Banner Graphic, Volume 12, Number 99, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 January 1982 — Page 7
Sports scoreboard
Indiana College Basketball By The Associated Press Monday's Games Ball State 63, Butler 54 Bradley 79, Indiana 77,20 T Franklin 77, Earlham 75 Indiana State-Evansville 67, Transylvania 52 LaSalle 66, Notre Dame 61 Monday's College Basketball Scores By The Associated Press EAST Boston U 89, Fla Southern 68 Canisius 78, Vermont 63 Cornell 53, Colgate 38 Fordham 73, Yale 58 Hofstra74, Marist7o La Salle 66. Notre Dame 61 Loyola, Md 89, St. Francis, Pa 67 Maine 66, Utica 58 Pitt 60, Temple 59 Rutgers 65, New Hampshire 51 Seton Hall 66, Providence 65 SOUTH Ala -Birmingham 82, Jacksonville 62 Alcorn St. 84, Miss. Valley 71 Campbell 83. Elon 69 Davidson 54, W.Carolina 51 Delta St. 68. SW Missouri 66 East Carolina 70, Baptist 56 Georgia St. 77, St .Louis 70 Grambling 66. Bethune-Cookman 65,20 T Jacksonville St. 88, Troy St. 86 Louisville 79, Florida St. 57 Marshall 90, VMI63 Memphis St. 84, Baltimore 62 North Carolina 64, William & Mary 40 N Carolina St. 46, S.Mississippi 45 NE Louisiana 69, McNeese St 67 NW Louisiana 76, Nieholls St. 63 Old Dominion 93. Howard U. 65 Richmond 58, South Carolina 45 Roanoke 74, Swarthmore 63 South Alabama 75, St. Xavier 45 Southern U. 76, Prairie View 60 South Florida 72. Wis.-Green Bay 48 MIDWEST Ball St 63, Butler 54 Bradley 79, Indiana St. 77,20 T DePaul 96, St. Mary’s, Calif. 72 Illinois St. 59, Drake 49 Kansas St. 82, Nev.-Las Vegas 65 Ohio St. 67, Syrause 57 Tulane 60, Cincinnati 58 W Illinois 100, E.Kentucky 84 Wichita St. 92, U.S. International 67 SOUTHWEST Baylor 68, Southwestern 59 Houston 63, Rice 61 N Texas St. 87, Pan American 83 Sam Houston St. 78, Texas Lutheran 65 SW Oklahoma 85, USAO 74 Texas-Arlington 77, Texas-San Antonio 69 Tulsa 80, Creighton 55 FAR WEST Brigham Young 76, New Mexico 58 Fresno St. 56, Lamar 36 Nev.-Renoß2, Detroit 79 New Mexico St. 75, W.Texas St. 66 Oregon St. 68, Arizona 55 San Francisco St. 72, Alaska-Fairbanks 47 Santa Clara 107, Cal-Davis 81 Simon Fraser 78, Azusa Pacific 72 SE Louisiana 60, San Diego 59 Southern Cal 57, Washington St. 56. OT Texas-El Paso 73, Utah 61 Washington 56, UCLA 50 EXHIBITIONS Rocky Mountain 105, Regina, Canada 65 Seattle Pacific 98, Eikeli, Norway 82 TOURNAMENTS Hatter Classic First Round New Orleans 83, Centenary 79 Stetson 68. Morehead St. 61 College Bowl Games At A Glance By The Associated Press Thursday, Dec.3l Hall of Fame Bowl Mississippi State 10, Kansas 0 Peach Bowl West Virginia 26, Florida 6 Bluebonnet Bowl Michigan 33. UCLA 14 Friday, Jan.l Cotton Bowl Texas 14, Alabama 12 Fiesta Bowl Penn State 26, Southern California 10 Rose Bowl Washington 28, lowa 0 Orange Bowl Clemson 22, Nebraska 15 Sugar Bowl Pittsburgh 24, Georgia 20 Saturday, Jan. 9 East-West Shrine Game, Palo Alto, CaHf.,3pm..CßS-TV Hula Bowl, Honolulu, Hawaii, 4 pm.. ABC-TV.Saturday, Jan. 16 Japan Bowl, Yokohama City, Japan, 11:30a.m. Senior Bowl, Mobile, Ala., 1:15 p.m. National Football League Playoffs At A Glance By The Associated Press Conference Semifinals Saturday's Games
No. 1 vs. No. 2 in Saturday contest
By TOMCANAVAN Associated Press Writer Preseason favorite North Carolina is the near-unanimous choice today as the No.l team in The Associated Press college basketball poll following a week in which nine of the nation’s Top 20 teams lost at least one game. This week’s poll, in which Virginia replaced previously unbeaten Wichita State as the country’s No. 2 team, sets up a matchup of the nation’s two topranked teams Saturday when North Carolina hosts the Cavaliers in a nationally televised game. It will mark the second time this season that teams ranked 12 in the country have met. Earlier this season, North Carolina retained the nation’s bragging rights by downing then No. 2 Kentucky 82-69, North Carolina, which raised its record to 9-0 with a victory over William and Mary last night, collected 56 of 58 firstplace votes and 1,158 points two shy of perfection. The Tar Heels also posted a thrilling SOSOS overtime decision over Penn State and downed Santa Clara 63-50 in winning the Cable Car Classic last week. Virginia, 11-0 following a pair of victories over James Madison and one over Richmond, was tabbed No.l on the final two first-place ballots. The Cavaliers received 1,095 points from the poll’s nationwide panel
National Conference Dallas 38, Tampa Bay 0 American Conference SanDiego4l, Miami 38, OT Sunday's Games American Conference Cincinnati 28, Buffalo 21 National Conference San Francisco 38, New York Giants 24 Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 10 American Conference San Diego at Cincinnati National Conference Dallas at San Francisco Super Bowl XVI Sunday. Jan. 24 AFC champion vs. NFC champion at Pontiac. Mich. National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W... L Pet.. .GB. Philadelphia 24 6 .800 Boston 23 7 .767 1 New York 16 15 .516 84 Washington 13 16 . 448 104 New Jersey 11 19 .367 13 Central Division Milwaukee 22 9 .710 Indiana 16 15 .516 6 Atlanta 13 16 .448 8 Detroit 13 18 .419 9 Chicago 12 19 .387 10 Cleveland 6 24 ,200 154 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division W I Pet. GB San Antonio 20 9 .690 Denver 15 16 .484 6 Houston 13 18 .419 8 Kansas City 11 20 .355 10 Utah 10 20 .333 104 Dallas 7 23 .233 134 Pacific Division Los Angeles 24 8 .750 Seattle 19 11 .633 4 Golden State 18 12 .600 5 Phoenix 18 12 600 5 Portland 17 13 . 567 6 San Diego 7 22 .241 154 Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games Cleveland at Atlanta Phoenix at Indiana New Jersey at Washington Philadelphia at Detroit New York at Milwaukee Denver at Chicago San Antonio at Portland Kansas City at San Diego Houston at Golden State Wednesday’s Games Chicago at Boston Milwaukee at New Jersey Washington at Philadelphia San Antonio at Utah San Diego at Denver Dallas at Seattle Monday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press FOOTBALL National Football League CHICAGO BEARS-Fired Neill Armstrong, head coach. C anadian F ootball League TORONTO ARGONAUTS-Named Frank Clair to the scouting staff. HOCKEY National Hockey League NEW YORK ISLANDERS—RecaIIed Brent Sutter, center, from Lethbridge of the Western Hockey League. NEW YORK RANGERS—Recalled Peter Wallin and Mikko Leinonen, forwards, from Springfield of the American Hockey League. COLLEGE GEORGIA TECH—Named Dwain Painter an assistant football coach. KANSAS—Named Dr. Del Shankel interim athletic director. NAVY—Named Gary Tranquill, head football coach. WORCESTER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE—Signed Bob Weiss, head football coach, to a five-year contract extension. National Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press Tuesday’s Games Los Angeles at Philadelphia Washington at Quebec Boston at Montreal Minnesota at St. Louis Colorado at Calgary Wednesday's Games Winnipeg at Hartford Detroit at Buffalo Toronto at Minnesota Pittsburgh at Chicago Colorado at Edmonton
The AP Top Twenty By The Associated Press The Top Twenty teams in The Associated Press’ college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, this season's record and total points. Points based on 20-19-18-17-16-15-14-13-12-11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-21: 1. North Carolina (56) 9-0 1,158 2. Virginia (2) 11-0 1,095 3. Kentucky 8-1 984 4. Missouri 9-0 959 5. DePaul 11-l 877 6. Minnesota 8-1 808 7. lowa 8-1 740 8. San Francisco 11-l 628 9. Wichita St. 10-2 583 10. Tulsa 9-1 549 11. Arkansas 8-1 536 12. Louisville 8-2 532 13. Georgetown, DC 11-2 506 14. Houston 10-1 427 15. North Carolina St. 11-l 345 16. Alabama 9-1 283 17. Oregon St. 9-2 212 18. Idaho 11-0 192 19. UCLA 6-4 143 20. St. John’s, N.Y. 9-1 126 of sports writers and broadcasters. Kentucky, now 8-1 following a 34-28 overtime victory over Notre Dame in a slowdown game and a harrowing 68-66 decision over Georgia last week, inched up one slot to N 0.3 with 894 points. Six of the remaining seven teams in the Top 10 also were ranked there last week, but have played a game of musical chairs. Missouri, DePaul, Minnesota and lowa all jumped three positions and are ranked 4-7
Huskies hand UCLA 2nd Pac-10 loss
By BARRY WILNER AP Sports Writer It wouldn’t take much to convince UCLA to skip its next trip to the state of Washington if such a thing were possible. At least the 19th-ranked Bruins, who just completed their first all-losing trip to the Evergreen State since 1963, are secure in the knowledge that they won’t have to return until next season. The Bruins, long a college basketball power, dropped a 56-50 decision to the Washington Huskies Monday night after falling 57-51 in triple overtime Saturday to Washington State. Washington guard Steve Burks scored nine points in the final IV 2 minutes Monday to drop UCLA to 6-4 and 0-2 in the Pacific-10 Conference. The Huskies, who beat Southern California in overtime Saturday night, are 9-2 and have a six-game winning streak. The sweep of the Los Angeles schools was Washington’s first since 1977. UCLA held a 42-37 lead but went nearly 4 l / 2 minutes without scoring. Burks put in a layup and free throw with 1:29 to play to give the Huskies a 48-46 edge and he added six more free throws down the stretch as UCLA tried to catch up by fouling. Burks finished with a game-high 17 points. “Steve Burks rose to the challenge,” said Washington Coach Marv Harshman. “I thought the foul shooting at the end was one of the big things.” As for Burks’ key three-point play, Harshman said it wasn’t part of the plan. “We were going to go down to 20 seconds and call another timeout,” he said. “As a coach, I was glad to see the layup.” UCLA Coach Larry Farmer wasn’t glad to see how his team reacted at the end of the contest. He said the Bruins took bad shots. “You should look to get the ball inside or shoot free throws,”
Practice made for perfect OT Bradley win; Cards top Butler
Associated Press David Thirdkill knew the routine, and Eddie Matthews handed him the ball at just the right second. Thirdkill hit a short jumper with five second to play in the second overtime Monday night to give Bradley a 79-77 Missouri Valley Conference basketball victory over Indiana State. It was the league opener for both the Braves and the host Sycamores. In other Indiana college games Ball State beat Butler 6354, Franklin edged Earlham 7775 and Indiana State-Evansville topped Transylvania 67-52. “That was a play we work on a lot in practice,” Thirdkill said. “But we haven’t executed it well until tonight. You have to be sharp to come off the screen at the right moment to get the pass. Matthews threw a great pass, and the only thing I had to do was catch it and put it in. I like that play because it shows the confidence the team has in me.” Thirdkill, who finished with 18 points, atoned for missing two key free throws in the final seconds of regulation time. Bradley Coach Dick Bersase said, “We’ve had 11 overtimes this year, and it sure is nice to
respectively. Missouri, 9-0 after victories over Southern Cal and Notre Dame, got 959 points. DePaul, 10-1, was next with 877 followed by Minnesota at 808 and lowa with 740. San Francisco, 11-1, slipped two positions to No.B when knocked from the unbeaten ranks by Rice in the Rainbow Classic. The Dons, who received 628 points, rebounded later in the tournament to beat Wichita State, 9-2, which plummeted to N 0.9 following its loss to San Francisco and another to North Carolina State. Tulsa, N 0.13 a week ago, closed out the Top 10 with 549 points. Arkansas, 8-1, dropped six places to No.ll after being upset by Texas Tech. Louisville is 12th followed by Georgetown, D.C., Houston, North Carolina State, Alabama, Oregon State, Idaho, UCLA and St. John’s, N.Y. Last week, the Second 10 was Indiana, Alabama, Tulsa, Louisville, Oregon State, UCLA, Georgetown, Houston, Villanova and North Carolina State. Idaho, 11-0, and St. John’s, 9-1, are the newcomers to the Top 20, replacing Villanova and Indiana. Villanova lost the championship game to St. John’s in the Holiday Festival, while Indiana dropped two games in the same tournament.
see some of that experience pay off. We had every chance in the world at the end. Hit free throws and rebounds in key situations should have won it for us in regulation.” In the first extra period, Indiana State’s James Smith connected on a jump shot with four seconds remaining, tying the score at 75. Coach Bill Hodges of Indiana State said, “We had enough opportunities. We just didn’t get it done. We were in trouble in the overtimes, and that hurt us. Bannister sprained his knee in the first half and didn’t play with full effectiveness throughout the game. The bottom line is we didn’t have enough experience to execute at the end.” Senior forward Mitchell Anderson led the Braves with 20 points. Junior forward Ken Bannister topped the Sycamores with 23 points before fouling out with 3:02 left in the final overtime. The victory gave Bradley, which trailed 45-38 at halftime, a 7-6 record while Indiana State fell to 6-5. In Muncie, John Williams scored nine of his 13 points in the final 9>/2 minutes to lead the Ball State Cardinals. The 6-foot-
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he said. “We didn’t.” Among ranked teams in action Monday night, No.l North Carolina bombed William and Mary 64-40; N 0.5 DePaul eased past St. Mary’s, Calif., 96-72; N 0.9 Wichita State beat U.S. International 92-67 with a second-half outburst; lOth-ranked Tulsa outscored Creighton 80-55 in Missouri Valley Conference action; No. 12 Louisville trounced Florida State 79-57 in the Metro Conference; 14th-rated Houston edged Southwest Conference rival Rice 63-61; No. 15 North Carolina State squeaked by Southern Mississippi 46-45, and No. 17 Oregon State whipped Arizona 68-55 in another Pac-10 outing. Top Ten Sam Perkins and Michael Jordan had 13 points and James Worthy added 12 for the top-ranked Tar Heels, 9-0. North Carolina led 35-20 at the half after Jordan scored 11 of his points. DePaul’s Terry Cummings scored 22 points and pulled down 14 rebounds, while Bernard Randolph notched all 14 of his points in the first half and his replacement, Terry Grubbs, had 15 points. Wichita State stormed from a 38-33 halftime advantage behind the strong front line of Greg Dreiling (18 points, eight rebounds), Antoine Carr (15 and seven) and Cliff Levingston (11 and eight). Tulsa’s Greg Stewart poured in 17 points as the Hurricane won its Missouri Valley Conference opener and 24th straight game at home. Second Ten Louisville fell behind 4-0, then ran off 15 points and was never headed. Derek Smith scored 22 points to lead the Cardinals. Houston nipped local rival Rice for the 21st time in 22 games. Ricky Pierce threw in 37 points for Rice, which upset San Francisco and North Carolina State to win the Rainbow Classic last week. The Cougars rallied as freshman Akeem Abdul Olajuwon and
4 forward also contributed seven assists and four steals. Ray McCallum, Ball State’s leading scorer, topped all scorers with 18 points , 16 in the first half. “We had a 14-day break, and I think it helped us, Ball State Coach Steve Yoder said. “Butler’s record is not very good, but of all the teams we’ve played this year, they are one that doesn’t quit. They were still going after us with 10 seconds left.” Butler, 1-8, trailed by 11 points, 36-25, after four minutes of the second half but rallied to cut their deficit to one point at 40-39 on a Tony Warren jumper with 11:10 to play. The Cardinals, 4-5, answered the threat with a Jeff Parker field goal and a three-point play by Ricky Hampton. Butler’s Lynn Mitchem, who was high for the Bulldogs with 14 points, followed with a field goal, but Ball State pulled away on two baskets by Williams and one by McCallum. Jay Williams scored 21 points and Rick Moorehead added 17
for Franklin against the host Quakers. Franklin led 63-56 before Tim Lebo scored Earlham’s final 16 points, including a pair of baskets in the final nine seconds. Lebo, who finished with a game-high 26 points, hit a field goal with nine seconds to play to make the score 77-73. After a steal, he scored again with two seconds remaining. Franklin evened its record at 6- while Earlham suffered its ninth loss in 11 starts. BRADLEY (7#) Anderson 5 10-12 20, Thirdkill 6 6-9 18, Reese 4 3-611, Scott 7 1-2 15, Mines 4 1-2 9, Mathews 0 2-2 2, Webster 0 04) 0, Winters 1 04) 2, Cook 10-02. Totals 28 23-33 79. INDIANA STATE (77) Bannister 9 5-6 23, Smith 5 0-010, King 1002, Wright 5 6-7 16, Golden 3 0-16, Coin 324 8, Fields 4 2-210, Stephens 02-2 2, Mugg 0000. Totals 30 17-22 77. Halftime—lndiana St. 45, Bradley 38. Regulation—63-63. First Overtime—7s-75. Fouled out—Anderson, Bannister, King. Total fouls—Bradley 23, Indiana State 23. A—4,582. NOTRE DAME (61) Spencer 7 4-6 18, Sluby 6 1-4 13, Andree 1 04) 2, Mitchell 104) 2, Paxson 21-2 5, Varner 6 0-112, Rucker 2 04) 4, Duff 21-35. Totals 27 7LASALLE (66) Burton 104) 2, Butts 3 5-811, Piotrowski 5 1-211, Black 8 4-4 20, Tiano 10-3 2, Davis 212 5, Philson 35-611, Hag-wood 20-24. Totals 25 16-27 66. Halftime Notre Dame 22, LaSalle 29. Fouled out—Spencer, Sluby, Piotrowski. Total fouls—Notre Dame 21, LaSalle 19. Technicals—None. A—8.139.
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January 5,1982, The Putnam County Banner-Graphic
Clyde Drexler led a second-half surge and Rice’s Donald Beni nett missed a shot at the buzzer. Dereck Whittenburg sank a free throw with two seconds left to lift N.C. State over Southern Miss. The Wolfpack was nursing a two-point lead but Sidney Lowe had his shot blocked on a drive with 32 seconds left. The Golden Eagles’ Curtis Green tied it with a 15-foot jumper. Green then fouled Whittenburg, who made the front end of a one-and-one for the victory margin. Oregon State reserve Rob Holbrook collected a career-high 18 points and the Beavers overcame an early 18-8 deficit. Unranked Teams Bradley’s players ought to file for extra scholarships after their fourth overtime game this season, a 79-77 double OT Missouri Valley victory over Indiana State. Last month, the Braves lost to Cincinnati 77-75 in a record seven overtimes. They’ve also had another double overtime contest and a game that went one extra period. David Thirdkill made up for missing two free throws in the final seconds of regulation time when he hit a short jump shot with five seconds left in the second overtime. Thirdkill, who scored 18 points, had missed a pair of free throws with the score tied at 73 and only three seconds left in regulation. In the first OT period, Indiana State’s James Smith put in a jump shot with four seconds remaining to tie the score 75-75, forcing another extra session. In other games, La Salle upended Notre Dame 66-61 and Pittsburgh edged Temple 60-59 in a doubleheader at the Palestra, New Mexico State beat West Texas State 75-66, Illinois State topped Drake 59-49, Seton Hall beat Providence 66-65, AlabamaBirmingham downed Jacksonville 82-62, Richmond defeated South Carolina 58-45, Illinois State outscored Drake 59-49, Kansas State outdueled Nevada-Las Vegas 82-65.
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Edmonds Janitorial Nov. 30,1981 STANDINGS W L Wilmas Beauty Shop 84 36 Marsh No. 2 79 41 Cavins Realty 71 49 Taylor Graphics 3 54 Banner-Graphic 53 67 Marsh No. 1 47 73 Varcity Lanes 46 74 H.B.G. Insurance Market 34 86 High Team Game: Wilmas Beauty Shop. 861. High Team Series: Wilmas Beauty Shop, 2533. High Ind Game: Betty Edmonds, 218. High Ind Series: Betty Edmond & Karen Cox (tie), 563. Series Over 400: B. Edmonds, 563; K. Cox, 563; R. Ferrand, 528; S. Cash, 518; M. Storm, 513; M. Wood, 509; J. Paris, 496; B. Lewis, 492; G. Lancaster, 492; B. Clark, 488; M. Edgetl, 487; B. Cromer, 482; J. Cavin 484; BJ. Jones, 468; L. Dickey, 457; - J. Brewster, 454; C. Flint, 452; C. Justus, 444; S. Brewer, 435; C. Wright, 433; J. Campbell, 433; B. Douglas, 431; D. Hansel, 429; C. Steinbaker, 419; L. Eastham, 405. Automotive STANDINGS W. L. Torr’s Restaurant 98 38 Mallorys 82 54 C. 5772 78 58 Staley's Moving & Stg 76 70 3-D Auto Parts 74 62 Cloverdale Auto Parts 72 64 Al Carney Chev 70 66 Clay Co. R.T.C 65 71 Lone Star 64 72 D. Cooper 60 76 Kennev’s Machine Shop 59 77 D&K Beetles 52 84 Ralph Hutcheson & Son Const. ...48 88 High Team Game: D.B. Cooper. 1049. High Team Series: D.B. Cooper, 2989. High Ind. Game: Jack Miller, 243. High Ind. Series: Jon Rice. 619. Series over 500 (male): highest to lowest: J. Rice, 619; S. Crawley, 604; J. Miller, 584; D. Cline, 563; R. Branham, 560; S. Cofer. 545; M. Comer, 542; B. Brewster, 537; B. Parrish, 537; C. Alex, 533; R. England. 533; T. Beland, 533; W. Ensor, 529; J. Scott, 526; R. Black, 524; A. Gibson, 523; R. Buis, 522; H. Whitaker. 519; R. Lancaster. 519; D. Isom, 518; I. McCammack, 517; R. Shoemaker, 517; R. Newman, 516; M. Bartley, 516; S. Sutherlin, 515; R. Smiley. 514; M. Adams, 514; D. Sutherlin. 513.
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Commercial STANDINGS W L P.G. Evans Real Estate 102 26 American Legion 78 50 Curt’s Flexers 72 56 Gilliam's Machine Shop 72 56 Bill's Pro 52 76. Hopkins-Rector Funeral Home ... 50 78. WJNZ Radio 44 84 Holiday Inn 42 86 High Team Game: American Legion, 1025. High Team Series: American Legion. 2920. High Ind. Game: Lee Jones, 234. High Ind. Series: John Frost, 608. Series over 500 (male): highest to lowest: J. Frost, 608; L. Jones, 586; G. Liebert, 551; J. Gilliam, 546; F. Middleton, 542: D. Isom, 538; D. Staley, 538; S. Wood, 530; L. Paullus, 519; M. Wallace, 513: W. Barger, 511; D. Lewis, 511; C. Hall, 509: M. Williamson. 508; M. Mager, 503. Automotive Dec. 8,1981 STANDINGS W L Torr's Restaurant 92 36 Mallory’s 78 50 C. 5772 76 52 Staley’s Moving & Stg 74 54 3-D Auto Parts 70 SO-_' Cloverdale Auto Parts 66 62 Al Carney Chev 62 66! Clay Co. R.T.C ~..61 67 Lone Star 60 68 D. Cooper 54 74 Kenney’s Machine Shop 53 75 Moose Lodge 52 76 D&K Beetles 50 78 Ralph Hutcheson & Son Const. ... 48 80 High Team Game: D.B. Cooper’s, 3061. High Team Series: D.B. Cooper's. 1038. High Ind Game: John Allee & Steve Cofer, 246. High Ind Series: Steve Cofer, 714. Series over 500: S. Cofer, 714; D. Grimes, 658: R. England, 590: C. Danhour, 579; J. Miller, 576; J. Allee, 561; D. Rumley, 560; D. Howlett, 559; R. Shoemaker, 557; J. Rice, 556; G. Young, 555; M. Adams, 548; C. Higgins. 546; W. Ensor. 544; J.’ Williams, 536; L. Shinn. 531. D. Hansel, 524; S. Sutherline, 517; M. Owens, 510; J. Scott, 510: H. Whitaker. 509: G. Liebert, 506; M. Bartley. 505; J. Stinnett, 504; E. Routt. 501; R. Smiley. 501; R. Walker, 500; L. Dean. 500.
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