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Show Or T1 Page B4 Thursday, March 10, 1983 Park City News To face Wildcats today CO-OP 1 UTAH'S FINEST I East side Trolley Square, 1 I by Mountaineer Sports, Salt Lake City 1 Utah's Largest Selection I of Hand-made Collectibles, I Art Treasurers 6 Antiques Custom made quilts and afgans, wall and ceiling murals, wood carvings, cedar chests, 6 hardwood furniture. ' Highest quality at most j? X ' affordable prices guaranteed. J 2 Custom orders accepted Mn qdti i 1 n I TABLE a SlS LINEN til m KM A complete selection of tableclothes, place mats, napkins, runners and napkin rings. 120 Trolley Square 359-1131 Win over Tintic puts Miners in region basketball tournament by John Kinch The Park City High School boys' basketball team took on Tintic, or rather Tintic's one-man team, center Darin .Yaden, last Friday, edging Yaden and company 62-59, allowing the Miners to advance ad-vance to the Region 11 ' Tournament. Yaden, 6'8", almost single-handedly single-handedly kept Tintic in the game, but excellent play from Chris Cooper and Steve Winchester, not to mention cagey coaching by Bruce Reid, gave Park City the playoff win at Lehi High School. Cooper and Winchester each scored 18 points while Reid changed the Miners' defense three times during the course of the game, trying to stop Yaden. He finally settled on a man-toman defense. "We tried everything to stop him (Yaden) and nothing noth-ing worked. So, we decided to stop everyone else and let him get his points. It worked," said Reid. Yaden scored 36 points as well as rejecting several Park City shots at the defensive end. However, he hardly intimidated the Miners. In the first quarter Park City jumped to a 6-0 lead midway through the quarter against Tintic, also called the Miners. Tintic played horribly, turning over the ball. Yaden managed only one field goal. Chris Cooper, on the other hand, exploded for five field goals and 10 points, and the Miners led 15-7 at the end of the quarter. In the second quarter Yaden kept his team in the game by bitting five free throws as well as eight other points. He tied the game at 17-17 with 4:55 remaining before the half. However, Park City took the lead after capitalizing on seme Tintic errors and hit six unanswered points. With less than two minutes left in the half, it was 28-21. At the buzzer Cooper hit a 15-foot jumper to give Park City a comfortable 36-27 lead. But Tintic was a different team in the third quarter, passing well and supporting Yaden, tying the game 37-37 half way through the second half. Tintic shut down Park City's defense, namely Chris Cooper, who had only one point-the second half of the game. The lead changed hands several times, with Tintic going up by two points, 47-45 at the end of the quarter. A worried Park City regrouped on the sidelines and came out in a man-to-man defense, resigned to the fact that Yaden was going to score. Fortunately, Steve Winchester Win-chester for Park City also was not going to be denied . uJLA. m .a I Need a place 'I to live? TRY OUR CLASSIFIEDS! his baskets. Winchester gave the Miners the lead, 59-57 with less than three minutes left in the game. Yaden answered with two points at the other end. But Winchester, Win-chester, again, kept Park City in the game with a prayer shot that fell, 61-59 -with 54 seconds in the game. Park City got the ball back when Kerry Kusiak was fouled. Kerry Kusiak hit the second free throw of a two-shot foul, upping the score to 62-59 at 40 seconds. A traveling call against Tintic gave Park City the ball again with 10 seconds left. Park City held on to the ball and the win, 62-59. "We played much better as a team than Tintic did," said Reid, "I thought it was an exciting, well-played game." Park City will have to come up with another well-played well-played game this Thursday at 3:45 p.m. to defeat South Summit, division champs, in the first round of the region E tournament in Kamas. South J, Summit has already de-f feated Park City twice this season by a combined mar gin of almost 60 points. it;:' : . "It's mine!" Park City's Bill Simmons (24) plays a game of keep-away with two Tintic players. Wallyball, racquetball tourneys You might describe it as off-the-wall volleyball. , Wallyball, a type of volleyball adapted to the confines con-fines of a volleyball court, is alive and thriving at the Prospector Athletic Club. If you were around a year ago, you might remember that the club commemorated the introduction of wallyball to Park City by holding the first-ever local wallyball tournament. Since it's now. almost exactly a year later, that means it must be time for the second-ever local wallyball tournament (they still haven't figured out a proper name for it). The double-elimination tournament is scheduled to be held at the club Sunday, March 20. The entry fee is $5 for club members, $10 for nonmembers. The fee covers the cost of T-shirts, refreshments, and free court time to practice before the tournament. The event will include both novice and open divisions. The three-person teams may include both men and women. The registration deadline is noon, March 19. For racquetball aficionados, the club is planning its annual St. Patrick's Day Classic, to be held March 17-19. 17-19. The tournament is open to all levels of expertise, and may include doubles if there is enough interest. The entry fee for the event is $10 for members, $15 for nonmembers, which covers the cost of T-shirts, refreshments, and two hours of court time to practice during non-prime time hours. The entry deadline is 9 p.m. Wednesday, March 16. JUUUUUWU J jJVJ Sunday, March 13, 1983, 1:00 pirn. Registration Sat., March 12, 9 a.m. 11:45 a.m. and Sunday, March 13, 9 a.m. 11:45 a.m. at the Park City Race Department Ticket Windows. No late entries. For more information call 649-81 1 1 Ext. 247. C2 -'A if 4 4 Illlllik K - |