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Show The English Language Center of Cache Valley, Inc English as a second language (ESL) Classes Registration: Sept. 22 & 23 (10:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.) Classes start Sept. 26 & 27 (10 week sessions) 106 East 1120 North in Logan Morning and Evening Classes Classes Available / Tuition + Books • Beginning: $25 • Levels 1-4: $25 • Advanced: $40 • Advanced English Grammar: $40 Questions? Call (435) 750-6534 or www.elc-cv.com Quik Payday Pays More. • CLUB SOCCR From page 8 ground and the frame of the goal. The ball fell to Kelly who punched home his first goal of the year with a flying side volley. In the second half, Josh Mills scored in the 65th minute. Left alone at the top of the penalty area, Mills ripped a shot high into the net. The Aggies got their seventh of the night when Danny Spillman capitalized on a scramble in the Badger box. In the midst of the confusion, Spillman volleyed in his first goal of the year. The University of Utah brought a similar challenge since most of the Utah State team had not seen the Utes play because the club didn't put a team together the last few years. Potter scored twice in the first half while Christensen added a third late in the second to give the Aggies their second win in as many games. USU opened the scoring in the 24th minute after a scramble in the Utah penalty box. Christensen ended up with the ball and laid a centering pass to Potter who hit a blast beyond the Utah goalkeeper's reach. Kenny Reid would later get around his mark and center the ball to Potter. After a moment of hesitation, Potter lightly put in his second goal of the afternoon. "The first half [against Utah] was the best soccer we've played all year," Lamara said. "We possessed the ball, we controlled it — that was the objective of the game." Throughout the second half, Aggie goalkeeper Robby Nelson made several saves to keep the Utes off the board. "Robby's solid," Lamara said of the USU goalie. "The thing I really like is that he's starting to hang onto the ball." Lamara explained Nelson had a tendency before to simply push the ball away when making saves, but now he's catching it and holding onto it. "That's what we need," Lamara said. "We don't need any rebound goals." In the 73rd minute, Utah State got their final goal on the day. Christensen beat the Utah offside trap and curled his shot around the oncoming Tyler Lorson/tmlarson&c.usu.edu AGGIE COLBY JONES slides the ball away from a Ute player during Saturday's game at Tower Field. goalie. In explaining his goal, Christensen brought some principles from the classroom. "Simple physics," Christensen said of his shot. "I put a little bit of spin on the ball and it curved around the goalie and into the side netting." The Aggies closed out the weekend and their home schedule with a loss given by the Rams. In addition to the fatigue of playing three games in as many days, the Aggies were also missing four starting players due to religious commitments. Colorado State scored three times in the first half. Utah State came close in the 20th minute when Johnny Carver took a strong free kick from 40 yards out that was tipped off the crossbar by the goalkeeper. Late in the second, half Carver again had a look from 40 yards — this time in open play — which went in off the underside of the crossbar. "Overall, this weekend I give us a B+," Lamara said. He also told his team to forget about the loss to CSU and to start preparing for their game against BYU on Thursday. That game will be held at BYU's South Field in Provo. Kickoff is set for 7:30 p.m. -stm@cc.nsu.edu covering the field well. Mid-way through the second half, the Aggies again found the back of the net. This time it came from junior Sierra Smith with her first career goal. "The second goal was definitely crucial because it put the game in our control," McQueen said. "A 1-0 game, it could have changed the game if she didn't put that goal in. It actually kind of changed the game after that goal, for a while. After that goal we were able to kind of calm down." Cairns said she told Smith that she needed to work on get- ting numbers up on the board with either assists or goals. "For her to be able to do that and to finish that and gain some confidence is great," she said. "Outside midfielders do a lot of work and don't get a ton of touches on the ball. That second goal was key. Because if it is still 1-0, that gives them a lot better of a shot to come back thanifitis2-0." The Aggies will finish out their four-game homestand this week. They will first face Utah Thursday at 4 p.m. -aednnmds@cc.usu.edu >WlN From page 8 click," she said. "One thing we worked on a lot this week is building into the attack and I think that really helped us control the flow of play. I was a little bit nervous at the end of the first half because we were attacking so fast, that there was a really big gap between our attack and defenders." At the half, Cairns said she talked to the team about closing that gap, something they needed to do to keep Idaho State from scoring. For much of the second half, Cairns said the Aggies did a really good job of adjusting and • OVERTIME From page 8 Per/Hour Can You Say, "Cha-ching?" That's right - $8.50 per hour from the get-go. No waiting. No tricks. You'll also get a $50 training bonus and $100 more after 90-days, plus the chance to make up to $10 after just three months. Throw in medical, dental and vision insurance, discounted Sports Academy memberships and seven schedules to choose from, and you'll see why so many Aggies choose Quik Payday. Apply TODAY at our website: www.jobs.quikpayday.com or call Kasey at 774-8213. QMK TAYD I,COM Financial Solutions Online Michael Shaprtfmichaelsharp@cc.usu.edu AGGIES FIA, MARGARITA PEREIRA and Whitney Doe try to drag a BYU player to the ground during Saturday's game at the HPER Field. USU won 10-3 in overtime*. already won it," she said. "We played like that today. A 3-0 lead is nothing in rugby." Lambert said Saturday's game was much closer than last year's with BYU. "Last year, we beat them like 37-0," she said. "But there's brand new teams on both sides and they have a new coach." Olpin said the game was sloppy, but it was understandable given all the inexperienced players on the team. "Most of the players played their first or second game of rugby today," she said. "Most of them had never played before [this season]. Based on that, I thought they did very well. But I expected to win by a lot more." USU will play in the Snakebite Tournament in Boise next weekend, which Lambert said the team won last year. . ; ~bhhintoti@cc.usu.edu |