Inside The Game: STL | Two Nights. One Lesson. Control What You Can’t See.

Inside The Game: STL | Two Nights. One Lesson. Control What You Can’t See.

Apr 24, 2026 215 Views Baseball

Inside The Game: STL | Two Nights. One Lesson. Control What You Can’t See.

by Connor Jenkins for Live Stream STL Media

Baseball doesn’t lie.
Over two nights in a home-and-home series between Jefferson and Herculaneum, the scoreboard flipped—but the deeper story stayed the same.

Game one belonged to Jefferson. Clean execution. Timely hitting. Discipline in the moments that mattered most. They did what good teams do—capitalize when given the opportunity and refuse to break under pressure.

Game two? A completely different outcome.
Herculaneum responded with dominance. Senior Tanner Duncan didn’t just pitch—he controlled the game. One hit. Seven innings. Total command.
Same teams. Same field. Completely different result.
That’s the game.

The Moment That Defined It All
In Game One, Herculaneum had the bases loaded with nobody out.
Momentum. Pressure. Opportunity.
And then—one play changed everything.
A ball up the middle that should’ve been a hit… gets stolen out of the air. Force out at home. Turned into a double play. Inning over. No runs.

That wasn’t luck. That was discipline, awareness, and preparation showing up under pressure.
Baseball exposes you in those moments.
You either panic… or you execute.

The Response Separates Teams
Game Two showed something just as important: response.

Herculaneum didn’t fold after the loss. They didn’t carry frustration into the next game.
They reset.
And then they dominated.

Early pressure. Two-out rallies. Explosive innings. And a senior who took full control of the moment when his team needed it most.
That’s maturity.
That’s leadership.
That’s what winning teams are built on.

The Lesson: You Don’t Control Outcomes—You Control Execution
Most athletes chase results.
Batting average. Wins. Stats. Recognition.
But this series makes one thing clear:
You don’t control the result.
You control:

  • Your preparation
  • Your response
  • Your execution under pressure

Jefferson executed first.
Herculaneum responded better.
That’s why the series split.

Faith, Pressure, and the Unseen Game
Here’s where it goes deeper.
Pressure doesn’t build character—it reveals it.
When the bases are loaded… when the game speeds up… when everything is on the line…
You don’t rise to the occasion.
You fall back on what you truly believe.
Faith matters here.

Not just in a religious sense—but in trust:

  • Trust in your preparation
  • Trust in your teammates
  • Trust in something bigger than the moment

Because when everything feels out of control, faith is what keeps you grounded.
Calm players make winning plays.

Devoted Take
Two games. Two outcomes.
But one truth:
The best players—and the best teams—aren’t defined by when things go right.
They’re defined by how they respond when they don’t.
That’s the difference between playing the game…
…and understanding it.

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