Erik Kelly, though, to strand all three runners.

The Wolverines then took advantage of two uncharacteristic Crimson Bears errors in the bottom half of the inning.

With a runner on first and one out, Watts’ pickoff attempt of Lion Lincoln at first base escaped Kelly’s glove and Lincoln advanced to third base.

The Crimson Bears made another error moments later as Woodell’s pop-up to shallow left field fell through the glove of the left fielder, allowing Lincoln to score from third.

“We brought the team in, we talked about it for a little bit and then we flushed it and went back out and played our ball,” Cesar said of the errors.

Mallinger would answer back in the third inning, hitting an RBI double to right field to tie the game.

Lincoln’s opportunistic base running resulted in another run in the bottom half of the third. After advancing to third base on a wild pitch, Lincoln came home on another wild pitch.

Watts said he didn’t let the miscues demoralize him.

“I think last year I would’ve melt down and probably threw the game for us,” Watts said. “But new year, new me. I know I had a goal stepping on that mound and that was winning the game and not let anyone get to me.”

The Wolverines weren’t immune to wild pitches either, as JDHS made a charge in the fifth inning to tie the game.

Jacob Dale led off the inning with his first hit of the game. Cesar’s hit to left field advanced Dale to second base.

Watts took ball one before Woodall’s second pitch flew high over the catcher to the backstop, allowing both Dale and Cesar to advance. Woodall intentionally walked Watts as the Wolverines hoped to get Mallinger to hit into a double play. Instead, Mallinger’s sacrifice fly scored Dale to tie the game.

A close play at first base prevented the Crimson Bears from taking the lead.

With two outs and runners on second and third, third baseman Terren Sugita fielded a tough grounder. The throw was high and pulled first baseman Chase Subitch off the base for a moment and the umpire called Riley Griffin safe at first base. However, after further discussion among the umpires, the call was reversed and Griffin was called out. Now, instead of the Crimson Bears taking a 3-2 lead with runners on the corners, the score remained tied and the inning came to a close.

The Wolverines’ hitting waned over the next few innings as Watts and the JDHS infield made quick outs.

The Alaska School Activities Activities Association began sanctioning the state baseball tournament in 2000. JDHS quickly established statewide dominance through the first 13 years of the tournament, appearing in over half of the state championship games.

JDHS won state titles in 2002, 2003, 2008, 2010 and 2012. But in the last six seasons, South Anchorage has run the show. After winning their first state championship in 2011, the Wolverines appeared in six of the next seven state championship games, winning it all again in 2013 and 2016.

“When the bracket first came out and we saw that South was on the other side of it, we knew right away if we were going to make it to the championship game it was going to be against South and we wanted it to be against South,” Cesar said. “To win a state championship, you want to play the best to know that you’re the best and we finally pulled through.”

The Wolverines knocked the Crimson Bears out of the tournament both in 2015 and 2017.

“I think it means a lot to our seniors to know that we finally got this team and we showed them what Juneau-Douglas baseball is all about,” Watts added.

It was the first state championship for JDHS coach Chad Bentz, a former player.

“It was a really special year with a really special group of seniors, I’m really going to miss them big-time,” Bentz said. “Not just the talent … they’ve been playing together since they were kids and I don’t see any better way for them to go out.”

Alaska high school baseball champions

2018: Juneau-Douglas (South Anchorage)

2017: Sitka (South Anchorage)

2016: South Anchorage (Chugiak)

2015: Chugiak (South Anchorage)

2014: Sitka (South Anchorage)

2013: South Anchorage (Service)

2012: Juneau-Douglas (Ketchikan)

2011: South Anchorage (Dimond)

2010: Juneau-Douglas (Dimond)

2009: Dimond (Chugiak)

2008: Juneau-Douglas (Sitka)

2007: Sitka (Juneau-Douglas)

2006: Sitka (Chugiak)

2005: Sitka (Homer)

2004: Kodiak (Chugiak)

2003: Juneau-Douglas (Bartlett)

2002: Juneau-Douglas (Lathrop)

2001: Service (Wasilla)

2000: East Anchorage (Juneau-Douglas)


• Contact sports reporter Nolin Ainsworth at 523-2272 or nainsworth@juneauempire.com. Follow Empire Sports on Twitter at @akempiresports.


A pig pile for Juneau-Douglas High School pitcher Kasey Watts. The Crimson Bears won the ASAA state baseball championships over South Anchorage 3-2 on Saturday. (Michael Dinneen | For the Juneau Empire)

A pig pile for Juneau-Douglas High School pitcher Kasey Watts. The Crimson Bears won the ASAA state baseball championships over South Anchorage 3-2 on Saturday. (Michael Dinneen | For the Juneau Empire)

Juneau-Douglas High School pitcher Kasey Watts pitched six innings in the ASAA state baseball championship game. JDHS won 3-2 over South Anchorage. (Michael Dinneen | For the Juneau Empire)

Juneau-Douglas High School pitcher Kasey Watts pitched six innings in the ASAA state baseball championship game. JDHS won 3-2 over South Anchorage. (Michael Dinneen | For the Juneau Empire)

Juneau-Douglas High School baseball player Erik Kelly cheers his team on from the dugout during the ASAA state championship game Saturday. (Michael Dinneen | For the Juneau Empire)

Juneau-Douglas High School baseball player Erik Kelly cheers his team on from the dugout during the ASAA state championship game Saturday. (Michael Dinneen | For the Juneau Empire)

More in Sports

La Perouse Glacier in Southeast Alaska retreats from a campsite in summer 2021. (Photo by Ned Rozell)
Alaska Science Forum: Number of Alaska glaciers is everchanging

A glaciologist once wrote that the number of glaciers in Alaska “is… Continue reading

An outdoor basketball hoop is seen in Bethel in October 2022. Alaskans will be able to play only on sports teams that match their gender at birth through college if a new bill becomes law. (Photo by Claire Stremple)
Alaska House committee advances, expands proposal to bar trans girls from girls sports

Bill adds elementary, middle school and collegiate sports to limits in place for high school.

Utah’s Alissa Pili, right, poses for a photo with WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert after being selected eighth overall by the Minnesota Lynx during the first round of the WNBA basketball draft on Monday in New York. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger)
Alaska’s Alissa Pili selected by Minnesota Lynx as eighth pick in WNBA Draft

Two-time All-American is fifth Alaskan to be drafted, third to go in the top 10.

Pseudoscorpions are very small predators of springtails and mites. (Photo by Bob Armstrong)
On the Trails: Intertidal explorations

A bit of exploration of the rocky intertidal zone near Shaman Island… Continue reading

The author’s wife fights a steelhead while the author contemplates fly selection. (Photo by Jeff Lund)
I Went to the Woods: The fear of missing fish

Student: “You know, FOMO, the Fear Of Missing Out” Me: “I know… Continue reading

Astrophysicists Lindsay Glesener, left, and Sabrina Savage enjoy the sunshine on an observation deck at the Neil Davis Science Center on a hilltop at Poker Flat Research Range north of Fairbanks. (Photo by Ned Rozell)
Alaska Science Forum: Waiting for the sun at Poker Flat

POKER FLAT RESEARCH RANGE — Under a bluebird sky and perched above… Continue reading

Maddy Fortunato, a Chickaloon middle school student, sets to attempt the one-hand reach by touching a suspended ball while remaining balanced on the other hand during the Traditional Games on Sunday at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Striving for the perfect balance of competition, camaraderie at seventh annual Traditional Games

More than 250 participants pursue personal goals while helping others during Indigenous events.

Purple mountain saxifrage blooms on cliffs along Perseverance Trail in early April. (Photo by Pam Bergeson)
On the Trails: Flowers and their visitors

Flowers influence their visitors in several ways. Visitors may be attracted by… Continue reading

Elias Lowell, 15, balances his way to the end of the pond during the annual Slush Cup at Eaglecrest Ski Area on Sunday, the last day of what officials called and up-and-down season. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Up-and-down season at Eaglecrest ends on splashy note with Slush Cup

Ski area’s annual beach party features ice-filled water, snowy shores and showboating skimmers.

Most Read