August 17, 2025

ALWS Game 9: Louisiana hands Virginia 1st loss of tournament

By Richard Walker
Baseball
News
Kade Bryant of Bossier City, La, Post 202 runs to third during Game 9 of the 2025 American Legion World Series. Photo by Chet Strange
Kade Bryant of Bossier City, La, Post 202 runs to third during Game 9 of the 2025 American Legion World Series. Photo by Chet Strange

Bossier City Post 202’s win in Sunday’s opening game kept them alive for a semifinal berth.

It’s rare that a team celebrates its first loss in the American Legion World Series.

But knowing that tiebreaker implications could be on the line entering its Sunday morning pool play finale, Chesapeake (Va.) Post 280 did celebrate after its 4-3 loss to Bossier City (La.) Post 202.

It’s because Chesapeake entered knowing it needed to allow four or less runs to ensure it would advance to Monday’s semifinals.

“If you’re going to lose a game, this was the only way that you want to lose,” said Chesapeake head coach Larry Bowles, whose team was the tournament’s last unbeaten.

Bossier City strengthened its tiebreaker position with the victory but won’t be assured of becoming the second team of the Stripes Division to advance to the semifinals of the eight-team event until after Sunday’s finale matching Asheville (N.C.) Post 70 against Greece (N.Y.) Post 468.

“We worked out the math and knew where we stood coming in,” Bossier City head coach Dane Peavy said. “So if something happens and we don’t get in, it just wasn’t meant to be.

“My guys played extremely hard and did what we set out to do.”

Bossier City (26-4) did so with a strong start from veteran right-hander Brody Bower and by answering every Chesapeake challenge.

Bower, soon to be a sophomore at Bossier Parish (La.) Community College, went 6 1/3 innings with eight strikeouts before being relieved after he reached the maximum 105-pitch limit. Reliever Gavin Brint retired two straight batters on four pitches for the save.

“You can’t say enough about Bower,” Bowles said of Bossier City’s pitcher. “He battled and did a great job. And my guy (Colin Lebel) was right there with him.”

Lebel threw a five-hitter with two strikeouts but was undone by fielding errors in the third and fifth innings that provided Bossier City with what proved to be the decisive runs.

Griffin Sibley (2 hits) and Cole Snell (2-run home run) led Bossier City’s offense and Keegan Haesler (2 hits, 1 RBI), Wes Stubbe (2 hits, 1 RBI) and Ben Kablach (solo home run) led Chesapeake’s offense.

Chesapeake (25-4) will become only the eighth Virginia team to finish in the final four of the ALWS; others were in 1950 (Richmond, 4th place), 1959 Hampton (runner-up), 1962 Hampton (4th), 1981 Richmond (runner-up), 1985 Midlothian (champion), 2006 Midlothian (3rd) and 2008 South Richmond (3rd).

“This doesn’t happen very often,” Bowles said. “So it’s special.”

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