Two big milestones for T Statman (4/20)

Two big milestones for T Statman (4/20)

Apr 21, 2015 by Brentt Eads
Two big milestones for T Statman (4/20)
The Horizon team gathers on the field. Photo by Manny Rodriquez.
The Horizon team gathers on the field. Photo by Manny Rodriquez.

As we previewed early Monday morning and expected would happen, All-American pitcher T Statman hit the 1,000 career strikeout mark in a home game at Scottsdale (Ariz.) Horizon and also pitched her team to a 6-3 victory over Boulder Creek, giving her 80 wins in her prep career.

T is only the third pitcher ever in high school history to reach the 1,000 K mark from 43 feet…

Not a bad day’s work!

Here’s strikeout #1000!

… and the ensuing on-field celebration!


Also, here’s a nice article written by Les Willsey of AZPreps365 which recaps the big day for the Arizona senior and her team:

SOFTBALL: T STATMAN GETS 1,000TH K, HORIZON TRIMS BOULDER CREEK

April 20, 2015 — BY LES WILLSEY, AIA365

The parental urging early in T Statman’s softball career at Horizon consisted of the terms “spins and spots”. A constant reminder from the bleachers by her father to help with her pitching and focus. Parental advice as strikeout No. 1,000 drew close on Monday was “Take a deep breath.”

T Statman gets 1000KStatman wasted little time in collecting that milestone 1,000th K Monday afternoon. It took her and the Lady Huskies a bit longer to secure a 6-3 victory over Boulder Creek in a Division I softball game between certain postseason contenders at Horizon.

Statman, the mainstay in the circle for Horizon the past four years, needed three strikeouts vs. Boulder Creek to reach 1,000. She fanned the first two hitters in the top of the first — looking and swinging, respectively. That was it for the first inning, but four pitches into the second inning Statman rang up cleanup hitter Aubrey Ledbetter looking for the nice, round number.

The game was stopped briefly to recognize Statman’s feat as the first pitcher in Arizona to fan 1,000 hitters since the pitching rubber was moved back from 40 feet to 43 feet.

She was surrounded in the circle by teammates and coach Jackie Coburn, who took the ball that got No. 1,000 to the dugout for a keepsake. Teammates then offered a brief, echoing chant of T Stat, T Stat, T Stat, T Stat.

Statman also is only the third high school softball pitcher nationally to record 1,000 strikeouts from 43 feet since the distance was changed five to six years ago depending on the state.

“I wanted both outs and strikeouts, but at the beginning I was looking for strikeouts,” Statman, who is headed to the Univ. of Arizona in the fall with softball and academic prowess in tow, said. “It feels awesome to get that many. But the thing about strikeouts is if you don’t win the game, they don’t help much. It is super cool because of the change (40-to 43). That’s really changed the game a lot.”

T Statman gets 80 career winsStatman’s win was the 80th of her career in which she’s averaged 1.5 strikeouts per inning pitched.

“Getting that many strikeouts wasn’t a blip in my mind,” Statman said when she first entered the circle for Horizon in the 2011-2012 season. “It’s something that just happened.”

Statman went the distance, finishing with 10 strikeouts. She allowed six hits and trailed briefly 2-0 after giving up only one hit the first three innings. That hit was a sharp, two-run single up the middle by Boulder Creek’s Hunter Raum in the third.

An error and hit batter were the runners that scored on Raum’s hit. Raum drove in all three runs, adding an RBI single in the fifth that left Horizon with a 4-3 lead.

Horizon had trouble scoring runs early despite an abundance of hits. The Lady Huskies squeezed out two runs in their half of the third on a double by Jordan Wehr that tied the game. Horizon had nine hits after three innings.

Senior catcher Kaila Jacobi (left) and senior shortstop Jenna Beeso (right) have also been on varsity for four years with T. All are team captains. Photo courtesy of David Statman.
Senior catcher Kaila Jacobi (left) and senior shortstop Jenna Beeso (right) have also been on varsity for four years with T. All are team captains. Photo courtesy of David Statman.

Horizon nabbed the lead for good in the fourth with a two-out, two-run double by Jenna Beeso. Beeso added her third and fourth RBI of the game in the sixth with a single. Horizon finished with 16 hits — three each for Beeso, Wehr and Kaila Jacobi and two apiece for Gabby Moreno, Statman, and Chebsie Oden.

Boulder Creek was No. .9 in the D-I power-rankings released Monday morning and Horizon was No. 12. Boulder Creek is now 16-8 overall and 8-6 in power-ranking games. Horizon is 20-6 overall and 10-3 in power-ranking games.

Ten power-ranking wins is usually enough to qualify a team for postseason. The Lady Huskies have five games left to improve and try to move in to the top 8. Top-8 finish allows for a first-round tournament bye and second-round home game.

Boulder Creek has four games remaining.