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Show Win Mighty Mites Tooele Deer Reports "Good To Excellent A. T. a The Tooele Mighty Mites played fine offensive game Saturday against Players for Kearns Mites winning 21-- by Jim Ekins Roberts Sports Editor The 1982 general deer season which opens Saturday, October 23 and will run through Novemlter 2nd, should produce a good to excellent harvest throughout the county. The winter losses suffered in parts of northern and central Utah last winter was not experienced in Tooele county. The high numl)er of fawns in 1981 has produced good populations of small bucks. , The larger bucks are there also but not near as many. The classification surveys for this year are compleated and again show good production. For those wondering where the bulk of the hunters went last year and the number of deer harvested, here are the 1981 harvest and pressure figures. Unit 10 Heaston, 6,454 hunters and 2,602 deer harvested for a success of 37 percent; 12 Stansbury, 3,700 hunters and 1,036 deer harvested for a success of 28 percent; 13 Vernon, 3,709 hunters with 1,345 deer harvested for a success of 36 percent; and 62A Deep Creeks, 1,009 hunters with 191 deer harvested for a success of 19 percent. There are good deer numbers on all of Tooele counties deer herds with the ex A ' Things Are Tough All Over ception of the Deep Creek Mountains which remains quite low. As a result of this, hunters will have the best results hunting areas they are familiar with; areas' they have hunted before and know the terrain and deer movement patterns. Each year many hunters are cited for violations as a result of not reading the current proclamation. Many laws are the same such as the requirements to wear 400 sq. inches of the hunter orange, tagging yoru deer before removing it from place of kill, not carrying loaded firearms in vehicles, leaving evidence of sex attached to the animal and not wasting wildlife. However, many laws change each year and hunters must be aware of these changes. Hunters are also encouraged to respect private land and also remove all litter from their camp areas. The future of deer hunting depends on the responsible sportsman patroling his own ranks. Any state law violation should be reported to the nearest peace officer or 7 call the toll free number at the 662-333- Division of Wildlife Resources Office. Have a safe and succesful deer hunt! intently. Tooele capped its successful golfing season Wednesday by finishing fourth in the state championshipos. Timpview successfully defended its crown with a score of 319, followed by Provo, 321, Box Elder 323, and then Tooele in fourth place with a score of 333, as the Buffs finished ahead of eight other teams. I was especially pleased with our performance at state, coach Wayne Robins said. I felt that we played up to our potential, and it woud have taken a miracle for us tomove lip any higher in the standings, because every one of our kids played as well as they can. Duane Gillette, a junior, had the low v?-- score for Tooele, a 79. Another junior, Craig Leonelli, finished second for the Buffs with a score of 82, and seniors, Mike Griffith, Norm Northcutt and Steve Tate fired rounds of 84, 88 and 95. Tooele care roaring back from a six stroke deficit to defeat Judge Memorial by 10 strokes in the final match of the season to win the region championship for the sixth year in a row, and then finished fourth in the state as the windup for the year. Other members of Tooele's team are Shawn Gregrich, Scott Hansen, Mike Griffith, Russ Spendlove and Darin Anderson. Crantsville player (Russell Hall) appears to be squaring off to take a shot at an official. Not so, it of the Crantsville-Morgagame Tuesday. For Fourth Place In a great volleyball exhibition Tooele reversed an early season loss to Murray, when the Buffs defeated the Spartans and 15-- 7 Tuesday afternoon on the Tooele court. The win for Tooele insures the Buffs of a tie for fourth place Mewith the winner of the Jordan-Judg- e was which Tuesday. morial game played In order for the Buffs to qualify for post season play they have to finish fourth or 16-1- 4, 5 Against Murray, who is in third place in the standings, it was the consistent serving of Becky Chuculate and Stephanie Bunn that finally subdued Murray. Fay Harding also had a prominent spot floor play in the win, with her and accurate settings at the net. Last week, South, who holds down second place in the standings tacked a three-se- t defeat on Tooele winning 15-After losing the first anbd 9 the serving of Miss behind Tooele set, Bunn and Miss Chuculate shot Tooele before South rallied to out in front 17-1- 15-1- 8-- force the set into overtime, before Tooele could pull out the win. However Tooele failed to keep up its momentum and dropped the last set and match to South. Continuing her great play and spikes was Nina Bush who kept Tooele in the games against South and Murray. Tooeles next outing will be Tuesday when they take on league leading West at 3:00 p.m. t'W A is just a Tooele Volleyball Team In A Tie - Dont Be Deceived A Bittmen. v. A wi) sr Chad Fisher, Frank Anderson, Eddie Evans, Jeremy Kroff, Mike Hamilton, Paul John Howard, Travis Ruybal and better. Tooele Finishes Fourth In State Championship Golf Travis McCluskey is having his troubles gaining any ground as two Morgan Trojans latch on to him. Moving in to help out in case McCluskey does break loose are Mark Flores (31) and Darren Rowberry (74). Morgans Darryl Benally (72) watches Tooele were Angel Merino, Ricky Smith, Mark Proctor Kelly Brown, Chase Nash, defense were the On Cloward. and Tony . break in the action n The Beginning And The End Derek Dahlstrom gets the Wendover Wildcats off on the right foot Tuesday when he lashed out a single in the first inning, which and advance to the championship game which will Be played eventually led to a Cat run. Wendover went on to defeat North Rich s Park. Wendover will meet St. Joseph in the title game. Tuesday October 26 at 8-- 3 Dow-Jame- Wendover Advances T o Championship After winning the league championship Wendover came up with a comfortable 3 win over North Rich Wednesday to advance to the Region championship 8-- against St. Joseph. Parkinson Draws Attention That little confrontation will take place Tuesday, Oct. 26 on Tooeles Dow-JamPark. St. Joe defeated Tintic 7 in the first game of Wednesdays double header to advance to the title game against football game George Parkinson, one of the finest ends in the state, was never alone during the Crantsville-Morgaall of Parkinson In the followed attention heads for a downfield Here Jon caught by Jeffrey. spite pass closely Tuesday. George five passes good for 22 yards in the Pokes final game of the season. 9-- n Wendover. North Rich jumped out to a 0 lead in the top of the first inning, a lead that Morgan Shows Class In 27-- 0 Victory Over Grantsville Any hopes Grantsville had to gain a spot in the post season play evaporated Tuesday night when Grantsville lost to Morgan 274), and Emery defeated Union 30-2- 3 in a double overtime. Wasatch, Lehi, Morgan and Emery will represent Region Nine in the play-offGrantsville played one of its best games of the year Tuesday. T rouble is, the Pokes met their Ixest opponent of the year, the s. Morgan Trojans. When these two fine squads finished banging heads, the Trojans were on the long end of a 27-- 0 score. Despite a strong defensive effort by Grantsville, Morgan amassed 326 yards from scrimmage, and racked up four touchdowns and 18 first downs. Kyle Wilson cracked through the Poke defense for 147 yards in 14 carries, and Paul Hugie added another 52 yards in 15 carries to establish themselves as the best of the Trojan runners. Quarterback Darin Murdock chipped in with 27 yards in four carries, and hit 7 of 12 passes for another 94 yards to account for most of Morgans yardage. "Tins is by far the best team we have faced all year, was the comment of defensive coach Dick Ruben as he paced the sidelines. "Our kids are playing good Iwll out there, but Morgan is just methodically destroying us." And Rulxm was right. Neither team could gain an advantage in the first period Indore Morgan gained pay dirt with 508 remaining in the second quarter. After taking a punt on its own 27 yard line, Morgan moved to its own 47 yard line, when Wilson broke through the middle of the Grantsville defense and raced 53 yards for the score. Tom Vorasane kicked the extra point to give Morgan a 0 lead. For a time it appeared that Grantsville was going to catch Morgan when the Pokes moved from their own 40 to the Morgan 34 yard line. Paul Hugie stopped 7-- the drive by intercepting a pass and returning it 32 yards to the Morgan 45. Six plays later John Jeffery scored from 12 yards out and Vorasane again kicked the extra point giving Morgan a 144) lead. Morgans third TD was almost a repeat of the second. After Grantsville had moved the ball from their own 24 yard line to the Morgan 34, Kirk Francis inter- cepted another Grantsville pass and the Trojans were on the way again, It took Morgan 10 plays to get the TD with Hugie scoring from seven yards out. Vorasane's kick made it 214). Two costly 15 lasted just long enog enough for Wendover to get its ups. Wendover wrested the lead from NR with a two-ru- n spurt in its half of the inning, added a single run in the third, and sealed the victory with a outburst in the fifth inning. In this deluge, Wendover sent eight batters to the plate and came up with five big hits to score its five runs. Starting pitcher Bodie Peebles who had a 54) season record including a r, a and a pitched brilliantly for the first 4 innings when he hit a wild streak and walked the first two batters he faced in the fifth inning. Coach Cliff Hart replaced Peebles with Jay Mclnemey, after the North Rich runners had pulled a double steal, putting NR runners on second and third base. Mclnemey struck out the first batter he faced, but then uncorked a wild pitch which allowed NR to score one run. Big Mac then struck out the next NR batter, m one-hitte- two-hitt- i! r " run from scrimmage was Flores nine yard run. Jeff Hamm came Up with some great pass catches, latching on to four catches good for 69 yards. George Parkinson came up with his usual sterling performance. Tuesdays game, which was delayed nearly an hour because the officials had not been notified, marked the end of the double play. Tough Defense Wendover came up with another fielding gem in the top of the seventh. After NR had scored one run and had loaded the bases with only one out, first baseman Bob Massell ripped a vicious grounder out of the dirt, stepped on first for one out and then fired to C. Anderson at home in time for Anderson to tag the runner for the final out of the game. Best hitters for Wendover were Derek Dahlstrom who went 2x2 at the plate including one run batted in and 2 runs scored, Billy Ratcliffe 2x3 and scored twice, Jay Mclnemey lxl, a pair of sacrifices, two runs batted in and scored once, and Massell who hammered out two hits in two trips to the plate, scored once, batted in one run with one of his hits being a double. When Wendover and St. Joe face each other it will makr the fourth time this year the Jays and the Cats have tangled, and it will also mark the third time they have played for some type of a championship. In their first meeting, Wendover won in the championship game of the St. Joe Invitational tournament. In a practice game the following day, St. Joe pinned a 10-- 3 loss on Wendover for the Cats only oss of the year. In the league championship game, Wendover was victorious again, this time and now these teams will meet again for the region championship and the right to advance to the state championship game and the right to advance to the state championship game, which will le pluyed Satur- high school careers of the following seniors: John Butler, Paul Castagno, James Christensen, Richard Lasserre, Lon Youngberg, Charlie Mohler, George Parkinson, Tommy Harris, Mark Flores, Shane Watson, Jeff Hamm, Blayne Wiley, Ken Young, Charlie Allen, Darrin Harris, Darren Rowberry, Brian Geldmacher, Mike Randle, Rocky Romano, Troy Orr, Rick Valdez and Wayne Wells. After a great start in which they Won their fiist four games, the Pokes ran into rough going and dropped their last four gumes to finish the season with an overall record of 4 and a 4 league record. 7-- 6 9-- 1 4-- day, Oct. 30 at BYU. St. Joe 9, Tintic 7 yard penalties helped Morgan gain its fourth score, which came on a one yard run by Kelly Wilson. Grantsvilles quarterback John Butler closed out his career with a fine performance, completing 16 of 27 passes good for 144 yards and spiced up his performance with several key runs on quarterback sneaks. Mark Flores, churned and chugged his way for 40 yards, but that brilliant Morgan defense never let him get loose for the long gainers. Grantsville 's longest vj with the runner on second attempting to move over to third. It didnt work, and the runner was thrown out, Curtis Anderson to Lance Dahlstrom for an inning-endin- g Tintic 012 010 3- -7 6 3 St. Joe 080 010 -9 6 2 Butteries: T - Allinson, and M. Draper; SJ Willard, Holbrook (7) and Bohacs 3B- - Willard 3, Allinson North Rich 3, Wendover 8 North Rich 100 010 -3 3 1 Wendover 201 050 -8 9 1 Butteries: NR - Wumsley and Mills; W Peebles, Jay Mclnemey (5) and C. Anderson; WP - Peebles. 2B Massell x- Bag Elk .... x- Grontsville TD'l 0 0 0 0 Wilson (33 yds.), Jeffery (13 yds.), Hugie (7 yds )ond Wilson (1 yd.) PAT Vorosone, 3, pk. Tooele hunters Dennis Vario and Leonard Stallivicre display elk which they shot at Hardware Ranch in Cache County during the recent elk hunt. five-poi- -- ' |