Beal City Ace Closes Finals-Filled Career with Perfection in Repeat

By Keith Dunlap
Special for MHSAA.com

June 15, 2024

EAST LANSING — Getting to pitch in a state championship game once is rare in itself. Doing so twice is even more improbable.

But three times during a career? Take a bow, Beal City senior Cayden Smith. 

Two years ago, Smith pitched two innings of relief in a loss to Riverview Gabriel Richard. Last year, he allowed one run in a complete-game win over Plymouth Christian Academy. 

Getting the ball again in a championship game Saturday, Smith saved the best for his last high school game and achieved something no pitcher had done before in a Final, throwing a perfect game in a 10-0 Beal City win over Norway that ended after five innings.

Smith, who will play for Central Michigan, struck out eight batters to earn his second-straight Finals win.

“Nerves are going to get to you every year,” Smith said. “It’s just who can overcome.”

The Aggies' Jack Fussman gets under a throw home to score. Smith did more than that in a performance that reduced Beal City head coach Brad Antcliff to tears of joy after the game when describing it.

“That’s Cayden Smith,” Antcliff said. “The kid is a gamer. He wants the ball. He had all the command of his pitches today, and he pounded the zone. You have kids that have ‘it.’ I can’t tell you what ‘it’ is. But Cayden Smith has ‘it.’ He’s a bulldog.”

Beal City’s offense was also potent, starting when senior Jack Fussman singled home Smith for the first run in the bottom of the first inning. 

Beal City (34-6) then grabbed a 2-0 lead in the second on an RBI single with two outs by junior Owen McKenny. 

The Aggies kept the pressure on in the third, scoring four times to take a 6-0 lead. Senior Lane Gross hit a two-run double to the gap in right-center, and then Smith helped his own cause with a two-run double that made it 5-0 Beal City. A walk with the bases loaded gave the Aggies a 6-0 advantage. 

In the sixth inning, Beal City took an 8-0 lead on a two-run single by Fussman, and then completed the game via the run-differential rule when a single up the middle by senior Josh Wilson ended up scoring two runs with a Norway throwing error to home. 

An Aggies hitter lines up a pitch.Fussman finished with four RBI for Beal City, which won its sixth Finals title in school history. 

Even in defeat, Norway produced a terrific story. 

The Knights (28-4-1) were attempting to become the first team from the Upper Peninsula to win a Finals title in baseball, and getting to the championship game was no small feat, especially after beating a team from the Catholic High School League, Marine City Cardinal Mooney, in a Semifinal. 

But Norway simply ran into a buzzsaw in Smith and a Beal City team that was ranked No. 1 in the state for a reason.

“We’re going to cherish it forever,” Norway head coach Tony Adams said. “It was a heck of an accomplishment. We made school history, we made history for the Upper Peninsula, and today’s result isn’t going to diminish that. You can’t take that away.”

Click for the full box score.

PHOTOS (Top) Beal City’s Cayden Smith (26) makes his move toward the plate during his team’s Division 4 championship win. (Middle) The Aggies' Jack Fussman gets under a throw home to score. (Below) A Beal City hitter lines up a pitch.

Cass Tech Hopes PSL City Championship Next Step in Emergence as Diamond Contender

By Keith Dunlap
Special for MHSAA.com

May 30, 2025

DETROIT — Juan Torres said it was a completely different feeling walking the halls of Detroit Cass Tech last week. 

Greater DetroitA junior baseball player for the Technicians, Torres knows full well to what extent Cass Tech is a football school, especially since it won the Division 1 title in the fall and produces Division I college talent every year. 

But after Cass Tech won the Detroit Public School League baseball city championship on May 19, there was plenty of pride and attention paid to what the school had achieved on the diamond.

“It’s pretty tough because we are a football school,” Torres said. “Being able to show up to school (the day after) and to say that we won something, it felt really good. We can compete. That was a really good feeling.”

For Cass Tech head coach Melvin Jackson, earning a 6-1 win over Detroit Western in the PSL final at Comerica Park was a moment he had waited for and built toward since taking over the program eight years ago. 

Western had won the last 15 PSL championships and in general has been the gold standard for baseball in the league. But Cass Tech has been inching closer in recent years. 

Last year, the Technicians beat out Western out for a PSL division title, but lost to the Cowboys in the playoff championship game. 

Cass Tech wasn’t denied this year, with starting pitcher Kyle Terry pitching 5 2/3 innings and Jordan Spencer registering the last four outs to start a jubilant celebration. 

The offense was keyed by Torres, who had three hits and three RBI. 

“This year, I kind of felt like we were ready,” Jackson said. “They have been really hungry for this moment.”

While rivals, Jackson said the reason he wanted to defeat Western was because the Cowboys had been an inspiration and measuring stick for his program. 

Jackson and Cass Tech hope topping Western for the PSL title can be a sign of continued growth for high school baseball in the city. 

“You want to bring baseball back, and these are the things that will help bring baseball back to another level in the city,” he said. 

Cass Tech and other programs in the city face challenges that many suburban schools do not. Cass Tech technically has a home field on Belle Isle, but just about every nonleague game is played away on someone else’s field. 

Detroit Edison, the Division 3 runner-up three years ago and a semifinalist last year, is in a similar boat having to play most of its games on the road and conduct practices on the school’s turf football field. 

“When you go out to some of those schools and you see those kinds of facilities, it makes you think, ‘What if?’” Jackson said. 

But much like Edison, Cass Tech forges on and makes the best of it. Just like Western was an inspiration to get to the top of the PSL, what Edison has done is motivating the Technicians to make a deep run in the MHSAA Tournament. 

“We want to build a program like theirs,” Torres said. “We want to build toward something where we can compete every year and be in those important games.”

Jackson insists that his team can achieve things this year beyond the PSL title. 

Cass Tech could very well run into Western again today since they are in the same District, and Jackson feels winning that bracket could be a great springboard for his team.

“There’s more baseball to play,” he said. “If we can get past them, the sky is the limit. The kids I have right now, my seniors and my juniors, they are hungry.”

Keith DunlapKeith Dunlap has served in Detroit-area sports media for more than two decades, including as a sportswriter at the Oakland Press from 2001-16 primarily covering high school sports but also college and professional teams. His bylines also have appeared in USA Today, the Washington Post, the Detroit Free Press, the Houston Chronicle and the Boston Globe. He served as the administrator for the Oakland Activities Association’s website from 2017-2020. Contact him at [email protected] with story ideas for Oakland, Macomb and Wayne counties.

PHOTO Detroit Cass Tech’s baseball program takes a post-championship photo after winning the Detroit Public School League city title. (Photo courtesy of Cass Tech coach Melvin Jackson.)