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Friday, December 17, 2010

Friday Night Hoop

BOYS 
GREATER THUMB WEST
Team W L W L
BCAS 0 0 3 0
Vassar 0 0 3 1
Bad Axe 0 0 1 2
Reese 0 0 1 2
USA 0 0 1 2
Cass City 0 0 1 3
EPBP 0 0 1 3
GREATER THUMB EAST
Team W L W L
H. Beach 0 0 4 0
Marlette 0 0 3 0
Sandusky 0 0 3 1
Ubly 0 0 3 1
Brown City 0 0 1 3
Mayville 0 0 0 3

NORTH CENTRAL THUMB NORTH
Team W L W L
North Huron 0 0 1 2
Port Hope 0 0 0 2
Caseville 0 0 0 2
Owen-Gage 0 0 0 2
A-Fairgrove 0 0 0 3

NORTH CENTRAL THUMB SOUTH
Team W L W L
CPS 0 0 3 0
Deckerville 0 0 2 1
Kingston 0 0 2 1
Peck 0 0 1 1
Memphis 0 0 0 2

FRIDAY’S RESULTS
Harbor Beach 62, Bad Axe 45
USA 61, Sandusky 58 OT
Ubly 60, EPBP 47
Reese 74, Mayville 29
Marlette 52, Cass City 48
Vassar 61, Lakeville 51
Almont 56, Brown City 47

MONDAY’S GAMES
Sandusky at Yale (B/G DH, 7:30 p.m.)
A-Fairgrove at Peck
North Huron at Deckerville
Owen-Gage at Kingston
Caseville at CPS

TUESDAY’S GAMES
Mayville at Cass City
Marlette at Almont

WEDNESDAY’S GAMES
Mayville at Owen-Gage

HARBOR BEACH 62, BAD AXE 45
Harbor Beach      25-07-19-11--62
Bad Axe      10-15-09-11--45

HARBOR BEACH SCORERS: E. Kraft 2 0-1 4, J. Hanson 1 0-1 14, A. Ginther 1 3-4 5, S. Grekowicz 3 8-9 14, S. Sorenson 2 3-4 7, A. Siemen 8 1-2 17, J. Booms 0 1-2 1
TOTALS: 17 (4) 16-23 62

BAD AXE SCORERS: E. Sisco 2 3-3 13, B. Dean 1 1-2 3, S. Krug 0 3-4 3, S. Kelly 3 2-3 8, J. Pawlowski 1 0-0 2, J. Quinn 7 2-2 16, J. Dorsch 0 0-1 0
TOTALS: 14 (2) 11-15 45

THREE-POINTERS: Harbor Beach – J. Hanson 4; Bad Axe – E. Sisco 2
JV: Harbor Beach winner

USA 61, SANDUSKY 58 OT
USA 12-12-11-18-08--61
Sandusky 13-14-06-20-05--58

USA SCORERS: A. Botello 2 1-1 11, K. Comer 0 2-2 2, S. McBrayer 1 2-2 4, N. Fletcher 1 4-4 15, D. Gangler 2 3-4 7, J. Holland 3 4-5 10, D. Rieck 2 1-1 8, K. Fletcher 1 2-4 4
TOTALS: 12 (6) 19-23 61

SANDUSKY SCORERS: J. Coats 4 3-4 17, A. Alvirez 0 0-0 3, J. Mills 1 0-0 2, B. Ball 1 2-2 4, C. Baysdell 5 3-3 16, K. McGuire 1 1-2 12, C. Kursinski 2 0-3 4
TOTALS: 14 (7) 9-14 58

THREE-POINTERS: USA – N. Fletcher 3, A. Botello 2, D. Rieck 1; Sandusky – K. McGuire 3, J. Coats 2, C. Baysdell 1, A. Alvirez 1

UBLY 60, EPBP 47
Ubly     12-18-17-13--60
EPBP     16-13-07-11--47

UBLY SCORERS: B. Glaza 0 0-0 3, J. LaFave 1 0-0 5, T. Peruski 0 2-3 2, J. Franzel 1 0-0 2, E. Booms 2 2-2 6, M. Leipprandt 10 7-8 27, J. Kaufman 1 2-2 4, L. Nowicki 2 2-4 6, J. White 1 1-2 3, B. Cleary 1 0-0 2
TOTALS: 18 (2) 16-21 60

EPBP SCORERS: E. Gascho 2 1-5 5, B. Lawrence 3 2-3 8, C. Voelker 8 4-6 20, T. Warack 3 3-5 12, N. Krohn 1 0-0 2
TOTALS: 17 (1) 10-19 47

THREE-POINTERS: Ubly – B. Glaza 1, J. LaFave 1; EPBP – T. Warack 1

REESE 74, MAYVILLE 29
Reese     21-26-19-08--74
Mayville      06-12-04-07--29

REESE SCORERS: M. Frost 2 1-2 5, A. Lefler 4 0-0 11, T. Volz 1 3-5 5, K. Yaklin 2 3-4 7, S. Elbers 0 2-2 2, T. Menapace 3 0-0 6, E. Campbell 0 1-2 4, C. Gnatkowski 7 3-5 17, J. Guerrero 1 4-6 6, A. Fuerst 2 0-0 4, J. Trombley 3 1-4 7
TOTALS: 25 (2) 18-33 74

MAYVILLE SCORERS: J. Neighbors 3 0-2 12, B. Baber 1 0-0 2, F. Buggia 2 4-8 8, J. Maddocks 2 0-0 4, T. McComas 1 1-4 3
TOTALS: 9 (2) 5-14 29

THREE-POINTERS: Reese – A. Lefler 1, E. Campbell 1; Mayville – J. Neighbors 2

MARLETTE 52, CASS CITY 48
Marlette     18-12-15-07--52
Cass City      11-12-05-20--48

MARLETTE SCORERS: K. Jickling 1 1-2 3, A. Storm 4 0-2 11, K. Lange 1 1-5 9, D. Thomas 2 0-2 4, J. Volz 3 0-0 6, B. Mellstead 1 0-0 2, K Hall 7 3-4 17
TOTALS: 19 (3) 5-15 52

THREE-POINTERS: Marlette – K. Lange 2, A. Storm 1

-------------------------------------------------------------------
Girls Basketball
GREATER THUMB WEST
Team W L W L
Reese 1 0 5 0
Vassar 1 0 4 1
Cass City 1 0 2 3
USA 0 0 2 1
EPBP 0 1 3 2
BCAS 0 1 2 2
Bad Axe 0 1 2 3

GREATER THUMB EAST
Team W L W L
Sandusky 1 0 6 0
Marlette 1 0 4 1
Brown City 0 0 4 0
Ubly 0 0 0 3
H. Beach 0 1 3 2
Mayville 0 1 0 6

NORTH CENTRAL THUMB NORTH
Team W L W L
Port Hope 0 0 3 0
North Huron 0 0 1 3
Owen-Gage 0 0 1 3
Caseville 0 0 0 2
A-Fairgrove 0 0 0 3
NORTH CENTRAL THUMB SOUTH
Team W L W L
CPS 0 0 3 2
Deckerville 0 0 2 2
Kingston 0 0 2 2
Peck 0 0 1 2
Memphis 0 0 0 2

 FRIDAY’S RESULTS
Deckerville 52, Caseville 30
CPS 60, A-Fairgrove 17
Kingston 57, North Huron 41
Port Hope 43, Peck 27

MONDAY’S GAMES
Harbor Beach at Mayville (makeup)
BCAS at Saginaw Nouvel
Sandusky at Yale (B/G DH, 6 p.m.)

TUESDAY’S GAMES
Harbor Beach at Cros-Lex
Vassar at Frankenmuth
Memphis at Port Hope
Peck at A-Fairgrove
Deckerville at North Huron
Kingston at Owen-Gage
CPS at Caseville

WEDNESDAY’S GAMES
Reese at Cass City 

CPS 60, A-FAIRGROVE 17
CPS    16-15-19-10--60
A-Fairgrove     04-08-01-04--17

CPS SCORERS: M. Munro 2 0-0 4, C. Lein 2 0-0 4, B. Alexander 2 0-0 7, L. Sertich 3 1-3 7, E. Lentz 2 0-0 4, C. Nowawski 1 0-0 2, B. Ploep 0 1-4 1, A. Washe 2 1-1 5, L. Bartley 0 3-7 3, S. Albrecht 5 2-2 12, A. Nickens 4 3-4 11
TOTALS: 23 (1) 11-21 60

A-FAIRGROVE SCORERS: S. Crane 3 7-12 13, C. Knepfler 2 0-5 4
TOTALS: 5 (0) 7-17 17

THREE-POINTERS: CPS – B. Alexander 1
JV: CPS winner

DECKERVILLE 52, CASEVILLE 30
Deckerville      10-12-15-15--52
Caseville      04-09-10-07--30

DECKERVILLE SCORERS: K. Spaetzel 1 0-0 2, M. Nichol 6 1-2 13, S. Sampson 1 7-9 9, T. Kreiner 2 0-0 4, T. Mausolf 1 2-4 4, J. Salowitz 5 0-0 10, T. Rich 5 0-0 10
TOTALS: 21 (0) 10-15 52

CASEVILLE SCORERS: H. Nowak 2 3-6 7, R. Janke 3 1-2 10, T. King 1 0-0 2, M. Fortsch 4 0-0 11
TOTALS: 10 (2) 4-8 30

THREE-POINTERS: Caseville – R. Janke 1, M. Fortsch 1

KINGSTON 57, NORTH HURON 41
Kingston      20-09-21-07--57
North Huron      05-13-10-13--41

KINGSTON SCORERS: K. Collins 4 0-1 8, A. Lester 3 3-6 12, E. Chambers 6 3-6 18, S. Marquardt 0 3-4 3, Q. Daily 4 0-0 8, M. Lavery 3 1-2 7, C. Shafor 0 1-3 1
TOTALS: 20 (2) 11-22 57

NORTH HURON SCORERS: K. Knoblock 1 0-0 2, A. Case 7 2-4 16, S. Clancy 4 8-13 16, C. Yaroch 1 0-0 2, M. Levaine 1 3-6 5, K. Korleski 0 0-3 0
TOTALS: 14 (0) 13-26 41

THREE-POINTERS: Kingston – A. Lester 1, E. Chambers 1

PORT HOPE 43, PECK 27
Port Hope     06-11-13-13--43
Peck      10-01-13-03--27

PORT HOPE SCORERS: K. Gust 2 0-0 13, B. Schave 1 1-2 3, J. Schuh 2 4-8 8, T. Reinke 1 0-0 2, M. Schave 3 0-0 6, K. Kowaleski 2 2-2 9, J. Schulz 1 0-0 2
TOTALS: 12 (4) 7-12 43

PECK SCORERS: M. Murray 2 0-0 4, E. Warren 1 1-2 3, T. Daniels 1 0-0 2, S. York 1 0-0 2, K. Jones 2 0-2 4, S. Partelo 3 0-0 6, B. Partlo 0 2-6 2, M. Jones 2 0-0 4
TOTALS: 12 (0) 3-10 27

THREE-POINTERS: Port Hope – K. Gust 3, K. Kowaleski 1

College bowl contest coming this weekend

Just a note to all college football crazies.
We will host a college football bowl contest on the blog this year.
I will post 15 games to pick.
Winner takes all - a gift certificate to an eating establishment.
The games will be posted later this weekend.

Feger making his mark on and off field

ALBION — For four seasons, Mark Feger poured his heart and soul into playing soccer at Albion College, turning into one of the hardest working — and best — players for the Britons.
Now that his playing days have come to an end, the 2007 Elkton-Pigeon-Bay Port graduate is pursuing a career as an athletic trainer and/or physical therapist.
And Feger knows he’ll have to work even harder if he wants to succeed — and become one of the best — off the playing field.
“My (soccer) career was a great experience because it taught me the importance of working hard every single day in practice and in the games,” Feger said. “That hard work ethic is something I will be able to take with me into my future career and life.”
Feger got the chance of a lifetime this summer when he took on an athletic training internship with the Cleveland Browns.
“Through the relationships and connections I had been able to establish with my professors at Albion, they helped me get an internship with the Browns,” Feger said. “This internship was very similar to what I was used to as an athletic training student at Albion.”
Feger said as an athletic training major at Albion, he had worked with various sports teams and clinics to improve the hands-on skills he learned about in the classroom. 
“With the Browns, we were working one on one with the athletes, providing rehab and treatment,” he said. “We also were on the field at practice and the preseason games providing the taping, stretching and necessary treatment on the sidelines.”
Working at times 17 hours per day, Feger labored at a sprinter’s pace each session for four weeks.
“At first, I was intimidated just not knowing what to expect,” Feger explained. “I had very little knowledge of what my responsibilities would be before I arrived to their training facility. Upon arrival, we went over their expectations of us and what our daily responsibilities were going to be. 
“When I saw how much freedom the athletic training staff was going to grant us, I felt much more comfortable to work with the athletes and utilize the skills I have gained from my experience at Albion. I was very confident of my educational base because the professors at Albion have been very demanding and supportive at the same time to get the best out of every student they work with.”
After coming back to Albion in the fall, Feger went from taping and treating NFL players to being moved around on the soccer field for the Britons.
“I was asked to play multiple positions this year because our team was suffering from numerous injuries,” he said. “I finished the last half of the season as a center back, which was a huge switch from the offensive positions I have played in the past.”
Despite all the position tinkering, the senior led the Britons in scoring with seven goals, including a pair of game-winners. His 14 points ranked him ninth overall in the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association in scoring.
The Britons struggled this season, finishing 6-14 overall.
“This season was the worst season I had at Albion, as far as the record and standings are concerned,” he said. “But I am very happy that I decided to play soccer in college.”
Feger was a first-team All-State performer for EPBP in the fall of 2006, when the Lakers advanced all the way to the regional finals where they lost to eventual state champion Richmond. 
After offers from several MIAA schools, Feger decided on Albion primarily for its academics.
“I felt very comfortable on my visit to Albion, and academically it was a very good fit for my future goals,” he said. “Albion had the best atmosphere within the team and the school was very well known for its high academic standards.”
After coming from a highly successful program at EPBP, Feger took some lumps early on at Albion.
“It was a completely new experience,” he said. “We were always expected to win in high school, and in college any team could win on any given day. 
“The biggest difference between high school soccer and college soccer is the speed of play. In high school, it was very common to see players dribble the ball the length of the field untouched and score. In college, you’re lucky to take three touches and not get knocked to the ground from behind. It’s very physical and required that the speed of play was increased to an extremely quick pace.”
Though his soccer career is over, Feger is excited about the future.
“I have applied to physical therapy graduate school, and I am also in contact with the Browns and may be applying for the year-long internship for the upcoming season,” he said. “At this point, I don’t know which path I would like to pursue more, but both are very viable options.”
Feger credits Albion for turning him into the person he is today.
“Albion has done more for me already than I would have expected,” Feger said. “The professors in the athletic training program at Albion are some of the best teachers, friends and people I have ever met. I have learned that it is equally as important to be the best student you can be in the classroom and a person with great integrity outside of the classroom. Every day of your education can be viewed as an extended interview for your future career.
“The people you meet and the relationships you developed can make all the difference in the world when being presented with an opportunity like this.”

Elkton-Pigeon-Bay Port graduate and Albion College's Mark Feger helps tape Brandon McDonald during his internship with the Cleveland Browns this summer. McDonald now plays for the Lions.          Photo courtesy Albion College

Our picks for tonight...

BOGAN
BOYS
Bad Axe at Harbor Beach
USA at Sandusky
EPBP at Ubly
Reese at Mayville
Almont at Brown City
Lakeville at Vassar

GIRLS
Caseville at Deckerville
CPS at A-Fairgrove
North Huron at Kingston
Port Hope at Peck

ADAMS
BOYS
Bad Axe at Harbor Beach
USA at Sandusky
EPBP at Ubly
Reese at Mayville
Almont at Brown City
Lakeville at Vassar

GIRLS
Caseville at Deckerville
CPS at A-Fairgrove
North Huron at Kingston
Port Hope at Peck

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Comments cleared up

We've noticed we've had some problems with people trying to post comments.
I think we have the problem solved.
If you post a comment, and it won't go through, just continue to hit "POST" and it will eventually post.
Sorry about the confusion.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

After promising opener, Bad Axe slips up

BAD AXE — Until Bad Axe knocks off one or two of the Greater Thumb Conference’s elite teams, the Hatchets will continue to dwell in the bottom half of the league.
After a bright start to the season last week against Mayville, the Hatchets came home here Wednesday to face GTE title contender Marlette. Bad Axe, though, squandered its chance to make an early statement, dropping a 68-32 GTC crossover decision to the Red Raiders.
“This was our first test and I know I am not happy with it,” said Bad Axe coach Jim Quinn. “And I know the players aren’t happy with it.”
The Hatchets actually trailed by just five points midway through the third quarter before the Red Raiders poured it on, using a huge end-of-the-period flurry to grab an 18-point advantage.
From there, a 12-0 Marlette spurt to open the fourth quarter put the game out of reach.
“They ran that press and we kind of went brain-dead and all of a sudden, boom, boom, boom... When you’re five or seven points down you’re kind of hanging on the cliff anyway,” Quinn said. “We had it to five, but then it was 10, and then it was 25.”
Marlette, which knocked off Reese in its season opener last week, put 11 players into the scorebook, paced by Alex Storm’s 15 points and Kyle Hall’s 13 points.
 “They are a very good basketball team,” Quinn said. “They run the floor well, they’re tall and they play well together.”
After having five players tally double figures in the season opener, the Hatchets had just one here Wednesday night. Jesse Quinn hit the mark with 10 points while Ethan Sisco had seven and Scott Krug six.
“Offensively, we didn’t do very well at all,” Quinn said. “Everybody has to know their jobs. I think we have some guys who are still searching for their roles. 
“We have some guys who we want shooting the ball and we have a few guys who we want penetrating. Everybody has to know their job and do their job. We didn’t have that tonight.”
Trailing by 10 at the half, the Hatchets got a pair of three-pointers from Sisco to cut the deficit to five with 4:37 to play in the third quarter. 
Marlette, though, then turned on the jets, forcing several turnovers with its press. In a matter of a few minutes, and sparked by a couple of steals and hoops from Donnie Thomas, the Red Raiders bolted to a 45-27 lead. Eight players scored for Marlette in the fourth quarter when the Red Raiders outscored the Hatchets 23-5.
Bad Axe travels to Harbor Beach on Friday. 
“It doesn’t get any easier for us,” Quinn said.
The Red Raiders led 10-5 after one quarter and used an 8-0 run to open the second to grab a 25-15 lead at the half. Storm had seven points in the frame for the winners.
“At halftime we were down 10, but we had played terribly — so I wasn’t too disappointed in that,” Quinn said. “Then they had that stretch in the third quarter which was basically the game.”

PHOTOS FROM BA-MARLETTE
Bad Axe’s Jordan Dorsch converts on a half-hook shot for the Hatchets in the opening quarter. 
Marlette’s Alex Storm tries to block the shot from Bad Axe’s Spencer Kelly.
Marlette’s Kolby Lange makes a move to the hoop against Bad Axe’s Brandon Dean.
Bad Axe's Jesse Quinn and Marlette's Kyle Jickling tangle in the paint.
Marlette’s Alex Storm goes up for a one-handed jumper against Bad Axe’s Spencer Kelly.

WEDNESDAY’S BOYS RESULTS
Marlette 68, Bad Axe 32
EPBP 74, Mayville 39
Harbor Beach 51, Cass City 38
BCAS 58, Ubly 54
Sandusky 35, Vassar 30
Brown City 61, Deckerville 32
Bangor John Glenn 54, Reese 53 OT 

New Top 10s – News and Notes

BOYS BASKETBALL POLL
School                       10-11 Record       Pts.
1. Harbor Beach 2-0 48    
2. Ubly 2-0 43    
3. BCAS 2-0 39
4. Sandusky 2-0 38
5. Vassar 2-0 24
6. CPS 2-0 23
7. Marlette 1-0 17
8. Cass City 1-1 13
9. Reese 0-2 8   
10. Deckerville 2-0 4
Others: Bad Axe (2), USA (1)

With wins over Unionville-Sebewaing Area and North Huron, Harbor Beach remained a strong No. 1 in this week’s Huron Daily Tribune Top 10 Boys Basketball Poll. 
The Pirates get a test tonight when they travel to 1-1 Cass City. Unbeaten Ubly moved up two spots to No. 2 while 2-0 Bay City All Saints also slid up two slots to No. 3. 
2-0 Sandusky made a huge jump, going from unranked to No. 4. 2-0 Vassar also made a nice move, going up a pair of spots to No. 5. 
Undefeated Carsonville-Port Sanilac is up two spots to No. 6 while 1-0 Marlette slips in at No. 7. 1-1 Cass City slides down to No. 8 while 0-2 Reese tumbles to No. 9 and Deckerville makes an appearance at No. 10. 
The boys basketball poll and area statistics will usually run Wednesdays in the Tribune.
------------------------------------------------------------------------  

GIRLS BASKETBALL POLL
  School                       10-11 Record       Pts.
1. Sandusky 5-0 50    
2. Reese 4-0 44    
3. Brown City 4-0 41
4. Marlette 3-1 33
5. Vassar 3-1 32
6. EPBP 3-1 23
7. USA 2-1 21
8. Harbor Beach 3-1 11
9. BCAS 2-1 8   
10. Port Hope 1-0 4
Others: Bad Axe (3)

There is no doubting who is No. 1 in this week’s Huron Daily Tribune Top 10 Girls Basketball Poll.
At 5-0, Sandusky received all five first-place votes in this week’s poll.
4-0 Reese was a strong No. 2 while 4-0 Brown City remains No. 3.
3-1 Marlette, whose only loss came last week to Reese, moves up to No. 4 while 3-1 Vassar remains No. 5.
3-1 Elkton-Pigeon-Bay Port, whose only loss came last week against Sandusky, slips a few spots to No. 6 while 2-1 Unionville-Sebewaing Area is at No. 7 and 3-1 Harbor Beach remains No. 8.
2-1 Bay City All Saints makes an appearance at No. 9 while 1-0 Port Hope remains steady at No. 10.
The girls basketball poll and area statistics will usually run Tuesdays in the Tribune.

--------------------------------------------------------------------
We’re already knee-deep into the boys and girls basketball seasons.
Here are some news and notes from the first few weeks.
GIRLS WHO’S HOT
• No doubt, Reese, Sandusky and Brown City — just like last season — seem to be the top teams in the Greater Thumb Conference, combining for an 18-0 start.
The 5-0 Redskins were pushed by Vassar in the season opener, but haven’t been threatened since.
Lauren Krause, Whitney Fox and Emily Hale have had nice starts to the season for the Redskins. They showed off Friday night at Elkton-Pigeon-Bay Port, combining for 37 points in the Redskins’ 51-34 win over the Lakers.
• There are a few other teams inching closer to the Big 3.
In the GTW, Vassar and Unionville-Sebewaing Area might push the Rockets.
USA has been led by sophomore Miranda Fuerst, who is averaging 14 points per game for the 2-1 Patriots. 
For the 3-1 Vulcans, Lydia Peplinski had a 20-point game against Caro while teammate Alisha Campbell has drilled eight three-pointers.
In the GTE, Harbor Beach and Marlette are both 3-1 and could push the Redskins and Green Devils.
Jenna Hirsch has been lighting up the scoreboard for the Raiders, averaging 18.7 points in her first four games.
Tori Kraft has carried the Pirates, averaging 16 points in her four games.
• There have been some notable performances in the North Central Thumb League.
North Huron’s Sara Clancy is averaging 18.3 points in her team’s first three games.
Owendale-Gagetown’s Mandy Muntz had 12 blocked shots in a recent game, bringing her season’s total to 23 in four outings.

BOYS WHO’S HOT
• In the GTW, for those of you who have missed it, Bay City All Saints is 2-0, thanks mostly to Drew Janer.
Janer is averaging 24 points in the two Cougars’ victories.
Elsewhere, Bad Axe forced 28 Mayville turnovers in its 44-point win over the Wildcats last week.
The Hatchets put five players in double figures, led by Spencer Kelly’s 18 points.
“Kelly was just too physical for us,” said Mayville coach Leon Westover.
Kelly was an impressive 6-of-7 from the foul line, as well.
• In the GTE, Harbor Beach, Ubly and Sandusky are all 2-0.
The Redskins are a bit of a surprise under first-year coach Ryan Pritchett. 
Jordan Coats leads the Redskins at 11.5 points per game while the team has buried 10 threes in the first two games.
• In the NCTL, Carsonville-Port Sanilac’s Calvin Amey is averaging 23 points per game, which includes at 30-point outburst in the season opener against Akron-Fairgrove.
Peck’s Tim Logghe had 23 point in a season-opening win over Dryden.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Tuesday cancellations

A good Tuesday to all,
As far as we know, all area games have been cancelled for this evening.
If you know of any being played, please post.
Tomorrow, we will post the area's updated Top 10s and some news and notes from the first few games of the boys and girls seasons.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Snow bound...

Well, isn't this a nice welcome to winter?
12 inches of snow and it keeps coming down.
And, the wind is up at around 30 mph...
There isn't much going on around town today.
All of today's games have been postponed and tomorrow's I am sure are in jeopardy, too.
We will keep everyone posted.


Maybe a topic off of sports today.
What's the worst snowstorm anyone can remember?
This one ranks right up there with me...