Desert Christian's Camron White high-fives a teammate after scoring a run in the first inning of a 2015 game against Douglas.

It didnโ€™t take long for Desert Christian High School to find a fitting perspective after winning three consecutive state baseball championships from 2013-15.

A few minutes after completing a 31-1 season in 2015 โ€” capping a remarkable 86-7 streak over three years โ€” all-city pitcher/first baseman Zach Malis said: โ€œItโ€™s the end of an era, the completion of a legacy.โ€

It doesnโ€™t matter if a high school team plays in Division I or Division IV, as Desert Christian did. Winning three consecutive state baseball championships isnโ€™t just getting hot, getting a few breaks or playing inferior competition.

The last Arizona small school to win three consecutive baseball titles was Wilcox, 1999-2001.

In the 2015 season, coach Grant Hopkinsโ€™ club beat upper-division opponents Flowing Wells, Walden Grove and Tanque Verde, as well as teams from New Mexico, Idaho and Phoenix in a mid-season tournament. The Eaglesโ€™ only loss was to Taft High School of Lincoln City, Oregon, a Class 3A school with more than double Desert Christianโ€™s enrollment.

The previous Tucson baseball team to win three consecutive state championships was Tucson High, which did so from 1950-52 and 1954-56.

โ€œI was very blessed with that group of kids,โ€ Hopkins says now. โ€œThe โ€˜15 team was a generational team. Especially given the fact the school was only about 150 kids and 75 boys at the school. The team only had 13 baseball players.โ€

Hopkins had the โ€œrightโ€ 13 players.

Malis, who spent the last two seasons playing in the Detroit Tigers minor league system after hitting .302 in a productive career at Grand Canyon University, hit .569, .636 and .515 over the Eaglesโ€™ three state championships. As a pitcher, he was 29-3.

Andrew Edwards, who is now in his third year in the New York Metsโ€™ minor-league system, playing in Double-A, was 25-2 as a pitcher and also hit over .400 all three seasons. After Desert Christian, he played at New Mexico State.

Both Malis and Edwards were chosen to the Starโ€™s 2015 all-city team, which featured players from 5A to 1A. Malis had 186 RBIs in his three state championship seasons, which is believed to be a state record at any level.

Zach Malis played in the Detroit Tigers' system before returning to Tucson.

Hopkins, a Tucson native whose high school baseball career ended when he seriously injured his pitching arm in a 1990 car accident, requiring four surgeries, earned a degree from NAU and returned to Tucson. He is a financial advisor.

He became the head coach at his alma mater in 2007, paying dues for six seasons and going 89-73. By 2013, the Eagles were loaded. They won the โ€˜13 state title with a 26-4 record, won again in โ€˜14 with a 29-2 record and again in โ€˜15 with a 31-1 record.

Desert Christian outscored opponents by an average of 13-1 in the 2015 season.

It wasnโ€™t just Malis and Edwards. Camron White hit .462 with 20 stolen bases, Jacob Rosson hit .414 and his brother, Zach, hit .431. Brett Grabosch hit .365. The Eagles didnโ€™t overpower teams; they hit just six home runs. They won with pitching, fielding and timely hitting more than power.

Malis left the Detroit Tigersโ€™ system last year, he moved back to Tucson and is now a manager at Amazon. He is married with a baby.

Hopkins retired from Desert Christian after the 2016 season, when his team went 25-6 and reached the state semifinals.

โ€œThe fact I still get to see (my championship players) as often as I do is also a blessing,โ€ says Hopkins. โ€œI was also very fortunate I got to win two championships with my son, Daulton, in 2013 and 2014.โ€

Hopkins didnโ€™t lose the coaching bug when he left Desert Christian six years ago. He was an assistant coach on Sabinoโ€™s 2019 state championship team. He returned to Desert Christian to help coach in 2020 and 2021.

โ€œAssistant coaching fits my lifestyle much better now,โ€ he says.


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Contact sports columnist Greg Hansen at 520-573-4362 or ghansen@tucson.com. On Twitter: @ghansen711