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Show sun ' 4 North Edition Lakeside Review Wednesday , May 18, 1983 Noithor tha High Road ... Viovmoni Advances . Page 1C . In Tournoy , By KIMT SOK2IS tavlaw Ifwrte Utter View-mon- ts SALT LAKE CITY Quinn Hepworth looked 0j "am - 'f; bad his first time at bat in last AA'-iy'Yst- W week's state tournament baseball game, swinging the bat with all the commitment of a playboy on his wedding day. With East ahead in the bottom of the first inning and the V ' w "Y , - f'S A''A,Ai , A V-- ' , A A - ; 1-- 0, count on Hepworth Vikings' Coach John Edwards called, timeout to have a short Satur- :A; rv 2, v: day afternoon chat with his clean-u- p hitter. a : I told him to quit thinking and start swinging, Edwards said. "I told him You're a bet- - . f I ' 4!t'krgm.X9 , ter hitter than that. Not to be sacreligious or anything but, the whole incident was almost spiritual. Hepworth walked back to the box with Edwards, sermon in his head, and hit the next pitch into the parking stalls behind the left field fence. No thinking, no guessing, just hitting. I looked like a prophet, joked Edwards after the game, which his team won Kevin Smith again went all the way on the mound for the Vikings. He didnt pitch a like he did against Bingham earlier in the week, but he a home gave up only one run run in the first inning on seven hits. The key, Edwards said, was Smiths control, something the senior pitcher has had problems with in the early innings of a game. Easts only run came on a hit by Greg Hey wood that went out of the park in centerfield. Edwards told Smith not to worry about it. I said to him, you gave them their run and it didnt take as long, Edwards said, as it did in the Bingham game, when Smith gave up four walks in the first inning, but allowed only one hit. Despite pitching a complete game SaturdaySmitb did not T: f. X, .!' ' A', ''A ' ' - '' ' )rf' rrv ' iS - I- ' ' ' " s? , , , . t-- f , " ' ' ", ' ', v'--- ' w, " V ... Nor the Low Road 8-- 1. one-hitt- Staff photos by Rodnoy Wright baseball team tried both down at the plate by but cut were roads, the Bingham Miners. Brett Talbot is thrown out above and Craig Kennedy is thrown out to the left, LAYTON HIGH'S er look as sharp as he did against Bingham last Monday. He was pitching after four days rest and he usually goes after seven, said Edwards. A portion of Smiths success in his two state tournament wins has. been the result of good defensive play by Viewmont. In the first game, it was rightfiel-de- r Doug Scovel who saved the game for Viewmont with a h grab. In the game against East, it was junior third baseman Wade Bevans who made several nice plays in the game. And although Bevans has had problems with the bat this year, he has played well for Edwards. He has played very steady defensively all scored when Talbot fielded a bunt and threw wildly to first base, giving the Miners the day at Ken Price Park in Murray at 2:30 p.m. The championAfter Hepworths two-ru- n ship games will be played at homer in the first inning, the Ken Price Thursday. Vikings added a run in the sec- Edwards said. He made some good plays today. year, ond inning off starter Dan Martinez. Two consecutive errors by East shortstop Heywood gave the Vikings two more runs in the 4 third inning. The score re- until the sixth inmained ning, when Viewmont scored two additional runs on a throw5-- one-hande- d, shin-hig- 1 st 2 win. 4-- A seventh inning against Bingham Friday, Layton was tied and its senior pitcher, Brett 2-- 2, ing error and Bevans brought the other one in with an RBI single. The Vikings were to play Monday, but wet grounds at Derks Field forced that game to be postponed until Wednes Hill-cre- 3-- Bingham 3, Layton 2 SALT LAKE CITY It looked like the Lancers were set to rebound from their opening state tourround loss in the nament. Going into the bottom of the Talbot, had given up only two runs and five hits. But that last inning will haunt the Lancers. Talbot walked the leadoff hitter, Bob Murdock, who went to second on error. He - "a But that last inning was not the first time the Lancers failed to take advantage of opportunities. In the fourth inning, Layton third baseman Craig Kennedy was waved in from second base by Coach Brad Hawkins after ErikNalder singled. Kennedy was easily cut down at the plate, and Nalder was immediately thrown out at second base, ending the Layton scoring opportunity. I shouldnt have sent the kid (Kennedy), Hawkins simply said. Talbot was also thrown out at home plate in the third inning. But Hawkins preferred to talk after the game about the things the Lancers had accomplished. We won the region, which I didnt think we would do, he said. The Lancers simply didnt play well in either state tournament game. Pitching was a problem at times as were fielding and baserunning errors and hitting. We had a couple of kids who didnt swing as well as they could, Hawkins said. Layton lost its first game of the tournament last Monday to with Talbot pitchHighland, ing only two innings. I think Talbot came back and did a heckuva job, Hawkins said. 9-- 4, Against Brighton Donga Is rts AAystf One More some Won the goalie. Viewmont kept pouring the pressure on, coming back time and again, but it was Davis that scored the goals. Again the ball found its way to penalty kicks. Bitner, the only coach Davis A couSALT LAKE CITY has had in six years since it ple of little mistakes, said started its soccer program, has Viewmont soccer Coach Roger been here before. We have taCushing, and that changed the ken two second places and one momentum for the whole game. third, this is our year, he said. We played a better game. In Since most of the team has soccer when you get a couple of been here before, they are not goals, it shifts the momentum struck with awe like some; they and there it goes. can just go out and play their But Davis, undefeated in state gairfe. . play, dumped its region rival in And play their game they did, a 0 decision on a soggy field on from the opening direct score ' , a cold day. by Allen Stenquist, Davis had But for Davis it is upwards things its way. and onwards to a meeting with Viewmont had two shots at Brighton today for the second the goal early in the second half, time in a week. Last time but the first shot hit the crossaround the Darts popped the bar and the second went to the Bengals with a 2 victory. To- left side of the upright. With Viewmont feeling down because day they will match up again. Now we have two to win of the misses, Davis Brian Baone, said Davis Coach Bruce con brought the ball down, and Bitner. We want to take it on with the defense converging on Wednesday though. We figure him he passed it off to Stenquist, Brighton to be more cautious who scored a second goal. this time, not willing to give up In another play, a Davis goal as many penalty kicks. Three of was disallowed because the ofour gods last time came off of fensive player interfered with By DALI KMUNOUD Rviw Correspondent Bacons talented feet, which gave the ball to Ryan Smith, who scored with 9:40 left in the match. The final goal in the game, and by the Darts, was almost too easy. On the left side of the goal, Cox and Dave Lattin combined and drew the goalie out and then popped the ball over him (Robin Steenstra) on to the waiting head of Brian Bacon. The pass was 99 percent perfect, and Bacon didnt even have to move his feet. Just a little head tap and the fourth goal was history. The frustration was beginning to show on the Vikings, as one came player on a break-awa- y down against Scott Argyle (Davis goalie), but when the ball popped up he hit it with his 4-- 6-- hand into the goal. Davis will play Brighton to- - day at 5 p.m. at Westminster College in Salt Lake City. If the fr Soeeer Titfle Darts lose, they must play Brighton once more. But a win would give Davis the championship. The Darts earned the right to play Brighton by defeating Cottonwood earlier in the week, On Saturday, the Darts easily 3-- 1. defeated the Bengals, considered the tournament favorite. The Darts scored three go- als on penalty kicks and Bacon contributed three goals for the Darts, two of which came off the penalty kicks.' Viewmont also played well in the tournament and gave every team they faced a tough match. Apparently the Vikings didnt know who they were playing on Friday night, the Brighton Bengals, because they came out and played them straight and the Bengals had to take the match into overtime to come away with the win, 4 in double overtime. The opening goal of the game came on a mixup on defense, and the Bengals squibbed the ball in on an easy tap. 6-- In the second half, View-monVernaun Gines put his head into one and got the goal with just more than 15 minutes left in the game. ts 8, . - 5 - After the first overtime vl iiStU 2$ L y V "A; ' f Av - 1' . Avy A ' - , p v v 'r J L :W games to win the A AHv.y Y defeated Cottonwood last week, and must win one of its last two state - v. ' A v v DAVIS HIGH "A 1 vf 4-- A soccer championship, '4 V period produced no score, a shoot-ou- t began to determine the winner. Both sides were even, and it was the Bengal goalie, Mike Peacock, that stopped the fifth Davis shot. Bengal Mike Halls shot was hit by Viewmont goalie, Robyn Steenstra, but it dribbled into the goal for the winning score. Joey Smith, who played the right wing position, had a good day both ways for Viewmont, but this time the Bengals came out on top. In the losers bracket, the Layton Lancers beat the Alta Hawks 1 on Friday to advance to play Viewmont on Saturday. Coming back off of opening round loss to Cottonwood, the Lancers used three different players for each of their goals. Erik Johnston from the center forward spot scored the first 3-- one. Songkham Doungdara from out on the left wing got credit for the second and Senior Staff photos by Dan MiHar VIEWMONT HIGH was defeated by Davis Monday, eliminating the Vikings from the tournament. Ray Pollard kicked in the third. Beckman, a junior playing in a The only scorer for the Hawks halfback position. was Rob Ekblad. WOODS CROSS The deSaturday didnt prove to be as good for the Lancers as they fending state champs took it in two straight this year and the went down at the hands of Viewmont in a 1 Davis County twostraight werent wins. After losing their opener to the powermatchup. Viewmont depended on two ful Bengals, the Wildcats, who players, who each scored two field a young team, took a lesgoals to put the Lancers out of son from the Bonneville Lakers a in a 1 finale. Bonneville scorthe tournament. Marcello ers were Roger Lund and Mike Center forward playing and halfback was responsible Buckway. The lone scorer for for two scores as was Chris Woods Cross was Kirk Dyches. - 4-- Cas-sib- 2-- |