| 
        
        | Sports
News,  Archives,  
Mayfield's 
Mutterings, 
Schedules, 
Announcements,  
Calendar,  
Sports
News Elsewhere  (fresh daily
from the Web)
         |  
        | 
  |  
            | 
        Monday, May 19 |  
            | Individual state championsshine at East Peoria
 Seventh-grade Hartsburg-Emden boys andseventh-grade Chester East-Lincoln girls take second place
 By Rick L. Hobler 
            
            [MAY 19, 2003]  
            Every 
            May about this time some extraordinary events take place in schools 
            all around Illinois. Graduations, school plays, musical concerts, 
            "final everythings" and the like. All carry with them high emotion 
            and drama. Most carry the weight of great expectations. Most 
            recognize individual and collective achievement. All are significant 
            to each person involved. None is more significant to the 
            participants than the annual May pilgrimage to East Peoria for the 
            IESA Junior High State Track Championships. |  
            | 
            This last weekend was no exception to 
            the annual drama of May. Around 2,000 boys and girls ages 10 to 14, 
            along with innumerable parents, siblings, grandparents and anyone 
            else who cared to come, journeyed from near and far in a sea of 
            yellow buses and cars to the EastSide Centre so that these young 
            people could "show their stuff." And what a show it was!  
            The mile record for girls was shattered 
            and almost broke the five-minute mark. The pole vault record for 
            boys was toppled at a height that required the IESA to find their 
            biggest ladder just to set the bar. Numerous new records were set in 
            all types of events. There were literally hundreds of stories to be 
            told. I can share only a few. 
            That Logan County had its share of 
            individual state champions should, of course, be of no surprise to 
            anyone. There was Ashley Bonaparte, whose individual determination 
            almost single-handedly carried her seventh-grade Chester-East 
            Lincoln team to a second-place team title. There was Dakin Bolen, 
            who did the same for the Hartsburg-Emden seventh-grade boys. Then 
            there was Kate Schonauer from Carroll Catholic, who almost didn't 
            get to run, when her name was inadvertently left off the official 
            qualifier's sheet. She not only ran but ran to a first-place finish 
            in the seventh-grade 200-meter dash. There was the consistently 
            excellent Wes Umphreys of Hartem, who captured the eighth-grade high 
            jump title. 
              
            
       
            Or I could tell you (as humbly as a 
            proud dad can tell it) of the West Lincoln-Broadwell 4x100 relay 
            team of Natalie Boward, Melissa Ramlow, Kylie Sparks and Hilary 
            Hobler who, having been placed in the "slower lane" in the finals, 
            not only weren't "slower" but repeated as state champions, blew away 
            the competition and shattered the state record so that it now stands 
            at 52.88 seconds. Or I could tell you of an almost identical 
            dominating victory by the Chester-East Lincoln 4x200 relay team of 
            Jamie McFadden, Bridgette Hyde, Ashley Bonaparte and Emily Berglin.
             
            And how could I leave out the story of 
            the ever-so-sweet-and-friendly Rachel Robertson from Mount Pulaski, 
            who was everywhere for her team and was also the state champion in 
            the seventh-grade long jump with a jump of 15 feet, 4.5 inches. And 
            even telling you all that would still leave out too many untold 
            stories of the effort and determination of all of the other Logan 
            County athletes who qualified and gave it their all this weekend. 
            While no Logan County team brought home 
            a team state championship, the seventh-grade girls from Chester-East 
            Lincoln came close and the seventh-grade boys from Hartsburg-Emden 
            came even closer with second-place finishes. C-EL garnered 33 
            points, compared with the 39 points brought home by this year's 
            state champion, Champaign St. Matthews. The Hartem seventh-grade 
            boys missed a state championship team title by ONE point, as 
            Effingham St. Anthony squeaked out the victory with 26 points to 
            Hartem's 25. Also, the Carroll Catholic girls managed a sixth-place 
            finish in 7A competition. 
              
      
       
            [to top of second column in this article] | 
            
       
            For their respective teams, the 
            individual performances of Ashley Bonaparte for C-EL and Dakin Bolen 
            for Hartem were impressive. Bonaparte was part of the state champion 
            C-EL 4x200 relay team, jumped 15 feet, 1.25 inches to take home a 
            second-place medal in the long jump and ran to third-place finishes 
            in both the 100-meter and 200-meter dash. Dakin Bolen was part of 
            the first-place 4x200 relay team, won second place in the 200 and 
            was fourth in the highly competitive 100-meter dash. 
            Obviously no one person wins his or her 
            team a second-place title, and such was the case for both C-EL and 
            Hartem. The remaining points for the C-EL seventh-grade girls came 
            from the previously mentioned members of the 4x200 relay team and 
            the 4x400 relay team of Desirae Lercher, Amy Fellers, Emily Berglin 
            and Bridgette Hyde, who came in sixth. Hartem's other points came 
            from Dustin Bolen in the seventh-grade high jump and the remaining 
            members of the 4x 200 relay team, namely Tarel Stancle, Mitchell 
            Gleason and Dustin Bolen. Dustin leaped to 5 feet, 2 inches before 
            the high jump bar fell, winning him a seventh-place medal. 
            Additionally, in other events for 7A 
            girls, the following competitors ran and jumped to receive medals: 
            Kylie Sparks, WL-B, fourth place, 200 meters; Carroll Catholic 4x200 
            relay team of Kate Schonauer, Chrissy Schonauer, Abbie Feldman and 
            Lexi Springer, fifth place; Kate Schonauer, Carroll Catholic, sixth 
            place in the long jump; Chrissy Schonauer, Carroll Catholic, seventh 
            place in the shot put; Mikel Reed, Mount Pulaski, seventh place, 200 
            meters; and the Mount Pulaski 4x200 relay team, fifth place. 
            In action for 7A boys, the C-EL relay 
            team finished sixth in the 4x200 race. 
            Among 8A girls, the only medal winner 
            other than the WL-B 4x100 state champions was a second place for the 
            strong performance of Abby Olsen of Hartsburg-Emden in the shot put. 
            For 8A boys, the Hartem 4 x 400 relay 
            team placed sixth, while Carroll Catholic's Justin Ritchhart threw 
            to fourth place in the shot put with a best throw of 44 feet, 8.5 
            inches. 
              
      
       And those 
            are just some of the stories. I can tell you all this, but you 
            really do have to be there (maybe the pictures associated with this 
            article will help) to capture the emotion of a very young person 
            running in front of a crowd, sometimes almost as big or bigger than 
            her or his hometown, realizing champion status or finishing last, 
            but still finishing. Some collapsed from the effort. Others had the 
            unsurpassed energy of children and ran all the way from their event 
            to the medal tent to get and proudly display their accomplishment. 
            For every victory shout of joy, there were several tears of loss. 
            Either way, every young person who competed was a champion in the 
            eyes of those in the stands who love them. And at this age level… 
            that's really all that matters. Congratulations to all who gave it 
            their all! 
            [Rick L. Hobler] |  
          | 
 |  
            | 
            High 
            school baseball 
            
            [MAY 19, 2003]  |  
            | 
            At StanfordGame 1
 
            Lincoln      000 100 0 - 1-2-0 
            Olympia    000 000 0 - 0-5-2 
            Jason Fitzpatrick (W) and John Peters; Andrew Lee (L, 2-3) and Rush 
            Olson. 
            Hitting stars - Olympia - Ross Thompson (2 hits). 
            Pitching star - Lincoln - Fitzpatrick (7 IP, 0 ER, 5 SO, 0 BB). 
            Records - Lincoln 14-13, Olympia 20-10 | Game 2 
            Lincoln       000 000 500 - 5-10-1 
            Olympia     040 100 001 - 6-7-1 
            Brock Werner, Bob Maestas (7, L) and Peters; Ross Thompson, Zach 
            Kufhuss (7), Derek Dudgon (7, W, 2-0) and Brad Brooks. 
            Hitting stars - Lincoln - Peters (2 hits), Harnacker (2 hits); 
            Olympia - Derek Foley (2 hits, RBI). 
            Pitching star - Olympia - Thompson (6 IP, 0 R, 0 ER, 5 SO, 0 BB). 
            Records - Lincoln 14-13, Olympia 20-10.  |  
          | 
 |  
            | 
            High 
            school softball 
            
            [MAY 19, 2003]  |  
            | 
            At StanfordGame 1
 
            Midwest Central     000 000 0 - 0-3-1 
            Olympia                  
            000 022 x - 4-7-1 
            Lewis (L, 9-5_ and Livengood; Jessie Shay W, 23-2) and Amber Lessen. 
            Hitting star - Olympia - Tiffany Prager (2 hits, RBI, triple). 
            Pitching star - Olympia - Shay (2 hits, 2 strikeouts). | 
            Game 2 
            Midwest Central      000 000 0 - 0-4-0 
            Olympia                   
            200 000 x - 2-4-2 
            Woiwode (L, 9-5) and Livengood; Lindsay Watkins (W, 5-0) and Katie 
            Tucker. 
            Records - Olympia 31-2, Midwest Central 20-10. |  
          | 
 |  
            | 
            High 
            school track and field 
            
            [MAY 19, 2003]  |  
            | 
            Mahomet-Seymour InvitationalAt Mahomet
 
            1. Olympia 89; 15. Delavan-Hartsburg-Emden 
            100 METERS - 1. Joyce (O), 11.9 
            200 - 3. Joyce (O), 22.8 
            400 - 3. McClain (O), 51.7 
            300 HURDLES - 8. Myers (O), 43.6 
            HIGH JUMP - 1. Raes (O), 6-6 (meet record) 
            LONG JUMP - 4. Raes (O), 20-2 1/2 
            DISCUS - 1. Schultz (O), 158-9 
            SHOT PUT - 1. Schultz (O), 58 - 1/2 (meet record) 
            POLE VAULT - 6. Hish (O), 12-0; Slager (O), 12-0 
            400 RELAY - 2. Olympia, 44.2 
            800 RELAY - 4. Olympia, 1:32.8 (school record) 
            1,600 RELAY - 1. Olympia, 3:30.5 
            3,200 RELAY - 5. Olympia, 8:31 | 
       
             |  
          | 
 |  
            | 
              Articles from the past week |  
            | 
            
            Saturday: 
            
            Friday: 
            
            Thursday: | 
            
            Wednesday: 
       
      
        Area junior high 
            track teams bring home sectional titlesWest Lincoln-Broadwell girls and Hartsburg boys get first
        High school 
        track and field
        High school 
        softball
        High school 
        baseball
        Basketball camp dates 
        announced 
            
            Tuesday: Monday: |  
          | 
 |  
          | 
            
              |  
            | Cards and Cubs at it again By Jeff Mayfield 
            [MAY 19, 2003]  
            ...And 
            this time it's not just the game between the lines. Both dugouts are 
            spending more time yakking at the umpires than Joan and Melissa 
            Rivers do yakking about who's wearing what at the Oscars. |  
            | 
            Speaking of Oscars, BOTH teams appear 
            to be taking lots of acting classes. I know managers and pitching 
            coaches always think that they're getting squeezed on the calls, but 
            if you REALLY want something to complain about, look at the strike 
            zone that Atlanta pitchers have gotten the last 10 years! I think 
            even I could through a few strikes if you're gonna give me six 
            inches on either side of the plate. 
            Also, if I were a manager I think I 
            would be a lot more concerned about horrible base running and guys 
            missing their cutoff men! As good as today's players are, sometimes 
            the fundamentals that many of us were taught as kids just aren't 
            there. How can that be tolerated by today's managers and 
            front-office people? I just don't understand it. Especially when 
            you've got pitchers on both teams going out there and busting their 
            butts for six, seven or eight innings, and then to have a game 
            thrown away because of an error… and not just any error, but mental 
            errors… That's a killer! Last live 
            "FANdamonium" 
            …for the next couple of months is 
            tonight. Greg and I will be discussing some of these issues as well 
            as: 
            Greg ripped Tomko and Simontacchi the 
            last two weeks on our show, and they've both fared well… We want to 
            get Greg's take on that. 
            Even if the Cubs lose on Monday and go 
            only 1-3, I STILL think they will be OK. They are so much more 
            competitive with Dusty Baker at the helm, they seem to be in every 
            game… and I've been saying all along that I think they will be there 
            for the long haul. I think Greg will agree with us on that. 
            The Cubs are now 4-22 since 2000 in St. 
            Louis… How will Greg explain that? 
            Lots of talk coming out of Chicago 
            regarding the Cubs picking up a third baseman. The names I keep 
            hearing are Aaron Boone out of Cincinnati and Mike Lowell out of 
            Florida. We'll see what Greg's take is on that, or if the Cubs 
            should even make a move at all. I don't even want to tell Greg what 
            former Cubbie Bill Mueller is hitting over in Boston… 
               
         
            [to top of second column in this
            article] | 
       
       
            Greg may have some questions for me 
            too. Like what is up with the Cardinal bullpen? Will J.D. Drew get 
            shipped or will he continue to battle injuries? What in the world is 
            going on with Rick Ankiel? Should the Birds ship him, convert him to 
            an outfielder or just continue to be patient with him and hope that 
            the magic returns? What's up with the slumping bats of Jim Edmonds 
            and Tino Martinez? And is Vina staying or going? And who knows what 
            other stuff Greg will be masterminding before our last spring 
            episode? Catch us at 6 tonight right here on the
            LDN live link, on CITV 5 
            or on FIX 96.3 FM radio or call us at (217) 735-3306. 
            And we will both lament what is 
            happening to the Chicago White Sox. 
            CONGRATULATIONS to C-EL, Hartsburg-Emden and Carroll Catholic 
            …for their outstanding showing at last 
            weekend's IESA 7A state track meets! Chester-East Lincoln girls took 
            home a second place trophy, while Carroll finished sixth. The Hartem 
            boys also brought home a second-place trophy. Congratulations to all 
            of these students for representing Logan County so well! Railers 
            keep up winning record 
            The Lincoln Railers baseball team has 
            fought off cold conditions, rain and untimely hitting to stay on the 
            winning side of the ledger of late. After missing several good 
            opportunities to take a game from Jacksonville last week and 
            settling for a tie, Lincoln was able to split with Olympia on 
            Saturday. Jason Fitzpatrick struck out five and limited last year's 
            Class A state champions to one run on two hits in a 1-0 shutout. 
            Olympia won the nightcap 6-5. The Railsplitters moved their record 
            to 14-13-1. Have a great 
            week, everybody! [Jeff
Mayfield] |  
          | 
 |  
        | 
Announcements
         |  
            | 
             
            Basketball camp dates announced 
            
            
            [MAY 14, 2003]  
            
            NORMAL 
            -- First-year Illinois State head basketball coach Porter Moser has 
            announced his camp dates for the summer of 2003. |  
            | 
            Moser and his Redbird staff will host 
            three camps this summer, with a pair of day camps and one team camp. 
            The first day camp runs June 16-19 and 
            is for boys entering grades 1-12. The second day camp is open to 
            boys entering grades 1-8 and is scheduled for July 15-18. The day 
            camps are designed for commuters only and focus on the basic 
            fundamentals of dribbling, passing, shooting, rebounding, defense 
            and game play. 
            The cost for either day camp is $170. 
            Each camper receives a basketball and a T-shirt.   
            [to top of second column in this
            article] | 
 
            The team camp, which caters to high 
            school and junior high teams with boys entering grades 6-12, will be 
            June 20-22. The camp format is round-robin and tournament team play. 
            The cost for the team camp is $170 for 
            commuters and $205 for resident campers. Each will receive a camp 
            T-shirt. 
            For more information about the 
            basketball camps, call the Redbird men's basketball office at (309) 
            438-8681 or click 
            here for an application form.  
            [Click 
            here to download the Adobe Acrobat reader for the PDF file.] 
            [Todd Kober, director of
            media relations,Illinois State University]
 |  
            | Back
      to top
               |  
                    | 
   
                    
                    News
                    | Sports
                    | Business
                    | Rural
                    Review |
                    Teaching
                    & Learning |
                    Home
                    and Family |
                    Tourism
                    |  Obituaries 
                    
                    Community |
                    Perspectives |
                    Law
                    & Courts |
                    Leisure Time |
                    Spiritual
                    Life | Health
                    & Fitness | Teen 
                    SceneCalendar 
                    |
                    Letters
                    to the Editor
   |  |