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College
volleyball
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Lincoln
College vs. Carl Sandburg
[SEPT.
28, 2001] Lincoln
College will take the weekend off after beating Carl Sandburg 30-26,
30-9 and 30-25 in volleyball Thursday night at Lincoln. "We
will take a 9-8 record into this short break, and it is very
pleasing to be over .500 at this time," said coach Mark Tippett.
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The
Lady Lynx coach continued, "We played pretty well and with a
lot of intensity. Carl Sandburg made us work hard for our points in
the first and third games. I don't know what happened in the second
game, as we just totally dominated. We were very consistent
with our serving and we found a way to push through in the first and
third games."
Janine
Buettner had another outstanding night for the Lady Lynx with 12
points, eight aces and nine kills. Erica Miller
contributed nine points, six kills and four digs, while Marie Burash
had nine points and one ace. Angela Maestas, a Lincoln
High School graduate, had eight points and three digs, while Beth
Guy, a Hartsburg-Emden grad, contributed 25 set assists.
[Bill
Martinie,
Lincoln College sports information director]
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Men’s
soccer
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Lincoln
College vs. Danville
[SEPT.
27, 2001] Lincoln
College shut out Danville 4-0 in men’s soccer at Danville
Wednesday afternoon. The victory runs the Lincoln record to 6-2 for
the season.
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Lincoln
College scored its third shutout in the past four games with
Fernando Delgado in goal. Delgado was credited with six saves
in the game.
"We
played pretty well. We had a lot of opportunities early but
couldn’t put the ball in the net," said coach Mark
Howard. "I put in three subs for the last 20 minutes of
the game, and two of the three scored goals. We didn’t
play our best defensive game of the year, but they were a hard team
to defend because they just kick and run."
Jesus
Cruz scored Lincoln’s first goal at the 39th minute with an assist
from Steve Gorton. That was the only goal of the first half as the
Lynx had a 1-0 margin. At the 75th minute, John Lusicic scored
with an assist from Chris Luther, and 12 minutes later Cliff
Scattergood put a ball in the net with an assist from Mike
Fox. The final Lynx goal came at the 89th minute, with Lusicic
again scoring, this time with the assist from Jeremy Wood.
[Bill
Martinie,
Lincoln College sports information director]
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College
volleyball
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Lincoln
College vs. Lake Land
[SEPT.
26, 2001] Lincoln
College lost to the Lake Land volleyball team in three matches at
Mattoon on Tuesday night, 30-22, 30-23, 30-15. The loss drops
the Lady Lynx back to the .500 mark for the season as they enter a
home match against Carl Sandburg Thursday at 6 p.m.
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"Lake
Land was a very solid team. We did not come out with much
intensity," said coach Mark Tippett. "I felt we
should have played tougher, but when you don’t play with a lot of
emotion against good teams, you are going to have problems."
Erica
Miller had nine points and four kills, while Angela Maestas had
seven points and three digs for the Lady Lynx. Janine Buettner
contributed six points, two blocks and five kills.
[Bill
Martinie,
Lincoln College sports information director]
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High
school
volleyball
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Tough,
but not enough
[SEPT.
25, 2001] The
will to win. Refusing to lose. Both are two sides of the same coin.
Last night one team had more of both than the other. Unfortunately,
the team with more was the Olympia Spartans. The Lady Railers played
tough, but tough was not enough to win.
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Olympia
came into last night’s match with a 19-2 record and was all
business from the warm-up time until its business was finished. Its
business was to take care of an excellent Lady Railer team. A
hard-fought battle ensued between botsh champion-caliber teams. The
Railers had victory in sight in both games but couldn’t finish off
the Spartans in either game. In the end, it was Olympia who would
outlast the Lady Railers 15-11, 16-14 to take home their 20th
win.
In
Game 1 the Lady Railers maintained a lead through the 11-point mark
and then let the victory slip away. The Railers played tough as the
match began. An opening serve from Kari McFadden and a kill by
Samantha Conrady broke the ice and gave the Railers a lead they
would not relinquish again until the scoreboard showed 12-11
Olympia.
But
while the Railers led most of the way, Oly was always right at the
door looking to take over. Ultimately it was Olympia’s Laura
Doombas, at the net and at the service line, who took over and who
proved too much for the Lady Railers. Doombas was everywhere, and
wherever she was things happened. Her hard kills at the net were
virtually untouchable. Her hard jump serve frustrated the Railers
all night. With the score 11-8 in favor of the Lady Railers, Doombas
stepped to the service line for Oly. When she finished there, the
game was over. Doombos ran off seven successive serves that finished
off the Railer hopes for a victory.
Bright
spots for the Lady Railers in Game 1 included the serving and net
play of Darcy White and the team net play by Tina Cook, Michelle
McFadden, Kari McFadden and Samantha Conrady.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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In
Game 2 it looked like the Railers would force a three-game match, as
they overcame an early Oly lead to bring themselves to the brink of
victory at 14-12. But the Spartans just wouldn’t allow themselves
to lose. The entire game was again a back-and-forth affair with the
Railers’ biggest lead being four points at the 10-6 mark. But once
again it was Oly’s Laura Doombas, along with Elizabeth Siuda, who
had more of a will to win than anyone on the floor. Doombas’ plays
on a defensive block at 14-14 and another powerful kill at 14-15
secured the match for Olympia.
The
Railers were led in serving by junior service expert Christina Xamis
and by Missy Aper and Darcy White. On the Railer side of the net,
Kelli Gleason did her usual excellent job of setting, and Tina Cook
and Darcy White were unstoppable at the net. Kari McFadden have
several nice soft touches for points as well as the night’s most
unusual play, when her "pass" from the backcourt went over
the net and fell to the court, untouched by Olympia, for a Railer
point.
The
large crowd in attendance last night witnessed two of the premier
teams in the area going head to head. Regardless of the winner, both
teams played competitive volleyball and showed why their programs
are the envy of many in central Illinois. Both teams have talent,
depth and work hard on the court.
It
seemed to me that the slight difference that caused Oly to go home
with the victory and Lincoln to suffer the loss was sheer will. Oly
was not about to lose. They expected they would win…and they did.
The Railers played well but were unable to finish. I’m sure the
loss will prove useful to the Lady Railers as they continue
conference play and enter the postseason state tournament, where
willing to win and refusing to lose will be crucial.
The
junior varsity squad also went down to defeat in a hard-fought,
three-set match by scores of 14-16, 15-7, 11-15.
The
Lady Railers finish out the week with two conference matches. The
Lady Railers travel to Glenwood tonight and return home on Thursday
to face Sacred Heart Griffin.
GO,
RAILERS!
[Rick
Hobler]
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Illinois’ second-half surge
upends No. 25 Louisville
Defense shuts out Cardinals over the
last
34-plus minutes as Illini prevail 34-10
By
Jeff Mayfield
[SEPT.
24, 2001] For
two weeks or more, many people were pointing to this game to see if
this year’s Illini squad was for real or not. And most of the
43,232 patrons, including several Logan County residents at the game
Saturday, came away pleased with what they saw. They saw a suspect
defense hold an explosive Cardinal offensive attack that was
averaging 37-plus points per game to only one touchdown and a field
goal for the day!
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Louisville’s
outstanding receiving corps gobbled up a lot of yardage but couldn’t
find the end zone. Had you asked the crew in the press box early in
the proceedings how many TD receptions they guessed the Cards would
finish the game with, I doubt that many would have said one. I know
this LDN reporter wouldn’t have!
The
fans also saw the vaunted Illinois aerial attack, although it was
sporadic for most of the game. In fact, both teams showed the
effects of playing with heavy hearts and a loss of timing that came
from having so many days off.
J.J.
Tubbs hit an early 29-yard field goal to put the Illini on top 3-0,
but by the end of the period, highly touted Louisville QB Dave
Regone had completed a 3-yard TD pass to Ronnie Ghent. Nathan Smith
added the PAT, and just like that it was 7-3 Cardinals with 2:40
left in the first. And as easy as they made it look, it appeared it
might be a long day for Illinois.
Luckily
those fears were never fully realized. As a matter of fact, Illinois
struck back within 20 seconds. This is NOT a typo. The Illini
actually had a three-play, 80-yard drive that was capped by a 9-yard
strike from Kurt Kittner to Carey Davis. That play put the good guys
back on top 10-7. Then it was time for our new favorite player,
Christian Morton — actually he was one of our favorites last
season — to get into the act. All he did was intercept a pass and
take it to the house, which was 33 yards away. That put Illinois
ahead 17-7. Smith had a career-longest 43-yard field goal to finish
the first-half scoring at 17-10 Illinois.
Both
teams appeared to be sluggish at times and out of sync, and you
really couldn’t have guessed what was going to happen in the
second half. After an inspiring halftime show, the Illini came out
and underwhelmed the fans for a couple of possessions before Kittner
hooked up with another of our favorite players, Walter Young, on a
38-yard heave that made it 24-10. Illinois surged and was never
really headed after that.
[to top of second column in
this article]
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However,
our LDN crew is still concerned about whether the defense is Big Ten
tough yet. We say to keep putting pressure on our opponents. In the
first half the Illini were going with several nickel-and-dime
packages that were pretty successful. But in the second half the
Orange and Blue picked up the pressure on the QB so much so that
Regone was held to six completions for 64 yards! If we continue to
blitz, mix up our coverages and continue to improve against the run,
we have a chance to be competitive in our always-rough conference.
Antoineo
Harris highlighted a stellar offensive day with a short TD jaunt to
go along with his 102 yards from scrimmage on 22 carries. Former CS8
player Peter Christofilakos added five points with a field goal and
two PATs. Kittner finished the day 18-of-39 for 301 yards and two
touchdowns to go along with two INTs. In all fairness to Kurt, it
appeared that both of those passes could have been caught for
offensive receptions.
The
Illini had 504 total yards to Louisville’s 338. The Illinois
defense held the Cardinals to 29 yards rushing for the game! We
wager to say if we do that during Big Ten play, a wild ride may be
in store.
Speaking
of wild rides, the Illini hit the road next week to play in the Big
House against the infamous blue. A win there and the Illini could
well be on their way back to a bowl game…
Quick
hitters
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With the win, Illinois has now won 10 non-conference games in a row
for the first time since a 15-game winning streak from 1910-16.
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The win over No. 25 Louisville is Illinois’ first over a ranked
team since they picked Ohio State apart 46-20 in 1999.
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The Illini are now tied with Louisville and Oklahoma in forced
turnovers. All three teams have collected 12 turnovers each.
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Illinois is now leading the turnover battle against their opponents
12-2.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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High
school football
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Olympia vs. Prairie Central
Olympia
7 6 6
0 – 19
Prairie Central
7 7 13 7
– 34
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Lincoln vs. Springfield
Lincoln
0 7
0 6 – 13
Springfield
7 13 15 7 –
42
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Part
2
One-time Railer now prepares
for more difficult battles
Jeff Mayfield interviews former
Lincoln Railer gridder Jon Barton
[SEPT.
28, 2001]
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[Click here for Part
1]
Q.
Is it hard to get fired up for an Army football game or is it
easier?
A.
We haven’t had a home game since the attack, but I think it will
be easier. Now more than ever, the team represents something bigger
than the academy. The team represents our country and all the ideals
we hold true.
Q.
Tell us a little about your experience in playing 150-pound football
for the academy.
A.
Well, I spent most of my time playing "left out." It was a
challenging experience. The practices were more intense than any
practices I had in any sport in high school. They were longer,
tougher and just drained your energy.
Q.
Are you just too busy to play now and are you playing any other
sports like IMs?
A.
I left the team because I wanted to improve my grades and because I
wanted more time for myself. I would leave for practice a little
before 3 p.m. and not get back to my room until 7 or 7:30 p.m. That
is a big chunk of my day that I could be using for other things.
Everyone
here has to do an IM if they are not involved in a varsity sport. I
have done basketball and some other sports. Doing an IM is fun,
competitive and takes up less time than a varsity sport.
[to top of second column in
this section]
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Q.
Reflect on your days of being a Lincoln Railer...
A.
Being a Railer. I know I have only been out of high school four
years but it seems like so long ago. Being a Railer was great. The
fans are great. They are always there to support you. My best
friends from high school are people from the Railer teams I was
fortunate enough to be a part of. High school was a lot of fun. I
have some great memories from things like student council,
homecoming, prom and just running around like an idiot with my
buddies. But, I realize already that high school is just a short
part of your life, and if the most meaningful things you ever did
were in high school, then you have missed the boat on life.
Q.
What did you like most about it? Least?
The
thing I liked most about being a Railer was the whole atmosphere of
high school. LCHS is not so small that you know everyone by first
names but not so big that on your last day of your senior year you
meet another senior for the first time.
Also,
I enjoyed the laid-back environment. I feel strongly that high
school should be as pressure-free as possible. Set accomplishable
goals and achieve them. Everyone has a skill they excel at. High
school is a time to search for those things. If you weigh yourself
down with the pressure of doing everything, you will not find the
skill you are the best at. I think I was able to find out what I was
good at, thanks to the people and environment at LCHS.
The
thing I liked least was changing the beginning of school from 8:50
to 7:30 after my sophomore year. That really threw my schedule off !
Seriously,
the thing I liked least, in retrospect, is the overall lack of
diversity in the LCHS student body. That is not the fault of anyone
in particular, but you meet people of different colors, faiths, and
backgrounds in the real world. There is no real exposure to that at
LCHS, and that is a real disadvantage for its students.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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Part
1
One-time Railer now prepares
for more difficult battles
Jeff Mayfield interviews former
Lincoln Railer gridder Jon Barton
[SEPT.
27, 2001]
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Q.
Jon, where were you when you heard of last week’s tragic events?
A.
I was in between classes, and I heard another student say that the
WTC was on fire. So, when I got to my next classroom I told my
teacher what I had heard, and he turned on CNN. At that point the
second plane had just crashed into the second tower and another
plane had struck the Pentagon. All I could think was, "My God,
we’re at war."
Jon Barton
Q.
Did life as an Army cadet change for you immediately?
A.
I think my life changed in the sense that my mission here at the
academy became very real. I am here to become an officer in the Army
and it is easy to lose sight of that when you have tests and papers
and all the other distractions of college life. The current status
of our nation’s military agenda has made me focus more on what I
will be doing in 18 months.
Q.
Will life for you be different for a long time coming?
A.
Life will be different for me, but I think life is going to be
different for every U.S. citizen. Many people are concerned about
the safety of our country. No one knows if the attacks are over, so
many people are reluctant to live their lives the way they did prior
to the attacks.
On
a positive note, the attack has brought our nation together in a way
we have not seen since World War II. The way the country is going to
retaliate is unclear, but the resolve and courage of our people is
not. The citizens of this country will not be intimidated by the
acts of a fanatical few bent on the destruction of our way of life.
[to top of second column in
this section]
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Q.
What is your attitude and how is the mood in your dorm and on
campus?
A.
My attitude has taken on a more serious tone. I know now that I am
not thinking as much about where my friends and I are going this
weekend and more on the things I need to do to better myself as a
leader before I graduate.
The
attitude on campus is somber but focused. The academy is only 50
miles from New York City, so the attack really hit home. Many of us
have visited the WTC. I even have friends that stayed at the
Marriott at the base of the tower just a few weeks before the
attacks. Another cadet who lives on my floor had a brother working
in the WTC at the time of the attack. As of right now his brother is
missing and presumed dead. The attacks are very real for most people
at the academy.
Q.
I imagine that you young men may have more purpose and more resolve
than ever?
A.
That’s true. I have never seen so much concern or resolve from
myself and other cadets since I have been here. We realize now just
how important the job of the military is going to be over the next
decade, and there is not a more noble cause than protecting the
people and the country you love.
Q.
Is it hard to go to class, or did the events make your studies more
real?
A.
It has been very hard to go to class. There is all this horror and
suffering going on 50 miles away, and I am sitting in a finance
class learning the present value of a corporate bond. Class just
seems very trivial right now. There has been an outcry from cadets
to go to the city and help out, but there are enough volunteers
right now. All we can do is sit and wait for our turn.
(To
be continued)
[Jeff
Mayfield]
[Click
here for Part 2]
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