Perry’s big knock secures MIAA title for Lions
EMPORIA, Kan. — In a game that was a pitcher’s duel early, it was a three-run walk-off homer in the bottom of the seventh that proved to be the difference in a 4-1 Missouri Southern State University win over the Rogers State University Hillcats in the title game of the 2026 MIAA Championship Saturday at Emporia State University’s Trusler Sports Complex. After both teams went scoreless for the first three frames, the Lions (48-7) got on the board in the bottom of the fourth inning when freshman pinch hitter Gianna Saggese plated pinch runner Micha Snider with a sacrifice fly to right field.
The Hillcats (36-19) evened the game at 1 in the top of the sixth inning when Saylor Brown was hit by a pitch with bases loaded, scoring Raelle Gorman. The play went under review but eventually went the way of RSU and the game went into the seventh with the teams still level at 1-1. With one out in the top of the final inning, MSSU’s Emily Davis came in to relieve starter Kiki Pickens and got the final two outs to set up Perry’s late-game heroics.
Katie Gray smacked a one-out double to center field before the Hillcats intentionally walked Carsen Tinkler. Perry stepped up to the plate and smacked a no-doubter over the left center field fence, plating pinch runner Emma Mason and Tinkler and giving the Lions the MIAA title. The Lions captured the regular season title last week for the first time since 2001 — the same year MSSU celebrated its last MIAA Tournament Championship.
“Our team is together and we are 18-strong,” MSSU head coach Hallie Blackney said. “They play for each other and I am just so glad they got rewarded with this today because they play for each other as a selfless bunch and it is just the neatest thing i have seen in my entire career. ” Perry, a fifth-year senior who missed the 2024 season due to torn ACL, talked about her thoughts before and during her last at-bat.
“Typically, I have no thoughts coming into the box and that is basically what happened,” Perry said. “I try not to think too much because that is when things go south. I knew that pitcher was tough and had gotten me all day — I got lucky on a bunt — so I knew I had to have a good approach going up there.