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Show B-4 The Park Record Calendar High School Sports Basin Recreation Fieldhouse Wasatch Back vs. Uintah February 5 8:00 p.m. (655-0999) Swimming Boys Basketball North Summit vs. St. Joseph January 30 7:00 p.m. Wasatch @ Timpanogos January 30 7:00 p.m. Park City vs. Tooele January 31 7:00 p.m. South Summit @ Morgan January 31 7:00 p.m. Park City @ Juan Diego February 2 7:00 p.m. North Summit vs. Layton Christian February 2 7:00 p.m. South Summit @ Judge Memorial February 2 7:00 p.m. Wasatch @ Maple Mountain February 2 7:00 p.m. North Summit @ Duchesne February 6 7:00 p.m. Park City vs. Bonneville February 7 7:00 p.m. South Summit vs. Summit Acad. February 7 7:00 p.m. Park City @ Ogden February 9 7:00 p.m. North Summit vs. Utah Military February 9 7:00 p.m. Wasatch vs. Skyridge February 9 7:00 p.m. Girls Basketball Park City vs. Tooele January 30 7:00 p.m. South Summit vs. Grantsville January 26 7:00 p.m. Wasatch vs. Provo January 26 7:00 p.m. North Summit vs. St. Joseph January 30 7:00 p.m. South Summit vs. Morgan January 30 7:00 p.m. Wasatch @ Timpanogos January 30 7:00 p.m. Park City @ Juan Diego February 1 7:00 p.m. South Summit vs. Judge Memorial February 1 7:00 p.m. Park City vs. Bonneville February 6 7:00 p.m. North Summit vs. Duchesne February 6 7:00 p.m. South Summit @ Summit Acad. February 6 7:00 p.m. Park City @ Ogden February 8 7:00 p.m. North Summit vs. Utah Military February 9 7:00 p.m. Wasatch vs. Skyridge February 9 7:00 p.m. Ice Hockey Playoffs Park City vs. Herriman February 5 9:00 p.m. Park City @ Region Meet January 27 9:00 a.m. Park City @ State Meet February 9-10 TBA 3v3 Basketball Tuesday 7:00-9:00 p.m. Drop-in Basketball Mon/Wed/Fri Wrestling Park City @ Division Tourney February 2-3 TBA Park City @ State Meet February 9-10 TBA Tues/Thurs 8:00-10:00 p.m. Drop-in Basketball Sat/Sun 8:00-10:00 a.m. Drop-in Pickleball Alpine Skiing Mon/Wed/Fri Youth Ski League January 27-28 South Series February 3-4 Youth Ski League February 10 Noon-2:00 p.m. Drop-in Basketball Winter Sports 3:00-5:00 p.m. Drop-in Pickleball 9:00 a.m. Tues/Thurs TBA 8:30 – 11:30 am. Drop-in Soccer (age 16+) TBA Mon/Wed/Fri Nordic Skiing Noon-1:30 p.m. Drop-in Soccer (age 16+) Potato Cup Soldier Hollow January 27 10:00 a.m. Intermountain Junior Qualifier January 27 10:00 a.m. Citizens Series Race #2 January 28 10:00 a.m. Citizens Serier Race #4 February 10 10:00 a.m. Wednesday 9:00-11:00 p.m. Drop-in Soccer (age 30+) Tuesday 9:00-11:00 p.m. Open Batting Cages/ Field Sunday Recreation Sports 7:00 a.m.-Noon Golf Cages/Simulator Park City Recreation Services Tues/Thurs (615-5401) 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. South Summit Aquatics & Fitness Center Volleyball (783-2423) Adult Coed League Wednesday 6:00-9:00 p.m. Adult Basketball Thursday Weather Hotline (cancellations) 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. Rock Wall Saturday 615-5432 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m. Pickleball Open Gym Wed. – Fri Park City Ice Arena 4:00 – 6:00 p.m. Ice Hockey Gold League Sunday Silver League Wed/Thurs/Sun 6:30 p.m. To include an upcoming sports event in the calendar, please send an email to Joe Lair at scoreboard@parkrecord.com 8:00 p.m. YOUR COMMUNITY Submit event recaps, photos and news about local clubs/groups/nonprofits to arts@parkrecord.com You set the scene Boys Basketball Results – January 24 Ben Lomond 48, Park City 40 Park City 14 9 9 8 - 40 Ben Lomond 4 14 20 10 - 48 Scoring PC – Spink 4, Obradovich 13, Hase 1, Preston 5, McCurdy 5, Lowe 10, Cassarubas 2 BL – Christofferson 2, Ormond 9, Espinoza 3, Watson 9, Puk 6, Doss 11, Hughes 8 Results – January 23 North Summit 67, Utah Military 33 North Summit 24 20 12 11 - 67 Utah Military4 12 7 10 - 33 Scoring NS – Hunsaker 3, Calderwood 8, B. Richins 5, Stephens 2, C. Richins 9, Blonquist 4, Ovard 6, Winters 7, Brown 5, Chappell 3, S. Richins 4, Wa. Woolstenhulme 5, Wy. Woolstenhulme 2 UM – Bushman 5, Summer 5, Ogden 13, Howell 3, Wisden 2, Burger 3 Results – January 20 South Summit 69, Rich 43 Results – January 19 North Summit 59, Duchesne 49 South Summit 66, Summit Academy 57 Girls Basketball Skyridge 58, Wasatch 46 Results – January 17 Park City 71, Ogden 65 South Summit 61, Judge Memorial 53 Results – January 16 Layton Christian 91, North Summit 62 Springville 57, Wasatch 45 Region Division 4A Region 11 W L Juan Diego 6 0 Stansbury 5 1 Tooele 4 2 Bonneville 2 4 Ogden 2 4 Park City 1 5 Ben Lomond 1 5 Andringa going to Olympics ents moved to Colorado when he was 3 and he promptly started skiing. At age 7, he saw Jonny Moseley drop the dinner roll and change the course of moguls skiing. Andringa joined the Winter Park freestyle team at 8. Ten years later, he was close to making the U.S. National Team, but tore his meniscus a week before the Freestyle World Junior Championships. In the following year, he joined the Vail Ski and Snowboard Club and began learning his new team’s process while performing physical therapy and nursing the persistent pain from his knee injury. “I had this little pill bottle of anti-inflammatories that they called ‘the magic bullet’ because, if I wanted to ski that day, I had to take one, otherwise I was in too much pain,” he said. That year he also went to Switzerland with Vail for his first training camp abroad, which he thought for a while would be his last. “It was a pretty scary situation,” he said. “I basically had orbital cellulites. No one’s ever heard of it, I’d never heard of it. It’s one of those things when you ask a doctor about it they say, ‘Ah, that never happens,’ because it’s so rare, but then it was turning into meningitis.” Bailey remembers Andringa complaining of a terrible headache, but he didn’t know him well at the time, and didn’t know how normal this was for Andringa. “One day we were heading up the tram and he started freaking out,” Bailey recalled. Andringa said he couldn’t see because his head hurt so badly, and Bailey condoned a trip to the doctor. Bailey said he had been to the same clinic in Zermatt and said he was not impressed with the level of care available. “I got down and came back (to the hotel), and he was walking around with an IV hanging out of his vein. Just hanging out,” Bailey said. “They said it was fine because they might have to do it again.” After a few hours, the situation took a dire turn. While sitting on the couch, Bailey noticed his new teammate’s face was swelling wildly. “I thought they were joking around with me because everyone gives each other (crap) all the time, but I looked in the mirror and the whole left Continued from B-2 Kauf envisions her run a minute before putting it under her feet.” Scoreboard High School Sports Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, January 27-30, 2018 Continued from B-1 Overall W 13 7 6 5 4 4 1 Results – January 24 North Summit 72, Utah Military 13 North Summit 22 1218 20 - 72 Utah Military4 5 4 0 - 13 Scoring NS – A. Richins 7, Murdock 20, Crystal 2, Watterson 10, H. Richins 4, Lamon 3, McQueen 10, Garfield 3, Langston 9, T. Richins 4 UM – Waddoups 2, Frady 1, Furniss 10 L 4 9 7 10 12 Results – January 23 11 Park City @ Ben Lomond 13 Results not available Results – January 19 Duchesne 33, North Summit 2 31 6 Skyridge 43, Wasatch 41 7 Results – January 18 6 North Summit 56, Layton 14 Christian 33 Summit Academy def. South Summit 8 9 Region Overall 8 Division 4A Region 11 7 W L W L 14 Bonneville 6 0 11 4 12 Tooele 5 1 9 6 Division 3A Region 13 Morgan 4 0 South Summit 2 2 Grantsville 2 2 Summit Academy 2 2 Judge Memorial 0 4 15 11 12 10 3 Division 2A Region 16 Layton Christian 5 0 North Summit 4 1 Duchesne 3 2 Altamont 2 3 St. Joseph 1 4 Utah Military 0 5 11 6 8 9 2 2 Division 5A - Region 8 Timpanogos 3 0 Springville 2 1 Skyridge 2 1 Provo 1 2 Maple Mountain 1 2 Wasatch 0 3 Stansbury Juan Diego 11 5 Ogden 10 6 Ben Lomond 9 6 Park City 6 9 4 11 7 9 4 3 2 0 0 2 11 5 3 7 9 4 2 12 5 2 9 5 0 14 Division 3A Region 13 Morgan 4 0 Grantsville 3 1 Judge Memorial 2 2 Summit Academy 1 3 South Summit 0 4 Division 2A Region 16 Duchesne 5 0 North Summit 4 1 Layton Christian 3 2 Altamont 2 3 St. Joseph 1 4 Utah Military 0 5 Division 5A - Region 8 Skyridge 5 0 Provo 4 1 Wasatch 3 2 Maple Mountain 2 3 Springville 1 4 Timpanogos 0 5 Swimming Park City @ Wasatch Results – January 18 Team Scores Women 1. Park City 2. Wasatch Men 1. Park City 2. Wasatch Combined 1. Park City 2. Wasatch Ice Hockey 9 9 12 5 Results – January 20 7 10 Park City 4, Uintah 0 8 9 4 14 Standings Division 1 W L Viewmont 15 0 12 2 Murray 14 1 11 6 Salt Lake Stars 13 2 8 10 Park City 11 4 4 9 UCI-North 11 4 4 10 Wasatch Back 10 5 1 10 Northern Utah 9 6 Davis County 7 7 Brighton 6 9 13 4 Uintah 6 9 8 7 Bountiful 5 10 11 6 Sky Canyon 4 11 8 7 East 3 11 1 15 Cache Valley 3 12 2 13 Herriman 2 13 Alta 0 15 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 pts 30 28 26 22 22 20 18 15 12 12 10 8 7 6 4 0 Winter Sports Nordic Skiing pts Wasatch Citizens Series 94 Race #2 76 Mountain Dell – January 20 Time 93 Male Open 10.5 km 77 1. Logan Chamberlain 29:39.7 2. Brandon Brewster 30:20.6 30:47.7 187 3. Ian Harvey 31:47.5 153 4. Felix Firth Male age 18-24 10.5 km 1. Xander Burkemo 29:42.7 2. Nels Nichols 36:41.2 side of my face was puffy and drooping,” Andringa said. Soon, his left eye had swollen shut. “I had to sprint to the doctor’s office because it was about to close and they were vacuuming up -- all the lights were off and it was locked,” Andringa said. “I knocked on the window and the doctor took one look at me and said, ‘You need to get to the hospital, because there’s none in Zermatt.’” He was taken to a clinic in Visp, Switzerland, by ambulance — an hour’s drive from the training camp. “They did a CT scan, put me on a ton of antibiotics, and then for the next four days I literally didn’t fall asleep.” He later revised that statement to an estimated four hours of sleep over four nights. With no Wi-Fi and no book, Andringa lay awake counting the dimples in the ceiling. “Then, finally on the fourth day I woke up with a 105.6-degree fever,” he said. Andringa’s grandfather, a doctor, told him by phone to not get on another ambulance until they had given him a certain antibiotic. They did, and he was driven to Bern, Switzerland, another hour away. In Bern, Andringa was isolated from his teammates. “It was so weird,” Bailey said. “We kept hearing little snippets. … In the afternoon they would say, ‘Oh he’s fine,’ then the next morning he’s got a 106-degree fever.” Andringa was also frustrated. His headache had not subsided, and he was struggling to glean information from the largely German-speaking staff. “I was trying to speak with these neurosurgeons and they were debating doing emergency brain surgery, and the whole time I can’t even open my eyes in a bright room because my head hurt so badly,” he said. “At one point, I straight up asked a neurosurgeon, because I was so fed up with it and no one was telling me anything, ‘Am I going to die?’ And he told me that they didn’t know. Which I feel like you shouldn’t do that.” The infection that had started in his eye had not relented, and doctors were worried that, because of a 7-inch skull fracture he sustained at age 14 while skateboarding, it could slip through his skull and into his brain. “So they waited to see if I needed emergency brain surgery, but because of that switched antibiotic, I started getting better and then was released like four days later,” Andringa said. He was left largely intact, but his illness had compromised his fitness for that season. Ironically, he said the healthy lifestyle he had adopted to overcome his knee injury might have saved him from meningitis. The next season, he worked back to fitness but blew out the meniscus on his other leg. He worked back to health yet again. In the 2016-2017 season, he finished second in the U.S. Selections event and missed out on the team again. “It would be like if we had Michael Jordan and he was still Michael Jordan but he couldn’t make it into the NBA,” Bailey said. “And I’m not saying Casey is as good as Michael Jordan, but everyone that saw him competing in the lower ranks was like, ‘What is happening here?’ It was such a weird thing to see.” In that season, he finished on the podium at every North American Cup competition but one. Andringa spent last summer and fall in a in a pop-up camper in Routt National Forest outside Steamboat Springs, Colorado, to avoid paying rent money while training, then he finally finished first in the U.S. Selections event and made the U.S. Team. He then took on the World Cup circuit and earned his first top-six result in his second ever competition. “After I was at Deer Valley and got to experience that whole thing, I sat down and felt like it could all be over right now, and I would just be so happy with how this all went,” he said on Tuesday, He finished 24th in the Tremblant World Cup in Canada on Jan. 20, but had built up enough points to maintain his position on the team and earn an Olympic berth. “It’s all happened so fast,” Andringa said. “Literally a month ago I was skiing U.S. Selections -- which I have skied tons of times -- not knowing whether or not I was going to ski World Cups or go to college. That ended Dec. 21. Now it feels like it’s been a year since then, but it’s been like 32 days.” Bailey said after all his friend had been through, he had a hard time processing that Andringa was finally going to the Olympics, and Andringa himself could hardly believe it. Every once in a while, Andringa said he still looks around, takes in his situation and his mind balks. He considered his trip to the Olympics like winning the lottery. “It was just so hypothetical,” he said. “It just doesn’t work out like that very often, so I’m just so honored to be a part of this team.” Sitting at Deer Valley Resort, he said he hadn’t yet planned a bucket list for the Games. He would lay out some competitive and personal priorities that night, but at that point, it was already more than he could have asked for. Because her run is extremely fast -- perhaps a holdover developed through her expertise as a duals mogul racer -she can launch higher off her ramps, and draw out her jumps, which helps both her speed and jumping scores. “Then she crosses the finish line and looks over the shoulder, because it’s one of the fastest times on the course week in week out,” Gnoza said. All told, her three races will total just under one and a half minutes in Pyeongchang. “(It’s) crazy how much time and effort we put into 30 seconds, but there’s a lot to lose or a lot to gain in those 30 seconds,” she said. When announcers call Kauf’s name for her run at the Winter Games, all the visualization will be over. If she takes gold, it would be the realization of a dream she has envisioned hundreds of times. Male age 25-29 10.5 km 1. Christopher Creveling 41:02.9 Male age 30-34 10.5 km 1. William Ellison 45:50.4 2. Jake Garfield 46:00.5 Male age 35-39 10.5 km 1. Gwenael Layec 34:17.1 2. John Allison 34:17.8 3. Derek Hackman 36:42.0 4. Christopher Smith 47:29.6 Male age 40-44 10.5 km 1. Aaron Phillips 32:07.7 2. Kevin Cummisford 33:19.1 3. Andre Crouch 36:49.3 4. Todd Thompson 37:14.4 5. Sebastian Uprimny 39:15.8 6. Jim Weigel 40:13.4 Male age 45-49 10.5 km 1. Brandon Firth 33:54.0 2. Eric Pardyjak 34:19.3 3. Chris Davidson 39:45.3 4. Nick Ekdahl 42:31.3 5. John Selfridge 50:20.2 Male age 50-54 10.5 km 1. Randy Anderson 32:28.8 2. Mark Keeney 34:10.4 3. Chris Humbert 34:13.7 4. David Gontrum 35:35.3 5. Don Eggert 36:18.2 6. Scott Nielson 36:38.8 7. Jeff Minnema 36:45.7 8. Dru Whitlock 37:30.7 9. Dan O `Connor 40:08.8 10. Chris Magerl 50:30.0 Male age 55-59 10.5 km 1. Michael Weglarz 34:57.8 2. Rob Lang 35:47.4 3. Julian Zgoda 35:54.9 4. Darrell Davis 37:03.2 5. Dwight Janerich 37:14.7 6. Don Deblieux 37:58.7 7. Sam Wolfe 40:45.4 8. David Susong 43:09.4 9. Gary Colgan 43:25.2 Male age 60-64 10.5 km 1. Torbjorn Karlsen 34:58.0 2. Geir Vik 37:58.0 3. Tim Dougherty 40:19.3 4. David Stice 42:09.2 5. Jed Palmacci 43:17.7 6. Kurt Dudley 44:07.4 7. John Michael Broussal 44:18.4 Male age 65-69 10.5 km 1. Patrick English 43:04.5 2. Chris Tietze 45:55.5 3. Tom Stephens 47:51.3 Male age 70-74 3.5 km 1. Gary Fichter 14:45.6 2. David Wagner 16:20.4 3. Richard Groth 34:11.1 Male age 75+ 3.5 km 1. Noel Olsen 14:27.7 2. Dave Hanscom 16:53.0 Male Novice 3.5 km 1. John Fassio 13:25.2 2. Jon Oler 14:29.6 3. John Nowoslawski 15:28.3 4. Ted Palomaki 15:50.0 5. Greg Schlegel 16:57.7 6. John Guldner 18:47.6 7. Pete McCoy 19:02.9 8. Brian Alm 20:29.1 9. Gary Weight 23:12.0 10. Brent Alm 43:53.6 Male age 16-17 7.0 km 1. Vincent Bonacci 20:59.2 2. Jakob Eggert 21:05.2 3. Tyler Cowan 22:18.2 4. Keenan Peters 22:27.5 5. Mix Broadhead 25:05.6 6. Blake Mercy 25:26.5 Male age 14-15 3.5 km 1. Aiden Rasmussen 10:01.5 2. Mason Heimburger 10:02.3 3. James Cessna 10:22.4 4. Aksel Anderson 10:31.8 5. Jack Shuckra 10:32.2 6. Wes Campbell 10:44.0 7. Janne Koch 11:02.9 8. Steve Oler 11:30.8 9. Joseph Bonacci 11:44.2 10. Cooper Seliga 13:12.2 11. Santiago Arramhide 14:05.5 12. J.D. Broadhead 16:32.8 Male age 12-13 3.5 km 1. Zach Selzman 11:49.9 2. Jefferson Thompson 12:21.7 3. Duncan Whitbeck 12:24.0 4. Easton Boyer 12:36.0 5. Daniel Radu 12:38.1 6. Jack Tooley 13:42.1 7. Maddux Leonard 13:44.0 8. Colby Turner 14:03.7 9. Kyle Hase 14:16.1 10. Cole Utley 16:16.0 11. Max McNulty 17:20.7 12. Dean Hottle 17:46.0 13. Jeff Selige 25:37.1 Male age 10-11 1.9 km 1. Phillip Radu 6:09.7 2. Lucas Fassio 6:17.2 3. Andrew Crouch 6:20.2 4. Milo Page 7:21.7 5. Finnian Schaffer 7:43.4 6. Ryan Thompson 7:48.4 7. Thomas Vandekamp 8:13.6 8. Charlie Schlegel 9:25.4 9. Keller McCoy 9:51.2 10. Seth Rothchild 13:36.6 11. Zak Oliver 20:21.8 Male age 8-9 1.1 km 1. Martin Radu 4:14.8 2. Matias Uprimny 4:18.9 3. Jaydon Crouch 4:29.7 4. Ian Carmack 4:38.4 5. Scott Miller 5:47.4 |