High school baseball: Lisk brothers help fuel Fairfield's rise as Indians double last year's win total

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High school baseball: Lisk brothers help fuel Fairfield's rise as Indians double last year's win total

Apr. 19—OXFORD — The connection started long before the first pitch. It showed up in backyard games, long days at the field and years of learning each other's tendencies. Now, it's paying off in a big way for Fairfield High School's baseball team — with brothers Sam and Nathan Lisk at th

High school baseball: Lisk brothers help fuel Fairfield's rise as Indians double last year's win total

Apr. 19—OXFORD — The connection started long before the first pitch. It showed up in backyard games, long days at the field and years of learning each other's tendencies. Now, it's paying off in a big way for Fairfield High School's baseball team — with brothers Sam and Nathan Lisk at the center of a surge that has the Indians playing some of their best baseball of the season. Sam Lisk, a ...

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Apr. 19—OXFORD — The connection started long before the first pitch. It showed up in backyard games, long days at the field and years of learning each other's tendencies.

Now, it's paying off in a big way for Fairfield High School's baseball team — with brothers Sam and Nathan Lisk at the center of a surge that has the Indians playing some of their best baseball of the season.

Sam Lisk, a junior right-hander, delivered a complete-game performance Saturday, allowing just one run on two hits while walking none in a 4-1 win over La Salle in the Reds Futures High School Showcase at Miami University's McKie Field.

And behind the plate, his younger brother Nathan handled every pitch.

"In some ways, it makes it easier," Sam said. "I get frustrated at him a lot, so I just throw the ball harder at him."

Sam Lisk was in control from the start Saturday, attacking the strike zone and leaning on a defense that has become one of Fairfield's strengths.

Junior shortstop Colton Owens and junior right fielder Teagan Lucking highlighted a clean, aggressive effort as the Indians continued a stretch that has seen them win six of their last seven games.

Fairfield jumped out early, taking a 1-0 lead in the first inning when Owens singled to score Nathan Lisk. The Indians added on in the third with an RBI single from Justin Hembree, then created separation in the fourth on a sacrifice fly from Nathan Lisk and a run-scoring wild pitch.

"I'm always locked in," Sam said. "We got to the field early, did a lift, stretched, hung out all day. Then once it was time, we flipped the switch. I was just going."

Nathan, a sophomore catcher, recognized the rhythm almost immediately.

"You can just feel it," Nathan said. "It's just a feeling of knowing he's on. I've seen him pitch my whole life, so I know how his ball moves by heart. I know how to get him fired up and keep his tempo going."

That familiarity has helped shape Fairfield's identity — one built on energy, chemistry and a noticeable shift from a year ago.

"The team just vibes a lot better," Sam said. "Everyone gets along. The dugout's loud, everyone's hyped. That energy — especially when you're on the mound — it gets you going."

Nathan pointed to a more disciplined approach at the plate and a team-first mindset.

"We've come together more as a team," Nathan said. "We're not taking selfish at-bats. We're moving the ball, doing whatever we can to win. That's all that matters."

Fairfield went 4-24 a season ago. The Indians (8-3) have already doubled that win total this spring — a reflection of both internal growth and a more connected roster.

Indians third-year coach Lance Durham has seen the change take hold.

"Sam's the ultimate competitor," Durham said. "Even when he doesn't have his best stuff, he lives in the strike zone. No walks. When you're doing that, it makes it easy on your defense."

That philosophy has become Fairfield's blueprint.

Durham noted the Indians have compiled a stretch of walk-free innings this season, emphasizing strike-throwing as the foundation for their recent success.

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