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Ignacio's Stoney White Thunder-Lucero pitches during his long-relief stint Friday morning, March 27, in the Bobcats' first of two season-opening games at Monte Vista.
Ignacio's Ambrose Valdez tags – the umpire ruled it wasn't in time – Monte Vista's Azariah Hurtado (1) on an unexpectedly-close play at second base Friday afternoon, March 27, during the teams' second of two games at MVHS.
Ignacio's William Mendoza-Lechuga (5) cracks a single Friday morning, March 27, at Monte Vista for the Bobcats' first hit of the 2026 season.
Ignacio Baseball head coach Isiah Valdez makes sure of his batting order prior to the Bobcats' season-opening doubleheader Friday morning, March 27, at Monte Vista.
Photo Credit: Joel Priest | Special to the Drum
Photo Credit: Joel Priest | Special to the Drum
Photo Credit: Joel Priest | Special to the Drum
Photo Credit: Joel Priest | Special to the Drum
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Bobcats lose first two to Pirates


IHS starts ’26 with losses in Monte Vista 

Ending a wait of more than a month, Ignacio at last got the 2026 baseball season underway Friday morning, March 27, but didn’t do so against some cupcake of an opponent. 

And though able to reach base frequently in Monte Vista, the Bobcats couldn’t convert enough baserunners into scoreboard runs and ended up falling 14-4 (in five innings) and 9-2 to the Pirates – ranked third in the CHSAANow.com Preseason Class 2A Coaches’ Poll, but either No. 1 or 2 in CHSAA’s Selection & Seeding Index prior to sweeping the doubleheader. 

“I don’t think these guys are just a league-championship contender; I think they’re a State contender,” IHS head coach Isiah Valdez said afterwards. “And we came out, had some first-game jitters, committed some uncharacteristic errors – we don’t usually do that; we pride ourselves on defense – but we battled back in Game 2. Kept it close and struck first.” 

“That’s just knowing our worth right now and trying to keep rolling … as consistently as we can,” said senior third baseman/centerfielder Sonny Flores, who went 2-for-3 with two runs in Game 1 and 3-for-3 with an RBI in Game 2. “They were better than us, but we can compete and gave them a good run.” 

Making his long-awaited debut after recovering from a serious football-season injury, senior catcher Gabe Archuleta led off Game 2 singling MVHS left-hander Judah Howe’s first pitch into center, then took second when junior William Mendoza-Lechuga shot a grounder which third baseman Landon Sanchez couldn’t handle. Senior Stoney White Thunder-Lucero, however, then grounded to Sanchez, who not only forced Archuleta at the hot corner but then fired across the diamond to also collect White Thunder-Lucero. 

But senior shortstop Ambrose Valdez then lifted a double to center, scoring Mendoza-Lechuga, then came around via a Flores single into right, putting Ignacio up 2-0. Valdez then turned a 6-3 double play off Pirate senior catcher Chayse Bouet’s bat, and senior CF/1B Azariah Hurtado then flew out to Flores – solidifying IHS’ early advantage and giving freshman lefty Stephen Romero, whose arm angles varied between three-quarter and full sidearm, even more confidence in his first-ever start. 

But after fellow freshman Zackariah Loudenburg was stranded at first base in the top of the second, Monte Vista rediscovered first-game form and, powered by Sanchez’s bases-clearing double over leftfielder Loudenburg, went up 5-2. Junior Jakoby Ross then ripped a two-RBI double in the bottom of the third, increasing the locals’ lead to 7-2. 

Having bounced into a 4-3 DP in the top of the fourth, Romero (L; 4 IP, 7 R, 7 ER, 2 BB, HB) began the bottom of the inning freezing MVHS senior shortstop/designated hitter Kelby Mondragon with a 2-2 fastball for his first varsity-level strikeout, and later got Hurtado to line out to Valdez and strand courtesy runner Connor Mellott at second after Bouet doubled to left with two away. 

Bouet singled home both Mondragon and leadoff man Kobe Jiron with two gone in the Pirates’ sixth, and Howe (7 IP, 7 H, 2 R, ER, 0 BB, HB, 4 K) allowed nothing to come of sophomore Joseph Atencio’s lead single in the Bobcats’ seventh in polishing off his complete-game W and improving Monte Vista’s record to 5-0 overall (0-0 2A Southern Peaks). 

Also a lefty, Jiron earned the Game 1 win at Adrian M. Guitterez Memorial Field by dealing four frames and conceding four runs while scattering nine hits. He walked three ’Cats and struck out two while plunking none. Tagged for three runs in the bottom of the first inning and a fast four – two via a Hurtado triple to left, and another via Manny Jiron’s ground-rule double over the fence in left-center – in the second without recording an out, Archuleta (IP, 4 H, 4 BB, HB, K) took the season-opening loss. 

Lefty White Thunder-Lucero came in to finish the second stanza, but gave up three more runs as MVHS led 10-0 going into the top of the third – when Ignacio got an RBI-double (plating Flores) from Mendoza-Lechuga, an RBI-groundout (scoring Archuleta) from White Thunder-Lucero and an infield RBI-single (driving in Mendoza-Lechuga) by Valdez. 

Howe (2-3, HBP, 2 R) and Ross (2-3, SAC-FLY) each booked four RBI in the ten-run victory, with Ross clinching it by singling Howe in from second with zero outs in the home half of the fifth. Hurtado went 3-4 with two runs and as many RBI, while Bouet and Manny Jiron each scored three runs. 

Designated hitter Michael Hensley went 2-2 with a double and a run, but in the bottom of the fourth became a double-play victim at home plate after Romero, playing centerfield, caught Kobe Jiron’s one-out fly off White Thunder-Lucero (3 IP, 9 H, 7 R, BB, K) and fired the ball in to catcher Archuleta, who applied the tag to a decelerating, surprised Hensley. 

Archuleta and Mendoza-Lechuga each went 2-3 with a run in defeat, while Valdez ended up 1-1 with two walks and White Thunder-Lucero 0-2 with a sacrifice-fly and two RBI. 

“Our guys can battle with anyone in the state,” Isiah Valdez said. “We came out and hit the ball well against three really good arms, and moving forward I think we’re going to be able to put up a lot of runs. But our defense has to be there to keep people out of games … and we’re going to improve that stuff and look forward to a great season.” 

“Get better? We know we can,” Flores said. “Just keep on that grind and I think we can make a (postseason) run this year.” 

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