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Show Competition, recreation and fitness Review Wednesday May 4, 1988 Laytom sits After six rounds of Region 1 baseball, with one round rained out, Layton sits atop the pack with 4-- 1 record. The Lancers came by that mark via some timely hits and some even more timely defense against Roy on Friday. Layton beat the Royals while Clearfield lost 3 to Bon2-- 1, 6-- neville. Meanwhile in Region 4, Davis came from behind to down Highland In Tuesdays round of games, Clearfields Lance Manning pitched the first shutout in five years at Clearfield as the Falcons beat Roy In other Tuesday action. Lay-to- n thrashed Box Elder 17-- 4 in Brigham City and Davis dropped a 0 heartbreaker to East. when Steve Wilmoth smacked an RBI single, scoring Justin Mansfield. Later in the seventh, Roy had runners on first and third with one out. But Roy hit a sharp grounder to B.J. Lovell, who tagged the runner going to second and then fired to first base to complete the double play and nullify what could have been the tying run for Roy crossing the plate. $ t ( J-- Layton 2, Roy 1 At Layton, the Royals lashed put 12 hits against Laytons Sanh Johnson, but the Lancers came up with timely defense to keep the Royals from scoring until the final inning. .The Lancers got a run in the first when Johnson reached first base and then Troy Murray and Larry Cantarella slapped back to ack singles to bring Johnson home. Cantarellas RBI single came with one out. Layton got what proved to be the winning run in the third when B.J. Lovell got on base on an error and the Lancers got n singles again. This moved Lovell around and Murray got the RBI. Roy got its run in the seventh I back-to-ba- ck time-Johnso- Bonneville 6, Clearfield 3 At Clearfield, the Falcons got the early lead 1 after four innings, but a fifth inning surge by Bonneville in the fifth spurred the Lakers past the Falcons to record the win. Bonneville scored three runs in the fifth and then added two more insurance runs in the seventh to make the final score. Meanwhile, Clearfield had trouble offensively. We just couldnt get the hits when we needed them, said Clearfield coach Ray Meibos. The Falcons had runners in scoring position several times V 3-- the throughout couldnt get them in. game, but We even had two runners on base with one out in the last inning and couldnt score, Miebos said. Despite the loss, the Falcons outhit the Lakers. We outhit them. We have outhit everyone weve played during league this year. Now, we just need to get the defense to come through a little better, Meibos said. See Baseball, page 2B 5 - X 4 ( Staff photo by Bruce Bennett Laytons Larry Cantarella dives after Roy baserunner Danny McFarland in Laytons narrow 2 - 1 win over the Royals. Roy nets big region win Davis thumps Highland, Clearfield ties Lakers Roy came up with an impressive win over Layton, while Clearfield tied Bonneville and Davis thumped Highland in region soccer action Friday. Meanwhile in Tuesdays round of games, the Falcons beat the Royals, Davis shut out East and Layton beat Box Elder. Roy 5, Layton 0 At Roy, the Royals put together an impressive offensive display while also cutting out defensive mistakes to stop Layton The Royals had 27 shots on goal while recording the shutout. I couldnt be more happy with the team than I am, at this point of the season, coach Scott Snel-so- n 5-- 0. said. We wanted to start to peak to 300-met- er hurdles.' Davis Chris Anderson finished second to Maes in both events. Meanwhile in the girls division, Linda Zaugg posted her double wins in the same two get ready for state, and thats what were doing. We play better every game, and the most exciting thing for me is theyre starting to understand what were trying to do. The way weve lost games is through defensive errors. But now were stopping the defensive errors and controlling the ball on offense better, Snelson said. The Royals scored four goals in the first 20 minutes of the game and kept that lead for a 0 halftime advantage. , events. She completed the hurdles in a time of 15.79 and intermediates won the at 47.57. Davis Sean Smith won the discuss with throw of 163-- 7 and Laytons Wes Nance won the high jump with a leap of Orem won the boys team competition y'ith 77 points, followed by Davis with 55, Layton was fourth with 40 and Roy was 1th with 15 points. In the girls division, Layton finished fifth with 33 points. er 300-met- er . 6-- 6. 4-- Nathan Karras scored two goals for Roy, while Eric Man-- v ning, Adam Richards and Mark Endo had one each. Tyler Jason Henley, Woodbury, Sean Halley and Lance Wadkinds picked up assists for the Royals. Our team is finally starting to come along with aggressive defense and controlled offense, said Roy Coach Scott Snelson. Goalie Steve Scott got the shutout, and Scott Taylor and Jeff Manning turned in solid defensive performances as the Royals in league play. improved to obviLayton dropped to ously missing the services of forward Don Cooper, who is out for the season with a broken leg. -1 2-- 4, Clearfield 1, Bonneville 1 At Washington Terrace, Clearfields Mark Tureson scored the Falcons only goal with a minute left in the game as the two teams battled to a tie. The two teams battled to a scoreless tie in the first 40 minutes. In the second period Bonneville scored when they sent a rebounded shot back into the net. The Lakers then held off Clearfields charge until late in the game when Tureson scored with an assist off a comer kick. The Falcons managed the tie despite being undermanned because a player had received a red card earlier in the contest Bonneville coach Dan Slaugh said he felt his team was snake-bi- t, especially when the Falcons were playing a man short part of the game. in Clearfield dropped to -1 league play. Davis 9, Highland 0 At Kaysville, the Darts scored early, scored in the middle and scored late as they cleared their bench enroute to a 0 shellacking of Highland. Highland just couldnt find a way to keep the Darts from scor9-- ing. Davis rolled up a 0 halftime advantage on two goals by Blake Wilcox, followed by one each from Rob Jacobson and Brian Kynaston. In the second half, Brigham Redd scored first, followed by goals from Sam Adams, Arkou-da- s, Mike Wooley, and Aaron Rassmussen. The Darts also had a bevy of assists from Jacobson, Arkoudas, Kynaston, Eric Emmins, Jake Davis and Justin Morris. 4-- See Soccer, page 23 Couple cuts running time 1 Editors note: With summer and its road race season fast ap- BYU Invitational Saturday's results for the boys In 75th proaching, many runners will be hitting the pavement to prepare themselves to compete in their favorite races 5K, 10K, or marathon. Through a series of articles, the Lakeside Review is following Janet and Jeff Larsen through a training program that begins with a fitness test administered by HuNorths new mana Hospital-Davi-s It culmicenter. fitness testing - Fat fighter countdown - - - - i t - - Staff Photo by Robert Regan Roys Brandon Rees bends a pole on his way to a finish in the pole vault. third-pla- ce fitness center has access to other qualified professionals who can help people manage stress, stop smoking and improve their diet or their exercise routine. Tom Fairbank and Dave New-bolboth having earned doctorates in clinical psychology, have an office in a medical office building near the hospital and can be consulted for stress management. The hospital also has a dietician, Jean Weinert, who teaches an eight-wee- k program to help with developing a better diet. The diet classes are $100 and available to groups of 5 peod, half-marath- - See Track, page 2B Tp. . 100-met- er the J" Ns A cold, constant wind Saturday hindered times and athletes at the 75th annual Brigham Young University Invitational Track and Field Meet at Clarence Robinson Stadium in Provo. Still, Laytons Pat Maes and Clearfields Linda Zaugg were able to come away with double wins despite the poor weather conditions. Maes clocked 14.86 in the high hurdles and followed that with a 39.33 showing in the intermediate annual Brigham Young University Invitational at Clarence Robison Stadium: 1. Tyler Anderson (Orem), 100 meters 10 94, 2. Kenneth Salahuddin (Tooele), 11 09; 3. Mike Cutler (Bountiful), II 26, 4. Rich Blanc (Carbon), 11 27; 5. Chris Mclnnls (Bingham), 11 31 6. Ctlnl Barnes (Highland), 1132 1. Tyler Anderson (Orem), 200 meters 21 65, 2. Clint Barnes (Highland), 22 43, 3 Chris 22 52, 4 Rich Blanc (Carbon), Barkley (Alta), 22 61. 5. Bart Jorgensen (American Fork), 22 66, 6. Paul Morgan (Springville), 22 84 1. Mike Cutler (Bountiful), 400 meters 4930 2 Chris Strohn (Highland), 50 23, 3 Scott Hill (Weber), 50 99, 4 Nathan Davies (Orem), 51 10, 5 Craig Ritchie (Hillcrest), 51.18, 6. Paul Morgan (Springville), 51 35. 1. Dave Spence (Tlmpvlew), 800 meters 1 54 14, 2 Mathew Godfrey (Weber), 1 57 65, 3. Kurt Kotler (Mountain Crest), 1 59 09, 4 Mark DePriest (Davis), 2 00 65, 5 Chris Burton (Cottonwood), 2 01 05, 6. Brandon Kerr (Mountain View), 2 01 24 1. Guv Perry (Weber), 1,600 meters 4 26 20, 2. Steve Sumsion (Hillcrest), 4 26 63, 3. Kelly Dodge (Carson City, Nev ), 4 28 52, 4. Mark Ellison (Judge Memorial), 4 28 78, 5. Jason Brown (Provo), 4 28 8 4, 6. Brandon (Box Elder), 4 30 29. 1. Rvan Anderson (Vlew-mon- t), 3,200 meters 943 11; 2 Kregg Chldester (Alta), 9 45 10, 3. Jason Brown (Provo), 9 52 12, 4. Chad Bybee (Mountain View), 9 53 06, 5. Travis Anderson (Cedar City), 9 53 06, 6. Dave Larsen (Brighton), 9 54 28 1 Pat Maes (Lay-Ion- ), high hurdles 14 86, 2 Chris Anderson (Davis), 14 95, 3. 15 25, 4 Mike Walker Bruce Stevens (Davis), (Hillcrest), 15 41,5 Steve Pierce (Bonneville), 15 42, 6 Chris Strickland (South), 15 49. 1 Pat intermediate hurdles Maes (Layton), 39 33, 2 Chris Anderson (DaNev ), Reid 3. City, (Carson 39 Jim 51, vis), 40 33, 4. Chris Strickland (South), 40 66, 5 Rob Murphy (Brighton), 4125, 6. Shawn Moser (Orem), 41.72 f . hinders meet PROVO r yC' f 100-met- 4 V'. .Wind -- 0' - i 5-- 7. 2-- 0. in baseball 1 pretty atop Region with a chuckle. The schedule the Larsens agreed to with Anderson was two days a week of distance running (30-4- 0 minutes) and one day a week of organized wind sprints to build strength. With the race coming up this both runners have noticed week, nates six weeks later when the an improvement couple will compete in the Fat Janet was running three miles the on by Fighter 5K race, put in about 30 minutes before she hospital and the Lakeside Review. started this schedule. Now she A week later, alter the informahas cut her time to 26 minutes tion from all of the tests was with consistency. compiled and analyzed with the She also has a new best of aid of a computer program, the around 24 minutes. couple sat down with fitness cenJeff, despite an injury that sideter director Jim Anderson and lined him for the entire fourth worked up a comprehensive exer- week the training schedule, alof cise schedule. so cut time off. The schedule was centered Jeff was running three miles in an activity around running 29 minutes and is now about Janet has been involved in for down to 5 minutes with conthree or four years. Jim took up the sport about a year ago after sistency. In addition to Anderson, the years of trying to avoid it, he says 24-2- 10-1- ple. Exercise classes will also be taught. They are for a minimum of five people and they will help people learn to exercise more effectively and how to improve their workouts. Cost for four weeks of classes, two classes per week, is $40. Sandie Longo is available to help those who want to quit smoking. There will be a fee associated with each of the extra programs. |