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Show 2 THE GREEN SHEET C- -' Monday, December 22, 1986 Skyline Takes Honors In Granite Swimming Meet ! EAST MILLCREEK. Skyline high captured both the boys and girls in Granite District swimming action held Wednesday and Thursday. In girls action, the Eagles finished up with 321 points compared to second place Cyprus 230. Cottonwood was third with 209. In boys 5 Skylines margin was with Cyprus again second. Granger was a close third with 185 points. In Wednesdays girls' slate, Cottonwood opened by taking the 200 medley relay in 2:01.42 with Skyline second and Cyprus third. In individual action, Becky Hebert gave Skyline itr first victory by taking the 200 free in 1:59.79 with Julie Collard, Granger, second; Trisha Matz, Cyprus, third; andAdelaCan-brer- a and Randi Obromowitz, Skyline, fourth and fifth. In the 200 I.M., Stacey Weidauer, Taylorsville, won out with a time of 1:19.93, beating Nikki Gillette, Skyline; Jill Chytraus, Cottonwood; Dianna Sherwood and Deanna Barnes, Skyline. Penny Heaton of Olympus won the 50 free with a time of 25.84 as Amy Leeper of Skyline was second, Caroline Philpot and Holly Byers of Cyprus third and fourth and Sue Benner Skyline fifth. The diving competition was taken by Marilyn Messick of Olympus with Jennifer Booth of Cyprus second and Rebecca of Cottonwood third. Moving over to Thursdays slate for the ladies, Stacey Wiedauer of Taylorsville took the 100 fly in 102.3 followed by Leeper and Gillette of Skyline, Leslie Burke of Cyprus and Becky Cable of Skyline. The 100 free saw first go to Olympus Peggy Heaton in 44.79 while Matz, Cyprus, was second; Collard, Granger, third; Tina Scribner, Cottonwood, fourth; and Adela Cabrera, Skyline, fifth. In the 500 free, Becky Herbert of Skyline was first in 5:24.04 followed by teammates Sherwood and Abramowitz, Shelly Anderson and Lisa Willis of Cottonwood. Becky Cable of Skyline took the IOC back with a time of 1:04.41 with Holly Byers and Sami Katsuragawa, Cyprus, second and third; Diana Barnes, Skyline, fourth; Kim Sargent, Cottonwood, fifth. The 100 breast was won by Cyprus Leslie Burke in 1:11.23 with Jill Chytraus, Cottonwood, second; Traci Richards, Cyprus, third; Lys Chard, Olympus, fourth; and Renee Focht, Kearns, fifth. Skyline won the 400 free relay in 3:51.63 with Cyprus second and Cottonwood third. j . Wednesdays boys action saw Skyline open with a win in the medly relay in a time of 1:45.64. Olympus was second and Cottonwood third. Brett Provost of Taylorsville won com-petito259-19- SNsI& FLOORED . . . Mountain View player falls to the floor while trying to cut around Murray's Doug Chapman (35). Murray finished up the pre- - moritorium slate with a night. at home on Thursday 64-5- 8 Spartans Trip Mustangs MURRAY. After winning their two games by two and one point last margins, Murrays Spartans had somewhat of a breather here Thursday night, as they defeated Mountain Crest The win, which evened their in record at gives the Murray cagers an opportunity to start Region play in January with a winning record, as they will play at Granger Tuesday, Dec. 30, at 7:30 and then Taylorsville the following-Friday, Jan. 2. on their home floor. Coach Craig Hammers team 16-1- 0 64-5- 3 jumped out to an eight point lead in the first quarter with Junior eager Peter Young scoring 9 of his game high 18 points and Murray led at the end of the period. Mountain Crest, led by the sharp shooting of Lee Brown, who led his team with 22 points, narrowed the edge at the half to and his team then caught the Spartans at the beginning of the second half at 31, but Murray pulled ahead again to lead at the end of the third In the fourth quarter the Spartans protected their lead thanks to a pair pre-leagu- e 31-2- 6 45-4- 1 , of baskets by Danny Devenport at crucial stages and by the shooting of Cheyenne Winget, who had 9 of his 13 points during the quarter. Mountain Crest rallied several times but could never pull closer than 2 with Murray leading most of the time by 5 or 6. One of the pleasing aspects of the victory, according to Coach Hammer, was that 9 of the 11 players in uniform got into the game and each of the nine scored. Hammer also noted that in the six games his team has played there has been a different Continued on page 4 Darts Dominate Bulldogs LAKE. Judge Memorial, recognizing they were playing one of the better teams in the state, tried to slow down the Davis Darts here Friday night with a controlled tempo game and for a while it worked, but ) Judge, hampered by- the loss of Cameron Kessey and having to play ; freshmen, just could not get the job ; accomplished and Davis won SALT . ' - 71-5- Davis, which has beaten powerhouse teams v . - Ben Lomond and Brighton this season, led by 15 to 8 at the quarter and by They jumped off to a 33-2- 1 the third at the half. lead in 20 point quarter before the Bulldogs, led by Rick Solvason and Micah Peters closed to within eight with two minutes left in the quarter. Judge, however, ran out of power in the fourth quarter and at one time had three freshmen on the court, an experience Coach Jim Yercovich says has not happened to him in the 20 years he has been at Judge. One of the freshmen. Chris Jones, played more than half the game, and Yercovich mentioned that the last time he had a freshman play that much was when Richard Holmes, now playing for Rice University, was a freshman at Judge. Yercovich had some positive things to say about the loss and was very pleased with the play of Rick Solvason who held Davis Pearson, their leading scorer in check, and also had a game high 22 points and five recoveries. Micah Peters also had a good game, shooting 8x11 from the field for a total of 17 points. As a team Judge shot just 40 percent and more disappointing, hit only 3 for 11 from the free throw line. Judge will play its last game on Friday, Jan. 2 at Ben Lomond and w'ill open their region season with a game Friday Jan. 9 . ' I chard of Cyprus. Shaelling of Granger, however, was first in the 100 free in 51.04 followed by Krueger, Skyline, second; Underwood, Cyprus, third; Sorensen, Cottonwod, fourth; Allen Ormsby, Taylorsville, fifth. Skylines Aaron Baar won the 500 free with a time of 5:06.83. Second went to Blanchard, Clkypurs, third to Mike Binns, Granger; fourth to Craig Jensen, Granger, and fifth to Travis Thomas, Cyprus. David Barnes gave Skyline another first in the 100 back with a time of 58.41. He was followed by David Ormsby, Taylorsville; Lee Chamberlain, Olympus; Keith Ayers, Granger; and Kevin Buchan, the 200 free in 1:50.46 followed by Troy Blanchard, Cyprus; Aaron Skyline; Craig Jensen, Ormsby, Baar, Granger; and Alan Taylosville. The 200 I.M. was taken by Cyprus Jason Hayes in 1:59.82. Second went to David Barnes, Skyline; third to Chad Blanchard, Cyprus; fourth to Mark Anderson, Skyline; and fifth to Keith Ayers, Granger. Brad Sorensen from Cottonwood was the champion in the 50 free event with a time of 22.57. He was chased by Stewart Olsen of Olympus, Chris Krueger of Skyline, Greg Underwood of Cyprus and Pat Aten-ciof Granger. Cottonw'ood also won the diving with Kort Borg first, Mike Tuckfield of Olympus second and Jim Gubler third. In Thursdays slate. Provost of Taylorsville got his second first in the 100 fly in the time of 53.89 with second going to Mike Shaelling of Granger, third to Lee Chamberlain of Olympus, fourth of Mark Anderson of Skyline and fifth to Chad Blan o Skyline. The 100 breast was won in a time of 1:04.94 by Cyprus Jason Hayes with second going to Granites Dave Nielson, third to Skylines Craig Teel, fourth to Stewart Olsen, and fifth to Cottonwoods Kurt Ogden. Cyprus won the 400 free relay with a 3:26.94 mark. Taylorsville was second and Granger third. Warriors Drop Two Decisions field goals and one Taylorsville had to foul and East had 14 foul pitches in the period. The game was close to that point at the and, in fact, was tied at three-pointe- TAYLORSVILLE. Playing its second game in three days may have taken its toll on Taylorsvilles basketball crew, which followed a home loss to a solid View-motough team Wednesday by dropping a decision at East Friday. The two losses dropped the Warthus far, but riors record to 16-1- 6 61-5- 8 end of the first period. East outscored Taylorsville 16-- in the seat the cond to lead by seven, midway point, but in third quarter the Warriors outscored East The kids kept fighting back, noted Leatherwood. They wouldnt let them (East) get away from us. Jason Knight led Taylorsville scoring with 18 points, going 2x2 from three-poiranger, and added five rebounds. Lindsay Familar and Todd Hailstone each added 12, Familar picking up eight asists, and Hailstone nine rebounds. Also playing well were junior center Jay Gleason who had five points and four rebounds; Doug Harmon, coming off an injury, with eight boards; Duane Lee with five points and five assists; and Leo Howell with six rebounds. Rebounding was another key in 9 69-5- 8 32-2- 3 17-1- Taylorsville coach Dan Leather-woo- d remains optimistic. He stated that his team is doing some things better and getting closer, making the kind of progress coaches look e for in play. Taylorsville will not play again until Friday, Jan. 2 when they visit cross-rive- r rival Murray for a 7:30 p.m. match. League play for the Warriors starts at Granger on Tuesday, Jan. 6. pre-leagu- East 69, Taylorsville nt 58 The difference in this contest was the free throw shooting. The Leopards finished up at 37x45 from the charity stripe, while Taylorsville was 13x21. The Warriors outscored East by 13 points from the field, but were outscored from the line by 24. Free throws help fthe Leopards pull away in the1" late going. Taylorsville trailed , by just four points, heading into the final quarter of action, but East quickly notched nine points off four two point r. the contest, East beating Taylorsville on 38-3- 3 the boards. 58 jViejnont6l, Taylorsville .4 Taylorsville was clinging to a two point edge with under two minutes to 46-4- play, but Viewmont sank a on page 4 three-Continu- Oldsmobile V ENJOY GET MORE FOR LESS pre-seaso- n TAX SAVINGS BEFORE 10003?QD ITS AnyXar CffiD MOW! TOO LATE! NINETY-EIGH- T CALAIS SEDAN $ I 199 CUTLASS CIERA SEDAN OO s219??x APX SPECIAL FACTORY MSRP 12,515 SALE PRICE 11,377 RECENCY DELTA 88 SEDAN $ 239 SEDAN s339??x OO APX SUPPLY LASTS CARS-WHIL- E MSRP 13,407 SALE PRICE MSRP 16,391 SALE PRICE 14,446 11,600 MSRP 20,038 SALE PRICE 17,490 SAVE UP TO 5,000.00 ON TORONADOS IN STOCK. ONLY 3 LEFT! SUPPLIES LIMITED. ALL CARS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE! 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