Banner Graphic, Volume 16, Number 143, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 January 1986 — Page 8
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The Putnam County Banner Graphic, January 28,1986
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South Putnam High School's freshman basketball team takes a perfect 10-0 record to Cloverdale Wednesday night. Members of the Eagle squad are (front row, from left): Todd Nichols, Jason Haltom, Mike Miller, Zac Clark, Warren Foust, manager Chris Williams
Cloverdale girls top Danville
DANVlLLE—Carrying a 22.8 scoring average, Debbie Mann draws a great deal of attention from opponents. Many try special defenses and generally it leads to a loss for the Cloverdale High School girls basketball team. But Monday night the Clovers beat Danville’s box-and-one defense, rallying from a 28-23 halftime deficit for a 55-48 West Central Conference win. Cloverdale is now 6-9 for the year, finished conference play at 4-5. “WE JUST STARTED playing right,” coach Greg Hammond said of the secondhalf turn around. “We didn’t change anything. We started doing what we weren’t doing correctly.”
Memphis State backs up No. 2 ranking with defense
By The Associated Press In a much-heralded battle of Top Twenty powers,- Memphis State’s basketball team showed Virginia Tech who was boss. In fact, the Tigers pressed the point home. “I told our guys in practice that they couldn’t handle our press and to keep after them,” said Memphis State Coach Dana Kirk after Monday night’s 83-61 rout of the Hokies in a big Metro Conference game. “All in all, I think we played as well in one 15-minute streak (in the second half) as we have played this year.” The Tigers, just boosted to No. 2 in the national rankings, had problems getting Parted against the No. 16 Hokies, falling behind 8-0. But it was a different story after that, as Memphis State rolled to its 20th straight victory this season. In other games involving the nation’s tanked teams, No. 5 Duke crushed Harare! 89-52; No. 12 Georgetown trimmed
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and (back row, from left) coach Kieth Puckett, Tege Lewis, Steve Schroer, Troy Branson, Mitch Trusty, Mike Trusty and Kevin Sullivan. Team members not pictured are Kyle Zeronik, Mark Timm and Shawn Battin. (Ban-ner-Graphic photo by Steve Fields).
Cloverdale outscored Danville 16-3 in the third quarter to take a 39-31 lead into the final period. No, Mann didn’t get especially hot. In fact, she scored only two of her 21 points in the third quarter. Instead the Clovers hit Danville as a team, Donda Morris and Denise Schwomeyer scoring four each, Marla Garrett three, Mann and Traci Sharp two each and Tammy Price one during the third quarter. IN ADDITION TO scoring a game-high 21 points (career total now 1,073 points), Mann also made nine steals and passed out six assists. “Danville played a box and one most of the night. Debbie did a pretty good job and they played a pretty good defense
Providence 69-54, and No. 20 Richmond lost a 62-59 decision to Old Dominion. Baskerville Holmes scored 19 points to power Memphis State. Holmes, who had two points in the first half before coming alive in the second, also chipped in with nine rebounds for the Tigers while center William Bedford added 12 points and 11 rebounds. After a cool first half, the Tigers came back hot after intermission, moving to a 21-point lead, 53-32, with 12:47 to play. Holmes scored 12 points during that flurry, which saw the Tigers stage unanswered runs of eight and 10 points. Virginia Tech Coach Charles Moir said his Hokies were just out-pressed. “The second half, we turned it over against the press. We had too many turnovers, 22, and that is normal to lose a game with that.” Moir said.
on her,” coach Hammond praised. Morris gave her help though, scoring 13 points and pulling down 10 rebounds to share team-high honors with Price in that department. Cloverdale travels to Eminence Tuesday night and goes to South Vermillion High School Saturday for a 1 p.m. regular season finale. Cloverdale (55) Mann 7 7-10 4 21. Garrett 11-2 S 3, Morris 5 3-5 113. Sharp 2 0-034, Hutcheson 10-012, Price 12-124, Schwomeyer 2 2226, Craig 10-0 2 2-Totals FG 20. FT 15-21, PF 20. Danville (48) Hadley 4 2-4 3 10, Davis 6 3-4 0 15, Buckley 2 2-3 5 6, Holtsclaw 2 1-3 35, HUI 2 2-2 26, Howard 2 0-14 4, Dinkle 1 0-1 2 2-Totals FG 19, FT 10-18, PF 19. QUARTERSCORING Cloverdale 10 13 16 16-55 Danville 14 14 3 648 REBOUNDING: CHS36 (Morris. Price 10). DHS 38 JUNIOR VARSITY GAME: 30-16 Danville
The Top Twenty By Associated Press Record Pis Pvs 1. North Carolina (63) 21-0 1260 1 2. Memphis State 20-0 1171 3 3. Georgia Tech 16-2 1081 4 4. Kansas 19.2 106 R 7 5. Duke 18-2 1019 2 6.Oklahoma 18-1 900 5 7.St. John’s 19-2 885 8 8. Kentucky 16-2 747 11 9. Michigan 17-2 740 6 10. Vegas 19-2 721 10 11. Syracuse 15-2 708 9 12. Georgetown 16-3 587 12 13. Bradley 20-1 458 17 14. Notre Dame 12-3 331 16 15. Indiana 13.4 249 -- 16. Virginia Tech 16-4 227 20 17. Louisiana State 16-3 224 14 18. Louisville 11-6 222 13 19. Paso 17-3 209 19 20. Richmond 16-2 116 --
No. 5 Duke 89, Harvard 52
David Henderson scored 14 points and reserve Billy King was 5-for-5 from the field for 12 points to lead Duke over Harvard.
Minnesota to continue Big Ten season
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Three Minnesota basketball players charged with sexual assaut have been ordered to appear at a preliminary hearing in circuit court here Feb. 6. In Minneapolis, meanwhile, the university has decided to resume the sport after a one-game hiatus over the scandal. Judith Hawley, assistant Dane County district attorney, told a court hearing Monday that Jim Dutcher, who resigned Saturday as Minnesota coach, apparently was unaware of his players’ whereabouts after a basketball game. “With all due respect to Mr. Dutcher, he apparently wasn’t keeping particularly good tabs,” she said. An 18-year-old Madison Area Technical College student says she was subjected to various sexual acts early Friday at the Madison hotel where the Minnesota team was staying after a Thursday game against the University of Wisconsin. Minnesota suspended the sport for one game Sunday, but university President Kenneth Keller said Monday that after much agonizing, he had decided to rein-
Fitzgerald leads Butler by Oral Roberts
By The Associated Press Oral Roberts didn’t stand a chance as Butler took an early lead with the help of Darrin Fitzgerald and and never let go, pounding the Titans 70-48 in a Midwestern Collegiate Conference basketball game. Fitzgerald, a 5-foot-9 junior guard, scored 18 of his game-high 28 points in the first half of the game Monday night, when the Bulldogs took the lead for good at 17-16 with 8:18 left in the half. Oral Roberts jumped out to an early 6-0 lead with 17:45 left in the first half. But Tony Gallahar, who finished with 13, scored a basket for the Bulldogs putting them ahead for the first time and to stay. Butler, shooting 53 percent from the field, improved to 7-10 overall and 2-3 in the conference.
Eagles draw first game; Clovers, Cougars in byes
By STEVE FIELDS Banner-Graphic Sports Editor South Putnam is in the opening game of the Eminence girls basketball sectional, while Cloverdale and North Putnam have drawn byes for the 11th annual Indiana High School Athletic Association girls basketball state tournament. South Putnam plays sectional host Eminence at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 5, followed by Greencastle and Monrovia squaring off at 8 p.m. Cloverdale drew the bye game Feb. 6 at 6:30 p.m. against defending champion Mooresville. NORTH PUTNAM DREW the bye at the Western Boone sectional and against the host. Crawfordsville takes on North Montgomery at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 5 in the opening game, Lebanon meeting Southmont in the 8 p.m. second game that same night. North and Western Boone meet at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 6. Mooresville and Greencastle have the only winning records in the Eminence sectional. Winners of seven sectionals in 10 years Mooresville has a 13-2 record this year and Cloverdale stands 6-9 after Monday night’s win at Danville. Greencastle is currently 11-5 with Thursday night’s West Central Conference game against Edgewwod yet to play. Monday night’s game with Terre Haute South will not be rescheduled, as it has been canceled. SOUTH PUTNAM IS 5-11 with one game remaining, a WCC contest with Tri-West that was postponed Monday due to school closing. North Putnam is 5-10 record with Tuesday and Thursday night games ahead. The Courgars, however, have one of the weaker records in the Western Boone sectional. Southmont stands 13-3, Western Boone 12-4, Crawfordsville 10-5, defending champion Lebanon 9-7 and North Montgomerey 5-11. At Plainfield, Cascade and Tri-West drew the bye against one another. Plain-
The Blue Devils, 18-2, started sluggishly, scoring five points in the first six minutes. But with the Crimson shooting 21 percent for the first half, Duke slowly pulled away behind the shooting of Henderson and Johnny Dawkins to take a 40-19 halftime lead. Duke wound up with a 54.5 shooting percentage from the field while Harvard could only manage 37 percent. Keith Webster led the Crimson with 11 points. “We played very lethargic in the first half,” said Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski. “I thought our second half was excellent. The second (half) was good because we executed almost every time downcourt. We moved the ball around well and I thought we really worked hard defensively.” No. 12 Georgetown 69, Providence 54 David Wingate had a game-high 20 points as Georgetown coasted past Providence.
state basketball. At the same time, Keller named former assistant Jimmy Williams the new coach. “My personal reaction is horror, and disgust and some amount of despair that we, as an academic institution, have created the environment in which that can happen,” Keller said. However, he said, it was not fair to penalize the remaining players on the team by discontinuing the sport. “The other eight have been traumatized by that offense. They appear not to have been involved in it,” Keller said. “They appear, perhaps at this point, less likely than any other group of young people in the country to get themselves into difficulty in the next several weeks. ’ ’ Mitchell Lee, 20, of Carol City, Fla., who was acquitted three weeks ago in Minneapolis of sexually assaulting a young woman in a dormitory, was charged Monday by the Dane County district attorney’s office with first-degree sexual assault. Kevin Smith, 21, of Lansing, Mich., also was charged with first-degree sexual assault.
The Titans, paced by Woody Jones witn 17 points and shooting 36 percent from the field, fell to 6-13 and 1-3. In other Indiana college basketball Monday night, Brian Humes scored 19 points and Kevin McAdoo chipped in 18 as host Detroit notched an 80-73 Midwestern Collegiate Conference basketball victory over Evansville. The Titans used a 10-2 scoring spurt in the closing 1:45 of the game to engineer the come-from-behind victory. The Purple Aces led by up to five points several times in the first half. Detroit battled back to lead 41-39 at halftime, but Evansville tied the score at 43-43 with 17:37 left in the game on a long bank shot by Curtis Jackson. Humes followed with a rebound basket that put the Titans ahead for good, despite
sports
field meets Brownsburg in the opening game and Danville squares off against Avon in the second game. The Cadets and Bruins play at 6:30 p.m., Feb. 6. SECTIONAL CHAMPIONS from Eminence, West Vigo, Bloomington and South Vermillion come to the GreencastleIHSAA regional Feb. 13 and 15. The winner at South Vermillion plays the winner at Bloomington Feb. 13 at 6:30 p.m., with the Eminence sectional champion drawing the West Vigo winner in the 8 p.m. second game. The championship contest is set for 8 p.m. Feb. 15. At West Vigo, favorite Terre Haute South takes on the host Vikings in the opening game of the four-team sectional Feb. 6. Northview plays Terre Haute North at 8 p.m. that night. At Bloomington, Martinsville and Owen Valley play the first game with Bloomington North and South matched up in the second game Feb. 5. Edgewood drew
North Putnam loses to Cascade
CLAYTON--Cascade’s press put a lot of wrinkles in the North Putnam High School girls basketball team offense Thursday night, defeating the Cougars 64-43. NORTH, NOW 5-10 overall and 3-4 in the WCC, had three starters in foul trouble and was down 18-10 after one quarter. “We just can’t play like that,” coach Bill Bays said. Michele Cassady led the Cadets with 18 points and Kim Hiland netted 12. Jannetta Sinnet scored 13 and Sarah Griffin 11 to
The Hoyas, 16-3, took only 19 shots in the first half, but made 13 of them for 68 percent and were up 35-25 at the break. Reggie Williams got 11 of his 13 points in the first half and Wingate contributed 10. Georgetown’s zone defense limited the Friars to one field goal in the final seven minutes of the first half and to only one in the first five minutes of the second. The Hoyas’ zone defense forced Providence to take several long shots and they were successful on only 36 percent from the floor, 10 percent below their season average. Providence Coach Rick Pitano said the Friars have problems in the front court. “If (Bill) Donovan doesn’t have a great game, we’re going to struggle. We’re playing as hard as humanly possible but teams are adjusting to us now. We are looking to go inside, but both our big men (Steve Wright and Jacek Duda) got in foul trouble. That’s the fear we have.”
George Williams Jr., 19, of Oakland, Calif., was charged with second-degree sexual assault. Lee also was charged with two counts of second-degree sexual assault and Smith with one count of second-degree. First-degree sexual assault is defined under state statute as sexual assault with a weapon or other force, and second-degree as sex without a person’s consent. The maximum penalty for first-degree is 20 years in prison. Second-degree carries a maximum penalty of SIO,OOO and 10 years in prison. The preliminary hearing was scheduled before Circuit Judge Robert Pekowsky. The players were jailed Friday after police halted the team’s airplane as it was about to leave from an airport for Minneapolis. On Monday, County Court Commissioner Todd Meurer set cash bail at $5,500 for Lee, $4,000 for Smith, and SI,OOO for Williams. Lee and Williams posted bail and were released, officials said.
Evansville efforts that pulled the Purple Aces within one point on several occasions. Senior forward Bubby Mukes led Evansville with 24 points. Detroit is 10-9 and 4-1. Evansville is 6-12 and 1-5. In Springfield, Mo., Harry Bell connected on four free throws in the closing minutes to help the Valparaiso Crusaders edge Southwest Missouri 66-62 in a MidContinent Conference basketball game. Phil Schlegel, who scored a game-high 18 points for Southwest Missouri, knotted the game at 56-56 with 2:44 left on a jumper. Bell, who scored 12 points, sank four free throws with about a minute to go to put the Crusaders ahead for good. Valparaiso, 6-12 and 2-4, were led by Scott Anselen’s 16 points. The Bears dropped to 13-5 and 2-3.
the bye and Brown County at 6:30 p.m., Feb. 6. AT SOUTH VERMILLION, Rockville takes on defending champ South Vermillion in the first game, while Rosedale and Montezuma are paired in the second game. North Vermillion meets favorite Turkey Run in the 6:30 p.m. bye contest Feb. 6. The winner at Greencastle advances to the Ben Davis-IHSAA semistate Feb. 22 against the winner from Center Grove in the 12:30 p.m. second game. The Greenfield Central and Warren Central regional champions play the 11 a.m. opening game. Pairings for the March 1 Final Four at Market Square Arena in Indianapolis have the Seymour and Lafayette semistate champions playing the first game with the Indianapolis and Ft. Wayne winners the second. Crown Point in the two-time defending state champion.
pace North. North Putnam (43) Ferranti 39-216. Sinnet 53-6313. Googh 394)56, Griffin 5 1-9 411, Man teller 1 2-3 33, Jones 1 9-01 2, Park 9MI 9, Phipps 01-229, Brooks 994)9 6-Totals FG 18. FT 7-18, PF 21 Cascade (64) Hiland 5 2-5 212, Cooper 2 3-43 7, Taft 99499, Cassidy 745 118, Myers 19-132, Dugan 21-4 35, Hammonds 21-2 25, Simmons 3 3-3 9 9, Franklin 9 2-4 12, Smyth 2 94 4 4, Barger 9 911 9, LoPossa 994 1 O-Totals FG 24, FT 1928, PF2I QUARTER SCORING North Putnam 19 7 15 11-43 Cascade 18 18 14 14-64 JUNIOR VARSITY GAME: Cascade 38, North Putnam 12
Not all events rescheduled With the approaching state tournaments, some of Monday night’s athletic events postponed by severe weather conditions will not be made up. Others, however, have been, or are being rescheduled. THE GREENCASTLE GIRLS basketball game with Terre Haute South and the North Putnam girls basketball game with Northview have been canceled and will not be made up. The North Montgomery boys swimming team comes to Greencastle Saturday at 10 a.m. to make up Monday night’s postponed meet. North Putnam and South Putnam are in the process of rescheduling junior high and freshman boys basketball games. Sports schedule Wednesday DePauw University at Marian College (Indianapolis), 7:30p.m., basketball DePauw University men’s swim team at Butler University (Indianapolis), 5 p.m. Danville at Greencastle, 6:30 p.m., t swimming Greencastle freshmen at Monrovia, 6:30 p.m. basketball South Putnam freshmen at Cloverdale, 6 p.m., basketball Edgewood JV Invitational, 6 p.m.,, wrestling Greencastle Bth Grade at North Putnam, 6:30 p.m., basketball Thursday Greencastle at Cloverdale, 6:30 p.m,,; wrestling Edgewood girls at Greencastle, 6:30 p.m., basketball Cascade at South Putnam, 6 p.m., swimming Greencastle Jr. High at South Pub. nam, 6 p.m., basketball Owen Valley girls at North Putnam 6:30 p.m. basketball Tuttle Freshmen vs. North Putnam asRoachdale, 6:30 p.m., basketball Friday (V«T»ky boys basketball) Greencastle at Terre Haute South Danville at North Putnam West Vigo at South Putnam A Cloverdale at Cascade Saturday Greencastle-IHSAA Wrestling Secional, McAnally Center North Montgomery at Greencastle l* a.m., swimming Cloverdale girls at South Vermillion V p.m., basketball -* Franklin College at DePauw sity, 3 p.m., basketball Monrovia at Greencastle, 8 d m -*> basketball **' ’£ Avon at South Putnam, 8 p.m., basket; Cloverdale at Northview a „3 basketball 8 (““i; Cascade at Danville, , p m^7
