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High
school basketball |
Tournament
scores
[NOV.
21, 2001]
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Girls
Clinton
Tournament at Dwight
Mount
Pulaski
10 17 20 27
Clinton
7 17 29 49
Howe
0-1-1, Faith 2-3-8, Hudson 2-0-4, Jason 2-0-4, Tillquist 1-0-2,
Rucks 1-3-5, Sanders 1-0-3.
Boys
Lincoln
Tournament at Lincoln
Lincoln
18 33 46 60
Limestone
9 24 36 48
Farmer
5-2-16, Komnick 1-0-2, Schonauer 2-0-5, Bast 2-0-4, Schrader 5-3-14,
Welch 3-0-6, Werner 1-0-2, Young
5-1-11
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College
football |
Illini
fans thankful for Big Ten Championship
[NOV.
23, 2001] The Illinois football team secured at least a
share of their first conference title in 11 years and will play in
at least one January 1 bowl game after their 34-28 victory over
Northwestern played Thursday in Champaign. Several players had
excellent games for the Illini, but none was better than senior
quarterback Kurt Kittner’s. Playing his final game in front of
the home crowd, Kittner completed 33 of 43 passes for 387 yards
and four touchdowns. At one point in the first half, he completed
12 straight passes. Two of Kittner’s receivers enjoyed 100 yard
receiving days, as sophomore Brandon Lloyd caught 12 passes for
140 yards and two touchdowns and junior Walter Young caught seven
passes for 123 yards and one touchdown. Kittner’s first
touchdown pass went to senior tight end Brian Hodges.
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With the victory, Illinois moves to 10-1 on the
season, their best record since the 1983 Rose Bowl season, and
clinches at least a tie for the conference championship. If Ohio
State upsets Michigan on Saturday at the Big House, Illinois will be
the outright conference champs for the first time in 18 seasons.
Coach Ron Turner, in just his fifth season in Champaign, has watched
his Illini program improve from 0-11 in his first season to an
almost perfect 10-1 in season number five. Do not be surprised if
Turner’s name becomes linked with several high-profile college and
professional programs which could possibly make coaching changes in
the off-season, including Notre Dame and the Indianapolis Colts.
So now what? At the very least, Illinois will
play on New Year’s Day in the Florida Citrus bowl in sunny
Orlando, Florida against second place team of the Southeastern
conference, probably South Carolina with coach Lou Holtz. However,
several Illinois players mentioned without apology their desire to
play in one of four BCS (Bowl Championship Series) games. The four
BCS games are the Fiesta Bowl (played on Jan. 1, 2002) in Tempe,
Ariz.; the Sugar Bowl (played on Jan. 1, 2002) in New Orleans, La.;
the Orange Bowl (played on Jan. 2, 2002) in Miami, Fla.; and the
Rose Bowl (played Jan. 3, 2002) in Pasadena, Calif. The Rose Bowl
will serve as the national championship game.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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The
following is a quick recap of the 2001 Illini season:
9-1-01
at California 44-17
victory
9-8-01
vs. Northern Illinois
17-12 victory
9-22-01
vs. Louisville
34-10 victory
9-29-01
at Michigan
45-20 loss
10-6-01
vs. Minnesota
25-14 victory
10-13-01
at Indiana
35-14 victory
10-20-01
vs. Wisconsin
42-35 victory
11-3-01
at Purdue
38-13 victory
11-10-01
vs. Penn State
33-28 victory
11-17-01
at Ohio State
34-22 victory
11-22-01
vs. Northwestern
34-28 victory
[Greg
Taylor]
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College basketball |
Redbirds
vs. UC-Irvine
[NOV.
23, 2001] The
Game: 2001 University Hoops Classic, 2 p.m., Nov. 23, 2001 at the
Sewall Center in Moon Township, Pa.
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The
probable starters
ILLINOIS
STATE REDBIRDS (1-0)
Gregg Alexander 6-4
190 Fr.-HS
Lincoln, Ill.
Baboucarr Bojang 6-9
205 Jr.-TR
Greenville, S.C.
Shedrick Ford 6-5
220 Sr.-1L
Macon, Ga.
Randy Rice
6-0 165
Sr.-1L Springfield,
Ill.
Shawn Jeppson 6-2
180 Sr.-3L
Spring Valley, Ill.
UC-Irvine
Anteaters (2-0)
J.R. Christ 6-9
245 Sr.
St. Louis, Mo.
Jordan Harris 6-5
217 Jr.
Phoenix, Ariz.
Adam Parada 7-0
240 So.
Alta Loma, Calif.
Jerry Green 6-3
190 Sr.
Pomona, Calif.
Mike Hood
6-4 190 Jr.
Beaverton, Ore.
The
coaches
Tom Richardson is 31-29 in his third season at Illinois
State. He is assisted by Chad Altadonna, Anthony Beane and Doug
Novsek. UC-Irvine is coached by Pat Douglass, who owns a 56-57 record in his fifth
season with the Anteaters. He is assisted by Todd Lee, Len Stevens
and Tim Cleary.
Alexander
goes where few freshmen have gone before
Since
1990, three true freshman have started their first collegiate games
at Illinois State. One of them is current Redbird Gregg Alexander.
Alexander drew the starting nod in the opener against Weber State
and responded with eight points, one rebound and two assists in 20
minutes of play. Alexander
joins P.J. Smith (1999) and Dan Muller (1994).
Bryson
lost for season
Tarise
Bryson, the nation¹s top returning scorer, the reigning Missouri
Valley
Conference Player of the Year and the Redbirds’ leading scorer for
the last three seasons, fell to the floor on a drive to the basket
at the 17:46 mark of the second half in Illinois State¹s 74-70
opening night victory over Weber State. The fall ended the season
for the Redbirds sixth all-time leading scorer, as Bryson dislocated
his right wrist and suffered severe ligament damage to his shooting
hand. Bryson underwent surgery the day after the game and will face
a year of rehabilitation. His wrist will be in a splint for two
weeks, a hard cast four weeks and another splint for four weeks. It
will take six months to heal.
About UC-Irvine
UC-Irvine
is located in Irvine, Calif. and enrolls 19,710 students. The
Anteaters are members of the Big West Conference.
Head
coach Pat Douglass is in his fifth season at UC-Irvine. He
owns a 56-57 record with the Anteaters and a 432-175 mark overall.
He was the 2000-01 Big West Coach of the Year.
UC-Irvine
was voted the Big West preseason favorite by both the league coaches
and media.
The
Anteaters return two starters from last season¹s 25-5 team that
lost in the first round of the NIT to eventual champion Tulsa.
Big West Player of the Year Jerry Green averaged 19.0 points and 4.8
rebounds per game last season, while Adam Parada, a member of the
Big West All-Freshman Team, averaged 7.6 points and 6.2 boards per
contest last year.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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For
UC-Irvine, the 2000-01 Big West regular season title was its first in
school history.
In
addition to being selected as the league¹s player of the year, Green
was also an honorable mention all-America selection by the Associated
Press.
The
Anteaters opened the 2001-02 campaign by hosting a pair of West Coast
Conference opponents. UC-Irvine dropped Saint Mary¹s 71-64 last
Friday night at the Bren Center, before topping Pepperdine 96-93 in
double overtime on Tuesday.
The
smallest players on the Anteater roster are Green, DeVaughn Peace and
Aras Baskauskas -- at 6-foot-3. With four players 6-foot-10 and
taller, the UC-Irvine roster averages 6-foot-7.
Last
season, the Anteaters claimed wins over Pac-10 opponents California
and Washington.
The
series
This
is the first meeting between the two schools. Illinois State owns a
22-11 mark all-time against schools hailing from California. The
last time the Redbirds faced a team from California was in 1998, when
Illinois State topped Pacific, and future No. 1 NBA draft pick Michael
Olowokandi, 64-63 in Redbird Arena.
4,239
miles from Redbird Arena
It¹s
doubtful if Kevin Costner and Courtney Cox will be embarking on this
journey, but today¹s game against UC-Irvine does mark the start of
the longest road swing for the Redbirds this season. After the three
games at Moon Township, Pa., for the 2001 University Hoops Classic,
Illinois State will travel to Statesboro, Ga., to face Georgia
Southern on Nov. 29 and will play at Texas-San Antonio on Dec. 1. In
all the Redbirds will travel 4,239 miles in nine days, before
returning to Redbird Arena to face Samford on Dec. 8.
Picked
to win the league? Chances are you¹re playing Illinois State
Illinois
State will play 11 nonconference games this season. Of the
Redbirds¹
11 non-Missouri Valley Conference foes, seven of the teams were
selected in the preseason polls to win their respective leagues.
The seven preseason favorites are Weber State (Big Sky), UC-Irvine
(Big West), Texas-San Antonio (Southland), Illinois (Big Ten), Georgia
Southern (Southern) and Central Michigan and Kent State, which are
both favored to win the two divisions of the Mid-American Conference.
Been
there, done that
At
the Missouri Valley Conference media day, Illinois State was tabbed as
the preseason favorite to win the league title by the conference media
and sports information directors. The Redbirds received 26 of the
possible 30 first-place votes. The last time the Redbirds were chosen
preseason favorites was in 1997-98. Illinois State went on to win the
conference. In 1996-97, the Redbirds were also favored to win and won
the league.
Ticket
information
Tickets
for Illinois State home games can be purchased from the ticket office
at Redbird Arena (309/438-8000).
Redbird
Radio Network
Mark
Johnson, play-by-play; Mike Matthews, color; Bruce Evans, sideline
(home only); R.C. McBride, studio host. Affiliates: WJBC (AM
1230/Bloomington), flagship; WINU (AM 880/Highland); WZOE (AM
1490/Princeton); WFMB (AM 1450/Springfield). All Illinois State
broadcasts can be heard on the Internet at either sports.yahoo.com or
wjbc.com. The latter also carries Tom Richardson¹s weekly call-in
show, which alternates depending on the schedule, but generally airs
each Thursday from 6:07-7 pm.
Web
Birds
The
Illinois State athletics web page, at www.redbirds.org,
includes a direct links to yahoo.broadcast.com and www.wjbc.com to
access the WJBC/Redbird Radio Network broadcasts. In addition, for
home games, live stats are available.
[Todd
Kober]
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High
school basketball |
Area
tournaments
[NOV.
21, 2001]
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Girls
Olympia
Tournament at Stanford
IVC
7 11 23 31
Olympia
8 19 32 43
Olympia
stats: Short 0-1-1, Gaither 9-4-23, Canopy 2-0-4, Boegel 3-3-9, Floyd
3-0-6.
Boys
Athens
Tournament at Athens
Hartsburg-Emden
6 19 30 42
Athens
8 22 32 46
Ke.
Leesman 2-0-4, Fletcher 2-0-5, Wrage 3-2-8, Anderson 2-3-7, Gleason
2-1-7, Ko. Leesman 1-2-4, Jones 2-1-5, Sherwood 1-0-2
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College basketball |
Lincoln
College vs. Black Hawk
[NOV.
21, 2001]
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Men
Lincoln
College handed Black Hawk a 91-80 setback in men’s basketball at
Lincoln Tuesday night.
Coach
B.J. McCullum’s squad featured a balanced attack, led by James
Roberson with 19 points. Derik Hollyfield and Sam Jackson both
contributed 18 points while Steve Turner scored 14 to round out the
double-figure scoring.
The
Lynx led 42-36 at halftime and outscored the visitors 49-44 in the
second half. Lincoln finished the game shooting 46 percent
from the floor and put the game away by making 20-of-26 free
throws. Black Hawk out-rebounded the Lynx 46-40. Amir
Major led the Lynx on the boards with eight rebounds, one more than
Hollyfield. Roberson and Turner both handed out seven assists for
the Lynx.
Lincoln
College will host the Eureka junior varsity on Nov. 26 (Monday) in
their next home game.
Lincoln
College (91) — Paris
Williams 1-1-0-0-2; James Roberson 7-10-2-2-19; Josh Clark
0-1-0-0-0; Gene Reed 0-0-0-0-0; Mike Fowler 0-3-1-2-1; Steve Turner
5-13-4-4-14; Andrew Kehr 1-1-0-0-3; Mike Sams 3-6-1-2-7; Amir Major
4-11-0-0-9; Derik Hollyfield 6-14-4-6-18; Sam Jackson
5-10-8-10-18. Totals 32-70-20-26-91. Three-point goals:
Roberson 3, Kehr, Major, Hollyfield 2.
Black
Hawk (80) — Jesse
Collum 2-11-4-5-9; Brandon Hoffman 1-2-0-0-2; Devarra Purefoy
1-3-0-0-2; Chris Hickey 5-13-0-0-13; Maurice Williams 9-21-2-4-22;
Matt Calef 5-10-2-2-14; Joe Spruille 6-15-6-8-18. Totals
29-75-14-19-80. Three-point goals: Collum, Hickey 3, Williams 2,
Calef 2.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Women
Angie
Bossingham tossed in 24 points to lead Lincoln College to a 74-55
victory over Black Hawk in women’s basketball at Lincoln Tuesday
night. Bossingham was joined in double figures by Zabrina Harper,
who contributed 12 points.
Lincoln
College held a 10-point lead at halftime, 46-36, and coasted to
victory the second half as both teams struggled to score, Black Hawk
netting just 19 points in the final 20 minutes.
Lincoln
College will be in action against Kankakee at 5:30 p.m. Nov. 27
(Tuesday).
Lincoln
College (74) — Ariel
Lamb 0-0-0-0; Tammy Bausley 0-0-0-0; Jenny Story 2-0-0-4; Victoria
Scott 3-0-0-6; Sarah McLaughlin 0-2-4-2; Audrey Hinrichsen 1-0-0-2;
Angie Bossingham 8-5-5-24; Ronni Beebe 0-7-10-7; Heather Dobey
0-1-2-1; Kim Calhoun 2-1-4-5; Kim Massenburg 1-0-0-2; Jessie Dullard
3-2-6-8; Sereida Melker 0-1-2-1; Zabrina Harper 5-1-2-12. Totals
25-20-35-74. Three-point goals: Bossingham 3, Harper.
Black
Hawk (55) — Ponce
2-0-0-4; Jones 2-0-0-4; Hughs 1-2-4-4; Johnson 1-3-7-5; Belite
2-0-0-5; Bea 3-4-4-10; Haynes 3-6-7-12; Brownwell 1-0-1-2; Thorpe
1-1-2-3; Barton 3-0-0-6. Totals 19-16-25-55. Three-point
goals: Belite.
[Bill
Martinie,
Lincoln College sports information director]
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High
school basketball |
LCHS vs.
Danville
[NOV.
20, 2001] The
Lincoln Railers defeated Danville 55-47 in their game Monday
evening.
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Score
by quarters
Lincoln
15 26 37 55
Danville
6 22 36 47
Individual
stats
Farmer
4-2-11
Romnick
1-0-2
Schonauer
4-0-9
Schrader
4-2-12
Welch
2-0-4
Werner
3-0-7
Young 5-0-10
Limestone
vs. Morton
at Lincoln tournament
Limestone
16 32 51 65 74
Morton
21 41 47 65 71
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Area
high school scores
[NOV.
20, 2001]
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Mount
Pulaski vs. Fisher
Mount
Pulaski 24 37 54 77
Fisher
7 20 32 37
Individual
stats
Wilson
1-0-2
Coers
2-0-4
N.
Tierney 2-4-8
Claments
1-0-2
Schilling
2-0-4
Olson
2-0-4
Blaum
6-1-13
Anderson
9-1-22
Waymire
1-1-3
J.
Tierney 2-0-4
Smith
4-0-8
Erlenbush 1-0-3
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Olympia
girls vs. Streator
Olympia
13 31 43 49
Streator
10 22 31 38
Olympia
JV vs. Tremont
Olympia
JV 12 25 41 51
Tremont
10 14 21 27
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College
basketball |
LCC
vs. MacMurray
[NOV.
20, 2001]
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Score by halves
MacMurray
44 49 - 93
Lincoln
Christian 47 45 - 92
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Individual
stats
Clark
8-8-27
Holderby
4-09
Below
3-3-9
Turney
0-4-4
Okusami
6-5-17
Grooms
3-2-8
Searby 7-3-17
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Illini
dominate Eastern Illinois
[NOV.
20, 2001] You
knew it was just a matter of time. He was like a time bomb in one
of those "Mission Impossible" shows. I mean, how excited
did you expect him to get in a couple of exhibition laughers? But
then, he didn’t come out all that strong last Friday versus
Gonzaga. However, Monday night Frank Williams began to prove once
again why Dickie V put him on the latest cover of the ESPN
magazine. Williams exploded for 16 second-half points by making
7-of-9 free throws and going a sizzling 5-for-8 from the field as
he finished the night with 20 points. His performance somewhat
overshadowed the real debut of Luther Head, who dunked his way
into the hearts of Illini fans everywhere with a 14-point
performance.
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More
kudos must go to the bench than that. Nick Smith continued his
improvement by giving Illinois nine points and three blocked shots.
Damir Krupalija bounced back from a lackluster showing against the
Bulldogs by hounding the EIU Panthers for 12 points as he didn’t
miss a shot in four tries.
Once
again defense and rebounding were the points of emphasis. Cory
Bradford totally bottled up the nation’s leading scorer from a
year ago, Henry Domercant. Bradford harassed him into a woeful
3-of-14 shooting night that really pointed to the Panthers’
downfall. Illinois’ presence in the passing lanes, denying almost
any penetrating pass of any kind, meant that all Eastern could get
were jumpers with Illini hands in their faces. Illinois improved a
little on the boards from their last outing by seizing a commanding
45-31 edge in the rebounding battle. These factors contributed to
Illini not going down to an upset-minded team like so many of their
ranked brethren.
Lincoln’s
Brian Cook chipped in with six points, four rebounds and four assists,
but did commit three turnovers.
This
game was a first-round victory in the Las Vegas Invitational, which I
guess allowed higher-seeded teams a home game in the opening round.
Next up for Illinois are two Thanksgiving weekend games, the first
versus Penn, followed by a game with Georgia Tech. The LDN does plan
to provide some inside coverage of this event for our loyal readers.
For
more info on last night’s game and a complete statistical breakdown,
go to the www.fightingillini.fansonly.com
website.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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College
basketball |
Lady
Lynx vs. McHenry and Moraine Valley
[NOV.
19, 2001] Lincoln
College won the Lady Lynx Classic this past weekend at Lincoln
College by defeating McHenry, 90-72, and Moraine Valley,
85-55. The Lynx are now 5-0 for the season and will
play at home Tuesday against Black Hawk at 5:30 p.m.
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Coach
Carol Wilson used numerous players in the two games, with nearly
everyone contributing. Ten players scored for the Lady Lynx in
the game against McHenry, while 14 cracked the scoring column
against Moraine Valley.
Jessie
Dullard led the Lynx against McHenry with 22 points. Double-figure
support came from Victoria Scott, 13; Kim Calhoun, 12; Zabrina
Harper, 12; and Sarah McLaughlin, 10. Angie Bossingham was the
lone double-figure scorer against Moraine Valley with 16 points.
Dullard
and Bossingham were selected to the all-tournament team by the
coaches.
Lincoln
College (90) — Ariel
Lamb 1-0-0-2; Victoria Scott 6-0-1-13; Sarah McLaughlin 3-1-2-10;
Angie Bossingham 3-2-2-9; Ronni Beebe 1-3-4-5; Kim Calhoun 5-2-4-12;
Kim Massenburg 0-1-2-1; Ashley Sims 1-2-2-4; Jessie Dullard
10-2-3-22; Zabrina Harper 6-0-2-12. Totals 36-13-22-90.
Three-point goals: Bossingham, Scott, McLaughlin 3.
McHenry
(72) — Abramavicius
1-3-4-6; Beyer 3-3-4-10; Brook 7-1-4-16; Jaehnke 4-6-12-14; Jay
3-3-4-10; Legnadli 4-0-0-8; Shockey 2-2-2-6. Totals
24-18-30-72. Three-point goals: Shockey 2, Abramavicius,
Beyer, Brook, Jay.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Lincoln
College (85) — Lamb
1-3-5-5; Bausley 0-1-2-1; Story 1-1-2-3; Scott 2-1-2-5; McLaughlin
3-1-2-7; Hinrichsen 1-1-2-4; Bossingham 6-0-0-16; Beebe 3-2-4-8; Dobey
1-1-2-3; Calhoun 2-3-4-7; Massenburg 3-1-4-7; Sims 2-3-4-7; Rossio
2-0-0-4; Dullard 1-6-8-8; Melker 0-0-0-0. Totals
28-24-41-85. Three-point goals: Bossingham 4, Hinrichsen.
Moraine
Valley (55) — Connelly
0-3-4-3; Leonard 4-6-10-14; Beranek 0-1-2-1; Kimmey 4-3-4-11; Archer
7-0-0-16; Crum 4-1-4; Maglaris 0-1-2-1. Totals
19-15-26-55. Three-point goals: Archer 2.
[Bill
Martinie,
Lincoln College sports information director]
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Ford
powers ISU past Weber State in season opener
[NOV.
19, 2001] NORMAL
— Forward Shedrick Ford tossed in 18 points and hauled in eight
rebounds as Illinois State edged Weber State 74-70 in the season
opener Friday at Redbird Arena.
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Down
by as many as six in the first half, the Redbirds (1-0) clawed their
way back to within one with nine minutes left, after a layup by Ford
and a Shawn Jeppson trey. The ’Birds took their first lead of the
game at the four-minute mark on another Jeppson 3-pointer as
Illinois State took a 35-31 lead into the half.
In
the second half, Baboucarr Bojang drove the lane and was fouled as
his shot dropped through. Bojang’s free throw extended the Redbird
lead to four. After Weber State battled to within one, Jeppson found
Bojang for a thunderous dunk. On the WSU’s possession, Bojang came
up with a steal and found an open Randy Rice for the layup and a
five-point lead with 7:40 remaining.
Wildcat
Brad Barton made things interesting, nailing a 3-pointer with 2.3
seconds in regulation, bringing Weber State within three, but Vince
Greene hit a free throw with less than one second left to seal the
Redbird victory.
Preseason
Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year Tarise Bryson went
down with an injury to his right wrist at the 17:46 mark on a hard
foul as he was driving to the basket. Bryson left the game for
X-rays with eight points, three assists and three steals.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Bojang
and Jeppson filled in during the second half in the absence of Bryson.
Bojang recorded his first double-double in his first game as a
Redbird, scoring 14 points, 12 in the second half, and pulling down 10
boards. Jeppson tallied 10 of his 14 in the second period and dished
out five assists.
For
the game, ISU shot 85 percent from the free-throw line (24-of-28)
while holding Weber State to 63 percent (12-of-19) from the charity
stripe. The tenacious Redbird defense forced 24 Wildcat turnovers,
which were converted into 29 points for the ’Birds.
Weber
State’s Jermaine Boyette poured in 14 first-half points and erupted
for 17 second-half points to lead the Wildcats. John Hamilton added 10
for WSU, which falls to 0-1.
The
Redbirds return to action Nov. 23, taking on the UC-Irvine Anteaters
at the University Hoops Classic at Moon Township, Pa.
[Erica
Fricke,
ISU assistant director of media relations]
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Cook’s
second-half explosion
leads Illini to tough opening win
By
Jeff Mayfield
[NOV.
19, 2001] I
don’t know who thought it was a good idea to open the season
with the Gonzaga Bulldogs, but it sure wasn’t I. I’ve been out
on the road so much this year that my phone call from Mr. Guenther
or from coach Self must’ve come while I was away. This is the
same Bulldog team that has reached the Sweet Sixteen in each of
the last three NCAA tournaments. Media outlets across the country
refer to them as Cinderella, but Cinderella only went to the dance
once! From my vantage point, all I can say about these guys is…
they’re pretty good! And I didn’t want to play them. I would
have been much happier with a game against Prairie View or my
former team out at LCC.
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Of
course if I wrote this story simply as a college basketball fan, I
would feel much differently. I would love this kind of contest,
putting two of the best 16 teams on the floor at the same time this
early in the season. You have to love that. However you saw it, the
Illini grinded out a gritty performance and rode Brian Cook’s
second-half breakout to a thrilling 76-58 victory that was much more
difficult than it sounds.
Illinois
shot only 39 percent from the field in the first half and were
clobbered on the boards but still managed a 36-29 advantage, mostly
because of the free-throw differential. To prove that I am not a
homer, I’m not so sure that Gonzaga fouled all that much or if
they were the victims of some interesting calls. The flow of the
game was disrupted several times, and I think the Bulldogs are a
very dangerous team when they dictate the pace and tempo. Last night
they were able to do neither.
Much
of that credit must go to coach Self’s defensive game plan.
Illinois had tremendous pressure on the ball, which limited the play
of All-World player Dan Dickau, who STILL somehow managed to get 19
points. Illinois’ defense was so good that Dickau finished with
six turnovers — very uncharacteristic, I’m sure.
In
addition to the great D, Brian Cook’s emergence in the second half
helped the Illini pull away from the pesky ’Dogs. After a very
slow start, Cook found the range and really got into the flow of the
offense. He finished the night 5-of-13 from the field, 7-for-7 from
the line, and he had two assists and three steals while committing
no turnovers. He led the team with 18 points and stayed away from
foul trouble in 34 minutes of action.
Cory
Bradford had a great opening night by firing in 17 points, and
Robert Archibald had a very solid 16-point performance. Sean
Harrington had five points — very uncharacteristic, I’m sure —
but he had some nifty passes and contributed four assists. Frank
Williams chipped in 13 for the Illini cause but never really seemed
to get untracked. As just a single observer somewhere out on the
prairie, I’m not too concerned about that.
Much
has been made about Cook and others regarding the fact that they
need to be more consistent. Well, dah! Don’t we all need to be
more consistent? I’m just hoping that this team displays the
unselfish play that they demonstrated last night, all season long.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
As
a former coach, I’d say that my best teams were when we had four,
five or six players and the scouting reports would say stop Williams,
and Cook and Bradford will kill you; stop Cook and Bradford, and
Archibald will rise up and bite you. What I would have given for a
player like Cook?!
Since
the depth of this year’s squad will be a question mark for a while,
it is even more important that the first six make the extra pass and
play the stifling team defense that they showed last night. Cook,
Archibald and Krupalija were double-teaming in the post ferociously.
The Illini guards put so much pressure on the ball that they were
forcing the Gonzaga guards to places on the floor that they did not
want to go. When you can shut down a great team like that with
suffocating defense, you give yourself a better chance to be
competitive every night.
Bench
contributions were also a factor for Illinois last night. I’m
getting on the Nick Smith bandwagon early. I think he has improved
immensely! He came out on the court and immediately electrified the
crowd with a blocked shot. Then he got a rebound and then a bucket. He
fired up the crowd and brought some energy to the floor. If he can
give six to 10 solid minutes a night and help us add another interior
player to the post rotation, he will make us so much better. Luther
Head and Brett Melton also did well in limited action. Damir Krupalija
never really seemed to get going, but his presence, especially on the
defensive end, was a factor. And Blandon Ferguson snagged three caroms
in three minutes of action. Our bench may very well determine how far
the Illini will go this season.
Gonzaga
out-rebounded the Illini 40-30 for the game, but that was offset by
two key statistics. First, Illinois forced the Bulldogs into 20
turnovers while committing only eight themselves. That’s like
mid-season form. And Illinois made 30 free throws to eight for Gonzaga.
While I’m delighted that the Illini made almost 80 percent from the
line, I’m not all that proud of the disparity. I am proud of our
overall performance.
I
would give us a strong B and could be persuaded to go B-plus if
someone gives me a cupcake.
Suddenly,
I’m starting to feel a lot better about scheduling this game.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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|
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College
football |
’Birds
come up short against Bears in season finale
[NOV.
19, 2001] SPRINGFIELD,
Mo. — Despite two touchdowns apiece from Quincy Washington and
Vito Golson, Illinois State could not contain Southwest Missouri
State as the Bears posted 611 yards of total offense, handing the
Redbirds their ninth loss of the season, 48-31, in the season
finale Saturday at Plaster Sports Complex.
|
SMS
scratched the scoring column first on a 62-yard pass from Austin
Moherman to Mark Marcos at the 6:16 mark in the first quarter. The
Bears then closed out the first quarter when running back Demetrius
Smith scampered into the end zone for a one-yard scoring run.
The
Redbirds struck back at the 12:55 mark in the second quarter with an
82-yard drive capped by a 37-yard Dusty Burk pass to Golson for a
touchdown.
Another
one-yard run by Smith with two minutes left in the half gave SMS a
21-7 advantage, but the ’Birds found the end zone once more before
halftime as Washington ran the ball in from the one-yard line with
24 seconds left on the clock.
In
the third, the Bears collected an early field goal that was answered
by the Redbirds with a Steve Carroll field goal from 47 yards out
with 9:14 left in the quarter. Washington scored his second
touchdown of the day on another one-yard carry at the 5:45 mark to
tie the game. The Bears responded with a 92-yard drive that ended
with a three-yard run by Eddie Linscomb to put SMS up by seven.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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The
first three drives of the fourth resulted in touchdowns as Moherman
found Marcos open once again and SMS extended the lead to 14 early in
the fourth. On the next drive, the ’Birds cut the lead to seven as
Burk hit Golson with a 21-yard strike at the 11:11 mark. Twenty
seconds later, Eddie Linscomb ran back the kickoff for a 65-yard
score, putting the Bears ahead 45-31. SMS added another field goal
with 7:06 remaining.
Burk
finished the day with 240 yards on 13-of-22 passing, two touchdowns
and three interceptions. Golson hauled in five catches for 81 yards
and two touchdowns while Washington rumbled for 82 rushing yards and
two touchdowns.
The
Redbirds conclude the 2001 campaign 2-9 and 2-5 in the Gateway while
SMS
finishes the season at 6-5 and 3-4.
[Heather
Henning, ISU athletics media relations]
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Illini
take out the Buckeyes
[NOV.
19, 2001] The
cardiac Illini have struck again, this time in Columbus, Ohio,
where the Illinois Fighting Illini left a stunned crowd of over
100,000 paying customers and a disbelieving Ohio State football
team scattered on the field in a 34-22 thriller. For the fourth
time in as many games, Illini QB Kurt Kittner brought the team
back from a deficit.
|
Illinois
(9-1, 6-1) has now won six games in a row since the season-opening
debacle at Michigan. Illinois can clinch at least a tie for the Big
Ten conference championship with a win over Northwestern at home on
Thanksgiving Day. The Illini are now ranked in the top 10 in the
nation at No. 10!
The
LDN was invited to Ohio State Saturday, but a previous commitment to
LCC basketball and some yard work stood in the way!
For
more info on the game, go to www.fightingillini.com.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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|
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College
swimming |
Lincoln
College at Illinois Wesleyan meet
[NOV.
19, 2001] The
Lincoln College men dominated the Illinois Wesleyan University
swimming meet Saturday to easily outdistance a field of eight
teams. The Lynx of coach Dan Hemenway had a team total of 187
points. Second place went to Carthage College with 97
points. Lincoln College was the lone two-year school
in the event.
|
The
Lady Lynx finished third in the nine-team field with a total of 74.5
points, behind Illinois Wesleyan with 125.5 and North Central with
110.
Ramiro
Palmar and Joe Krysak were selected co-MVP award winners for the
Lynx swimmers. Lincoln College won every event and
placed second in seven of the 12 events.
Placing
for Lincoln College men were:
Three-meter diving — 1. Sean Calhoun, 246.5; 2. Tim Philosophos,
230.75.
One-meter diving — 1. Philosophos, 256.95; 2. Calhoun, 232.95; 3.
Bryce Olsen, 144.60; 4. Brett Chase, 131.20; 5. Adam Johnisee,
131.20.
200-yard medley relay — 1. Lincoln College (Joe Krysak, Zach
Welch, Brandon Davidson, Carl Kopecky), 1:42.56; 3. Lincoln College
(Jason Hierman, Doug Garofalo, Ronald Kestner, Doug Zimmer), 1:46.44
200 free — 1. Krysak, 1:47.15; 2. Kestner, 1:51.64.
200 IM — 1.Palmar, 1:59.85; 3. Hierman, 2:08.92.
50 free — 1. Kopecky, :22.64; 2. Scott Sampson, :23.29.
100 fly — 1. Palmar, :53.89; 2. Welch, :56.79; 5. Brandon
Davidson, 1:00.35.
100 free — 1. Kopecky, :48.73.
500 free — 1. Krysak, 4:50.07; 2. Sampson, 4:59.82.
100 back — 1. Hierman, :57.05; 3. Ryan Poss, :58.73.
100 breast — 1. Palmar, :59.09; 4. Welch, 1:04.48; 5. Kestner,
1:05.05.
200 free relay — 1. Lincoln College (Palmar, Sampson, Krysak,
Kopecky), 1:30.54; 4. Lincoln College (Brooks, Hierman, Welch,
Kestner), 1:34.40.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
Top
finishers for the Lady Lynx were:
200
free — 4. Rachel Willenborg, 2:05.02; 6. Angela Couch, 2:06.26.
200
IM — 2. Leslie Seago, 2:22.78.
50
free — 4. Erin Nelson, :26.47; 5. Couch, :26.75.
100
fly — 3. Willenborg, 1:03.99; 4. Seago, 1:04.04.
100
free — 6. Nelson, :59.13.
500
free — 4. Seago, 5:37.75; 5. Couch, 5:45.55.
100
back — 2. Willenborg, 1:04.51.
200
free relay — 3. Lincoln College (Seago, Nelson, Willenborg, Couch),
1:47.31.
[Bill
Martinie,
Lincoln College sports information director]
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Baseball |
Knopp
signs with Western Illinois
By
Jeff Mayfield
[NOV.
17, 2001] In
front of a gathering of family and friends, Lincoln High School
senior Andy Knopp inked a deal to play baseball at Western
Illinois University after his local playing days come to an end in
the spring.
|
Knopp
was noticeably happy about all of the support and acknowledged it
throughout the 30-minute press conference that started Thursday at 4
p.m. in the main offices at the school.
Coach
Pat Hake also seemed quite pleased with the proceedings and pointed
to it as yet another sign of the continuing emergence of Lincoln
baseball.
Once
again the LDN brings you the REAL inside story, as we spoke with
Andy’s future coach, Stan Hyman, via telephone Friday morning.
This is what coach Hyman had to say:
"We
are excited to add Andy Knopp to our roster. He brings us lots of
versatility. He can play both the infield and the outfield, and he
can also pitch. That made him very attractive to us because we can
use him in varying roles. In terms of depth, he’s the kind of
player that gives us the necessary depth to accomplish our goals.
Andy was one of 12 signees that we’ve inked during this early
signing period, and he is a part of a tremendous recruiting class.
That is important to us, as we played the 50th toughest schedule in
the country last season.
"Another
big change over here at WIU is that we are bringing the program up
to a national level. We recently tore up our infield and rebuilt it.
Now it looks like a major league infield. Improvements like that and
adding a stellar recruiting class can do nothing but help us.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
"The
biggest thing about recruiting Andy was that he is a quality young
man. We know that he will give us a solid effort in the classroom and
out on the field. We pride ourselves on looking for solid kids from
solid families and schools, and we think we have found that with Andy.
He brings the kind of quality that we are looking for in our
program."
The
LDN hopes to do a full feature on Knopp in the future, but we have
these notes now:
—WIU
is a Division I program with a schedule approximating 56 games.
Included on their schedule are dates with such notables as Nebraska
(sixth in the nation last season), Iowa, Missouri, Kansas State,
Illinois, Illinois State, Bradley and Southern Illinois. They also
hope to play a game next season in the Minnesota Twins’
"Twinkie Dome," the Metrodome, and they also have scheduled
a tournament in Hawaii.
—Knopp
figures to be penciled in the lineup somewhere as a middle infielder,
probably at second base, which is a position that he is quite
comfortable with. Insiders say that he will probably be called on to
do some pitching as well. Again, according to insiders, Knopp is the
first Lincoln Railer in 10 years to sign with a D-I baseball program
directly out of high school!
CONGRATULATIONS,
Andy!
[Jeff
Mayfield]
|
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College
basketball |
Alexander,
Redbirds take 74-70
victory over Weber State in opener
[NOV.
17, 2001] Gregg
Alexander had eight points and started ISU's first game as a true
freshman, as the Redbirds held on for a 74-70 win over Weber State
in their home opener yesterday. Congratulations to Gregg and
to the Redbirds. For more info, click
here for Todd Kober's story on the game.
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|
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Post-game
with the LDN
At
Champaign: Illinois 76, Gonzaga 58
By
Jeff Mayfield
[NOV.
17, 2001] Occasionally
this season LDN will bring you some post-game comments by the game’s
principal players and coaches and from our staff. We’ll start with
last night’s chance encounter with coach Bill Self. LDN
photographer Tom Seggelke and I literally ran into him as we were
leaving the Assembly Hall.
|
Thinking, I’m
sure, that Tom and I
were with ESPN or Fox Sports News, he immediately asked us who we
were. We told him and he talked to us anyway!
He seemed to be very
happy with his team’s performance and told us that he was most
pleased with their defensive effort.
I wanted to plant a seed
with him to possibly open the door for future exclusive LDN
interviews, so I pointed out to him that we have a mutual
friend, former Oral Roberts star center Jay Henderson. Jay
is a veteran of the LCC (Mayfield era) basketball camps. Self
seemed to think that that was pretty neat.
I asked him if he
felt better now that this game was behind us and he said,
"Definitely."
I then offered him congratulations and wished him
good luck on the season and he said, “Thanks.” Tom was
very moved by his response.
Quotes
Coach Mark Few:
"I put us in this
situation (by scheduling this game). You have to play A-minus
basketball at best to win in this environment, and we didn’t.
We didn’t take care of the ball or execute well enough to exploit
some things. They took us out of option A and B, and so we
dribbled around trying to make something happen rather than trusting
your teammates.
"Illinois is a very
good basketball team. They are a great defensive team.
They spread you out and high-low you. There were times in
their offensive where all five players touched the ball. Those
are signs of a championship team. Their unselfishness
impressed me. But I’m the one who scheduled this game.
"It was a great
college basketball crowd.
"I would only grade us
out at a C or a C-minus. Our offense was not vintage Gonzaga
basketball tonight. Illinois should be credited for that.
They do what we call help on help. Last season we were
eliminated by Michigan State, and they killed us on the boards.
It was our goal to improve on that area and I think we have.
But, I would’ve swapped that tonight for better offensive
execution."
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
Gonzaga’s Dan
Dickau:
"We can’t get any big-
name teams to come up and play us in Spokane, Wash. I love
to play on the road in great arenas like this one. I/we had too
many silly turnovers to put us in a position to win."
The LDN asked him how
far he thought he could take his team. “I want to take them as far
as I can," he said. "I I have a lot of confidence in myself and in my team to
get us there.” There was so much pride in the hall with all of
the orange shirts. It reminded me of the great support we get back
home in our kennel!
Brian Cook:
"In the second half I
needed to post up closer to the basket. I got some layups and
got to the free- throw line, and that helped me get going."
The LDN asked if Cook
called for the ball when he’s in the flow or if they run plays
especially for him.
“No, coach wants us to pass the ball on the
perimeter, and he wants us big guys to really move without the
ball," Cook said. "
He wants us to get in the seams and not to force it. We have
confidence in each other, and we trust our offense.”
Stray arrows
I admit my skepticism
toward our crowd was certainly unfounded. They came out in
force last night, and their support was thundering. It may have
been the best early- season crowd that this reporter has ever seen, and
I’ve been a follower since 1975!
Many Lincolnites were
on hand to help the crowd do its thing.
Next up for the
Illini
Monday night the Illini are at home
versus Eastern Illinois in actually the first round of the Las Vegas
Invitational Tournament, which will resume in Vegas on Thanksgiving
weekend.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
|
|
LCC
vs. SLCC
[NOV.
17, 2001] The
Lincoln Christian College Preachers defeated the
St. Louis Christian College Soldiers last night 80-64.
|
The Preachers managed
to gain an early lead and hold it for most of the game.
Tension was high, however, as the teams were rarely more than 20
points apart. A two-team scramble for an escaped ball did
manage to lighten the mood by causing a six- or seven-man heap on
the floor.
The Preachers’ star
players were Matt Clark, with 25 points and two assists, and Joel
Searby, with 20 points and six assists. Joel Searby is a
newcomer to the team, having just transferred from Elmhurst College.
Team standings:
10 Matt Clark
7-2-25
11 Jake Raymer
2-0-4
12 John
Holderby 1-0-3
14 Aaron
Johnson 0-0-0
21 Anthony
Cerniglia 1-0-2
23 Zack Below
0-0-0
24 Ben
Brodfuehrer 2-0-4
25 Jim Turney
1-1-3
31 Mike
O’Conner 0-0-0
33 Antoni
Okusami 4-0-8
40 Josh
Grooms 5-0-10
43 Joel Searby
7-1-20
44 Mike Lerot
0-0-1
First
half 17-2-44
Second half
13-2-36
Game
total 30-4-80
“The good news was
we got to play everybody. The
bad news was the starters tried to do too much.” —
Coach Randy
Kirk
[Gina
Sennett]
|
|
|
College
softball |
Gaither
signs on as newest Redbird
[NOV.
17, 2001] NORMAL
— Olympia
native Tricia Gaither is the newest member of
the Illinois State softball family. Gaither signed a national
letter of intent with the
Redbirds on Wednesday.
|
After helping Olympia
High School to the Class A state tournament in each of the last two
seasons, Gaither will come to the Redbirds with no real defensive
home. This provides for very little concern to Illinois State head
coach Melinda Fischer because of abundance of offensive skills.
"Defensively I
have no clue where I will play her," Fischer said. "But I
think the real asset she has is the ability to lead off and put the
ball in play. She can slap, bunt, hit with power and has great speed
to go along with that."
Gaither set the
Olympia batting record as a sophomore with a .457 average. She then
followed that up by outdoing herself in her junior season by hitting
at a .466 clip, with 35 stolen bases and a .509 on-base percentage,
leading to an all-state selection by the Illinois Coaches
Association.
Fischer feels that
good coaching in both the summer and high school seasons has led to
Gaither's fundamentally sound game.
"Tricia is a
very fundamentally sound ballplayer also, which proves that she is
a product of good coaching in both high school (Olympia) and during
summer ball (Oly Fire)," Fischer said.
[Nate
Bargar, ISU athletic media relations]
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Mayfield’s
Mutterings…
|
By Jeff Mayfield
[NOV.
15, 2001] This
week, I don’t even know where to start... so, I’ll just start at the
beginning. As I’ve said before, this is one of my favorite times of the year.
Why? Because there are more sports offerings than you can shake a stick at. And
that’s a pretty big stick. Baseball, golf and volleyball have just wrapped up,
and now we have football, basketball, wrestling, hockey and a host of other
sports.
|
Railer hoops
For
you local hoops fans, it’s time to see this season’s editions of both the
Lady Railers and the Railer basketball squads. I know that the boys will host
their annual Green and White scrimmage tonight at 6:30. You get to see everyone
in the program, and I think the only admission price is a can of pop.
Many
wonder about the significance of holding an intra-squad game for the public.
There are so many benefits that it would be hard to list them all. Of course you
don’t want any injuries, but it is just good to get everyone some time and let
them get used to the environment. Because the next time they take the floor, it
counts!
I
ALWAYS looked forward to that annual scrimmage. It was done in my hometown very
similar to the way it’s done here. Sometimes the stands are packed-out here
and sometimes they’re not. I STILL have not learned the secret. I do know how
much it meant to me when my neighbors, area business people, folks from my
congregation and assorted others would show up to support me and my teammates. I
knew some of them were clueless about the game, but they came anyway.
I
even know that there are several folks who ignore sports or who despise them.
That is OK with me. They are certainly entitled to that opinion. However, in my
limited experience in life, I personally have found very few things that can
mobilize a community, help give it an identity, foster a sense of unity and
pride than a group of people rallying around one of its local sports teams.
As
I travel the state of Illinois and proudly tell people that I am from Lincoln,
there is almost always an immediate reaction; and it has something to do with
our basketball program. Whether they know basketball or not, they know that we
have some of the hardest-working kids in the sport. They also know that
successful, winning basketball is synonymous with Lincoln.
I
always tell them the same thing. Not only are they hardworking, but they are
just great kids! When I notice that that puts a smile on the face of these
people from all over the state, it makes me even prouder that I’m from
Lincoln. Some say we put too much emphasis on the sport, and they are probably
right. But there are a lot of worse things that we could be known for!
Here’s
looking to see you and 3,000-plus other fans at good ol’ Roy S. to support our
Railer teams again this year. I do think our crowds have gotten a little soft
the last two seasons. When our teams are performing at their highest levels,
they need YOU to give them energy and to really provide a home-court advantage.
I’m not too sure that that has happened of late. Let’s make this year the
year that our sportsmanship, support and class has no rival in the state of
Illinois! GO, RAILERS!
(Side
note: Congratulations to Railer coach Darrin Worth and his wife, Tiffany, on the
birth of their daughter.)
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Da Bears
"...those
aren’t pillows! How ’bout those Bears?!"
Hey,
how ’bout those Bears? Yah, cheeseheads, I know you came away with the victory
Sunday, but I have to tell you, it was not all that impressive. The Pack is
indeed good, but area growlers will tell you Chicago is gaining on you.
I
don’t know much about this Norris division that you all follow, but I do know
that the Bears are vastly improved. The addition of Anthony Thomas at running
back has made a big difference to this ballclub. Settling the Cade McNown
situation was also huge, although I’m still not convinced he was as much of
the problem as we’ve been led to believe. The receivers, while not speedy,
have run precise routes and have, for the most part, displayed good hands. And
special teams, for once, have been pretty special, as the recovery of the
onsides kick against Cleveland should point out.
I’m
especially happy for head coach Dick Jauron. He has been lampooned and lambasted
and just held up as a sacrificial lamb for this organization the last two years.
I listened to his call-in show two of the last three weeks, and I am amazed how
rude the fans are to him. He’s winning games, and they STILL have ideas on how
his coaching could be better.
The
LDN would like to give those fans just a little advice this week: GET OVER IT!!!
Dick has simply done a fabulous job turning this team around this season.
Especially if you’ve taken the time to carefully examine the roster that he
has been dealt. He has maximized it! Skeptics will tell you that the Bears have
played one of the softest schedules in the league. While there may be a
smattering of truth to that, the LDN would tell them you can play only the
people that the league office puts on your schedule. So, GET OVER IT!
I
didn’t even think the Bears looked all that bad on opening day versus the
Ravens. They still had a chance to win in the fourth quarter. And I know that
Packer fans don’t want to hear this, but if the Bears would’ve maybe played
just a little smarter just before halftime, they probably would’ve been in a
position to win on Sunday.
I’m not the
biggest Bears fan on the planet. I follow them because many of you, my local
friends, do. I wish them great success because they have to be one of the NFL’s
biggest underdogs!!!
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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