Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Mar 1983, p. 7

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jAGE^^INDE^I^R-MUDAY^MARCH^gM Schafer Gives The Scouts A Good Show Tom Schafer of Jacobs really put on a show for the overflow crowd last Friday night as his Golden Eagles defeated the Warriors. The young lad with several college scouts in the stands hit the net for 15 baskets and four charity tosses. A number of his baskets came from the three point range in college circles. Most notable of the coaches attending to watch young Mr. Schafer were Lou Henson of Illinois, who had a few kind words for some of the Warrior players after the game. Former Barrington coach, Gary Cook, now an assistant at Iowa State, was also in .attendance. The University of Michigan sent a representative, along with Loyola of Chjcago. It was the biggest crowd in the last 10 years at Buckner Gym and the Warriors gave it all they had before going down to defeat. Coach Ken Ludwig was most pleased with his squad's fcjlay Friday night, and Warrior fans can't complain about the play of their team. By the time you read this, it will be known if the Warriors are in the Crystal Lake South's regional finals. The Warriors played Central on Wednesday night, the winner playing Crystal Lake. South. On paper, South is the team to beat, but everyone knows what happen last year when Central upset the Gators. Having defeated everyone in the tourney twice this season, South's coach Gary Collins will have to forestall over-confidence in his team. Jacobs will have to get by Wauconda and then probably face Barrington at Barrington. This is no easy task for the Golden Eagles. Crown and Dundee play at Elgin, where the host school should win easily. They defeated Crown by 50 points earlier this season. There are a lot of good basketball teams in the state, so we look for a lot of so called upsets to take place before tonight. • p Next week Fat Wirtz's "Lady Warriors" open regional play at Woodstock when they On The Sidelines By Dick Rabbitt play Crystal Lake South in the opening game. South is the team to beat in this tourney. Dundee should win the Jacobs regional, and advanced to the Crystal Lake Central Sectional. Dundee, along with Libertyville ranked fifth in the state, meet along the way. It is truly March Madness in Illinois, and there will be plenty of basketball activity during the next three weeks. Dave Mihevc's Ouija Board didn't pick too badly in the Fox Valley this season. He missed a few in the middle, but had South at the top. He hit the Warriors right on the button with a 7-7 record, picked Jacobs for second, and had Crown and Cary-Grove in the right places, seventh and eighth. My picks were similiar, but the Warriors proved me wrong as I had them for sixth place and Woodstock fourth. Likewise, I had Crown and Cary-Grove at the bottom. ******* Down memory lane in the year 1964-65, with six Warriors scoring in double figures as the Warriors defeated Crystal Lake 84-53. Richie Smith led the assault with 18 points, as the Warriors put it away with a 23-5 last period attack. Mc Henry 84 Crystal Lake 53 McHenry: Moss 0-0 0, Laurence 5-5 15, Lockwood 4-311. Bentz 5-414, Hiller 5-111, Soda 5-3 13, Smith 5-8 18, Nolan 0-0 0, Mauch 0-2 2, totals 29-26 84. Crystal Lake: Thurston 2-0 4, Gulley 1-3 5, Miller 3-0 6, Desmond 8-4 20, Green 2-4 8, Naughton 1-0 2, Fletcher 3-0 6, Wolf 1-0 2, totals 21-11-53. McHenry 20 2219 23 -- 84 Crystal Lake 1514 19 5 -- 53 PAGE 7_-_PLAINDEALFR - FRIDAY, MARCH 4,1983 Lady Warriors Get 2 Chances McHenry Resident Leads Dealers At Midwest Boat Show The time is ripe to buy boats of all kinds. That was the general response made by McHenry resident, John Moulis, acting president of the Mid­ west Boat and Resort Show which will open this Friday at the Arlington Park Race Track Expo Center. It will end on March 13. John Moulis Moulis, along with his brothers, Joseph and James, own and operate Fox Lake Harbor boat dealership in Fox Lake. His family resides in McHenry. "The dealers will be showing products ideal for this particular area," said Moulis. "We are bringing in the best group of dealers who stand behind their products. Everything we show will be on sale." Warrior Season Ends (Continued from page 6) guys. We just have to work harder. I was proud of them." The Tigers stopped the Warrior comeback cold in the final quarter. The Warrior scoring was stalled, scoring only 17 points after scoring 21 in the third quarter. Two free throws by Corky Card put the Tiger lead back to 20, 72-52. Before the game was finished, both Herrmann and Peterson fouled out. Herrmann was the leading Warrior scorer with 20 points. A total of 12 of those 20 points came in the third quarter. Bauml scored 16 points. Caravan' >_A Moulis has been active with the boat show since the first one, 14 years ago. He said his term as president will probably last about two or three years. Boating has played an active part in Moulis' life. During the late 1950's, Moulis started racing boats. At the age of 19, Moulis set a speed record for an SK runabout Boat, exceeding speeds of over 100 miles per hour. He first broke the record in 1957 with a speed of 82 miles per hour and in 1958 he raised it to 87 miles per hour. He set the final record at 97.9 miles per hour. Although he exceeded the 100 mile per hour speed, the 97.9 is an average of several attempts. Moulis added those were speeds made by a flat bottom boat. "It was like putting the first man on the mcon. It was quite a feat," said Moulis. Also during the 1950's, he worked with his father, Joseph, in the boat business. In 1961, his father and his brothers developed the Fox Lake Harbor. Moulis graduated from Marquette University in Milwaukee and Fewick High School in Oak Park in 1957. He marriad his wife, Marlene, 1961. "We expect a record turnout," said Moulis on the Boat and Resort Show. "All the floor space is sold out. It has been sold out since fall. It will have the most exhibits in the history of the show." He added that 11 dealers will be represented at the show and the products will be world wide. T h e M c H e n r y W a r r i o r s g i r l s ' basketball team have the difficult challenge of playing 19-3 Crystal Lake South in the first round of the Woodstock regional. But, they do have the advantage of getting a warmup session with the second place Gators. The Warriors played the Gators on Thursday for the last game of the Fox Valley schedule. The two teams will have four days rest, before they tangle again on Monday during the Woodstock regionais at 6:30 p.m. Warrior coach Pat Wirtz knows what his team is up against, but he has upset notions running through his mind. "This is a team that nobody in the Fox Valley Conference has beaten in the last two years, except for Dundee," said Wirtz. "I would like to see us upset South, but it remains to be seen how good we play. "If we do lose on Thursday, we're not out of it on Monday." Wirtz has good reasons to be confident of his team against one of the top girls teams in the area. His team is riding on a two game winning streak and winning three of the last four games. Two of the wins came in game involving the third and fourth place teams in the conference. Wirtz attributes the late success to the return of last season's all-conference center, Karen Karpavicius, who was out for most of the season with an injury, ' "Karen is almost back to 100 percent. Karen coming back has improved the team tremendously," said Wirtz. "I think the girls filled in for Karen well, but when she sscores 20 points a game and then she is out of the lineup, it hurts. She is not only a scorer, but a team leader." Karpavicius has scored 46 points the last two games. Crystal Lake Central plays Woodstock in the second game and the winners of both games play on Thursday. The champion moves on to the Crystal Lake Central sectional. "Being good enough to beat South, well we will find out. We have been cutting down on mistakes. We were averaging 30 to 35 turnovers a game, but the last game against Central we only com­ mitted 11 or 12 tur­ novers. That's quite a difference." Besides Karpavicius, Wirtz is depending on two other players to guide the Warriors. "Defensively, we'll let Renee Mezzano work on the point guards. She has kept us in games with her defense. Terri Blume will be responsible for picking up some forced tur­ novers. "We think y/e can rebound with th£m. We just have to harass them enough." ^ "3W5RTS Lady Hawks End NWSC Play With Win Over Rams MONTINI EIGHTH GRADE CHEERLEADING SQUAD -- won first place at the St. Joseph Competition in Libertyville.' There next competition was in the Fox Valley Catholic Conference where they again won first place with over a 145 point advantage over the second place team. The girls then went on to the Rockford Diocesan Tournament at Marian Central and captured first place. Top; Kathleen Mauer, Middle; Giovanna Tonyan, Sue Sharp, Wendy Turner, Kathryn Byrnes, Colleen Huff, Bottom; Jennifer Wills and Barb Berent. STAfF PHOTO -- WAYNE GAYLORD. McHenry 8 17 2117 -- 63 Crystal Lake Central 20 33 10 25 -- 88 Fouled out: Herrmann, Peterson. Scoreboard Crystal Lake Central 88 McHenry 63 McHenry: Babb0-0-1 0, Bauml 5-6-4 16, Freund 0-0-2 0, Herrmann 10-0-5 20, Lively3^)-1 6, Peterson 2-4-2 8, Scott 3- 0$j, Jablonski 1-0-0 2, Dung 1-2-4 4, Blankenhorn 0-0-1 0, Buenzli 0-0-1 0, totals 25-12-23 63. Central: Howell 0-0-1 0, Janke 2-0-4 4, Zellman 0-2-0 2, Beck 5-2-3 12, Lerum 6-4-3 16, Ormsby 8-9-3 25, Card 6-5-1 17, Harrington 0-0-1 0, Gehring 3- 3-4 9. totals 30-25-20 88. FOX VALLEY GIRLS W L Pts. Opp. Dundee 13 0 809 493 21 C.L.S. 11 2 803 634 19 Crown 7 6 606 582 10 C.L.C. 6 7 631 578 9 McHenry 5 8 505 608 6 Woodstock # • 4 9 509 698 4 Cary-Grove 4 9 602 692 5 Jacobs 2 11 490 663 3 all 1 3 11 11 11 13 13 16 Fowler AII-NWSC (Continued from page 6) games the Skyhawks played. Fowler was one of three guards chosen for the squad, picked by the coaches. Kent Iwema and Steve Jerrell of Warren were the other two guards. Jerrel was the only junior picked. Iwemia and Terry Cheeks of Round Lake were named co-most valuable players in the conference. JOHNSBURG -- The Johnsburg Skyhawk girls' basketball team won its second Nor­ t h w e s t S u b u r b a n Conference ballgame, defeating Grayslake 41- 40 Tuesday on a last second basket by Theresa Hauck. Johnsburg ended NWSC play with a 2-12 record and 5-15 overall. Johnsburg held a 34-27 lead going into the final period, but the Rams slowly came back and took a one point lead with 20 seconds left in the game. The Skyhawks came right back and Theresa Hauck hit on a seven- footer to win the game. "It was a real nice way to end up the year," said Skyhawk Coach Nancy Fahey. "They have just improved a lot the last half, playing competitive ball." Michelle Swartzloff led the Skyhawks in scoring with 12 points and Hauck scored 10. ***** The Lady Skyhawks travel to Harvard on Monday to play their first regional game. be North Boone will their first test. Game time is 6:30 p.m. The last time the Skyhawks tangled with North Boone was the Johnsburg Tournament last January. The Skyhawks squeaked past North Boone in the first round, 43-38. It was the Skyhawks first win of the season and they went on to capture the tourney championship. Richmond-Burton Will play Alden-Hebron in the second game Monday. The winner of the Johnsburg-North Boone game will play Harvard Wednesday and Marian Central will play the winner of the Richmond-Hebron game. "The toughest team is Harvard," said Fahey. "I want to play against Harvard, but we have to take one game at a time and con­ centrate on North Boone. But Harvard is the team to beat. I want to be optimistic. Right now I'm just thinking of North Boone." DIDN'T KNOW Brought to you By Phil Oeffling Here's one that's hard to believe....But, it's true...Two of the greatest pro basketball players of all-time, Bob Cousy and Bill Russell FAILED to make their high school basketball teams.. Both were unable to make their teams in their high school days! ...It seems incredible, but it's been confirmed by the National Basketball Association... And it proves again that truth is sometimes stranger than fiction. • ' • • Has any basketball player ever scored all { his team's points in ona game?...This amazing feat happened once in a high school game in Alabama...A playar named Walter Garrett scored 97 points in ona game a few seasons ago, and the final scora in that game was 97- 541 * \ * * Here's an od­ dity^..There was once a heavyweight boxing champion of the world who was NOT a heavyweight!... Box ing rules say a heavy­ weight is any fighter over 175 pounds--but the heavyweight champ in 1906 was Tommy Burns, who weighed only 168 pounds. * * • I bet you didn't know...that now Is the best time to buy a new automobile. And now's the best time to see Keith Leathers or myself for an auto- mobile loan designed to fit your budget. Come in or call 385-1040. McHENRY STATE 1 AUK Top 5 Scorers FG Holtj-Dund. 106 Jensen, C.L.C. 104 Wold, Cr. 91 Boos, C.G. 80 Linden.Ja. 78 ENJOY EUROPE TWO WAYS! Low-cost Caravan Eurojet Tours $929 to $1698. Caravan Classic quality tours $979 to $3398. Both all expense, escorted, d ble occu­ pancy, plus air. 42 unique tours to all of Europe, plus Egypt, Morocco. Many departures, March to Nov. FOR FREE BROCHURE * CALL (815)385-7500 CHAIN-O UKES TRAVEL SERVICE 3405 W. ELM ST., McHENRY "Dependable Travel Since 1961" Bum Phillips, Head Coach, New Orleans Saints Get The Tough Little Itactor That Packs a Punch-- The New Mitsubishi MT180H With Hydrostatic Transmission." Plus: • 3 Cylinder Engine For A Smooth And Quiet Ride • Diesel Power For Economy And Endurance • Category 1 3-Point Linkage • 4-Wheel Drive And The MT180H Is Priced To Drive Away! MITSUBISHI BUILT BY THE PROS "THE HOUSE THAT SERVICE WJItF If •••*• 4102 W. CRYS L LAKE RD., McHENRY, ILL. v i . i n ' « , : 385-0420 sp :m®m « OVERTON Rl 120 nn,l Rl.tl McHrnr* HI SiH.itolHH) • wMr !1®« v : • . . . . . . • s - * USED AUTOMOBILES ECONOMY CARS 1981 ChevChevette 4 Dr., Stan. Trans. 1979 Plymouth Horizon TuTone Red, Auto. Trans. 1979 MGB Convertible White, Stan. Trans. 1978 Plymouth Volare Gold, Auto. Trans. OM PRODUCTS m 1982 Trans AM Black, Auto. Trans. 1978 Buick Regal Loaded, Nice 1980 Cadillac Sedan DeVille 12,000/12 Month Warranty 1979 Camaro Blue, Sharp and Lo< 1981 DeVill Leather Interior, Loa< 1980 C^iWLft"lle Leather ir^^ro^-uliy equipped harp and Locu^d cM0*a>uPe 1978 Cadillac El Dorado Front Wheel Drive 1977 Olds 98 Regency Fully equipped 1980 DJIQfMy to Sefe OTHER FINE MAKES 1978 Chrysler New Yorker Big Car Ride 4 1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass 4 Dr., Low Mileage All of the listed cars are available with 12 mo./12f000 mile warranties. Check for details STOP and SEE ovr 1983 Cadillac and Pontiac lino-up today! 40 New Cars To Choose From I 385-6000 Sale Hours M'Th 8:f ;80~'l^30"6 00 bOT 7•Uv"4lUw :Wm'_ m ip5 It i • 5 t M

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