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Wednesday, May 14 |
Area
junior high track teams
bring home sectional titles
West
Lincoln-Broadwell girls and Hartsburg boys get first
[MAY 14, 2003]
Area
junior high track teams brought home significant hardware from the
Washington Sectional on Monday. Additionally, a significant number
of participants qualified for the Class A state finals in East
Peoria this Friday and Saturday. [CLICK
HERE FOR PICTURES]
|
In 8A Girls competition, the repeat
sectional champion is West Lincoln-Broadwell, which amassed 78 team
points to beat second-place Delavan, with 57 points. The host
school, Washington Central, came in a close third with 54 points.
The West Lincoln-Broadwell eighth-grade girls will now move on in an
attempt to defend their 2002 8A state title.
Individual firsts for the eighth-grade
WL-B girls went to Melissa Ramlow (hurdles and 100-meter dash) and
Natalie Boward (200 meter and high jump). The defending state
champion 4x100 relay team, which now consists of Melissa Ramlow,
Natalie Boward, Kylie Sparks and Hilary Hobler, ran away with the
sectional title with a time of 54.4. The WL-B 4x200 relay team also
brought home a first place, with Chelsay Browning, Stacy Elliott,
Katelyn Atteberry and Amy Ramlow crossing the finish line with a
time of 2:06. Additional WL-B team points came from Chelsay Browning
(third place in the 100 meter and fourth in the 200), Melissa Ramlow
(third in long jump) and Natalie Boward (fifth in long jump).
Other firsts in the 8A competition went
to the 4x400 relay team from Chester-East Lincoln with a time of
4:51.7 and Abbey Olsen with a shot put throw of 36-2¼. Delavan's
Kayla Farris jumped 15-5¾ to win the eighth-grade long jump.
In Girls 7A competition, Chester-East
Lincoln, with 84 team points, took second place, falling just one
point short of first-place Dee-Mack, which had 85 points. West
Lincoln-Broadwell was able to bring home its second trophy with a
third-place victory with 69 points.
CE-L got first-place finishes from
Jamie McFadden (high jump), Bridgette Hyde (400 meter) and all of
their relay teams: 4x100, 4x200 and 4x400. Additional points came
from Ashley Bonaparte with a second-place finish in the 200 meter,
third place in the 100 meter and fourth in the long jump; Betsy
Ramlow (third, 800); Nettie Duncan (fourth in shot put and fifth in
discus); Sydney Morris (fifth, hurdles); and Emily Berlin
(sixth, 200).
West Lincoln-Broadwell's third-place
finish was accomplished by gathering first-place finishes in the 100
meter by Hilary Hobler and Kylie Sparks in the 200. Hobler also had
a third-place finish in both the 200 meter and the long jump. Sparks
piled on some more WL-B points with second-place finishes in the 100
meter and the high jump. Stacy Elliott added second-place finishes
in the hurdles and 400 meter and a fifth-place finish in high jump.
Chelsay Browning and Samantha Green also helped the WL-B cause, with
Browning getting fifth in the long jump and Green getting sixth in
the discus.
The other first-place performance for
local seventh-grade girls was a 14-11½ long jump by Katie Schonauer
from Lincoln Carroll Catholic. Chrissy Schonauer had a second-place
finish in the shot put for Carroll. The Carroll 4x200 relay team
also qualified for state competition.
[to top of second column in this article] |
In 8A Boys team competition, Hartsburg-Emden
took first place, gathering 67 points; Chester East-Lincoln nailed
down second with 58 points; and Delavan was a close third at 54
points. In 7A Boys action Hartsburg-Emden grabbed third place, while
Washington schools, St. Patrick's and Central, took first and second
respectively.
Hartsburg-Emden eighth-grade boys got a
flurry of points from Wes Umphreys Josh Conrady, Gary Rademaker and
their 4x400 relay team. Umphreys garnered first-place finishes in
the 400 meter and the high jump as well as taking third place in the
long jump. Josh Conrady garnered team points and individual honors
by taking the 800 meter run and by placing fourth in the long jump.
Rademaker pulled second-place finishes in the hurdles and 800 meter
as well as fourth in the long jump and sixth in the high jump. The
Hartem 4x400 relay team captured another first-place win to round
out the winning score.
For West Lincoln-Broadwell, Brandon
Farmer finished in first place in both the hurdles and the pole
vault. Justin Ritchhart won Carroll Catholic's only first-place
finish in 8A with a win in the shot put. Delavan's Mike DeWeese was
a one-man scoring machine, capturing first place in the 100 meter
and 200 meter and a second in the long jump. The CE-L 4x100 relay
team captured the other local first-place victory.
Finally, in Boys 7A action, the
third-place Hartem team gathered its points with strong efforts from
Dakin Bolen and Mitchell Gleason. Dakin took home a first in the
shot put, along with second-place finishes in the 100 and 200.
Mitchell Gleason ran strong enough to win the 400 meter and threw
long enough to win a second in the shot put. Tarel Stancel was also
a point man for Hartem, getting fourth in the high jump, fifth in
the 100 and sixth in the long jump. Dustin Bolen earned second in
the high jump with a jump of 4-8. Hartem's 4x200 relay captured
first in its event, and the 4x100 relay got fifth.
[photo by Rick Hobler]
West Lincoln-Broadwell's third-place
finish was accomplished by gathering first-place finishes in the 100
meter by Hilary Hobler and Kylie Sparks in the 200.
The only other local first-place finish
went to Delavan's Tony Hartzler in the discus with a toss of 106-3.
In a "little
piece of Americana," all of the qualifiers, plus hundreds of others
from around the state, will participate in the Class A finals this
Friday and Saturday at the
EastSide Centre
in East Peoria. Best of luck to all the qualifiers!
[Rick
Hobler] |
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High
school track and field
[MAY 14, 2003]
|
Boys
Corn Belt Conference Meet
At Fairbury
1. Olympia
100 METERS - 1. Joyce (O), 11.0; 5. Dillenburg (O), 11.6
200 - 1. Joyce (O), 22.6; 4. Wise (O), 23.4
400 - 1. Joyce (O), 50.6; 4 Brand (O), 52.3
800 - 3. McClain (O), 2:02.4; 6. Slager (O), 2:08.7
1,600 - 3. McClain (O), 4:36.7
3,200 - 4. Dietrich (O), 10:47.3; 5. Springer (O), 11:05.2
110 HIGH HURDLES - 5. Myers (O), 17.0; 6. Nussbaum (O), 17.4
300 INTERMEDIATE HURDLES - 5. Myers (O), 42.7
LONG JUMP - 2. Raes (O), 19-8 1/4
HIGH JUMP - 1. Raes (O), 6-0; 3. Dillenburg (O), 5-10
TRIPLE JUMP - 4. Canopy (O), 40-0
POLE VAULT - 5. Slager (O), 11-0; 6. Hish (O), 11-0
SHOT PUT - 1. Schultz (O), 56-4; 5. Boudeman (O), 45-1 1/2
DISCUS - 1. Schultz (O), 163-5; 2. Hieronymus (O), 149-11
400 RELAY - 1. Olympia (Dillenburg, Schmidgall, Brand, Joyce), 44.2
800 RELAY - 2. Olympia, 1:34.1
1,600 RELAY - 1. Olympia (Dillenburg, Schmidgall, Brand, Joyce),
3:27.3
3,200 RELAY - 3. Olympia, 8:40.7 |
Girls
Corn Belt Conference Meet
At Fairbury
5. Olympia
100 METERS - 3. Prater (O), 12.5; 6. McKown (O), 13.5
200 - 2. Prater (O), 26.2
800 - 5. Seggerman (O), 2:34.9
1,600 - 6. Wade (O), 6:13.3
100 HURDLES - 5. Hish (O), 17.5
300 HURDLES - 3. Fredericks (O), 50.6; 6. Hish (O), 53.6
SHOT PUT - 6. Lilienthal (O), 31-9
DISCUS - 5. Decker (O), 94-1
400 RELAY - 5. Olympia, 53.5
800 RELAY - 5. Olympia, 1:53.7
800 MEDLEY - 3. Olympia, 1:53.9
1,600 RELAY - 3. Olympia, 4:18.1
3,200 RELAY - 2. Olympia, 10:19.9
|
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High
school softball
[MAY 14, 2003]
|
At Stanford
Pontiac 000 001 0 - 1-5-3
Olympia 100 040 x - 5-5-1
Kristen Mehlberg (L) and Chelsea Rodgers; Jessie Shay (W, 21-1) and
Amber Lessen.
Hitting stars - Olympia - Erin Canopy (3 RBIs), Mallory Toliver
(RBI), Becky Hieser (RBI).
Records - Pontica 14-8-1 overall, 7-2 in Corn Belt Conference;
Olympia 28-2, 9-0. |
At Tremont
Hartsburg-Emden 000 400 0 - 4-6-1
Tremont
001 000 0 - 1-6-3
Nikki Chapman (W), Nicole Buse (6) and Alyssa Moehring; TJ Matheny
(L, 11-12) and Camiella Ayers.
Hitting stars - Hartem - Danielle Bergman (3 hits).
Records - Hartem 12-10; Tremont 11-13. |
|
High
school baseball
[MAY 14, 2003]
|
At Flanagan
Olympia 511 01(10) 0 - 18-10-6
Flanagan 230 23 3 0 -
13-13-3
Dusty Hayes, Rush Olson and Brad Brooks; Time Simulis (L), Andrew
Augsburger (1), Culie Hawthorne (6) and Mark Adamski.
Home runs - Olympia - Rush Olson (solo in 2nd).
Hitting stars - Olympia - Ross Thompson (2 hits, 3 RBIs), Tyler
Thompson (2 hits).
Records - Olympia 18-9 overall; Flanagan 3-21. |
At Pleasant Plains
Illini Central 000
100 0 - 1-5-3
Pleasant Plains 300 000 x - 3-5-1
Chris Norton (L, 5-2) and Travis Scott; Beard (W, 6-3) and Kulavic.
Hitting stars - Illini Central - Adam Williams (2 hits).
Records - Pleasant Plains 20-11; Illini Central 13-7. |
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Articles from the past week |
Tuesday:
Monday:
Saturday:
- High school track and field
|
Friday:
Thursday:
Wednesday:
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Cubs-Cards series No. 1 a draw
By Jeff Mayfield
[MAY 12, 2003]
The
first Cards-Cubs series ended in a push. The Redbirds set the tone
by winning the first game 6-3. However, the Cubbies came back in
dramatic fashion to take the second game 3-2 on a walk-off homer by
Alex Gonzalez. Then on Sunday, with St. Louis leading 11-9 in a
pitching duel and defensive struggle, the rains came and washed the
Cards' victory away. But that's NOT the bad news.
|
While Chicago was flailing with the
Brewers and the Cards were collapsing in Cincinnati, the Houston
Astros as well as the Reds moved right back into the race. So,
instead of Chicago and St. Louis pulling away from the pack, they've
let the pack right back into the race, which is something that this
amateur reporter thinks that both teams will regret.
The Cubs now start a brutal two-week
road trip. They will need to go about .500 if they have serious
title intentions.
A-Gon Mr.
Clutch?
We believe that A-Gon's long tater was
his third of the year in like fashion. What's up with this guy in
the clutch situations? And why not save some of these heroics for
the Reds and especially the Astros?
A tip of
the cap…
To former Cub Rafael Palmeiro, who
became just the 19th player in baseball history to reach the No. 500
home run plateau! He may reach the 3,000 career hits mark too. So,
why all the negativity and the hate towards Raffy? All these sports
shows say he doesn't deserve the Hall of Fame. In my book, if
someone reaches baseball's magic numbers -- and 500 homers and 3,000
hits are surely some of those numbers with mystic -- they deserve to
be in the Hall!
When it
rains … it pours
Feeling like St. Louis didn't have
enough injuries, Eli Marrero went down with a severely sprained
ankle in the rain-postponed game on Sunday. Before that incident
J.D. Drew was pulled from the contest with a stiff back. He will see
the chiropractor today and expects to be ready for Tuesday night's
home tilt with the Reds.
Time to
make some hay
If we're reading the calendar
correctly, the Cards play 20 of their next 26 in the friendly
confines of Busch Stadium. Winning 15 or more of those could go a
long way in giving the Birds a chance to fight it out among the
leaders all summer. However, if the injuries continue to mount and
they continue to find no answers from the pen, they may be able to
scratch their playoff invitations by the All-Star break.
[to top of second column in this
article] |
Lakers
win one for Phil
The Los Angeles Lakers won one for
their coach and the Sacramento Kings won one for themselves as
A.I. put his 76ers on his back and all three teams evened their
playoff marks to 2-2. In the last remaining series, the Nets have
the Celtics on life support as Boston trails New Jersey 3-0. It will
be interesting to see who, if anyone, can win some road games and
maybe steal a game or a series.
Coach
Alexander turns thoughts to next season
While his soon-to-be-graduated Railers
ink college deals, Lincoln Railer coach Neil Alexander has already
turned the page to next season. In an early morning interview, the
LDN has learned that the Railer summer schedule is already set. The
highlight of the vacation months will be the annual trip south for
the HUGE tournament that Lincoln always fares well in. Through the
years this tourney has been in Tennessee or Kentucky, but this year
the event moves to Evansville, Ind.
Coach "Al"
also reports that it is his feeling that the CS8 will be very
competitive next season. He says that many have already ruled the
Railers out with the loss of nine seniors. Not so fast, my friend,
at least for the Lincoln coach. He thinks the Railers will be gritty
and fight their way to success. This is one reporter who's not going
to argue with 12-13 years of success! Good luck, Railers!
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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Announcements
|
Basketball camp dates announced
[MAY 14, 2003]
NORMAL
-- First-year Illinois State head basketball coach Porter Moser has
announced his camp dates for the summer of 2003.
|
Moser and his Redbird staff will host
three camps this summer, with a pair of day camps and one team camp.
The first day camp runs June 16-19 and
is for boys entering grades 1-12. The second day camp is open to
boys entering grades 1-8 and is scheduled for July 15-18. The day
camps are designed for commuters only and focus on the basic
fundamentals of dribbling, passing, shooting, rebounding, defense
and game play.
The cost for either day camp is $170.
Each camper receives a basketball and a T-shirt.
[to top of second column in this
article] |
The team camp, which caters to high
school and junior high teams with boys entering grades 6-12, will be
June 20-22. The camp format is round-robin and tournament team play.
The cost for the team camp is $170 for
commuters and $205 for resident campers. Each will receive a camp
T-shirt.
For more information about the
basketball camps, call the Redbird men's basketball office at (309)
438-8681 or click
here for an application form.
[Click
here to download the Adobe Acrobat reader for the PDF file.]
[Todd Kober, director of
media relations,
Illinois State University] |
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