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Show Cyprus On Rebound - Colts Top Field In Volleyball Tourney CotSALT LAKE. tonwood claimed top honors in a weekend volleyball tournament that included 10 teams, four of which were from the Green Sheet area. The Colts outlasted Box Elder in the finals of the Highland Classic, winning the championship game Cyprus, which finished second to the Colts in one bracket of Fridays qualifying round, was a d loser Saturday and was eliminated. 15-1- first-roun- Granites squad, which looked strong Friday, beat East in its opener Saturday, but was exhausted dropped And to games American Fork and Box Elder. Judge Memorial suffered the same fate as Cyprus after barely surviving the cut in Fridays play. Judge was Cottonwoods first victim, losing 15-- 7 and Cottonwood had to overcome some adversi15-- ty Saturday when Cheryl Tye suffered a strained back and was available for only NET PLAY . . . Granite's Stephanie Ivie (4) tips ball past outstretched hands of Judge's Denise Gaztambide in volleyball tourney play Friday. Volleyball Jeff Hansen, of met on A pair rebuilding teams the volleyball court here Thursday, with Kearns defeating Murray in a tense match. The Cougars defeated the Spartans rather easily in the first game, Murray fought back to win the second and Kearns needed overtime to win Coach Diane Congdon said the play of return 15-- 17-1- 5 18-1- Ags, BYU Travel ing starter Shauna Stirling saved the match for her Cougars. Ability to spike the ball proved to be the edge for the win- ners. For Murray it was the first game and Coach Leidtke Becky was Anderson SALT LAKE. Two of game team. and Congdon was Provo, but losing to a very good Clearfield d - off will be 12:30 MDT. Beehive state squads picked up two wins and absorbed two setbacks last weekend. BYU bounced back from its season-openinshocker at New Mexico by handing San Diego state a thumping before a capacity crowd in Provo. The win revived WAC championship fev- g 35-1- 1 weekend. In their two meetings, and 27-1- 61-- 7 RINGS history when it visits Madison. The Badgers launched the season last week on a losing note, bowing 12-- 6 to Purdue. When the Y made its first bow in against a Big Ten foe, Indiana captured a 7 victory in the Holiday Bowl last December. 38-3- Reb-el-U- te 1 win in While Utah (See Page 4, Col. 8) free-scorin- g Las Vegas. 6 43-4- match with the Farmers, with Granite 11-- and winning 8 losing and then losing The Farmer mentor felt her starters played extremely well and Granite proved it will be a factor in Region Three. Cyprus Coach Pat the squads eliminated after the pool, play Friday, which appears to be good news for another Green Sheet area squad, Kearns, which plays in Region Two. After beating Judge Saturday, the Colts topped American Fork and 15-Box Elder fell and but battled back in a losers bracket to force another confrontation. Gannon but the Bucs bounced back Tuesday to defeated defending 4A champion Olympus 15-and 15-- lookthe Pirate more like ing team Gannon expected to field. On Friday the Pirates lost to Cottonwood, split with Box Elder and 15-- Region Opener 13-1- 5 Rather than play another three-gam- e set, the coaches agreed that if Cottonwood was the winner, the title belonged to the Colts, while if Box Elder won, the outcome of a second game would determine the champion. Allen felt the number of games in two days was hard on her squad, but felt good about the drilled East and Laurie Garwell for the Bucs that day, but the Brighton. rett played test of Saturday Fork was American more of a six individuals playing on their own situation than Gannon would prefer. American per- formance. Defensively the Colts were shaky in the early going, but came back stronger as the meet progressed. For Granite, lack of depth appeared to be the In greatest problem. her starters, Coach Alice Nellestein has a Fork won 15-1- 5 and 15-Against Olympus the Bucs played more as a team. Gannon said the serving was more consistent and the defense was better. She singled out Angie (See Page 4, Col. 1) Colts Face Skyline e LOGAN. in all is the past for play Cottonwood now, much to the relief of Colt Pre-leagu- Coach Tom Jones. Following a 10-- 0 loss to Sky View here Satur- - Murray Is Defeated By Judge MURRAY. Judge against Schovaers 6-- freshman, Margaret Traub, blanked Spartan sophomore Lisa Bassett, 6-- At number three singles, Murrays Kathy Hansen lost 6-- 6-- 3 to JoanErbin. In doubles competition, Judges Margene Singler and Diane Henkels defeated Shawna Davis and Pam Sheya Judge completed the sweep with - Tammy Wallace and Amy Wolffe downing Diana Madsen and Michelle Johnson 6-- d Kearns e record. Skyline, under new coach Gil Cordova, has had its problems, too. Stripped of an abundance of talent by graduation, Cordova inherited an inexperienced club that has had trouble putting points on the board. Much like Cottonwood. Skyline has players who are tough and who pre-leagu- topped sophomore Mar-ni- e 1 in Bailey number one singles before a strong Bulldog 15-1- 3 fashion. day, Jones hopes his club can shake off an 3 start tomorrow (Friday) when it opens Region Three play with a 4:30 p.m. contest at Skyline. If we can get off to the right start in region, we can forget all about that, Jones said of his clubs disappointing swept through all five matches here Tuesday to claim victory over the Murray high girls team. Coach Sam Moores Spartans will attempt to rebound from the loss today (Thursday) when they host Jordan at 3 p.m. Moore also is trying to schedule a match Barbara another defeat Tuesday against a 4A team. Anderson attributed an 5 and 5 loss to a Brigthon questionable team to jitters brought on by the teams youth and the fact that its first home game drew a crowd. Nothing really went well for the Spartans, who committed several net fouls and were guilty of inconsistent serving. The jayvees, however, proved tough by winnin and ing 15-come-from-behin- CLOSE LOOK . . . Official take a close look at play by Cottonwood's Lori Faux as Laurie Garrett of Cyprus reacts with block attempt during Colt victory over Pirates. play, 5. over-al- l was not delighted with her teams tournament 15-- teams 15-- 13-1- still tentative time, he said. Judge showed why it is the Region Seven favorite with an impressive performance. will test Tooele on Sept. 25. Murray is slated to host Granite tonight (Thurs- day) at 7. Cottonwood's Marci Wilder (S4) sets up ball as teammates Pam Davis (54) and Janelle Cook react during tourney test. Ogden Routed - BUMP . . . 6-- 6-- Jones said. To beat the Eagles, Jones said the Colts must move the ball on the ground, something which they have shown limited capacity for thus far. Cottonwood was able to establish a fairly sound running game in the first half Saturday, with Joel Johnson doing most of the carrying. But, trailing by a touchdown, the Colts had to abandon the ground attack in favor of a passing game in the second half. Quarterback Mike Moore, who took over OGDEN. Judge Memorial tuned up for the opening of league play by blasting Ogden Friday afternoon. The Bulldogs took advantage of a host of Tiger miscues to forge a half-tim- e 35-lead and refused to let Ogden into the end zone until the final period when the Bulldog third stringers were on the field. 35-1- 4 0 Coach Frank LEtoile thinks things may be tougher for his team tomorrow (Friday) in its league opener. The Bulldogs play Murhost to arch-rivray, with the home team seeking its first win in its new stadium. Murray cracked the win column Friday for the first time in much the same fashion as did ad- Denim that STRETCHES Ostberg and is expected to start against Skyline, was able to move the team but could not get the ball into the end zone. Penalties and mistakes were to blame first-and-go- Penalties defense, hurt too. Bobcats touchdown penalties - lone drive, two including a, roughing fourth-dow- n the passer call whistled Colts. the On the -- were - against the Tomorrow, the defense will have to be prepared for Skyline to come out throwing, Jones said. Theyll try to get you down right away with the big play, he added. Against Sky View, Jones said he was pleased with the offensive and defensive play of Moore, as well as Facers performance at tight end. Defensively, he cited the play of John Clark, a stocky linebacker seeing his first significant amount of playing time. Try a Want Ad! NO KIDDING $52,000 FOR II Small down may get you in. Finance at 9'j annual percentage rate (or 30 yrs. You don't have to qualify! Produces S400 monthly. Check into this or any of our apartment building listings. Income Realty & Mortgage 637 t. 400 So. b$24(T league title, and will probably need a victory in this one to make that a realistic goal. Cyprus, Murray and Judge Super Comfortable, tough jeans made of Wranglers new stretch Blue Denim. appear to be the class of the league again this season. LEtoile said the team is looking forward to playing for keeps after what he considers a good preleague slate. The effort enabled the team to gain some 2-- 1 Fashion Place Mall 242jSoJ Main St.t Downtown Ogden Orem much needed ex- perience. All three foes were respectable teams with solid programs. Patrons attending Fridays contest are be- ing urged to purchase tickets early. Those with tickets will be able to use any of six en- trances while those making purchases for the 7:30 kickoff will be forced to use the main gate behind the school. There is no parking available on the school site itself. Ogden dug a hole for itself in the first period and Judge capitalized on three fumbles to forge a 21-- 0 lead within that span. Joe Rotzler pounced on the pigskin when the Tigers fumbled the kickoff and immediately Judge went to work on establishing a ground game with Larry and Dave alternating o Har-mon- d car- ries. Colosimo plunged over from the two and Chris Klekas kicked the first of five extra points. On its first offensive play of the game Ogden again lost possession, with Dave McGill recovering for Judge at the 30. This time it was Harmond taking a pitch at the two and scoring. The kickoff resulted in yet another Judge recovery, this one by John Kelly inside the Tiger 30. Quarterback Ken Vierra kept at the one to send his team up by three touchdowns. In the second period Judge would add two more touchdowns, with Vierra hitting McGill on screen coa mpletion and after another McGill catch at the one, Russell Griffeth closed out Bulldog scoring with a plunge over right tackle. Two more Judge drives were killed by a dropped pass in the end zone and a pass interception, but it really didnt matter. The Bulldog first unit saw very little action after the half. LEtoile was elated with his teams per-- ' formance, noting that the goals of taking advantage of scoring opportunities and moving the ball on the ground per month were reached. Judge rolled up 322 yards of offense on 53 plays, punting only twice. Of that yardage 182 came on the ground, with Colosimo gaining 75 on 11 carries and Harmond 56 on 15. Brian Von Bank picked off an Ogden pass, as did Jim Tabish and AFFORDABLE? SALES PRICE Copper Cove sophomore Kenny Kreautler, who returned his 24 yards. Pat Chasman led the sack parade with a pair. McGill, for two weeks the defensive player of the game, was this weeks offensive standout. The junior flanker caught four passes for 125 yards. Vierra was the back of the week. He threw for 140 yards on 3100 Seuth 9175 West Model Open Noon to 7 5x7 comple- tions. Colosimo gained defensive honors for the week and center Mark Murphy was cited as the top lineman. Ph. Thrifty shoppers read To 9 - 260-984- George Black the Green Sheet classifieds! yours, 250-205- 5 lf you can qualify under the FHA 235 Plan, your payment can start as low as $240 a month St Company place 262-668- i I for most of the trouble. Using the screen pass to slow down the Bobcat rush, Moore hit tight end Mike Facer on plays covering 33 and 13 yards that helped move Cottonwood to a at the five. The Colts couldnt punch the ball over from there, however, and a bad snap botched the field goal try. A clipping penalty also wiped out a long punt return that would have given Cottonwood the ball at Sky Views eight yard line. for starter Victor 'Dogs Await Murray Showdown would Dahles 0 11-- the WrafigEsir Inseams to 36" 11-- 8 5 14-1- 10-1- 5 11-- 7 at this its fourth straight Tali Sizes 38 to 50 Waists Friday without a loss. Brighton was vanquished and 11-Cyprus Box fell and 11-Elder was beaten and while the Colts beat East 11-- 6 and can hurt you, but theyre not dominant Cyprus, but plans are like they have been, fumbles. Judge will be seeking & 10-1- Wednesday Judge, taking vantage of Logan Big Highland, Judge and Bingham on Friday, but lost to American Fork 2 and After beating East 15-- 9 and 15-- the Farmers lost to American Fork Box and Elder still needed three games to claim the in in 1972. 2 BYU will be meeting its second Big Ten foe in DIAMONDS 966-675- win 24-1- 7 over Arkansas, then took a breather last game will be the second in history between the schools. Las year UNLV captured a RINGS GOLD 31-1- Saturday nights $WANTED$ SCHOOL 9 1975 S; Granite defeated considerable Murray suffered Utah was drubbed by a vastly superior Nebraska squad 55-- at Lincoln. And Weber was 0 by pummeled Northern Iowa. Utah State will try for the third time to upset Texas in the Saturday strggle, but the Ags are prohibitive underdogs. The Longhorns opened the year with a nationally-te- Texas triumphed pre-leagu- plays very hard and on Saturday fatigue appeared to be a definite factor. The Colts sailed through the pool play 15-- 18, 1980 scrappy squad that number of games, her bench was forced to come through. Brighton Bingham were Thurs., Sept. were Cougar jayvees victorious. bright. previous Gempeler scored touchdowns for Granite high in a 22-- 6 Farmer victory over Kearns, enabling the victors to finish 0 e in play. Hansens TD came on a pass from Gempeler to initiate the scoring for Granite. Junior quarter-bac- k Brady Wood tallied the lone Cougar touchdown. (That was September, 1970). I Duckworth and Kris Kent provided solid play both matches er for Cougar fans. levised 15-- 3 Chris Mark and Reed a ing West Valley City, UT. Watt Valley View delighted with the efforts of sophomores Lorraine Teo and Jackie Vigil. She expects the pair to move into varsity starting berths. In Utah State squeezed out a 17-- 7 win over stubhome this weekend born Idaho State to even while the other two are its record at Neveron the road. theless, Aggie hopes for Utah, still seeking a a third straight PCAC first win of the new sea-so- crown are by no means stadium. At the same time in Ogden, likewise-wdnles- s Weber State will entertain Idaho State. The weekends toughest assignment goes to Utah State. The Ags will meet nationally-rankeTexas on the Longhorn turf in Austin. Kick-of- f is 6 p.m. MDT. Meanwhile, Brigham Youngs Cougars will challenge a Big Ten squad, colliding with Wisconsin in a daylight game at Madison. Kick- win 16-1- grid squads will play at will host Kearns 14-1- fought back to and major college NevadaLas Vegas in a 7:30 p.m. game at Rice Anderson cited Pam Sheya, Kathy Hansen and Jody Hill for their play. The Cougars made it two in a row Tuesday night with a victory over Roy. After losing the first pleased with the effort. Kearns had already played twice, beating Utes, Weber In Home Contests Utahs . - Kearns Tops Murray KEARNS. glancing back in sports with the limited duty, Coach Shirley Allen noted that Tye had had an excellent tournament to that point, as did Carri Palmer and Jeri The Colt Lambert. coach noted that with the tournament featur- |