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Show 7 Thursday, Dec. THE GREEN SHEET 8, 1988 SPORTS Hot Shooting (60) Cougars Down MHS MURRAY. Key baskets and a hot streak at the free throw line helped Kearns overcome late surge by a determined crew of Murray Spartans here Friday 69-6- 0. Kearns will be at home for the first time this season tomorrow (Friday) when it entertains West Jordan at 7:30 p.m. Brighton will then pay a call on the following Tuesday, also at 7:30, to conclude play. pre-leag- Murray, meanwhile, will host Olympus today (Thursday) and Mountain Crest on Tuesday, both games set for 7:30 p.m. match Fridays Keams-Murra- y was close most of the way, the edge Cougars owning just a after the first period. The Spartans stayed on the Cougars 18-1- 7 heels through the second quarter and trailed by only three, at the midway point. Kearns was on the verge of breaking the game open in the third period, however, moving out to a margin. But Murray began to rebound, cutting the by the advantage to five, end of the quarter. Early in the final stanza, Murray pulled even and then went ahead briefly before Kearns, dropping in some big buckets and going 6x8 at the line, took the lead back. For the game, Kearns was 16x24 at the foul line and shot 60 percent from the field, 22x37. Bryan Veazie lead a balanced Cougar attack, scoring 16 points, 35-3- 52-4- followed by Tony Bockweg with Continued on page 9 Bulldogs Down Ogden To Remain Undefeated HEAD TO HEAD.. . Murrays Kearns defender In Friday night high David Madsen (34) is countered by school action. The contest, played at Murray, was close all the way, Kearns regaining the lead early in the nal period and going on to post its first victory of the 1988 season fi- 69-6- 2. Lancers Creep Past Woods Cross On Road Memorial to travel Judge Saturday where the Bulldogs are unbeaten. League play will begin GRANGER. Granger grabbed its second road win Tuesday in a battle over sharpshooting Woods Cross, That came on the heels of a 9 overtime loss to West on Friday and evened the Lancer record at The Lancers will host a big strong Mountain Crest team at 7:30 tonight (Thursday) and will hard-foug- ht Dec. 16 67-6- 2. at Taylorsville. Tuesdays game was a study in contrats as the smaller Woods Cross team used its outside shooting ability while the bigger Lancers went for the inside buckets. Woods Cross connected 71-6- 2-- 2. on seven while three-pointe- rs 61-5- Taylorsville was in control most of the way, leading 16-1- 2 at the end of first quarter and by 14, 34-2at the half, according to Coach Leatherwood. Dixie got as close as five or six points in the third quarter, which ended with the The final Warriors ahead 48-3margin ended up as eight points, 0, 8, 7. 8. (Thursday) then travel to Murray on Tuesday, both games slated for 7:30 p.m. starts. 64-5- Taylorsville 87, Viewmont 67 Though pleased with the fact his crew scored points in quarter in route to every Tuesdays win, what really tickled Taylorsville Coach Dan Leather-woowas the fact he had five players with five or more assists. Jeff Leatherwood had nine assists to go with his 19 points and Tyler Dow eight, added to his 22 points. Shane Lyon, Ryan Coates and Bill VanRy dished off five times each. Blaine Bambrough notched 12 points and 10 rebounds and 20-pl- d Coates 10 points. Taylorsville opened by running first quarter a 21-1- 3 up advantage. Both teams hit for 20 points in the second period, which ended with the Warriors on top 41-3- Jeff Leatherwood led Taylorsvilles scoring with 18 points, while Blaine Bambrough added 17. Bambrough also netted nine rebounds as the Warriors ended edge on the up with a boards. Taylorsville went 26x30 at the foul line compared to Dixies 14x26. 29-1- 8 Pine View pressed and pressed hard for all 32 minutes on Saturday night, yet Taylorsville ended up just 6x11 at the free throw line, while Pine View went 20x26. Pine View also led in three-poishots with seven, Taylorsville finishing with just one. The Warriors, however led in every other category, including Taylorsville really began to pull in the third quarter, to outscoring the Vikings head into the final period up The fourth quarter was almost a carbon copy of the third, as the Warriors continued to find the open man and the open man continued to find the basket. from "We shot 25x39 or 64 or 7x9, range, 87, line from outside the three-poiand 16x18, 89 from the foul line, reported Coach Leather-woo'When you shoot like that, youre going to win games." St. George Road Trip 22-1- 2 63-6- two-poi- nt d. In Friday nights win over Dixie, 2-- 3 9. game won with the two seconds left as Grangers Dave Ryan missed the first of two free throws with his team down by two points. Ryan deliberately missed the second shot and Mike Maynard took the rebound off the rim and put it back through the hoop to send the game into over time. In the overtime with the score tied and the fateful two seconds again showing on the clock, Granger rebounded a missed West shot and a foul was called, sending Ryan to the stripe. Maynard was shoved at the line and players from both teams came onto the floor. According to Granger Coach Steve Paur, a technical foul was called on one of the Granger players, but a replay of game film showed that particular player had never left the bench. After the melee and arguments, the free throws by Granger were West 71, Granger 69 (OT) missed and the technical free throws by West were both made, Two seconds seemed to be the accounting for the final score. The game was won at the free magic number at the West high gym Friday as Granger scored an throw line where Granger shot a unbelievable basket with two dismal 6x17 while West hit on seconds left in regulation to tie 21x30. Even worse, Granger made the game at 62 and then with two only 1x5 free throws during the seconds left in overtime West overtime period. missed a winning shot and Maynard had 17 points and 15 with Jeff Hudson Grangers Dave Ryan was fouled. rebounds But missed free throws plus a scoring 12 and Ryan coming questionable technical foul gave through with 14. the homestanding West team an Coach Paur stated, 'We have to opportunity to win and they start hitting our free throws to cashed in on the two free throws win. Other than that factor our to do so. kids have played with great West led all the way, having a intensity and we played a good 2 lead at the half, a man defense all through the game lead at the end of the third and should have won it". quarter and it seemed it had the 34-2- 4. three-pointer- s. 50-4- 6 37-3- nt rebounding, owning a healthy advantage, and going 24x34 from the field. 30-1- 9 at the end Taylorsville led of the first quarter, but early foul trouble began to catch up with the Warriors and, by the halfway mark, Pine View held a 19-1- 7 away 36-3- 4 65-6- 2 Taylorsville Rips Vikes, Splits In St. George TAYLORSVILLE. After gaining a split in its trip doim south over the weekend, beating Dixie 64-5- 6 and falling to Pine View Taylorsville returned to friendly to batter confines Tuesday visiting Viewmont 87-6The Warriors host Orem today Granger had but three, but Mike Maynard connected for 14 points as the Lancers worked the ball inside. The game was close throughout at with Granger trailpqg the half. Coach Steve Paur called zone which confused the for a Wildcats and the Lancers edged ahead in the third period. The game went down to the wire with with just Granger leading seconds left. Tyler Wilder calmly sank a pair of charity shots to account for the final margin. Paur was pleased with the improvement in free throw shooting where the Lancers have struggled. Tuesdfay the came through with 12x16 and won the Paul battle of the boards Stokes, Wilder and Tim Allen hit Maynard had 11 boards to go with his 14 points. Darren Birch had 11 points. 32-3- 0 lead. In a see-sasecond half, which saw neither team managed better than a four-poilead, Taylorsville tied the score 44-4- 4 at the end of three quarters. A three-poin- t shot and two free throws helped Pine View earn the final margin with five seconds left. A Taylorsville three-poishot to tie missed at the buzzer. Tyler Dow went 10x12 from the field and ended up with 25 points to lead Taylorsville, adding nine rebounds. Ryan Coates added 10 points. w nt nt Bruins Post Two Wins SALT LAKE. The Salt Lake mark CEUs lead was cut to five, Bruins 55-5College The started getting exploded for 62 points in the game h second half to beat the College of until again Eastern Utah 102-9- 2 last Friday. Washington and Barnes took The Bruins were fueled by some control. Running the high output excellent three-poishooting offense to a comeback they both from Anthony January. He ended played With tough defense. Barnes the night with 26 points and four minutes remaining three-pointein the second half. blocked a shot to feed Washington Issey Washington added 24 points for the Bruins first tie of the ball Love brought the as he ran the offense and used his game, 65-6quickness for penetrating and crowd to their feet getting two dunks over the CEU center. This breaking down the CEU defense. The Bruins did not have all was the straw that broke the bright spots though. By the end of camels back and led the Bruins the first half the CEU Eagles had on to win. The Bruins also won Saturday moved into a 53-4- 0 lead. The Bruins were leaving the back door night 126-10- 3 against Colorado open most of the game, Coach Northwestern Community ColDave Osborne said. CEU got lege. Love was the high scorer center Melvin Love in foul trouble early and he had to leave at the 17:01 mark. That left CEUs Baldwin open in the middle to score and rebound. Community SALT LAKE. Judge Memorial won its third straight game here Friday night defeating Ogden 84-7- 2 in a run and gun battle that gave Judge a three game scoring average of 82 points. The win was the second of the week for Judge which also defeated Pleasant Grove Wednesday, 79-6Judge has a busy week coming up, playing host to Hillcrest tomorrow (Friday) and to Granger on Saturday. The Bulldogs cross the valley to play Cyprus Tuesday. All games are at 7:30. Fridays game saw the quick Ogden team jump out to a 14-- 5 lead in the first quarter but Chris Jones scored seven straight points for Judge to bring the Bulldogs within 16-1- 2 at the end of the 0. helter-skelteris- nt rs 5. quarter. In the second quarter Judges 59 point guard, Jimmy Soto, who had been held to three points in the first quarter, lit up the scoreboard with 16 and Judge went into the intermission ahead Nine of Sotos points during the period came on three-poibaskets. The third quarter saw Judge increase its lead spurred on by substitutes Tim Green and Matt Kitterer.' Green the gave Jones some rest and did a tremendous job of "dogging" the Ogden point guard, while Kitterer gave the Tlogs some added height and scored six points as Judge moved to a 38-3- nt d 63-5- 4 edge. With little more than six minutes to go in the game, Judge went into its spread offense. It looked as though it might have been a mistake as Ogden cut the lead to before Judge righted its play and made a number of easy baskets. Soto wound up with 36 points for the evening and had an amazing 12 rebounds. He hit 4x6 three-poiattempts, while Jones, playing sparingly, came through with 19 points, nine rebounds and six assists. Nathan Semerad had eight points and nine rebounds. The substitutes Green and Kitterer scored well, with Green having six points and five rebounds and Kitterer had 11 points and 10 rebounds. 71-6- 6 nt Judge 79, Pleasant Grove 69 North Carolina made the four corner offense famous under Coach Dean Smith but usually ran it for just three or four minutes at the end of a game. Judge tried something different in its win over Pleasant Grove going into the spread offense with 5:40 left in the second quarter. Coach Jim Yerkovich noted that his team was called with a record number of fouls, 33, and that he felt that it was best to go into the spread to protect his players. As it was four Judge players, Webster, Walsh, Kitterer and Semerad all fouled out and at the end of the game three other Judge players had three fouls. Judge led throughout the game 1988 BUSINESS SLCC tried to fight back with a zone trap but to no avail. The Eagles broke it most of the night with ease. With about a minute and a half remaining the Bruins went on an run. Matt Barnes hooked up with Love for two alley oop dunks. This proved to be the spark the Bruins needed. The second half started like the first half with CEU getting a back door dunk. But Love took control of the game by cleaning the glass with authority and giving CEU no second chances. January helped out scoring eight points in less than two minutes. By the 18:13 8-- y MINI SPAS Purchase of SALE LIST '1,196 Tubs factory 42"x72" . 4 jet SyStem with PRICE 1 E BLOSUH CPM hp pump. L 5049 So. State 262-762- 2 0 Javier Armenta, owner La comida suprema! Thats what youll always find at the Guadalajara Grill. This outstanding Mexican restaurant features all of the traditional favorites cooked in the authentic manner. Hearty combination dinners are available and your appetite is the only thing that will stand in your way ! Select from great tasting main dishes such as fajitas, enchiladas, tacos and chile relleno. Youll also want to try some nachos (a delicious plate of melted cheese and peppers eaten with the tortilla). ever-popul- ar with the biggest margin being 19 points and the final margin was as close as Pleasant 10-poi- Grove came. Yerkovich was especially pleased with the victory, the second straight over a Utah County team, a feat which he said was a mighty tough one to accomplish in Utah County gyms. Jones had an exceptional game for the Bulldogs as he scored 27 points but most noteworthy was the fact that he hauled down 23 rebounds, had six assists and seven recoveries. The 23 rebounds were especially important as Judges big men were in foul trouble throughout the game. Soto had 29 points with 13x16 from the free throw line and was 8x15 from the field plus handing out seven assists. Rams Rip Cyprus Club MAGNA. Fridays trip to Highland went well for a half, so far as Cyprus basketball team was concerned, then the Rams tactics finally 'wore the Pirates down, preciptating an in victory Highland e Tomorrow play. (Friday) and Saturday will find the Pirates engaged in the annual Box Elder Tournament. Cyprus will open play tomorrow at 8:45 p.m. against host Box Elder. On the following Tuesday, Cyprus will visit always tough Judge at two-platoo- n 83-5- 9 pre-leagu- 7:30. "It was a good game for a half, or even three quarters," Cyprus coach Mark Wilson said of Fridays match at Highland, "then we just ran out of gas. Highland would substitute its starting five with five fresh players and just kept the pressure on us." Wilson acknowledged his teams conditioning and timing are not at league season form yet, but added those are qualities that will come with time and experience. "We just need some seasoning," he explained. The smallish, but hardworking Pirates shadowed the Rams closely through the first half of at the end of play, trailing the first quarter. They finished even a little closer at the end of the second period, Highland began to pull away in the third quarter, but Cyprus was still within range, going into the final period down by 10, But the Rams outscored the tinng in the stretch run. Pirates Indicative of Cyprus fatigue factor, the Pirates shot just 31 from the field, 15x48. According to Wilson, they were decent from the line 28x38, 74, but got beaten on the boards Cyprus turned the ball over 20 times against the hard pressing Rams. Chris Matagis 16 points topped Cyprus sconng chart, while right behind was Brad Rammell with 15. 21-1- 7 36-3- 57-4- 26-1- 2 38-2- REVIEW GUADALAJARA GRILL How about that fantastic guacamole dip before the main course? Whatever you decide on, you can be assured that you are getting some of the finest Mexican food anywhere. Dont worry about the hot sauce . . . its served on the side and you season your food to your own taste! The Guadalajara Grill & Club is located at 175 West 200 South in Salt The 15,000 Lake City, phone square foot facility features a full menu including the new Mexican Flambe Dishes AND a sirolling Mariachi Band. Theyre open for lunch and dinner and offer takeout at all times as well as office deliveries for lunch. In the club youll find live entertainment and dancing nightly. Their brand new facility in West Valley City is opening December 1st and will feature a fine menu and great service. Its located at 4247 W. 3500 South, phone 964-055- 359-888- Make plans now to stop in at either of the Guadalajara Grill locations and enjoy a REAL Mexican dinner. The editors of this 1988 Business Review suggest that youll soon become a regular customer! |