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Area high school baseball results
[MAY 8, 2002] |
At Stanford
Flanagan
010 000
— 1- 4-1
Olympia
113 402
— 11-15-2
For Olympia: Jeff Darnall, Chris
Frank (3, 1-0), Lance Leesman (5), Ryne Sherman (6) and Ryan
Kendrick, Rush Olson (4).
Outstanding hitters: Sherman, 2
hits; Frank, 3 hits; Kendrick, 2 hits; Cullen Hayes, 2 hits.
At Manito
Hartsburg-Emden
100 100 1
— 3-5-2
Midwest Central
102 002 x
— 5-7-0
For Hartsburg-Emden: Ryan
Anderson (3-4) and Matt Gleason.
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|
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Area high school
softball results
[MAY 8, 2002] |
At Pontiac
Olympia
700 000 2
— 9-11-0
Pontiac
021 000 0
— 3- 8-1
For Olympia: Jessie Shay (17-2),
Amanda Wilson (3) and Amber Lessen.
Outstanding hitters: Erin Canopy,
2 hits, 2 RBIs; Tricia Gaither, 2 hits; Lessen, 2 hits, 2 RBIs;
Tiffany Prager, 2 hits.
At Emden
Tremont
000 00
— 0-3-7
Hartsburg-Emden
323 02
— 10-7-0
For Hartsburg-Emden: Nikki
Chapman (8-6) and Alyssa Moehring.
Outstanding hitters: Danielle
Bergman, 2 hits, 2 RBIs; Monica Proefrock, 2 RBIs.
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|
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Corn Belt Conference
track meet, at Mahomet
[MAY
8, 2002]
In
team totals, Olympia boys placed second with 134 points;
Olympia girls placed fourth with 80 points. The teams played
against Central Catholic, Mahomet-Seymour, Pontiac, Prairie Central
and University High. |
Boys
results
100 meters — 2. Weaver, 11.8
200 meters — 5. Garey, 24.8
400 meters — 2. Joyce, 51.7; 6. Brand, 54.5
800 meters — 6. Horton, 2:07.9
1,600 — 6. Lingle, 4:57.9
3,200 — 5. Seline, 10:56
110 high hurdles — 1. Sholty, 15.6; 6. Neisler, 17.6
300 int. hurdles — 1. Sholty, 40.7
Long jump — 6. McClure, 18-11
High jump — Raes, 6-2; 3. Neisler, 6-0
Triple jump — 5. Canopy, 34-6
Pole Vault — 3. Slager, 10-0
Shot put — 1. Schultz, 49-4; 5. Boudeman, 40-8
Discus — 1. Schultz, 148-9; 4. Hieronymus, 134-3 1/2
400 relay — 1. Olympia (Sholty, Dillenburg, Weaver, Joyce), 44.4
1,600 relay — 1. Olympia (Dillenburg, McClain, Sholty, Joyce),
3:32.4
3,200 relay — 2. Olympia, 8:31.1
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
Girls
100 meters — 5. Prater, 13.7
200 meters — 2. Prater, 27.9; 5. Bennett, 28.9
400 meters — 5. Freshour, 1:04.2
800 meters — 6. Boone, 2:35.1
1,600 meters — 3. Floyd, 5:47.9
3,200 meters — 5. Wade, 14:13
100 hurdles — 3. Hentzen, 49.4; 6. Fredericks, 51.9
High jump — 3. Craford, 4-10
Pole vault — McNeil, 6-0
Discus, 5. Cook, 88-8
400 relay — 5. Olympia, 54.1
800 relay — 4. Olympia, 1:57.2
800 medley — 5. Olympia, 2:09.0
1,600 relay — 4. Olympia, 4:19.4
3,200 relay — 2. Olympia, 10:17.9
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Railers
run into an above-normal team
[MAY 7, 2002] Normal
Community’s varsity baseball record was 12-9 coming into its game
with Lincoln on Monday. Thanks to eight runs in its last three
at-bats, Normal played an above-normal game and handed the Railers
an 11-7 defeat.
|
After
two innings, Normal had scored three runs, while Lincoln put just
six batters at the plate in the same two frames. Senior Andy Knopp
helped to open the Railer bats when he led off the third inning with
a home-run blast over a deep center-field fence. Ryan Williams led
off the fourth inning with a single and a stolen second base; and
after two outs, Knopp lined a shot up the middle to bring Williams
home.
[Blake
Schoonover smacks his second hit (a double) to right-center field.]
In
the fifth inning, the Railers exploded with five more runs. Normal’s
sophomore hurler, Shawn McElyea, developed some control problems and
granted four free passes and a single before being replaced by a
pitcher who threw a couple of wild pitches that allowed three
Railers to score. Senior Blake Schoonover added to the score with an
RBI line-drive single to center field. After that Railer at-bat,
Lincoln held a 7-6 edge.
Unfortunately,
that was the last scoring that Lincoln would do. Lincoln left two
runners on base in the sixth inning and two more in the seventh.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
Three
Railers had two hits in the game: Andy Knopp (home run and RBI
single), Blake Schoonover (RBI single and double) and Matt Boyer
(two singles). Jeremy Ohmart, Mitch Sheley and Ryan Williams had the
other hits for Lincoln.
Junior
Ryne Komnick took the pitching loss. After 4 1/2 innings, Komnick
had allowed seven hits and six runs (earned) but still held a 7-6
lead. In the bottom of the fifth, he quickly recorded two outs on
two pitches. But then back-to-back doubles produced the tying run
for Normal. In the sixth inning, the top of Normal’s batting order
opened the frame with a home run and two doubles. Lincoln’s Chris
Gosda then took the mound but yielded an RBI double before finishing
the inning with a strikeout and two ground outs. The four runs,
however, were sufficient to seal the victory.
[Andy Knopp
is ready to take another cut. Knopp had a home run and an RBI
single.]
In
spite of the loss, the Railers hit the ball well and played an
errorless game. They hope to get back on the winning track as they
pick up their conference schedule against Jacksonville this Tuesday
and Thursday.
[Rich
Knopp]
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Area high school
softball results
[MAY 7, 2002] |
Olympia vs. Monticello
Game
1
Monticello
100 000 00 — 1-5-1
Olympia
000 100 01 — 2-8-0
Battery:
J. Shay and A. Lessen
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Game
2
Monticello
000 01 — 1-5-2
Olympia
011 1x — 3-8-0
Battery:
A. Wilson and K. Tucker
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Okaw Valley Conference Meet
[MAY
7, 2002]
In
team totals, Warrensburg-Latham boys placed fourth with 74 points;
Warrensburg Latham girls placed eighth with 21 points. |
Individual
results
Boys
100 meters — 1. A.
Kronshagen
400 meters — 1. A. Kronshagen
110 high hurdles — 1. A. Poppe
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Girls
No results available
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WLB
and CEL run away with
IESA track sectional titles
[MAY
6, 2002] The
mayor of Washington, Ill., may have to officially declare Saturday,
May 4, 2002, as Lincoln Illinois Day or maybe Logan County Day in
his town. [New pictures added Tuesday, May
7] |
For
while 12 excellent teams were assigned to come to his town on
Saturday for the 2002 IESA Girls and Boys Track Sectionals, two
teams, the Wolverines of West Lincoln Broadwell and the Panthers of
Chester East Lincoln, left with most all of the major hardware and a
ton of state qualifiers. Hartsburg-Emden was strong in the Boys 8th
Grade Division.
[West-Lincoln Broadwell -- First place in
Girls 8th
Grade Division]
The
Wolverines came home with first place in the Girls 8th
Grade Division, second place in the Girls 7th Grade
Division and second place in the Boys 7th Grade Division.
The Panthers, not to be outdone by their friendly crosstown rivals,
brought home a first place in the Girls 7th Grade
Division, third place in the Girls 8th Grade Division and
first place in the Boys 7th Grade Division.
The
Hartsburg-Emden eighth-grade boys carried home the third-place
plaque and had numerous state qualifiers in several events. Lincoln’s
Carroll Catholic also had several state qualifiers.
Click
here for a list of all the qualifiers.
[Jamie
McFadden -- First place in
seventh-grade high jump]
Seventh-grade
girls
The
closest team title race was among the seventh-grade girls, where the
final point spread was a narrow three points. CEL narrowly defeated
WLB by a final score of 78-75. Both CEL and WLB had strong and deep
seventh-grade teams, garnering not only first- and second-place
victories but also those all-important team points in third through
sixth places.
Ashley
Bonaparte led the way for CEL, while Melissa Ramlow and Natalie
Boward were leaders for the WLB squad. Notable first-place finishers
among Logan County seventh-grade girls were Jordan Gallagher (CEL,
100-meter hurdles); Ashley Bonaparte (CEL, 100-meter and 200-meter);
Jamie McFadden (CEL, high jump); and Melissa Ramlow (WLB, long
jump). WLB’s 4x100 relay team, consisting of Natalie Boward, Katelyn
Atteberry, Leslie Curry and Kylie Sparks, was first in their event.
The CEL 4x200 relay team also brought home a first.
[Christine Presswood from WLB in 4x400 relay]
Melissa
Ramlow had two additional second-place victories, in both the
100-meter dash and the 100-meter low hurdles. Natalie Boward (WLB)
had two-second place wins, in the 200-meter dash and the long jump.
Also, the 4x200 relay team from Carroll Catholic ran to a
second-place victory. In the discus throw and the shot put, Hartem’s
Abby Olson qualified for state with second-place throws.
Eighth-grade
girls
Among
the eighth-grade girls, WLB dominated the field with 104 points. CEL
was third with 57 points. WLB’s Kylie Courtwright and Christine
Presswood led WLB to victory with all-around performances in both
track and field events.
[Curt Courtwright of CEL in the 100- meter dash]
[to top of second column in
this article]
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[Melissa
Ramlow of WLB in the 100-meter hurdles]
Courtwright
had first-place wins in the 200-meter dash and the high jump. She
also won a first with the WLB 4x100 relay team consisting of Melissa
Ramlow, Chelsay Browning and Hilary Hobler. She was also second in
the 100-meter dash.
Presswood
was dominating in the 1,600- and 800-meter runs, jumped to second
place in the long jump and was part of the winning WLB 4x400 relay
team consisting of Rachel Clarke, Natalie Boward and Stacy Elliott.
Other
first-place victories among the eighth-grade girls went to Shanan
McLaughlin of Carroll Catholic in the 110-meter low hurdles and
Katelyn Beavers (CEL) in the shot put.
[Ashley
Bonaparte (CEL) and Natalie Boward (WLB) in the seventh-grade 200-meter
photo finish.]
Seventh-grade
boys
CEL
ran to a 20-point victory over second- place WLB.
Standouts for Logan
County teams were Clark Schoonover (CEL), first in 110 hurdles and
long jump; Wes Umphyres (HE), first in 100-meter dash and high jump;
Justin Ritchhart (CC), first in the shot put, second in high jump;
Brandon Farmer (WLB), first in the 1,600-meter and pole vault; Matt
Schick (CC), first in 400-meter dash; and Jon Toft (CEL), first in
the 200-meter and second in the 100-meter. The WLB 4x100 and 4x200
relay teams each won first place in their event. CEL’s 4x100,
4x200 and 4x400 teams racked up second-place finishes in each of
these events.
Ryan Sanders (WLB) was second in the discus throw,
while Josh Conrady (HE) brought home a second in the 800-meter run.
[CEL seventh-grade girls receive
their first-place trophy]
Eighth-grade
boys
Among
the eighth-grade boys, Hartsburg-Emden outdistanced all other Logan
County teams with a third-place finish. Hartem had a first-place
finish by their 4x200 relay team. Hartem also had second-place
finishes by Billy Detmers (400 meters), Curtis Conrady (800 meters)
and Scott Ubbenga (discus throw). They also brought in a third-place
win and a state qualifier in Jacob Moehring in the 200-meter dash.
CEL’s
strong finish was dominated by the performances of Curt Courtwright.
Courtwright won the 100-meter dash, the 200-meter dash and the long
jump. CEL also got third-place wins and state qualifiers in the
800-meter run by Andrew McQuellan and in the 4x200 relay.
Carroll
Catholic was victorious in the high jump, where Jeff Oller jumped 5
feet, 7 inches to take first place.
[Kylie
Courtwright of WLB took first place in eighth-grade high jump.]
WLB
was able to pull out a second-place victory in the 4x400 relay.
And
while Saturday was a beautiful, sunny day in Washington, Ill., the
athletic performances of many fine young women and men and the glow
on parental faces outshone even the weather. The event was
characterized by the event coordinator, St. Patrick’s coach
"D," as undoubtedly one of the premier Class A sectionals
in Illinois Illinois this year. And if times set, distances jumped
and thrown, heights cleared and state qualifiers declared are any
indication of quality, then it appears coach "D" was
right.
The
IESA Class A state finals will be this Friday and Saturday at
EastSide Centre in East Peoria.
[Rick
Hobler]
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IESA
state track qualifiers
|
Eighth-grade
girls
High
jump — Courtwright (WLB)
Long
jump — Presswood (WLB)
Shot
put — Beavers (CEL); McLaughlin (CC)
100
hurdles — McLaughlin (CC); Fitzpatrick (CEL)
100
— Courtwright (WLB)
200
— Courtwright (WLB); Sparks (WLB)
800
— Presswood (WLB); Clark (WLB)
1,600
— Presswood (WLB)
4x100
relay — WLB (Ramlow, Hobler, Browning and Courtwright)
4x200
relay — CEL
4x400
relay — WLB (Presswood, Clark, Boward and Elliott); CEL
Seventh-grade
girls
High
jump — McFadden (CEL)
Long
jump — Ramlow (WLB); Boward (WLB); Bonaparte (CEL)
Shot
put — Olson (HE); Schonauer (CC)
Discus
— Olson (HE)
100
hurdles — Gallagher (CEL); Ramlow (WLB)
100
— Bonaparte (CEL); Ramlow (WLB); Hyde (CEL); Hobler (WLB); Rankin
(HE)
200
— Bonaparte (CEL); Boward (WLB)
4x100
relay — WLB (Boward, Curry, Sparks, Atteberry)
4x200
relay — CEL; Carroll Catholic
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Eighth-grade
boys
High
jump — Oller (CC)
Long
jump — Courtwright (CEL)
Discus
— Ubbenga (HE)
100
— Courtwright (CEL)
200
— Courtwright (CEL); Moehring (HE)
400
— Detmers (HE)
800
— Conrady (HE); McQuellon (CEL)
4x200
relay — HE; CEL
4x400
relay — WLB
Seventh-grade
boys
Pole
vault — Farmer (WLB)
High
jump — Umphryes (HE); Ritchhart (CC)
Long
jump — Schoonover (CEL)
Shot
put — Ritchhart (CC)
Discus
— Sanders (WLB)
110
hurdles — Schoonover (CEL)
100
— Umphryes (HE); Toft (CEL)
200
— Toft (CEL)
400
— Schick (CC); Umphryes (HE)
800
— Conrady (HE)
1,600
— Farmer (WLB)
4x100
relay — WLB; CEL
4x200
relay — HE; CEL
4x400
relay — WLB; CEL
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Railer
seniors celebrate with doubleheader victories
[MAY
6, 2002] Last
Saturday was a particularly special day for 10 Railer baseball
seniors and their families. Prior to the doubleheader with
Washington, the seniors were introduced along with their parents in
a fitting tribute to years of dedication and investment. As one of
those parents, I must confess that the occasion was filled with joy
and simultaneous sadness. It seems like just a couple of years ago
that I and as many as seven other of the seniors’ dads were
coaching these "little boys" in Little League. Without
doubt, among my most cherished memories will be those that I’ve
shared with the other dads, moms and siblings of this wonderful
bunch of seniors. |
Jeremy Ohmart, Mike
Martin, Danny Schick, Ryan Williams, Blake Schoonover, Matt Boyer,
Adam Schonauer, Michael Aper, Andy Knopp and manager Brian Boyer —
a great group of guys. Head coach Pat Hake elected to start all of
them in the first game against Washington, and they responded with
an 11-8 win.
[Senior Ryan
Williams and his parents, Don and Marla, symbolize the involvement
of families. Moms were given flowers, and dads received a
displayable baseball with signatures from all the seniors.]
[Seniors and
their parents line up for recognition.]
Four of these seniors
had two-hit games: Mike Martin (two stolen bases), Danny Schick
(triple, two RBIs, three stolen bases), Blake Schoonover (double,
three RBIs) and Andy Knopp (one RBI). Adam Schonauer and Ryan
Williams also had a hit and an RBI each. And Matt Boyer had an
RBI.
Ryan Williams had the
starting role on the mound and went 5 1/3 innings while striking out
three, walking three and allowing seven hits and just two earned
runs. Mike Martin got a brief relief appearance to finish the sixth
inning, recorded two outs and left two runners on base. Blake
Schoonover finished the game in the seventh inning, giving up a
couple of hits and a walk, but two runners were stranded when he
struck out the final hitter.
Both Washington and
Lincoln had 10 hits in game one, but the Railers refused to let
Washington take control.
[to top of second column in
this article]
|
Game two ended as a
five-inning mercy-rule game, with the Railers dominating in an 11-1
lopsided win. In this contest, five Railers had multiple hit games.
Andy Knopp was 2-2 with an RBI double; Steve Shanle was 2-2 with two
RBIs; Luke Welchel was 2-3 with a double and an RBI; Josh Gallagher
was 2-3; and Derek Schrader went 3-4 with four RBIs. Mitch Sheley
contributed a two-RBI triple.
[Senior Andy
Knopp readies himself at the plate. Knopp was 4-6 on "senior
day."]
Junior Chris Gosda
pitched the five-inning game, surrendering 11 hits but only one run
(earned). Gosda struck out two and walked none. Nine Washington
runners were left standing on base during the five-inning game.
Gosda helped his own cause by initiating two double plays. In the
third and fourth innings, Washington loaded the bases with fewer
than two outs. In both frames, the next batter grounded back to
Gosda, who threw to catcher John Peters for a force out, and Peters
then threw to first for a second out. Peters also set the
base-running tone for Washington when he threw out the first hitter
of the game as the player attempted to steal second after a leadoff
single. The Railers played a perfect defensive game behind Gosda,
committing no errors.
The victories moved the Railer record to
13-13 on the season. This week, Lincoln has four days of games
scheduled: Monday at Normal Community, Tuesday and Thursday against
Jacksonville (Tuesday at home), and a Saturday home doubleheader
against Olympia.
[Rich
Knopp]
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Area high school baseball results
[MAY 6, 2002] |
Olympia vs. Central Catholic
Central
Catholic 100 120 0 — 4-8-1
Olympia
123 205 x — 13-14-2
Battery:
C. Cheek (W 3-0), S. Raleigh (7), and R. Olson
|
Outstanding
hitters: Darnall (4 hits), Raleigh (2 hits), Olson (2 hits), C.
Hayes (2 hits), Darnall (3 RBIs), R. Kendrick (2 RBIs), T. Haning (2
RBIs)
|
|
Area high school
softball results
[MAY 6, 2002] |
Olympia vs. Hartsburg-Emden
Game
1
Olympia
000 400 0 — 4-6-1
Hartem
000 000 0 — 0-4-2
Battery:
J. Shay (W, 14-2) and A. Lessen
Outstanding
hitters: T. Prager (2 hits, RBI)
Game
2
Olympia
000 012 1 — 4-9-0
Hartem
000 000 0 — 0-1-0
Battery:
A. Wilson (W, 8-1) and K. Tucker
Outstanding
hitters: B. Hieser (2 hits, RBI), T. Prager (2 hits, RBI), A.
Darnall (2 hits, RBI)
|
LCHS
vs. East Peoria
Lincoln
101 000 0 — 2-4-1
East
Peoria 006 100 x — 7-9-3
Battery:
Goodman, Carmichael (5) and Wilkerson
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|
Lincoln
College baseball in tournament play
[MAY 6, 2002] QUINCY
— Lincoln College stayed alive in the Region 24 baseball
tournament here Saturday by defeating Springfield College 9-6 after
losing the first game, on Saturday, 8-4, to John Wood. The Lynx were
scheduled to play John Wood at noon Sunday. A win for Lincoln would
force a second game against John Wood. A loss to John Wood in either
game would end the Lynx season.
|
Lincoln
College scored three times in the opening inning against Springfield
and was never headed. The Lynx built a 9-2 lead before
Springfield closed the gap to 9-6 on a grand slam homer by Skip
Clayton.
Zach
Rinaberger led the Lynx with three hits in four trips to the plate,
with three runs scored. Jake VanDyke, Dan Dunn and Kenny VanHouten
each had a pair of hits for coach Tony Thomas, now 15-29 for the
season.
Kyle
Eastman was credited with the victory, working the first 7 1/3
innings, giving up seven hits and three earned runs. Eastman
struck out four and issued seven walks. Josh Becker finished the
eighth, and VanHouten struck out two in the ninth to earn the save.
John
Wood scored four times in the first three innings of the first game
Saturday and put the game out of reach with three runs in the
fifth. Dunn took the loss for the Lynx, giving up nine hits,
seven runs, two walks and four strikeouts in 4 1/3 innings.
Rinaberger
and Tim May each had a pair of hits for Lincoln College.
|
First
game
Lincoln
College 010 000 201 —
4-8-0
John
Wood
211 031 00x — 8-12-2
Dunn
(L), Cave (5), Whetstone (6) & Bartman; Whicker (W) & Missen.
Second
game
Lincoln
College 310
122 000 — 9-12-0
Springfield
College 002 000 040 — 6- 8-2
Eastman
(W), Becker (8), VanHouten (9-S) & Pesce; Alvey, Rowe, Gray,
Davis & Badman.
[Bill
Martinie, Lincoln College
sports information director]
|
|
LCHS sophomore
baseball vs. Bloomington
[MAY
4, 2002] Lincoln
High School scored nine times on ten hits but it wasn't enough as
Bloomington scored 11 times on 13 hits in posting an 11-9 victory.
The loss drops the LCHS mark to 9-9 for the season. Lincoln is
scheduled to play at Taylorville Monday afternoon |
Neil Rohrer and Jason Williams
led the Lincoln attack with three hits each while Mitch Sheley had a
pair of hits. Sheley scored four times and had a triple along with
two walks. Williams had a pair of doubles, a single, three RBI and
scored two runs. Rohrer had three singles, scored two runs and had
an RBI. Jason Melton and Trent Kavelman each had one hit and one
RBI for the Railers.
Paul Phillips was the starting
and losing pitcher for Lincoln, hurling 2 1/3 innings, giving up
nine hit and nine runs, five earned. Trent Kavelman pitched the
final 3 2/3 innings, giving up two runs and four hits.
|
Score
by innings
Lincoln
410 210 1 — 9-10-3
Bloomington 252
021 x — 11-13-2
Phillips (L), Kavelman (3) & Melton; Haywood (W), Shatlick (4),
Floyd (5-S) & Lambertz.
[Bill
Martinie]
|
|
Area
baseball game results
[MAY 4, 2002] |
At Hartsburg
Illini Bluffs
324 40x
— 13-13-0
Hartsburg-Emden 101
00x — 2-
9-5
For Hartsburg-Emden:
Pitching and catching:
Matt Gleason (5-1), Kent Leesman (3) and Drew Olson.
Outstanding hitters: D. Olson, 3 hits; Ryan Anderson, 3 hits.
|
Corn Belt Conference
Tournament
At Bloomington
Central Catholic
001 000 0 —
1-3-6
Prairie Central
201 050 x
—
8-9-2
For Prairie Central:
Pitching and catching:
Aaron Ifft (3-0), Dylan Ward (7) and Jordan Roy.
Outstanding hitters: Justin
Peters, 2 hits, 2 RBI; David Harms, 2 hits.
|
|
Area
softball game results
[MAY 4, 2002] |
At Emden
Illini Bluffs
000 014 2
— 7-9-0
Hartsburg-Emden
000 000 0 —
0-6-3
For Hartsburg-Emden:
Pitching and catching: Nikki Chapman (7-5) and Alisa Moehring.
Outstanding hitter: Danielle Bergman, 2 hits.
|
At Lincoln
Tournament
East Peoria
000 200 0
—
2-6-0
Lincoln
000 000 1 —
1-6-3
|
|
Raider Relays, Bloomington
[MAY
4, 2002]
In
team totals, Lincoln boys placed seventh with 22 points against
Bloomington, Champaign Central, Normal Community, Normal West,
Rantoul, Springfield and Urbana. |
Event
scores
Pole vault – 4. Lincoln, 15-6
Shot put
– 3. Lincoln, 124-7
|
Discus
– 2. Lincoln, 360-1
440 int. hurdles
– 4. Lincoln, 1:06.7
|
|
Clinton Carnival
[MAY
4, 2002]
Warrensburg-Latham
and Mount Pulaski boys competed at Clinton.
Team
scores
1. St. Joseph-Ogden,
118; 2. University High, 79; 3. Monticello, 55; 4.
Warrensburg-Latham, 48; 5. Meridian, 35; 6. Central Catholic, 31; 7.
Deland-Weldon, 30; 8. Clinton, 30; 9. Tolono Unity, 26; 10.
Lexington, 25; 11. Blue Ridge, 16; 12. Tri-Valley, 14; 13. Mount
Pulaski, 10; 14. LeRoy, 3; 15. Decatur St. Teresa, 2; 16. East
Central, 1; 17. Niantic-Harristown, 0. |
|
Roger Washburn
Invitational, Eureka
[MAY
4, 2002]
In
team totals, Olympia boys placed first with 120 points; Illini
Central boys placed seventh with 19 points; Olympia girls placed
second with 121.5 points; Illini Central girls placed eleventh with
11 points. The teams competed against
Bureau Valley, Delevan, Dunlap, El Paso, Eureka, Farmington, Henry,
Illini Bluffs, Lewistown, Lowpoint-Wasburn, Midwest Central,
Ridgeview and Tremont. |
Boys
events
100 meters – 2. Dillenburg
(Olympia)
400 meters
– Scott Joyce (O); 6. Brand (O)
800 meters
– 1. Brandon Grimsley (Illini Central), 2:04.3; 3. Raes (O)
110 high hurdles
– 1. Brandon Sholty (O), 15.6
300 int. hurdles
– 5. Scott Van Etten (IC); 6. Ayers (O)
High jump
– 3. Raes (O); 5. Clint Wells (IC)
Triple jump
– 4. Canopy (O)
Pole vault
– 5. Slager (O)
Shot put
– 2. Schultz (O), 51-4 1/2
Discus
– 1. Schultz (O); 2. Heironymus (O); 6. Josh Hayes (IC)
400 relay
– 1. Olympia, 44.4
800 relay
– 1. Olympia, 1:35.0
1,600 relay
– 1. Olympia; 4. Illini Central
3,200
– 3. Olympia, 8:33.9; 5. Illini Central, 8:43.9
Pole vault – 4. Lincoln, 15-6
Shot put
– 3. Lincoln, 124-7
Discus
– 2. Lincoln, 360-1
440 int. hurdles
– 4. Lincoln, 1:06.7
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Girls events
100 meters – 2. Prater
(Olympia), 13.20; 5. Bennett (O), 13.45
200 meters
– 2. Prater (O), 26.8
400 meters
– 5. Crawford (O), 1:02.78; 6. Freshour (O), 1:03.30
800 meters
– 4. Westerfield (O), 2:32.83
1,600
– 3. Floyd (O), 5:44.05
3,200
– 3. Floyd (O), 12:43.30
100 hurdles
– 1. Hentzen (O), 16.94; 3. Hish (O), 17.32
300 hurdles
– 3. Fredericks (O), 49.25; 4. Hentzen (O), 51.78
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|
Lincoln
College defeats Springfield College
[MAY 4, 2002]
Lincoln
College scored three times in the seventh inning to defeat
Springfield College 5-2 in opening round action of the Region 24
tourney Friday here. Lincoln will play John Wood at 11 a.m.
Saturday.
|
Jeff Harris drew a
walk and stole second to start the winning rally. Zach Rinaberger
dropped down a sacrifice bunt and ended up at second on an error
with Harris scoring the lead run. Tim May drew a walk and Dan Dunn
singled to load the bases. Jeff VanHouten then doubled in two runs
for Coach Tony Thomas.
May finished the game
with two hits, including a solo homer in the first, and scored a
pair of runs. VanHouten had a pair of double and Matt Mifflin
collected a pair of singles.
Lincoln College is
now 14-28 overall.
|
Score
by innings
Springfield College
100 010 000 — 2-8-6
Lincoln
College
100 100 30x —
5-9-0
Hopkins (L) & Badman; Hoffert, Deakin (W-6), King (9) & Pesce.
[Bill
Martinie, Lincoln College
sports information director]
|
|
Railers
rap conference-leading
Taylorville
[MAY
3, 2002] Two
days ago, the Railers were nipped by Taylorville 4-3 at home. On
Thursday, the Railers left no doubt when they left Taylorville that
they were not intimidated by the current conference leaders. Lincoln
controlled the game throughout, taking the rematch game 6-2 and
giving the Tornados their second conference loss. Unlike the
previous game, when it seemed that every Railer batted ball found a
Taylorville glove, this game showed that well-hit balls will
eventually find the safety of the turf.
|
Lincoln had a
masterful pitching performance from senior Matt Boyer, who went the
distance. Boyer struck out three, walked just one and granted seven
hits in his seven innings. Boyer went five innings without allowing
a Tornado to score. Three of his allowed hits came in the sixth
inning — the only inning that Taylorville scored. In every inning
except the sixth, Boyer faced just four batters.
Lincoln played solid
defense behind Boyer. The only Railer error came in the seventh
inning when there were two outs, and the error proved insignificant
when the following batter grounded out to end the game with the
four-run Railer lead.
The Railer offensive
attack was led by three seniors who accounted for eight of the
Railers’ 12 hits. Blake Schoonover went 3-4, had two stolen bases
and scored twice; Ryan Williams was 3-4 with a double, a run and two
RBIs; and Andy Knopp was 2-3, allowing Michael Aper, who replaced
him in the sixth inning, to score.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Other Railers also
played key roles in the Railer runs. Ryne Komnick had a two-out RBI
single in the fourth inning. Michael Martin reached on a bunt single
in the sixth and pushed Aper to third on the play, which set up a
sacrifice fly by John Peters. Martin also scored when pinch-hitter
Adam Schonauer directed an RBI single between third and short for
the Railers’ sixth run of the game.
The victory evened
Lincoln’s conference record at 5-5 (11-13 overall). The expected
potential of this Railer team has been showing itself more
consistently in recent games. With a strong showing the rest of the
way, Lincoln could still have an excellent season and be primed for
a run during the state playoffs.
This Saturday, the
Railers will host Washington for a doubleheader starting at 10. Ten
seniors will be honored during a special ceremony. It would be a
great opportunity to see the home team and give them an extra boost
as they make their final push toward a strong finish to their
season.
[Rich Knopp]
|
|
Area
baseball game results
[MAY 3, 2002] |
At Mount Pulaski
Illini Bluffs 302 207
— 14-11-3
Mount
Pulaski 000 000 — 0-
0-0
For Mount Pulaski:
Pitching and catching:
J.
Foley and N. Tierney (4), J. Blaum (6), and C. Erlenbush, C.
McClellan.
At Mason City
Illini
Central 100 080 2
— 8-5-0
Pleasant Plains
000 050 0 —
5-5-3
For Illini Central:
Pitching and catching:
B.
Cunningham and T. Scott.
Outstanding hitters:
B.Cunningham, 2 hits, 3 RBI; M. Brayfield , 2 hits, 2 RBI.
At Hartsburg
Heyworth 010
000 —
1-3-1
Hartsburg-Emden
522 011 —
11-9-0
For Hartsburg-Emden:
Pitching and catching:
K. Hoerbert and M. Gleason.
Outstanding hitter: R.
Anderson, 4 hits, double, home run, 3 RBI.
[to top of second column in this
article] |
Corn Belt Conference
Tournament
At Bloomington (Horenberger
Field)
Pontiac
001 000 0 —
1-5-3
Olympia 100 012 x
—
4-6-0
For Olympia:
Pitching and catching:
T. Thornton and Rush Olson.
Outstanding hitter: C. Cheek,
2 hits; Olson, homerun (one on in sixth), 2 RBI.
University
High 100 000 1
— 2-5-1
Olympia
120 101 x
—
5-7-0
For Olympia:
Pitching and catching:
R. Kendrick and Olson.
Outstanding hitter: C. Frank,
RBI; S. Raleigh, RBI; C. Hayes, RBI; C. Horner, 2 hits, RBI.
|
|
Area
softball game results
[MAY 3, 2002] |
At Stanford
Prairie Central
000 000 0
— 0-2-0
Olympia
001 000 x —
1-4-0
For Olympia:
Pitching and catching: Amanda Wilson (7-1) and Amber Lessen.
Outstanding hitter: Becky Hieser, 2 hits.
Outstanding pitcher: Wilson, 7 IP, 2 hits, no runs, 6
strikeouts.
|
At Mount Pulaski
Tremont
000 00
—
0- 1-6
Mount Pulaski 143
3x —
11-10-0
For Mount Pulaski:
Pitching and catching:
Becky Tobias (6-11) and CC Hudson.
Outstanding hitters: Tobias, 2 hits; Molly Gleason, 2 hits.
|
|
Corn Belt
Conference track meet at Fairbury
[MAY
3, 2002]
Olympia's
freshman-sophomore teams competed at the Corn Belt Conference meet. |
Boys
1. Mahomet-Seymour,
140; 2. University High, 105; 3. Pontiac, 100; 4. Olympia, 93; 5.
Prairie Central, 77.5; 6. Central Catholic, 23.5.
|
Girls
1. Mahomet-Seymour,
167; 2. University High, 110; 3. Central Catholic, 86; 4. Pontiac,
82; 5. Olympia, 72; 6. Prairie Central, 44.
|
|
Illini
fans offered extension on Missouri game tickets
[MAY
2, 2002] The
University of Illinois has obtained additional tickets for the
Illinois-Missouri football game scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 31, at
the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis.
Illinois
originally had 10,000 tickets for sale. Due to the great demand by
Illini fans, the Division of Intercollegiate Athletics has obtained
additional tickets for the game and extended the purchase deadline
until Friday, May 17. There are tickets available in the $30-$35
price range. People can buy tickets in person at the UI Athletics
Ticket Office at the Assembly Hall or call toll-free, 866-Illini-1.
[Kent
Brown, University of Illinois
sports information director]
|
|
Big
Ten announces basketball coaches for foreign tour
Bill Self to lead men’s team
[MAY
2, 2002] PARK
RIDGE — Illinois’ Bill Self and Northwestern’s June Olkowski
will serve as the head coaches for the 2002 Big Ten Conference Men’s
and Women’s Basketball Foreign Tour teams this summer. The women
will head overseas first, competing in Belgium and Holland June
14-24, before the men make their trip with games in Germany, Belgium
and the Netherlands Aug. 8-18.
|
In
2001, both the men’s and women’s teams posted unblemished
records. The men went 6-0 in England and Ireland to post their first
undefeated trip since 1995, while the women were a perfect 5-0 in
France and Switzerland.
Both
teams will be making their 11th trip overseas this summer, as the
men’s tour began in 1991 and has traveled every year since with
the exception of 2000. The women’s team started a year later, in
1992, and will be making its 11th consecutive tour in 2002.
Self’s
and Olkowski’s rosters will be solidified next month, and the
teams will gather for training camps in Champaign and Evanston,
respectively, prior to departure.
In
two seasons at Illinois, Self has led the Fighting Illini to a share
of back-to-back Big Ten titles for the first time since the 1951-52
campaigns. He is just the second coach in conference history to win
titles in each of his first two years. Wisconsin’s Walter Meanwell
accomplished the feat in 1912-13. Self is the first coach in
Illinois history to collect 50 wins in his first two seasons, as he
has posted a record of 53-17 (.757). In 2001-02, Illinois won a Big
Ten-best 26 games and advanced to the third round of the NCAA
championship. In his first season, Self guided the squad to the
Elite Eight for the first time since 1989 while recording 27
victories, the second-highest total in school history.
The
Oklahoma native began his head coaching career at Oral Roberts
(1993-97) before taking over at Tulsa (1997-2000), leading the
Golden Hurricane to 32 wins and an Elite Eight appearance in 2000.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Olkowski,
who recently completed her third season with the Wildcats, will be
leading a Big Ten foreign tour for the first time in her career. Her
coaching pedigree includes stints at Maryland, Arizona, Auburn and
Butler. When she was named head coach of Arizona in 1987, she was
the youngest head coach in the history of the NCAA. Prior to
coaching at Northwestern, Olkowski led Butler to five consecutive
winning seasons and the 1998 Midwestern Collegiate Conference title.
Charged with rebuilding the Wildcat program, she has drawn a strong
corps of talent to Evanston, including 2002
Big
Ten All-Freshman Team member Sarah Kwasinski.
The
Big Ten Conference foreign tours have given more than 220
student-athletes the opportunity to travel abroad, as the men have
toured such places as Japan, France, Italy, Finland, Belgium, the
Netherlands, Germany, Austria, England and Ireland, while the women
have traveled to New Zealand, Hungary, England, Scotland, Denmark,
Sweden, Slovakia, France and Switzerland. In 10 years, the men’s
teams have posted a 42-28 record while the women’s teams have gone
37-18.
[Scott
Chipman, associate director of communications, Big Ten Conference]
|
|
|
Lincoln, the hub of sports activity
By Jeff Mayfield
[MAY
6, 2002] Or
at least it was this past Saturday! If you ventured past the
friendly confines of Lincoln Community High School this past
weekend, you may not have been sure just which way to turn. There
were literally sports activities everywhere you looked. The Railers
were busy hosting a doubleheader against Washington. The Lady
Railers were hosting a softball tournament of their own. Soccer was
in full swing on the premises, and I think I saw the tennis team
going somewhere.
|
If
you’re scoring at home, here are the actual scores from this
weekend’s plethora of sporting events: The Railer varsity baseball
team swept Washington 11-8 and 11-1 and are quickly putting
themselves in position to be dangerous during the IHSA playoffs. The
Lady Railer softball team did lose to East Peoria 7-2 and a
heartbreaker to Deerfield, 2-1.
My
boy and I witnessed the Deerfield game and thought the girls played
them especially tough. It’s good to see JoBeth Borowiak back on
the mound. She got out of a tough bases-loaded jam in the fifth by
inducing one girl to hit a lazy fly ball and the next to hit a
harmless ground out. Unfortunately, the ladies just couldn’t
muster up enough offense to support the fine pitching effort! The
girls also lost to East Peoria 2-1 on Friday, but they did beat
Nokomis 2-0. Perhaps they have the confidence to turn it on in the
days ahead.
The
Lady Railers soccer club suffered an 11-0 loss to Pleasant Plains.
These
are the only scores turned in to the LDN sports desk. If you have
any score or sports story that you’d like to promote, just send it
to ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com,
fax (217) 732-7443 or call (217) 732-7443.
I
will try to give you an update tonight at 6 p.m. on the new FIX 96.3
sports call-in show!
Cards and
Cubs ready to tangle
Tonight,
the St. Louis Cardinals invade Wrigley Field for the start of a
three-game series with the Chicago Cubs. However, the really big
question is: Does anybody care? Seriously, the winner of this series
might just be able to start turning their season around; the loser
just gets mired in the pack. The Cubs are coming off a shutout of
the Dodgers and a pretty successful road trip. The Cardinals had
another disappointing showing by having a losing homestand. This
might be a good time to show up as a Cards fan, as they are probably
taking volunteers from the audience to join their pitching staff! I
say to the fans of both clubs: Don’t worry about it. You know that
these two teams will put on an entertaining series no matter what
their records say!
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Random
shots…
• The Blues have dug a big hole for themselves going down 0-2 in
Detroit. Will this series last more than five games? I doubt it! I
just wonder how the Blues would have fared had they kept Cujo
between the pipes all these years. I’m also not sure if anyone can
beat the Red Wings. I do have one question for NHL players: Why
doesn’t Brett Hull spend more time crashing into the boards or
down on the ice? It just seems to me that it’s harder to score in
one of those positions than it is camped out right in front of the
net!
• The Lakers look more vulnerable to me than I thought they would look
at this juncture. I did think that the Pacers gave the Nets all that
they wanted and then some! If the East team beats the West
representative, then you will have a pretty big story. I just don’t
see that happening.
• How many more days until Illini basketball? I’m sorry… I know a
lot of you get sick of basketball while it’s in season; I just
miss it when it’s gone! They could play college basketball 12
months a year as far as I’m concerned!
• Is it just me or is NASCAR getting more popular every week?
Team of
the week…
That’s
easy… I have to give my team-of-the-week award to the Abraham
Lincoln Memorial Hospital staff. They are celebrating 100 years in
our community, and this semiprofessional writer has no idea what we
would do without them?! So, to Mr. Woody Hester and to his entire
staff, thank you from me and the LDN for everything you do on our
behalf. We appreciate it!
[Jeff
Mayfield]
|
|
Announcements
|
Summer
coed track-and-field program
[MAY
2, 2002] Starting
this summer, the Lincoln Area YMCA will offer a coed track-and-field
program for youth 5 to 12 years old and teens 13 to 18 years old.
Participants will learn the fundamentals of track and field, as well
as stretching, warm-up and cool-down.
|
LCHS
track-and-field coach Michelle Aeilts, along with other volunteers,
will teach participants the benefits of building a strong body, mind
and spirit through running.
This
new program will be offered in two six-week sessions. Session A,
June 3-July 8, is for teens, and Session B, July 15-Aug. 19, is for
youth. The program will meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays at the LCHS
track.
For
more information, call 735-3915 or (800) 252-3520.
|
|
Central
Illinois Select soccer tryouts
[APRIL
17, 2002] Central
Illinois Select Soccer Club will have open tryouts for all
interested players May 13-17, May 20-24, and June 17 and 19. Tryout
dates and times for specific age groups are shown at www.cis-soccer.org/Tryouts/Tryouts.htm.
All
tryouts will be at Nord Field, located on Six Points Road, two miles
west of Morris Avenue in Bloomington. More detailed directions are
available at www.cis-soccer.org/Clubfolder/Facilities.htm.
For
more information about tryouts and CIS traveling soccer, visit the
club’s website, www.cis-soccer.org.; e-mail Steve Berry, director of coaching and player
development, at cissocceracademy@hotmail.com;
or call (309) 378-4699.
|
|
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