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Thursday, May 14, 2026
The White Lake Mirror

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Montague baseball splits with Ludington, two wins away from a conference title

MONTAGUE — While Montague didn't get the sweep it was hoping for in Tuesday's clash with Ludington, the Wildcats remained in position to win at least a share of the West Michigan Conference Lakes title by rallying to win game two 6-4 to salvage a split.
"Hats off to Ludington," Montague coach Jeff Moss said. "They came ready. We made quite a few costly mistakes in Game 1, and Ludington made us pay for them...Happy we regrouped and got the split."
Both teams entered the day unbeaten in WMC Lakes play, so both teams were battling for pole position in the league. The Wildcats (19-5, 9-1 WMC Lakes) must sweep last-place Orchard View next week in order to secure at least a share of the title, while Ludington faces Oakridge looking to lock up its share.
Having lost game one 13-9, Montague appeared to be in deep trouble going into the sixth inning of game two, down 4-0 and in danger of letting its chances of a conference crown slip away. However, the Wildcats' middle-of-the-order bats came through in the clutch to get the team close, and Levi Auger, the No. 9 hitter, slashed a two-run double into center field to bring across the winning run.
Fletcher Thommen opened the inning with a single, and Cole Moss ripped a run-scoring double to get his team on the board. He scored on a Cole Herremans groundout, and Dylan Bailey delivered a bunt single to score another run. That set up Auger for the big-time hit.
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Montague's Eli Petersen tries to tag out Ludington's Brody Kaminski at third base during Tuesday's doubleheader at Montague. The teams split the two games.
The 'Cats added an insurance run in the seventh. Thommen again led off with a single, and Moss followed with another single. A walk to Herremans loaded the bases and Chase Kurtzhal delivered a sacrifice fly to push across another run.
Eli Petersen, who battled hard on the mound all day, then retired the side in order to lock up the win. He allowed three earned runs on seven hits and struck out five.
"I told the guys, game two was a must win to keep our chances to win or share the conference title," coach Moss said of his between-games message. "It took us a while to get going, but we found our way...Now we need some help from Oakridge, and we need to take care of business with OV to win it outright. It’s a long season and we just need to continue on what we can control."
Thommen, Moss and Bailey's two hits each led the Wildcat offense in game two.
The O's never allowed Montague to get comfortable in game one, ripping off nine runs in the first three innings and answering every Wildcat rally. Cooper Bradley and Karter Johnson each had three hits and Moss and Auger had two apiece, but the Oriole offense battered Montague for 15 hits, all but two of them coming from four players.
With the game two win, however, the Wildcats remain in position to reach their goal, and with a potential district battle with North Muskegon looming, the team feels good about the work it's done so far.
"I'm so proud of this team and the progress we have made since March," coach Moss said.