New Prague senior Nolan Eischens doesn't mind the bat or ball in his hands.
New Prague takes down Mahtomedi 5-3 for first Class 3A state baseball championship
Nolan Eischens came on in relief to get the final four outs after driving in three runs in the Trojans' 5-3 victory over Mahtomedi.

Eischens came on in relief to get the final four outs after driving in three runs, preserving the Trojans' first baseball state championship with a 5-3 victory over Mahtomedi in the Class 3A finals Friday at CHS Field. The Trojans (24-3), ranked fourth by the coaches association, finished second and third in their previous two state tournament appearances.
"There was a ton of pressure out there," Eischens said. "I thrive on pressure. I loved it."
Eischens came on in relief of lefthander Nick Giesen following Jacob Johnson's two-out, two-run double in the sixth inning pulled the Zephyrs within 5-3. It was the senior's second hit of the day. Eischens didn't give up a hit while recording the final four outs.
"Nolan is a pretty good all-around player, whether it's at the plate or on the mound," New Prague coach Tanner Oakes said.
Eischens ripped a two-run single with the bases loaded in the Trojans' three-run fifth and doubled in the first run in the opening frame.
"I was trying to do as much as I could to help us win," Eischens said.
New Prague cleanup hitter Jake Lundquist added a run-scoring single with his second hit of the game in the fifth. Winning pitcher Giesen broke a 1-1 deadlock in the fourth when he was issued a bases-loaded walk. He gave up eight hits while striking out five and walking one.
"We took it one game at a time and kept setting new goals as the season went on," Lundquist said. "It's too many to count now."
Mahtomedi scored its first run on Carter Schmidtz's two-out, opposite-field single in the second. The Zephyrs (19-7) were seeking their third state championship, winning the title in 2018 and 2021.
"I came into a pretty good situation," said Oakes, who is in his fifth season at the helm of the New Prague program. "This is as big as it gets."