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Show 3 view WEST VALLEY Thursday, Feb. Playoff Shot 26, 1981 Judge Captures Second - Colts Facing Critical Tilts Pirate Poise Key To Championship Provo. Cyprus has a tentative game scheduled next Friday with Mountain View. In Thursdays classic battle between two close- SALT LAKE. Cyprus high girls successfully defended their Region Seven basketball title here Thursday with a 59-5- night victory at 3 ly matched in a classic en- Judge counter. The Pirates sealed the title with a win over Murray Tuesday to gain revenge over the team that handed it its lone loss in league play while Judge bounced back to beat Uintah in Vernal. Both teams are headed into the state tourney, but have more than a week off. Tourney play begins on March 9 in teams, o Bulldog Coach John felt the Pirate poise was the decisive factor. He had nothing but praise for the Cyprus attack and commented that his young team may have learned something from the experience, because in Tuesdays test, Judge needed the same type of effort to pull out the win at JJin-ta- 50-3- 2 58-4- 1 four fouls, Pirate Coach Bob Gonzales sent his team into a four corners attack and it paid off when Sharp converted 4x4 from the line and the Pirates did not make mistakes. In the fourth canto the score was knotted four coupled with Carrie times. Gina Glodowski outside kept the Bulldogs in the game with 10 points, but shooting and the defensive play of Shelly Sharp a 14x18 free throw effort put the Pirates in control by the Bucs kept the game just out of reach. early. ' Cyprus held a narrow Nunley was the games lead after one leading scorer with 21 (8, period and extended that 4x7). Pearce dropped in to 0 in the second. 16 (7, 2x2) and Garrett 14 But the explosive (3,8x16). Sharp was 8x8 Bulldogs roared right from the line. Gaztambide led the Denise back. held to a single Bulldogs with 18 (7, field goal in the first half, 4x4x7) and Glodowski added 16 (6 4x5). Marge erupted for 10 third-quartpoints and Judge Singler added eight. led 4 going into the The difference came at final eight minutes of the line where Judge hit just 6x15 to 23x29 by play. Cyprus standout Cyprus. There onwere 15 each Laurie Garrett, who had fouls called been relatively quiet squad. throughout the contest, Against Murray found the range in the Nunley and Pearce both final canto and had her picked up three fouls in team back in front within the first period, but the minutes. She scored 10 Pirates were able to pull away for an easy win, points in the canto, in6 after one cluding 6x7 from the line. leading Leading by only two at period, but 4 at the the 2:40 mark, but with half. Garrett was the three starters having games leading scorer Cyprus parlayed success at the free throw line into the important win. The Bucs were also capable of handling ball and hitting the open player inside. In this case it was Angie Nunley who found herself open and that Bucs, Murray Capture Golds (From Page 2, Col. 2) meet began with a bang. The first race in the finals was Nicolos upset of Region Seven champion Hawkins in the 100 butterfly with a record 1:02.78. Hawkins had a better time going in, 1:01.5, but was second Saturday night. Judges Ann Whitehead claimed seventh. In the boys race the top area swimmer was Murrays Shane Thorpe in fifth. Shawn Tadd of Spanish Fork won. Quinn became a double winner for Bountiful in the 100 free with a 48.33 effort. Ashton was seventh for Murray and Beagley eighth for the state champs. Flo Christensen of Provo captured the girls race in 57.08. Davis was third and Matz sixth for Cyprus. Thomsen captured the mens 500 in 4:44.18, but sister Alissa was forced to settle for a silver medal when Fisher of Viewmont set a new state record of 5:16.2. In race Ron the boys Richards, Steckler and Paul Broadhead took fourth, fifth and seventh for the Pirates, while among the girls, Lori Arreola was third for Cyprus and Suzanne Poole was eighth for Murray. Robinson broke the state record in the backstroke In the girls race was second for Judge, Dorothy sixth took Thorpe for Murray and Patti Philpot seventh Cyprus. Murray won freestyle relay, for the 400 with Robinson, Greg Cope, Ashton and Thomson finishing in 3:21.68. Cyprus sealed its state title with a second place finish. The Pirate girls erased the state record by swimming the event in 3:53.43. The foursome consisted of Nicolo, TEAM . . . Cyprus high's Tom Tuttle leads Pirate medley relay team to title enroute to seventh straight team title. Davis, Matz and Killpack. DENTURE CLINIC IN MURRAY Full Dentures' ttas girls basketball team takes on leagueleading East in a 3 p.m. game on the Colt floor. The Colts, favorite to win the region title, enter the contest one game behind the Leopards following a 8 victory Thursday over Skyline. East, 1 in region play, beat Olympus 4 to hold onto its lead. In their first encounter a month ago, Cottonwood edged the Leopards pre-leag- 53-4- Cottonwood ball handler who converted four of five charity tosses when Skyline was forced to good 16-1- 35-2- 6, Col. 2) the which blowout. tossed in eight points during the second quarter and was insecond-perio- d Cook strumental in setting up Coach Paul Dilleys Cyprus high Pirates tuned up for the state tournament with an 5 win impressive over Tooele here Friday night. Mondays 4:10 p.m. test of the winner of the n outing in St. George last night (Wednesday) will mark MAGNA. 92-7- Dixie-Carbo- Pirate ap- in the state tournement in five years. Cyprus will be fresh after more than a week off and excitement is running high. The Pirate third-plac- e finish pits the team against the champion of Region Sixs Division II, generally considered the weakest of the five 3A leagues. The winner of that game, however, in all likelihood n will m6et Provo, one of the pretourney favorites, in the once-beate- quarterfinals on LUXURIOUS BATH VANITIES KILN-DRIE- Cultured Marble Tops! EXOTIC DESIGNS! Fine Furniture Quality Bases! OH (Cammandar Mow Meit.-M- . Sot. Moon: loom to tpw MIDVALE MURRAY 101 Ss. State Sit 41S1 ) m Cl TU taHMMat me in SHEET APPROX. SQ. MAY VARY n. SSfSS OVER 4) So ft. SHEET HOME IMPROVEMENT OfflSB) CENTERS COAST TO CO AST I HOLLAOAY SAIT LAKE CITY 1440 Sa. Stat 4441 HiSa4ay (1JM RUNTY if FMI MRMINI (M tat) FAT UTBtl & Kenny - yrt. $25 per 1st child State Champion boundaries. Bob Wooley 250-758- 9 The Titans, mean- - Like The only Green Sheet Isom, Patty Poesch faced a strong challenge which re-- . quired that she not give up ground in the backstroke portion of the 200 individual medley. Poesch, the defending champ in the 500 freestyle, could not afford to fall too far behind Roys Karin Schanzle in the backstroke and try to make it up in the breaststroke. She didnt. Holding her own in the and pulling backstroke in her away breaststroke, Poesch race in 2:17.76. Grangers Webb was won the fourth and Isom sixth. and Sacrifice sistence paid Granite's . off per- for Wendy Whiting, who compiled solid scores on her last couple of dives to secure the championship with 356.8 points. But Cottonwood collected its share of points with Lynn Warnecke placing second, Jana Robbins third, Cher Milgrom fourth and Susan Striklett fifth. Oly received sixth place points from Mary Bradshaw. Valuable second place points were added by Colts Stacey DeGooyer in the Colt Gold Mine butterfly. 200 and 500 33-1- 60-5- Col-lar- how comes out, must-wisituation Tuesday. Normally, if that turns out to be (he case, the Colts would seem to have the advantage. Theyd have the home court advantage and already have beaten Olympus once this season n But, oddly. Cot- tonwood has displayed a consistent inability to win at home. Coach Clark undoubtedly would like nothing better than to reverse that trend on Tuesday. He would also like to eliminate the type of play his squad exhibited, at home, in the second half Friday against the Eagles. at After trailing the half, Cottonwood disintegrated in the third period, tallying just four points while Skyline ran off 11. The Colt offense improved in the fourth canto but Skyline did even better in pulling away to the final margin of victory. As he has for the past two years, Eagle stan- area championship in the boys competition came in the last race of the meet - the 400 freestyle relay. Eric Erekson, Bill Wilson, Brad Tye and Gregg Ostergaard raced through the course in 3:25.34 to defeat Bonneville. Granite was sixth and Granger seventh in the race. The Colt 200 medley relay team placed second to Skyline's 4A record time. Erekson was a double placer for Cottonwood, finishing third in the 100 free and fourth in the 50. So, too, was Ostergaard, who was third in the 200 free and sixth in the 500. Tye added fourth place points in the backstroke and Wilson contributed eighth place points in the breaststroke, where he finished behind teammate Collin Sprague. Mike Chard of Olympus finished second in that event and was fourth in the butterfly. The Titans also received points from John Paulson, second, diving; Paul Chamberlain, fifth, 200 IM; Lloyd Mayer, sixth, 50 free. Granite s Dave Richard finished sixth in the 100 and seventh in the 50 dout SKATELAND WEST freestyle sprints. Spencer Grangers Thurber was fifth in div- LESSONS and Lancer Adam Garside finished fifth in the 100 free. Also compiling finalist points for Cottonwood were Gerald Wayman, sixth, 200 IM; Robert Mayfield, seventh, butterfly; David Smith, eighth, 50 free. ing BEGINNING: 11:00 SAT. 4 4 AM INTERMEDIATE: 12:00 SAT. 969-849- NOON 1 4147 W. 5415 SO. 4 DECORATING 4 Si DESIGN 4 LEARN HOW TO 4 DECORATE ONE ROOM OR 4 WHOLE HOUSE 4 4 Drecksel Paul made life miserable for the Colts, scoring 29 points on 11 field goals and 7x11 from the line. (See Page 6, Col. 2) A Presented by Wanda Stoker. Designer Personal Consultation Available in the Store, at no charge, on any of your decorating Room Arrangement Color, Pattern, Texture Scale & Balance Carpet, Upholstery Drapes & problems. WEDS., MARCH 4,7-CALL 566-- 1 251 to sign up at. a 9 Required PRE-REGISTRATI- so A CLASSES BEGIN NO CHARGE 4 4 or COME A IN . 7200 So. State 46-4- 0 26-2- 5 hot-pace- Gilbert Romero motivated the Bucs with nine points in the first period, eight in the second, five in the third and eight in the fourth to claim game honors with a career high 30 (10, 10x12). All five Pirates Page reach-(Se- e 6, Col. 2) BASEBALL SIGNUP Mower Field 5285 So. 40th West Sat. Feb. 28th from 9 AM - 5 PM Sat. March 7th 9 AM - 5 PM Wed. March 11th 5 PM - 8 PM Child must be 8 2, Col. 9) freestyles, Poesch in the The Bucs exploded in butterfly and Talbot in the fourth canto, using a the 100 freestyle. 13x13 effort from the line Other finalists for the to outrun the Buffs 5 champs were after entering the period girls Stricklett and Johnson, trailing who finished fifth and efIt was an iron-ma- n in sixth, respectively, fort with Tooele forcing the 50 free; Mary Wilson, Dilley to use his small, seventh in the 500 free quick lineup the entire and eighth in the 200 game and that conditionfree; and Alana Thomping could also be a plus son and Joni Ellefson, on the big UofU court. seventh and eighth in the Tooele stayed in the 'breaststroke. game by shooting a sizzld Grangers Wendy ing 61 percent from the placed fourth in field, which offset a solid both the 200 and 500 free. Pirate 51 percent. But at The Lancers also receivthe line the Bucs were ed sixth place points unbeatable, hitting from Heidi Timmler in 22x26, while Tooele was the butterfly. making five of only eight Kearns Tall also placBoth teams ed seventh in the 100 attempts. had 35 field goals. free. Olympus garnered Tooele, however, was seventh place points guilty of 27 turnovers from Debbie Hatch in the against the Buc press. at the Cyprus led at half after trailing d the end of a first period. LITTLE LEAGUE No (From Page Is cond 41-3- (5, 2x5). 7:30. - 4A e. Meldrum (1, 7x8) and Lucero (2, 5x8) added nine each. . . . Tankers percent from shooting the field. The Cougars will close out league play with a pair of games this week. Kearns must travel to Brighton for a 7:30 test tomorrow (Friday) and will host Bingham in Tuesdays finale, also at 7:30. The Cougars would have to win both tests to tie Alta for a playoff KEARNS INTERNATIONAL kitchens White. A'4lC4'4 10a-5:30- Son. lOtBIS n counters or baths! Model) PATTERNS Glaze Tough Fired-oResists Stains, Burns! Perfect for shiny walls A 38?? i TILE TOUGH! D, - WALL FINISH IS NO-M- Wednes- day. Cyprus has two pluses going for it in the tournament, quickness and ability to convert from the charity stripe both of which were evident in Fridays league finale against a stubborn Tooele squad. Ceramic FANCY GLAZED MOSAIC TILE that contest it appears Cottonwood faces a of 35-3- 1 23 Tourney Trip Beckons Bucs the first pearance Colt Stacey deGooyer conEast swimmers after placing second in girls 200 freestyle at state 4A meet. KUDOS challenge for the lead, possibility. The Cougars shot a dismal 4x24 in the first half. In the first period they stayed in the game from the charity stripe, trailing 14-- Alta took a lead at half-timFrank Lucero led a charge in the third canto that saw the Cougars close to within eight, but there wasnt sufficient help and although the 1 Cougars trailed entering the final canto, Alta was able to pull away, connecting on 24x35 free throws. Kevin Crookston led Cougar scoring with 12 are on the road against East, which is unbeaten in league Tip-of- f time is play. gratulates rally, r (Friday) when the Colts Kearns could not Tooele Tripped put together its best quarter of basketball in the second quarter against Skyline, then managed to hold on during an uninspired second half. Trailing 2 after the first period, the Colts broke loose to outscore the Eagles 23-- 8 and take a 4 half-tim- e lead. Cottonwood sat back on its laurels in the second half, scoring just 18 points, but Skyline was unable to eliminate the deficit. breaks during the Reasonable Prices from shooting sophomore Lori Miles, a 42-3- Colts converted into fast 8 clutch free throw 46-3- turnovers J. Dunn DDS third-quarte- 8-- defense spearheaded by senior guard Janell Cook forced numerous Eagle Repairs while you wait. Operated from the Offices of: R. Paxton DAAD more. The Colts also worked the ball inside to center Cheryl Tye for six points that period. Down the stretch, the Colts received some (SeePage tomorrow 68-4- 31-1- 6 Laurie Faux for six COTTONWOOD. Strong pressure Relines Partial Dentures 261-436- SO. The whole region season comes down to today. For today (Thursday), Cottonwood will attempt to gain a share of the Region Three title when Coach Vaughn Marie- 67-4- 7 spot, an unlikely Battle Today Teammate Shane Thorpe was sixth and Dangerfield of Cyprus was seventh. Kartchner broke her girls record in 1:02.44. Shirene Hancock took fourth for Cyprus. Killpack captured top honors in the 100 breast, a feat equalled by Todd Richards of Cyprus for the boys. Her time was 1:09.73, his 1:04.34. Richards nipped Tuttle for the win and Philpot added to the Pirate total with a fifth place finish. - Region Title in the Cougars KEARNS. Hopes for a state playoff berth were virtually killed here Friday when Alta crushed Kearns Inept shooting kept the Cougars from overcoming a poor floor game by the Hawks and despite a 26-1- st while, travel to Granger tomorrow for a critical contest. But regardless 5 9-- prelims with a 54.69 time, which should give him status. Gascoigne Alta Drills 26-2- Colts-Ea- whether it has state tournament capabilities. It has to. Coach Kent Clarks Colts are involved in a dogfight for the final state tournament position from Region Three and it appears quite likely their fate will rest on a home game Tuesday against Olympus. Cottonwood and Oly in league are both play, the Colts record dipping following a drubbing at the hands of Skyline on Friday. Things dont look much more promising Die- - Hopes can show ttonwood Spartans with 12 and 11. Judge had a tougher (See Page 7, Col. 8) 12-1- 0 36-3- SO. COTTONWOOD This is the week Co- the Reynolds paced Pearces Gaz-tambid- e, Swim Meet 21 Nunley and Pearce had eight each and Gonzales was able to give his bench playing time Pam Sheya and Suzie with 1981. $20 for 2nd child. old before Aug. 1, WE RE BETTER. HERES OUR PROOE Many leading bourbons have lowered their proof from Wj to 80. Not us. Were still 8(5 proof Kentucky Bourbon at its finest. Which means more proof, more value, longer lasting flavor. So read your label. Then read ours. And let the numbers speak fur themselves. ANCIENT AGE Still 86 proof. '74, '75, '76, '78.. 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