1 | POWER 25 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | AWAY | SCORE | HOME | SCORE | |
3 | Kaukauna | 1 | No. 1 Kimberly | 8 | |
4 | The Papermakers cruised to a 8-1 win backed by some standout performances on both sides of the ball. While we know of Brady Koester's talents on the mound, he was hot at the plate for the Papermakers as he drove in six runs on two home runs to lead the Kimberly offense. Evan Olson and Kale Twombly each recorded multi-hit days as well and Olson would drive in one run, too. On the mound, Brayden Deering notched the win in his 4.1 innings of work, allowing just one run and he also struck out six. | ||||
5 | No. 25 Wisconsin Lutheran | 3 | No. 2 Marquette University | 5 | |
6 | Marquette gave Wisconsin Lutheran their first loss of the season, taking down the Vikings with a 5-3 final score. The Hilltoppers used a plethora of arms to win this one, ending with two shutout innings from Luke Agnew, who struck out three batters in his time on the mound. Agnew was the spark at the plate as well, doubling twice and finishing with a 3-for-4 line. Alongside him was the play of Parker Wyatt and Jack Hardt, who each had multiple hits in the Power 25 matchup, both doubling. Marquette strung together 11 hits as a squad, and held a lead for the second half of the game. | ||||
7 | No. 3 Menomonee Falls | 6 | Sussex Hamilton | 1 | |
8 | The Phoenix notched a win over Sussex Hamilton, courtesy of some free bases late in the game. In the sixth, Menomonee Falls found themselves down by one, but after a single from Dylan Dux, and two HBPs they were threatening. Wilson Kershner would then single to bring home one and Ty Cieslewicz reached base on a error that brought home two more runs. In the seventh, another run was brought home on a wild pitch, and after a walk and HBP, Jordan Hedrick delivered a single to bring home one more. On the mound for the Phoenix was Derek Steinbrenner who was one of the bright spots for this Falls squad. Across his complete game efforts, he scattered just four hits and struck out four, en route to the win. | ||||
9 | Racine Park | 0 | No. 4 Franklin | 10 | |
10 | The Sabers won in dominant fashion in their matchup with Racine Park. Noah Musolf got things started on the mound and was flat-out dominant across his four innings as he allowed just one hit, and struckout 11. Joe Herrick would come in for the final inning of the run-rule shortened game and he did not allow a hit while striking out one. Offensively, Alex Mierow had an impressive day at the plate, recording two hits and three RBIs from the leadoff spot. Dylan Cunningham, Cael Lynch, and Cooper Kamly all doubled in the contest, and Kamlay also drove in a run. | ||||
11 | Burlington | 4 | No. 5 Union Grove | 18 | |
12 | A seven RBI day from Nathan Williams, which included two home runs, led the way for Union Grove in their dominant win over Burlington. Besides Williams, Brady Clark also had an impressive day at the plate recording a double, homerun and a single to drive in two more for Union Grove. Rounding out the offensive efforts for the Broncos was Leo Weist and Braxton Hinds who each singled and doubled and drove in a combined three runs as well. On the mound, Robert Barrera earned the win in his 4.2 innings of work while striking out seven. | ||||
13 | Eau Claire Memorial | 1 | No. 6 Hudson | 3 | |
14 | In a big BRC conference matchup, it was the Hudson Raiders that came out on top. While the offense was slowed down by solid Eau Claire Memorial pitching, Ben Berkhof had their backs on the mound as he twirled a gem across his 4.2 innings of work, allowing just one run on two hits, and striking out nine to earn the win. Bradyn Bezanson relieved Berkhof and earned the 2.1 inning save while striking out three and allowing just one hit. Offensively, Payton Lawrence recorded a single and a RBI. Eli Ramthun tallied the days only XBH, a double, and also scored a run en route to the win. Despite being tasked with the loss, Roman Trapani was solid on the mound for the Old Abes as he held a talented Hudson lineup to three runs on five hits and punched out eight. | ||||
15 | No. 7 River Falls | 11 | New Richmond | 0 | |
16 | No. 7 River Falls | 9 | New Richmond | 0 | |
17 | In game one of this doubleheader, River Falls ace, Keenan Mork twirled an absolute gem. Across his six innings of shutout work, the Notre Dame commit allowed just two hits and struck out a whopping 14 batters to earn the win. Jaren Schwantz relieved Mork and he struck out two in his one inning of work. At the plate, Ben Johnson recorded three hits which included a double, and he drove in one. Caden Mueller also put together a solid day as he singled and doubled to drive in two runs. Teddy Norman and Elijah Baker each recorded two hits and drove in one run apiece in the win as well. Rounding out the offensive efforts for the Wildcats was Austin Curti and Chase McQuade who each singled and drove in a combined three RBIs. Game two went pretty similarly to the previous, as the pitching for River Falls continued to dominant. Eli Condon got things started on the mound and across his five innings of work, he allowed just one hit, and struckout 10 to earn the win. Auden Pankonin and Teddy Norman would each throw an inning of relief and Pankonin would strikeout three and each would hold New Richmond scoreless. Ben Johnson continued his hot streak at the plate as tallied a pair of singles to drive in one, and he also scored two runs as well. Bryce Bevan also singled twice and he too drove in one. Chase McQuade recorded the only XBH of the contest, a double and he drove in two. Teddy Norman, Cayden Mueller, and Zac Cleveland each recorded a single and one RBI to round out the scoring efforts for River Falls. | ||||
18 | No. 8 Arrowhead | 4 | Waukesha North | 0 | |
19 | A four-run seventh would be enough for Arrowhead in their win against Waukesha North. Arik Egerbrecht continued his hot start on the mound for Arrowhead as he scattered just four hits in his six innings of shutout work and he also tallied 13 strikeouts. Brady Carpenter came in for the final inning and notched the save while not allowing a hit, and striking out one. After a HBP and a pair of singles from Connor Olson and Issei Takahashi, Wes Lindee delivered a huge double to left field that cleared the bases, giving Arrowhead a 3-0 lead. Then Sam Vargas came up and recorded a single of his own that brought home Lindee and made the score 4-0. | ||||
20 | No. 9 Janesville Craig | 8 | Beloit Memorial | 0 | |
21 | No. 10 Monona Grove | 5 | Stoughton | 2 | |
22 | The Silver Eagles continued their hot start to the season as they took down Stoughton, 5-2. In the matchup, Nicholas Guidici drove in a team-high two runs on a single. Miles Nelson recorded a double and a single to drive in one run and Mac Vesperman also doubled while also scoring two runs of his own. Rounding out the scoring for Monona Grove was Dom Najacht who singled and drove in one run, en route to the win. On the mound, Noah Schaller got the start and he was impressive as he held Stoughton scoreless across his four innings of work and struckout eight. The aforementioned Najacht earned the save as he recorded the final two outs of the game via the strikeout. | ||||
23 | No. 11 Denmark | 7 | Waupaca | 0 | |
24 | Waupaca | 0 | No. 11 Denmark | 11 | |
25 | Denmark no-hit Waupaca twice on the day. In game one Denmark run ruled Waupaca 11-0 on only 10 hits on offense. Ethan Ovsak got it done on both sides of the ball. On the mound he tossed five no-hit innings on only 58 pitches, walking three and striking out five. Offensively Ovsak went 3-for-4 with two RBIs and four runs. In game two Denmark defeated Waupaca 7-0 as two pitchers combined for the no-hitter across seven innings. Lucas Miller went the first 6.1 innings for Denmark and walked three batters while tallying nine punchouts. Jaycob Dittmer came into the game to record the final out and struck out the last batter of the game. | ||||
26 | No. 12 Oak Creek | 8 | Racine Horlick | 0 | |
27 | Oak Creek shut out Racine Horlick 8-0. Payten Jibben tossed a complete game shutout in 73 pitches, striking out 11 batters only giving up two hits on the day. Offensively Oak Creek scored their first runs in the third inning courtesy of doubles from Nate Schopf and Payten Jibben that drove in two runs on the inning. Oak Creek would score two more in the fourth and four runs in the fifth to finish off the day on offense. | ||||
28 | Dominican | 2 | No. 13 Saint Thomas More | 13 | |
29 | Saint Thomas More took down Dominican 13-2 by run rule in the fifth inning. The Cavaliers offense scored seven runs in the bottom of the second on just four hits and walks during the inning along with some defensive miscues that the Cavaliers were able to capitalize on. The Cavaliers offense would score six more runs in the next two innings bringing their total up to 13 on the day. Elijah Niemiec was on the mound for the Cavaliers and tossed four innings giving up four hits and walks, striking out nine batters on the day. Oliver Gonzalez finished the game tossing one inning allowing two runs on two hits and walks. | ||||
30 | No. 14 Hortonville | 9 | Oshkosh West | 0 | |
31 | Hortonville shut out Oshkosh west 9-0. Nate Vela toed the rubber for the Polar Bears against Oshkosh West and tossed six innings, only giving up three hits and walks, while striking out seven batters. Dylan Schroeder would finish out the game on the mound, tossing one inning and striking out one batter. Offensively the Polar Bears tallied eleven hits on the day. Leading the way was Joe Fischer, Kolden Hunter, Turner Kuhnke and Nathan Grams who had multiple hits on the day. | ||||
32 | Lakeland | 3 | No. 15 Mosinee | 13 | |
33 | Lakeland | 0 | No. 15 Mosinee | 17 | |
34 | Mosinee was dominant in their two wins, outscoring Lakeland 30-3 over the course of the doubleheader. A seven-run fourth inning guided the Indians to a 13-3 run-rule win in Game One. Gavin Obremski, Davin Stoffel, Taylor Lemanski, and Sawyer Holtz all had two hits in this one. Game Two was a similar story, behind the performance of Keagen Jirschele both at the plate and on the mound. Offensively, Jirschele and Lemanski each launched a home run to guide Mosinee to their 17 runs. On the mound, Jirschele twirled a no-hitter in the run-rule victory, striking out seven and only walking two batters. Holtz and Obremski stayed hot at the plate, each contributing three hits. Blake Nichols had two RBIs for the Indians as well. | ||||
35 | No. 17 Sun Prairie West | 4 | Madison West | 5 | |
36 | Sun Prairie West was handed their first loss of the season and in program history, as Madison West upset the Wolves on the final play of the game. With the bases loaded, Nolan Broyzna was hit by a pitch, and won the game for the Regents. He scored two runs, paired with multi-hit games from Tiago Sanchez and Benji Wenkman. Madison West got a key performance from Ryan Schiessel, who held Sun Prairie West to one run over six innings, striking out seven. The Wolves put up three in the seventh to tie it, with the help of a 2-for-2 performance from Casey Wambach, but it was not enough. | ||||
37 | No. 18 Westosha Central | 0 | Waterford | 2 | |
38 | Dylan Questad and Ricky Maerzke combined to no-hit and upset Westosha Central, dominating from start to finish. Questad threw five innings, striking out 11 batters and walking one. Maerzke worked the last two innings, and was flawless, punching out two batters in the process. RBIs from Connor Harvie and Zach Flater was all that the Wolverines needed in this one, as they used their dominant pitching to get their sixth win under their belt. | ||||
39 | No. 19 Sun Prairie East | 13 | Madison La Follette | 1 | |
40 | Sun Prairie East remained undefeated as they took down Madison La Follette on Tuesday. In this run-rule win, Sam Ostrenga, Isaac Wendler, and Drew Kavanaugh all finished with two hits apiece. Wendler had three RBIs and both Ostrenga and Kavanaugh had a double. Three Cardinal pitchers combined to strike out eight batters over five innings of work, including Zach Brzezinski punching out the side in his one inning of relief. | ||||
41 | No. 21 Kenosha Tremper | 2 | Kenosha Indian Trail | 12 | |
42 | Indian Trail handed Tremper their second loss of the season. Offensively, Jack Zeller tallied one hit and three RBIs to lead the scoring efforts for ITA. Gage Finch recorded two hits, a double and single, and drove in two runs. Cade Minatto, Jackson Wilhelmson and Adrian Moyao each logged two-hits and Moyao also drove in two runs from the ninth spot. Sam Callow, Brad Filippis, and Jaylen Almond each tallied a hit and RBI to round out the scoring efforts for ITA. On the mound, the aforementioned Callow was solid across his five innings of work as he held Tremper to two runs on five hits and struck out six to earn the win. | ||||
43 | No. 22 De Pere | 0 | Pulaski | 1 | |
44 | In this marathon of a game, lasting nine innings, Pulaski pulled off the upset against an undefeated De Pere squad that just made their first appearance in our rankings. Kyle Olson had the walk-off single in the ninth inning, driving in the only run of the game. The Cardinals, despite having nine hits, could not get the clutch one to drive in runs. Easton Arendt finished 3-for-5 for them. As for the Red Raiders, Olson was the star, going 3-for-4 on his day. Michael Molthen added two hits as well. The combination of Olson, Braedon Eron, and Michael Wyant were able to shut down De Pere and its offense, which was hot coming into the game. | ||||
45 | Notre Dame | 10 | No. 24 Bay Port | 1 | |
46 | Notre Dame Academy was clicking on all ends of play on Tuesday, as they accumulated 11 hits as a team, and combined to throw a one-hitter to dominate Bay Port. Leading the way offensively was Brady LaViolette, who went 2-for-4 with a home run and five RBIs. Christian Collins also had two hits, including a double, and Donatello Badalamenti added three RBIs. On the mound, Avery Duncan threw a solid 5.2 innings, punching out nine and only allowing one hit. Then, Deuce Musial came on to close it out, going 1.1 innings and striking out two. | ||||
47 | Game Coverage | ||||
48 | Jefferson | 2 | Turner | 6 | |
49 | By. Josh Fields Area Scout Turner defeats Jefferson 6-2 in part to a five run fifth inning. Michael Cook toed the rubber for Turner and tossed 6.1 innings, in which he only allowed two runs against a Jefferson team that had not scored less than eight runs in a game up to this point. The Turner offense turned things on in the fifth inning in which they put up a five-spot during the frame. To start off the inning on offense the first two batters reached on errors and then Konner Giddley bunted for a hit to load the bases. Eric Halon came up and tripled on a fly ball to left field to clear the bases for Turner. Another error put a baserunner on for Turner and a Will Lauterbach ground out and a Mason Hoenig single drove in the last two runs of the inning. Konner Giddley would come on to relieve Cook in the bottom of the seventh inning and record the final two outs for Turner, striking out the two batters he saw to close out the game. Notable Performers: Michael Cook (Beloit Turner) 6.1 IP, 8 H, 2ER, 4 BB, 7 K: 1-3 Konner Giddley (Beloit Turner) 2-4, R: 0.2 IP, 2 K Eric Halon (Beloit Turner) 2-4, 3 RBI, R, 3B, 2 SB Aidan Kammer (Jefferson) 2-4 Tyler Fredrick (Jefferson) 6.2 IP, 8 H, ER, BB, 7 K: 2-4 | ||||
50 | MORE WIAA RESULTS | ||||
51 | Cedarburg | 4 | Port Washington | 5 | |
52 | From Monday, after losing a 4-0 lead in the sixth and seventh inning, Port Washington responded with a walk-off single off of the bat of Bryce Stasik, who drove in Colton Schall and won the game. In addition to Stasik's two-hit day, Nate Uselding was 3-for-3 with a run scored. Sam Hoeft performed well in his start, throwing six innings and only allowing one run, striking out five. Everett King carried Cedarburg's offense in a losing effort, going 4-for-4 with three RBIs. | ||||
53 | Brookfield East | 4 | Germantown | 12 | |
54 | Germantown put up five runs in both the fourth and fifth inning in their matchup against Brookfield East. Alex Pluta and Logan Zaverl each had a pair of hits to lead the offensive attack for the Warhawks, including a double from each of them. Jake Olszewski and Ryan Ferguson each drove in two runs for Germantown in a dominant win. | ||||
55 | Brookfield Academy | 0 | University School | 10 | |
56 | Graham Kasten was dominant for University School in a run-rule victory, striking out 10 batters in only five innings. Vidal Colon, Jason Adix, and Brock Miller all had two hits for the Wildcats, who also took advantage of their speed on the basepaths, stealing seven bases as a team. The six-run fourth inning put this one away. | ||||
57 | Wrightstown | 12 | Clintonville | 1 | |
58 | Clintonville | 9 | Wrightstown | 6 | |
59 | Wrightstown split a doubleheader with Clintonville, taking Game One in dominant fashion. Trevor Vande Hey had a home run and the Tigers had 13 hits as a team to carry them to a victory. Trent Vande Hey had three RBIs, and Avery Leick, Jack Hermann, and Quade Thompson all had two hits. Clintonville flipped the script in Game Two, stringing together 12 hits and outscoring Wrightstown 9-6. Jack Yeager led the way for Clintonville, launching a home run and jump-starting this offense. Yeager, along with Bryce Cartwright, Kolton Barkow, and Blake Weatherwax all had two hits for the Truckers. | ||||
60 | Menasha | 10 | Green Bay East/West | 0 | |
61 | Menasha | 5 | Green Bay East/West | 3 | |
62 | Menasha took both games in a doubleheader against Green Bay East/West, throwing a no-hitter in Game One. Quinn Ludvigsen and Jason Beier threw three innings apiece and shut down the Devilcats, combining to strike out nine batters.Offensively, a home run and a double from Nathan Kurland, along with three hits from Ian Dohms led the attack for the Blue Jays. Game Two was a little tighter, but Menasha managed to hang onto the lead for the entirety of the game. Dohms, who did well on the mound too, had two RBIs at the plate. From the leadoff spot, Ty Carlson was crucial too, going 2-for-2 with a walk, a run scored, and an RBI. | ||||
63 | Appleton West | 4 | Appleton North | 6 | |
64 | Caden Popp performed well on both sides of the field on Tuesday, going 2-for-3 at the plate and throwing six innings in his start. Popp earned the win, striking out four and only allowing one earned run. His offense helped him, as Garrett Hietpas and Alex Ramus each had two hits from the top of the order. William Hoerner added two RBIs with his double. | ||||
65 | Ashwaubenon | 1 | Manitowoc Lincoln | 11 | |
66 | Bryce Erdmann threw a five-inning complete game for Manitowoc Lincoln, taking advantage of the Ships' 11 hits. A lot of production came from the bottom of the order, as Ethan Hubbartt, Gavin Lettenberger, and Evan Vogt each had multi-hit games and drove in runs. Erdmann had two hits of his own, and Manitowoc Lincoln coasted to a run-rule victory after scoring in every inning except for one. | ||||
67 | Mukwonago | 8 | Oconomowoc | 2 | |
68 | After a slow start offensively, Mukwonago exploded for eight runs in two innings near the end of the game. Helping out was Logan Hansen and Roman Sienza from the top of the order, both having multi-hit games. Sienza had three hits, including a double. Walker Powers and Tyler Harvin also chipped in two hits for the Indians. Cael Bertrandt got the win after going 5.2 innings, and kept his team in the game long enough for the offense to heat up. | ||||
69 | Rice Lake | 1 | Chippewa Falls | 12 | |
70 | Chippewa Falls | 5 | Rice Lake | 4 | |
71 | Chippewa Falls remained hot, sweeping Rice Lake in two different types of games. The top of the order, including Grady Frederick, Dawson Goodman, and Jackson Gugel, along with Gavin Thompson from the nine-spot each had multi-hit games. Five runs in the fourth inning, backed by a dominant outing from Easton Bobb, who struck out 16 in 5.2 innings, guided the Cardinals to an victory. Then, in dramatic fashion, Chippewa Falls walked off the Warriors in Game Two, as Liam Brennan had a two-RBI single to right field to drive in the game-winning runs. Gugel and Fredrick both once again had multi-hit games, and the Cardinals pulled out another win on Tuesday. | ||||
72 | Sheboygan Lutheran | 0 | Oostburg | 6 | |
73 | Oostburg improved to 8-0 on the season, taking down Sheboygan Lutheran 6-0. Caleb Salm was dominant on the mound, striking out 10 and scattering two hits and two walks from Sheboygan Lutheran over five innings. Offensively, aside from the two RBIs from Donovan Depagter, the Flying Dutchmen took advantage of the six errors committed by Sheboygan Lutheran on the defensive end. | ||||
74 | Waukesha West | 5 | Catholic Memorial | 15 | |
75 | JT Kelenic blasted a home run, and Catholic Memorial used 10 hits and 11 walks to take down Waukesha West on Tuesday. Keith Williams and Cal Weber stood out on the offensive end, both with multiple hits and RBIs, including four off of the bat of Weber. Max Mullane finished 2-for-3 for the Wolverines in a losing effort. | ||||
76 | Hartford | 3 | Nicolet | 2 | |
77 | Austin Kutz and Hartford went on the road and took down Nicolet with a final score of 3-2. Kutz threw a complete game, holding Nicolet to only two runs, striking out eight and only walking one. RJ Thomae, Ethan Birkel, and Carter Kutz all had RBIs. Curtis Rodriguez was the table-setter, going 2-for-3 with two runs scored from the nine-spot, doubling as well. | ||||
78 | Pewaukee | 3 | New Berlin West | 5 | |
79 | New Berlin West took down Pewaukee, backed by a solid outing from Tyler Hewitt, and six defensive errors from the Pirates. Hewitt threw six innings, striking out 11, holding down a potent Pewaukee offense and keeping his team in the game. His offense took advantage, as Myles Rewolinski, Ben Miller, and Jaxon Weise all had multi-hit games to lead the way for the Vikings. For the Pirates, Logan Schill and Josh Bunyer each had two hits. | ||||
80 | Pius XI Catholic | 3 | New Berlin Eisenhower | 9 | |
81 | New Berlin Eisenhower got their fourth win of the season, taking down Pius XI 9-3. Charlie Cefalu and Jack Bretzmann had multiple hits for the Lions in the middle of their order, leading the way offensively. Sam Hirthe and Cefalu each struck out six batters in their appearances, including Cefalu doing so in 2.1 innings, holding down the Popes. | ||||
82 | Columbus | 0 | Lake Mills | 2 | |
83 | Lake Mills handed Columbus their first loss of the season, as Eddy Eveland twirled a three-hitter, striking out nine and only walking two. He gave up zero runs, and all the L-Cats needed was two hits from Caden Belling and a couple of RBIs scattered throughout their lineup to upset the Cardinals. | ||||
84 | Madison Memorial | 8 | Janesville Parker | 2 | |
85 | A home run from Noah Latham-Woodruff and 11 hits from Madison Memorial guided them to an 8-2 win over Janesville Parker. Along with Latham-Woodruff, Andrew Allen, Reid Adams, and Cashton Jones each chipped in two hits. The Spartans got a lead early on and never looked back from there, getting their fifth win of the season. | ||||
86 | Waukesha South | 4 | Muskego | 5 | |
87 | Brock Lulewicz had the walk-off triple to end this one, after Waukesha South tied it at 4-4 heading into the bottom of the seventh. Ian Rintelman scored the winning run, after getting his second hit of the day. Ben Kuglitsch had two RBIs for the Warriors, along with Ashton Kampa, who finished with an RBI and a double. For Waukesha South, Tannis Lange struck out 13 batters over 5.1 innings of work, and Brandon Dable ended his day by going 2-for-3. | ||||
88 | Iowa-Grant | 9 | Mineral Point | 10 | |
89 | In an eight-inning shootout, Mineral Point came out on top via a walk off single from Finley. Brendan Lynch, Luke Kisgen, and Jaiden Galle all had quality days at the plate, getting two hits apiece. Kisgen had a home run in this one, as Mineral Point pulled out a close win. For Iowa-Grant, Alex Popple was 2-for-3 in a losing effort. | ||||
90 | West Allis Hale | 0 | Brookfield Central | 10 | |
91 | Brookfield Central was dominant in their win against West Allis Hale, run-ruling the Huskies in five innings. Charlie DiPiazza was not retired, going 3-for-3 with an RBI. Aren Robinson and Hunter Szymborski each had two hits for the Lancers. Robinson finished with a double and two RBIs. On the bump, Noah Dreier and Jack Brand combined to throw five shutout innings, including three flawless innings from Dreier to start the game. | ||||
92 | Milwaukee Lutheran | 0 | Greenfield | 20 | |
93 | Parker Meifert and Ryan Graf combined to shutout Milwaukee Lutheran on Tuesday and combined to strikeout five. Offensivley, Niko Vega and and Evan Alms each tallied three hits. Brett Goggins smacked a RBI triple in the win as well. | ||||
94 | Durand-Arkansaw | 8 | Boyceville | 16 | |
95 | Rhinelander | 4 | Northland Pines | 2 | |
96 | Rhinelander | 9 | Northland Pines | 2 | |
97 | Ladysmith | 2 | Saint Croix Falls | 9 | |
98 | Ladysmith | 0 | Saint Croix Falls | 13 | |
99 | Wausaukee | 5 | Lena | 15 | |
100 | Wayland Academy | 0 | Montello | 6 | |
101 | Badger | 4 | Delavan-Darien | 2 | |
102 | Bonduel | 0 | Shiocton | 10 | |
103 | Cedar Grove-Belgium | 2 | Random Lake | 3 | |
104 | Coleman | 22 | Gillett/Suring | 0 | |
105 | Cuba City | 6 | Darlington | 3 | |
106 | Eau Claire North | 14 | Menomonie | 7 | |
107 | Elkhart Lake-Glenbeulah | 2 | Kohler/Christian | 6 | |
108 | Elkhorn | 2 | Wilmot | 5 | |
109 | Faith Christian | 0 | St. Augustine Prep | 13 | |
110 | Fox Valley Lutheran | 12 | Marinette | 11 | |
111 | Freedom | 12 | Oconto Falls | 4 | |
112 | Oconto Falls | 2 | Freedom | 3 | |
113 | Green Bay Southwest | 6 | Sheboygan South | 3 | |
114 | Iola-Scandinavia | 5 | Weyauwega-Fremont | 3 | |
115 | Kenosha Christian Life | 10 | Saint Francis | 8 | |
116 | Kenosha St. Joseph | 7 | Martin Luther | 2 | |
117 | Kewaunee | 18 | Sturgeon Bay | 0 | |
118 | Lake Country Lutheran | 30 | Heritage Christian | 1 | |
119 | Little Chute | 7 | Luxemburg-Casco | 6 | |
120 | Living Word Lutheran | 11 | Saint John's NW | 1 | |
121 | Marshfield | 2 | Wausau West | 0 | |
122 | Menominee Indian | 0 | Marion | 15 | |
123 | Neenah | 9 | Appleton East | 5 | |
124 | New Holstein | 15 | Roncalli | 2 | |
125 | Niagara | 5 | Crivitz | 10 | |
126 | Oshkosh North | 7 | Fond du Lac | 11 | |
127 | Pacelli | 6 | Rosholt | 2 | |
128 | Pittsville | 10 | Almond-Bancroft | 0 | |
129 | Poynette | 13 | Watertown Luther Prep | 10 | |
130 | Racine Case | 6 | Kenosha Bradford/Reuther | 7 | |
131 | Racine St. Catherine's | 8 | Catholic Central | 9 | |
132 | Reedsville | 14 | Ozaukee | 2 | |
133 | Riverdale | 11 | Boscobel | 8 | |
134 | Sheboygan Falls | 11 | Valders | 1 | |
135 | Sheboygan North | 1 | Green Bay Preble | 4 | |
136 | Shoreland Lutheran | 15 | Racine Lutheran/Prairie | 12 | |
137 | St. Mary Catholic | 16 | Mishicot | 4 | |
138 | Tigerton | 2 | Wild Rose | 10 | |
139 | Two Rivers | 0 | Chilton | 5 | |
140 | Wausau East | 0 | D.C. Everest | 9 | |
141 | Wauwatosa West | 4 | Wauwatosa East | 24 | |
142 | West Allis Central | 5 | Greendale | 22 | |
143 | Wisconsin Rapids | 12 | Merrill | 2 | |
144 | Xavier | 7 | Seymour | 0 | |
145 | Cloquet | 4 | Superior | 3 | |
146 | St. Thomas Aquinas | 4 | Bowler | 14 | |
147 | Big Foot | 0 | Edgerton | 10 | |
148 | Brodhead/Juda | 5 | East Troy | 6 | |
149 | Evansville | 3 | McFarland | 4 | |
150 | Kettle Moraine Lutheran | 8 | Plymouth | 3 | |
151 | Milwaukee King | 7 | Cudahy | 6 | |
152 | Waupun | 13 | Berlin | 2 | |
153 | Whitewater | 1 | Clinton | 13 | |
154 | Winneconne | 10 | Ripon | 14 | |
155 | Altoona | 8 | Osceola | 5 | |
156 | Amery | 3 | Ellsworth | 16 | |
157 | Ashland | 4 | Spooner | 2 | |
158 | Augusta | 4 | Bloomer | 11 | |
159 | Baraboo | 10 | Portage | 2 | |
160 | Beaver Dam | 0 | DeForest | 10 | |
161 | Belleville | 7 | Cambridge | 9 | |
162 | Cameron | 14 | Barron | 2 | |
163 | Dodgeville | 6 | River Valley | 4 | |
164 | Edgewood | 14 | Monroe | 2 | |
165 | Elk Mound | 10 | Colfax | 2 | |
166 | Fort Atkinson | 7 | Milton | 2 | |
167 | Hayward | 3 | Cumberland | 4 | |
168 | Johnson Creek | 14 | Markesan | 3 | |
169 | Lakeside Lutheran | 0 | Lodi | 5 | |
170 | Lourdes Academy/VC | 3 | Green Lake/Princeton | 13 | |
171 | Marshall | 7 | New Glarus | 5 | |
172 | Mayville | 3 | Horicon | 4 | |
173 | Monticello/Albany | 0 | Pecatonica | 12 | |
174 | Mount Horeb | 4 | Oregon | 3 | |
175 | North Fond du Lac | 0 | Laconia | 16 | |
176 | Northwestern | 14 | Chetek-Weyerhaeuser | 0 | |
177 | Northwood/Solon Springs | 15 | Bruce | 1 | |
178 | Potosi/Cassville | 13 | Shullsburg/Benton | 0 | |
179 | Birchwood/Winter | 7 | Prairie Farm | 4 | |
180 | River Ridge | 0 | Belmont | 10 | |
181 | Saint Croix Central | 8 | Prescott | 0 | |
182 | Prescott | 6 | Saint Croix Central | 8 | |
183 | Siren | 5 | Grantsburg | 6 | |
184 | Somerset | 7 | Baldwin-Woodville | 7 | |
185 | Baldwin-Woodville | 7 | Somerset | 4 | |
186 | Saint Mary's Springs | 7 | Campbellsport | 3 | |
187 | Clayton/Turtle Lake | 4 | Unity | 0 | |
188 | Watertown | 2 | Waunakee | 8 | |
189 | Westfield | 6 | Wautoma | 3 | |
190 | Madison East | 0 | Middleton | 10 | |
191 | Kewaunee | 10 | Sturgeon Bay | 0 | |
192 | Ladysmith | 0 | Saint Croix Falls | 13 | |
193 | New Auburn | 2 | Clear Lake | 23 | |
194 | Wayland Academy | 10 | Montello | 2 | |
195 | Ellsworth | 10 | Amery | 2 | |
196 | Green Lake/Princeton | 2 | Lourdes Academy/VC | 4 |