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Show Sun Tims, February 20, 1980, Page 6 Lancers do it again, perhaps they've got Falconsjffmied 78-5-2, billed a top prep battle, was the escape of a little girl who found her way onto the playing floor, three minutes prematurely. The crowd found more approval in the act of this young junior drill miss than what was going on in the Layton blow-ou- t. The Lancers held onto a 5 lead at half time. Awake From Slump You have to give Layton credit for never letting up," said coach Hansen. I really thought we were going to get back into the ball game in By Keith Duncan asked to sum up what happened to his basketball team When Friday night in Layton, Clearfield basketball coach Craig Hansen said, 1 wish I knew, I wish I knew. Layton, Region One w Inch appears to have its arch rivals and next-doo- r neighbors jinxed over the past couple of years, completely 2 in a key demolished the Falcons battle for both teams. There were fans on either side who saw an entire game in one half, a half totally dominated by Layton. The lancers, w ho were led by the pinpoint passing of Dave Burke and the smooth scoring touch of Mark, had lit the scoreboard with 30 points before Clearfield ever managed to get in double figures. It was the fifth consecutive beating the Falcons have taken from the Lancers, but this one was certainly the most embarassing, according to coach Hansen. Mentally I thought we were It was prepared, said Hansen. frustrating the entire evening. On the other hand, Doug Moon of I ay ton commented that his teams mental preparation through the week proved to be a key factor in his teams quick start. It was clearly the difference, we just came right out after em. Iiyton steamed to a 21-- 6 first quarter lead and it was all Hansen could do, was to call a couple of timeouts to slow the Lancers down somewhat. Lee, who ended the day with 22 tallies, didnt let his plus Region One scoring average suffer any W ith balanced scoring in each stanza, the sleek 3 senior forward was a little more than unstoppable. Burke was generally a painful thron in the side of the Falcons all evenings His assists coupled with his is twisting driving scoring lay-up- s why the Lancers had built a huge lead midway through the second period. About the most exciting event that took place in what was supposed to be 39-1- 78-5- By The Warriors blew Roy out early The .w f ' V of the crossroads of the West Gun Show will be held this weekend at the Salt Palace according to director Bob Templeton. Templeton said that there will be over 300 educational displays and trade tables of gun collectors and gun dealers from 30 states across the U.S. Featured will be a display of Winchester rifles owned by Idaho Rancher Otto Tiede. Tiedes exhibit includes one of each model the Historic Gun Company built from 1866 Bruce Odow was the only other Royal to place, as the Royals finished eleventh in the field of 16, 4A schools. Brighton won it all with 160 points. first quarter advantage 16-- 6 36-1- out-scor- 27-1- How the preps stand Prep Basketball 4-- 54-3- nt Anderson chipped in twelve for the Warriors and Van Fuller got eleven. Robb Thomas went scoreless in the first half, but came up with eight for eight field goals in the last half to lead the Roy scoring with 17 counters. Rylan Weidemeir who is shooting 75 percent from the field this season contributed 16 points for Roy. Roy beat the Warriors 30 field goals to 26, but the Warriors converted 22 of 34 foul shots to only two of six for Roy, and won by a dozen off the bench to harass the Warriors made the game respectable. is Weber with another big road-wi- n tied with Layton for first place, and entertains the Lancers this week on home ground. The winner of Region One will entertain the fifth place team n from Region Three in the playoffs. Roy, which seems destined for last place in Region One, will probably meet Skyline High School at the Eagles nest in Salt Lake Gty. In the luck of the draw, the cellar-dwellof Region One will still qualify for a playoff slot this year. That could be interesting for Coach Ted Smith, who has been getting much-neede- d exposure for his young and inexperienced team. on defense post-seaso- points. Weber ruled the boards with 30 s to 25 for Roy, but had 25 turnovers to just 17 for Roy. Coach Ted Smith cited Rylan Weidemeir for his play underneath and Brad McCaulley who came er pull-down- Here is where colleges play in opening rounds In answer to several queries, here are the first and second-roun- d sites for the NCAA tournament, as well as the regional and the nationals. d rounds: East Greensboro, N.C., March and Providence, R.I. Mar. Mideast Purdue, March and Western Kentucky, Mar. Midwest Nebraska, March and North Texas State, March and Arizona State, March State, March First-secon- W 6 Layton Johnson battles Roys Robb Thomas for rebound in clash last Friday in Roy. The Warrioos claimed a win to maintain a share of first place in Region One with Layton. WEBER'S 1 6-- 6-- 8, 4 2 4 4 KELLY Royal-Warri- Sky View jnevi,,e 4 3 4 5 1 7 .125 to 1963. Hillcrest Bmgham Brignton Orem Box Scores Layton 7, Clearfiold 62 " Clearfield 6 15 37 62; Layton 21 39 56 78 22; Sickert 6, 14; Layton Lee 11, Burke 1, 16; Vigil 0, 04, , 16; Owens 6, 2. Siekiera 2, 0; Seale 1, 4; Pearce 1. 00, 2, Reynolds 1, 00, 2, Watson 0, 0; Totals 36. , 78 Clearfield Hicks 7, 14; Borden 6, 15; Perkins 0, 0, Gorringe 3, 11; 13; Scofield 0, Wallace 5, 1; Nye 1, 62. Totals 24, 04. 2; Cook 2. 6; Other displays will be presented by the American Mountain Men and Members of the Shoshone Indian Tribe. Also featured will be the works of many of the Rocky Mountain areas leading Western and Wildlife artists, including Jonathan Bronson, Kent Peterson, Lynn Griffin and Cliff Clegg. The show is open to the public from 9 a.m. until 7 p.m. on Saturday, February 23 and from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. on Sunday, February 24. Other finishers were Granger (151) Layton (148) Sky View (109) Olympus (104), Weber (93) Kearns (90) Cottonwood (88Va) Orem (80) Skyline (61) Roy (55) Hillcrest (51) Bingham (48) Clearfield (47), Alto (44), Bonneville (26), Granite (17) and East (16). J71 3 3 0-- 0-- 0-- 3-- 5-- ''East-Skylin- 0 1000 , . Olympus Granger Granite 5 3 4 74, Ray 62 Weber 16 36 56 74; Roy 6 15 35 62 12; Miller 1, 0-Weoer Anderson 5, 2; Fuller 3. 5-- 11; Skeen 1, 5-- 21 ; Johnson 2(1 8, 3; Jensen 0, Kennlngton 1, 74 1; ShawO, 46, 4. Totals 26, Rov Rich 3, 00- - 6; Murdoch l, OO, 2 Wiedmeier 8 01, 16; Brown 1, 00, 2 17 Scholtec 4, 00, 8; Thomas 8, McCaulley 2, 00, 4; Hadsev l, 00, 2 Kirkwood 2, 62. 5; Totals 30, Sky View 69, Bwnevills 57 BonnevHe 1024 38 57; Sky View 16 S3 52 69 Bonneville Sylvester 11, 24; Call 8, 3, 17; Snell 3, W, 9; Buckway 2, Draney 1,2-3- , 4; Totals 26 11 15,57, Sky View McKenna 7, 00, 14; Hendricks 8, 3.-19; Bair 2, OO, 4; Benson 6. 16, Webb 4, 00, 8; Barrett 2, 8, Totals 29, .625 .500 500 375 .000 4 . Cottonwood 444 629 540 516 477 549 369 412 a s 493 486 547 484 581 485 620 REGION FOUR 3-- Weber 446 459 412 478 452 7 Ogden Oavis Box Elder Ben Lomond Logan Bear River 0 1 5 2 5 3 2 4 000 .714 .714 .429 At 453 .750 750 .625 479 545 8 410 306 393 337 309 407 442 41$ 470 REGION FIVE 6 2 Bountiful Viewmont Highland South Ration Provo American Fork Tlmpview Pavson Springvilie Pleasant Grove Cedar City Cedar City Spanish Fork Dixie Carbon 44 495 487 437 440 6 $ 2 3 498 .500 421 .250 484 1 7 .125 416 .018 .110 .018 .54$ 4S4 .454 .454 .454 .273 .273 .091 679 519 West Woods Cross 531 2 2 9 2 6 5 5 6 5 5 5 3 3 6 6 6 8 1 10 I 752 723 599 610 596 7-- 7-- East Pennsylvania U, March 14-1- 6. Mideast Kentucky, March Midwest University of Houston, March West University of Arizona, March Championships: Indianapolia, Ind., March f Butler University, 13-1- 5. 14-1- 6. 13-1- 5. 610 511 605 714 996 646 664 $1 22-2- 4. . , Ticket problem solved In an effort to solve some ticket problems among students at Weber State College, student officers say they will run a test ticketing for the basketball game with Idaho State University on Feb. 23 in the Dee Special Events Center. Bryan Steele, Associated Students of Weber State College president, said: We want to find out whether a number of are sitting in the student section at the games or whether our counting is inaccurate. Steele said during the first few games, there were between 300 and 500 seats in the student section which were not accounted for. He said the current policy of allowing students free admission with just their WSC identification cards non-studen- ts Six 9 9 6-- 8, Regional sites: 447 REGION THREE e 0-- 0-- .571 .571 429 .000 Alta 0-- 0-- .857 1 7-- 9. 7-- 6-- West-We- ber REGION TWO How Royal grapplers fared Roys Shane DeHart lost only his opening match at the Utah State 4A Wrestling Meet, last week, but came back to capture third place in state. a and they were ahead 5 at halftime. Both teams scored twenty in the third quarter, as Roys Coach Ted Smith changed team personnel and made a the game of it. The Royals Warriors 6 in the final quarter, but still lost by twelve points. Drew Skeen hammered in eight of twelve shots to lead the field in scoring 21 points, but Kelly Johnson hurt the Royals more with his thirteen rebounds and he got 20 points. Ralph Gun Show plans made j armiM Bliss Fullmer 74-6- with region win against two losses. A slumping Gearfield team fell to 4 with the loss. Greg Boarden, who has a starting berth with the Falcons again, led the Gearfield attack in scoring with 15 points. He was followed by Brook Hicks with 14, Scott Wallace with 13, Jeff Gorringe with 11 and Freddie Cook with 6. Three more Lancers found the double-figur- e column besides lee. They included Burke with 16, Ovens with 16 and Layne Sackett with 14. the third quarter." Clearfields comeback hopes came alive when the Falcons notched 10 unanswered points midway through the third stanza to close the gap to 7 with 30 seconds left in the quarter. But two three-poikillers, one by Burke and another by Stan Owens in the final seconds wiped out most of the damage Gearfield had done in the previous four minutes. Both squads traded basket for basket in the final eight minutes as Layton coasted in for their sixth dispose off Royals Weber stormed into Roy Friday from night to take a big 2 road-wi- n the Royals and solidify its First place standing in Region One basketball. 6-- ) Clearfield Courier, February 20, 1980, Page 6 Sun Chronicle, February 23, 1980, Page 8 Ben Lomond Beacon, February 21,1 980, Page 6 has taken away control of the seating. Once someone is inside the Dee Center, said Steele they could just as easily sit in the student section right up front rather than in the seats but which are they may have paid-foon the higher rows. Students will be admitted to the Idaho State game free of charge, but they will have to have a ticket. Steele says the students must take their identification cards to the Dee Center sometime between 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. on the day of the game to get a ticket. r They can also purchase a guest pass at that time for $4 which allows them to seat a partner in the student section. Region One cage title on tine lone this Friday at Weber The 1980 Region One cage championship could be decided this Friday when the surging Weber Warriors and the steady Layton Lancers battle itoutat7:30p.m. in the Weber High gymnasium. in Both teams are deadlocked at the region race with the Lancers already having defeated the Warriors at home earlier in the season. 6-- 2 r OACH The Lancers and the Warriors finished with the two worst records in n but both of their coaches claim their teams learned something from the ordeals of With mark, a few folks were saying to themselves that Weber might not live up to their billing as a possible contender for the Region One title. Over in Layton, no one including some close fans of the pre-seaso- pre-seaso- 2-- 9 pre-seaso- n Moon't Loyton Loner, have led or this Friday in Pleasant View. surging Weber Warrior, DOUG co-le-d Lancers gave the Big Blue and White a chance to win four games, let alone the region title. there isnt much of a surprise that they picked us to finish in the cellar, said Doug Moon of Layton. n didn't The 8 record in even phase the Layton coach, because as he commented, I really dont care n as long what we do through a as we go through learning stage. 2-- So the Friday night clash at Weber has a lot of color built around it, a lot more than just a school cage contest. high regular Were not big and where a lot of the polls revive around size and what you've got coming back, probably pre-seaso- n Region One all season long and will take on the because the team was doing things that werent designed to help them win right then. playing sharp defense, two of the things you have to do to win consistently," said the veteran coach. Layton worked long hours on defense and rebounding in the first part of the schedule and now Moon says the scoring and the offense are coming into their own. Were just playing super right now, controlling the boards and Both Dick Conoliy of Weber and of Layton have the utmost respect for each other. Both admire each other for the defense they employ each season. See you at Weber Friday, should be a dandy! pre-seaso- pre-seaso- The Layton mentor says the preseason took its toll on the Lancers Moon Warrior, lost to tho Layton Lancars the first time around but plan on ovoning the eor this Friday when they host the Lancers. DICK CONOLLYS WEBER |