OCR Text |
Show Page K. THE TIMES, March LEADER-GARLAX- - ... p,Ws- 10, 1977 ; ' Face Judge Tonight At 6:30 5 lm Burnt I Bear River toyed with the idea of pulling an upset for the first 16 minutes of their tournament opener, be- yr' 3-- fore defending champion American Fork pulled away to a second half win. The loss sends the Bears into the consolation bracket tonight against Judge Memorial, a squad which beat them in preseason play. The ;' bulldogs became another victim of Pleasant Grove's perfect record falling The game gets underway at 6:30 p.m. in the Special Events Center at the University of Utah. A loss to Judge would send the Bears to the sidelines to watch the remainder of this year's action. A win will pit the Bears 60-5- . against the winner of the Tooele vs Dixie game at 2:30 p.m. today. The Buffs of Tooele also defeated the Bears in their first game of the long season. Bear River stayed neck and neck with American Fork in the first half of play in part due to the agressive play of center Todd Grant underneath. Grant hit a number of buckets after pulling down offensive rebounds inside. Coach Paul Jeppesen went with two big men adding Barry Bradshaw to the lineup to take advantage of American Fork's lack of height. But it was defense which stymied the Bears particularly in the second half. The used a clinging defense that got by under the referee's whistle. After knotting a 8 half-tim- e tie in the slow and deliberate first half, the. Cavemen man-to-ma- n 28-2- Cavemen outscorded the in the third quartBears er to take a ten point 16-- 6 44-3- 4 lead. The Bears pulled out of their third quarter doldrums to equal the Cavemen's final quarter output but they could do no better. It wasn't because American Fork didn't give them chances. The Cavemen missed the front end of four tries to turn the ball over to the Bears but the Riverite squad committed six turnovers of their own in the one-and-o- The Bears got into tournament action by defeating 0 in playoff actCypress ion last Friday. Neither 57-5- team looked particularly sharp. But the Bears used the offensive rebounding of Grant underneath to pull out 7-- the victory. The Bears fell behind as much as six points in the first quarter. BEAR RIVER FG points. Teammate Frank Pulley added 18 In points. tournament action other Tuesday, Carbon beat 3-- Tooele Murray got by Dixie Pleasant Grove . got by Judge 52-4- quarter. The Bears were forced to rely almost solely on Grant Special in the second half as the Cavemen shut everybody off outside. Grant tallied 15 points and surprised everyone by going 8 at the line. He was the only Bear to get into double figures. The lid was clamped so tightly on guard Nolan Hess that he failed to score a field goal. Bradshaw had nine points, Chris Webb, 5, Williams, 8, DeVerl Stokes, 1. The Bears shot well from the charity stripe hitting on 16 of 20 while the Cavemen shot 10 of 16. Brad Adamson exceeded his 15.6 season average to lead all scorers with 20 Elk 88-8- , fl I. '!nj'M j( ' iS W The cutter team of Michael and. Owen Udy finished in first place in futurity action at the Futurity and Derby races at the fairgrounds this past weekend. First place in the derby action went to Caccia and Blattner of the Pocatello Association. Others placing in the futurity were: Holdaway Brothers, .secon; Gena Payne, third; Bingham and lhnck, fourth. The lop three finishers in the futurity come from the Bear River Cutter Racing ..SENIOR 'I ODD GRANT goes up lor two points against American Fork cavemen. 'I lie Hears fell short and mo- into consolation bracket play tonight at ii:'M p.m. gainst Judge Memorial. - Tankers Host Roy, reveal that hunters holding special rifle hunting permits have averaged 42 percent success, based on an approximately 90 percent return of hunter questionnaire cards. With an approximate 74 percent return on the archery elk questionnaires, hunters have averaged 9 percent success in the very challenging endeavor. Final figures from 1975 yielded a 36 percent hunter success for the special per- - In Futurity Action Baseball: a game in which the young'man who bravely strikes out for himself receives no praise for it. association. Bingham and Hincks are members of the Golden Spike association. Placing in the derby were: Price and Gull, second, Pocatello association; Scott and Norm, third, Skyline associ, ation; Bear River swimmers host Roy this afternoon in Region One action. The Bears dropped a 3 contest last week to county foe, Box Elder. Roy should be the Bear's second region win against three losses. The Bears beat the Royal squad in a preseason contest. Doug Fuhriman and Craig Veibell provided the fireworks for the Bears in the Box Elder meet. The pair teamed with Brent Deakin and David Jones, both seniors, to give the Bears a first in the d medley relay event in a time of 1:30. Fuhriman went solo in the d butterfly event to grab a first in the time of 50-3- 160-yar- 100-yar- 1:04.9. a second better than his Box Elder d opponent in the breastroke to take that event. Bear River's David Wheatley, a sophomore, also managed to pick up a first place performance for the Riverite squad in the diving event. Here are the complete Veibel was .3 of 100-yar- results: Region To Be Decided Friday Evening By Mark Butler The Adventurer Basketball region tournament of the LDS Church will be coming to a close Friday at 6 p.m. when Garland First Ward plays the winner of the Garland Second Ward and Tremonton Sixth Ward game for the championship. In the Adventurer division this year, Garland stake has come up with some topnotch teams. Garland First and connnH Wards have battled each other four times before with Garland First coming out on top all four times. Garland First Ward is unde- - medley 160-yar- d BR 1:30. 200 yard freestyle: Hammon (BE) 2:03; Auan (BE) 2:4.5; Larkin (BR) Trophies for the races were furnished by Don's Furniture and Upholstery, 2:00. freestyle: Swain (BE) 0:30.1; Scothern (BE) Archibald (BR) :31.9; d :32.12. Diving: Wheatley (BR) 138.40; Petty (BE) 125.05; Scothern (BR) 93.60. d butterfly: Fuhriman (BR) 1:04.9; Poh (BE) 1:07.6; Sargent (BE) 1:07.-2- 5-- ,W V 100-yar- Published every Thursday Publishing Co. at 10 North 1st West, Tremonton, Utah. Lazy P Tack and Western Palace Club, Cross X 'Cafe, and Jack's Jeep. Cache and Oneida $5.50 per .year,, all other areas $6.00 per year. Second Class Postage paid at Tremonton, Utah 84337 Subscription rate: Mack's Family Drive-In- , Bear River Farm Supply, Massey Fergusen, Inc., "Wear, breastroke: STAR Y7o suxs) (BR) 1:14.3; Pohmaje-vicRE) 1:14.6; King (BR) 1:16.04. BE a mm w m ( mm itanr ar.T.innt v b uni ; BR 3:57.2; r iRAY'S 16 -- 4 &m&s March March 3 4 Low 34 25 23 March.-- ) 41 March March March March 42 17 48 23 55 28 55 28 (i 7 8 9 FULLY ad. 257-362-7 $4577 EXTRA NICE 1975 GMC SIERRA GRANDE 4777 3a ton, fully equipped, INCLUDING AIR 1975 FORD 4x4 RANGER NEW YORKER 4877 PICKUP 1974 CHRYSLER STATION 10 WAGON, 1974 DODGE PASSENGER OWNER $3277 AIR TON AIR SPEED, 4077 1 COUPE CHARGER EQUIPPED, $3777 COND. v 3 TON '3277 PICKUP 39,000 EQUIPPED, HARDTOP 1 POLARA MILES, OWNER 1 2177 CUSTOM LOW OWNER, linrnlnr 1972 CHRYSLER NEW FULLY 30,000 EQUIPPED, MILEAGE YORKER $2577 MILES Sfi 1972 DODGE 1 1971 TOYOTA EXCELLENT CORONA ECONOMY DUTY TON $2577 NEW 1971 DODGE HEAVY H 0 LIKE OWNER, MK II $1577 TRANSPORTATION PICKUP STEP 2077 BUMPER Perc. trace 19 Ictc. zmifHmimjiiijii Tie-utHt- iut, 56 Book on road on north Tremont Street! Call, identify, pay for COUPE EQUIPPED 1973 DODGE I 0 0 BR Ueailicr courtesy of V & Nij'.ar o (,'ai land. I tah 4 2 h. 1975 CAMARO 20 2 0 h 9bWf?t 48 0 WEATHER Hi 20 FOUND Will buy your no longer needed items. Call coll- eel. Brighani City FULLY fealed thus far this season and has beaten Tremonton Sixth Ward once also. Members of the Garland First Ward team are Barry Carter, Kyle Hardman, Ricky Misrasi, Clyde Griffin, Mark Butler, Shawn Anderson, Kevin Brown, David King, Victor Olsen, Bobby Harper, Clynn Josephson and Steve Quigley. 2 15 6 trading post 1973 DODGE 4:11.4. 2 5 5 8 9 2 8 Rackman College cheer: when your kid receives the check from home. 4 freestyle relay: 3 :47.4 0-- 0 Adamson Pulley Hawkins Burgess G. Beck 1974 FORD i d 0-- 0 1 16 mit holders and an 8 percent success ratio for archery elk hunters. Final tabulations will be made in late March. FULLY Vei- bel 1 Box cuss isar tlay? 500-yar- 100-yar- d 4 Elder, 100-yar- d backstroke: 2- - 2 by the Leader 160-yar- d Wells (BE) 1:05.7; Deakin (BR) 1:09; Broman (BE) 1:09.1. 4 3- - THE GARLAND TIMES Hall and Bruce, fourth, Skyline association. Ind. medley: Anderton (BE) 1:52; Sargent (BE) 1:56; Jones (BR) d Grant 6 1 3 TIIE LEADER these '$PE&BLS$8l 2:12.6. 100-yar- -1 Mitric would like relay: freestyle: Swain (BE) :54.2; Archibald (BR) :57.17; Scothern (BE) :57.5. d freestyle: Auan (BE) 5:40.4; Hammon (BE) 5:42.25; Batis (BR) 6:46.9. 2- - 2 2 AMERIC AN FORK swam. Lose To Box Elder 0 60-5- The LEADER Udy Team First Hess Webb Morrison Williams Bradshaw Norr Stokes Results Preliminary results of Utah's 1976 special elk hunts FTA TP Ktoti 257-334-S if |