Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Aug 1985, p. 6

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Page 6 McHENRY PLAINPEALER Section A Tuesday, August 20,1985 Sports McHenry Sunday 12-inch Softball League Room to Grow Photo for the Herald by Rod Melsek These youngsters await instruction at a soccer camp held recently by the Chicago Sting. These, and other McHenry area youth will have the opportunity to play soccer on the high school level, as McHenry High has added interscholastic soccer to its list of sporting activities for the 1985-86 school year. s port Shorts Weight Management Karate Classes CRYSTAL LAKE -- The Lake Region YMCA will hold a free introduc­ tion to its Weight Management Program at 7 p.m., September 3. The class will include a lecture portion and an exercise part of the program. Strict dieting is not a part of the program. Guest speakers will also be a part of the program, talking about nutrition, stress management, cardiovascular endurance and more. For more information, contact the YMCA at 815/ 459-4455. YMCA Flag Football CRYSTAL LAKE -- The Lake Region YMCA will kickoff its Flag Football Season for grades 1-4 girls and boys, starting with a clinic af 9 a.m., September 14. The clinicians will be the three head football coaches at CAry-Grove, Crystal Lake South and Central High Schools. The coaches will intro­ duce the fundamentals of football, including passing, catching, kicking, blocking and general football strategy. The program will be divided into two groups with a first and second grade division and a third and fourth grade division. Volunteer coaches will be needed for the program. Each participant will receive souvenior T-shirts when the teams are formed in the third week of the 7-week program. For more information, contact the YMCA at 815/ 459-4455. CRYSTAL LAKE -- The Lake Region YMCA will again offer Karate classes for adults and youth. Adult classes will be held at 7 p.m. on Monday's and Wednesday's and at 11:30 a.m. Saturdays. Youth classes are held at 9:30 a.m., Saturday mornings for beginners and 10:15 for Intermediate. Youth classes are for 9-13 year olds. High School students will attend the adult class. The class is an eight-week program. For mroe informa­ tion, contact the YMCA at 815/ 459-4455. The YMCA has also enhanced its weight training room with new, free weight equipment. Call for registration. YMCA Gymnastics CRYSTAL LAKE -- The Lake Region YMCA will begin its fall gymnastics program Sept. 3. Classes for three year olds and up will be held at a variety of times during the morning and evening hours, Monday-Saturday. Gymnastics skills are also taught in a progressive program which allows the participants to learn at their owrf rate and skill level. Each class will also have a demonstration following the eight-week session to show the family and friends what they have learned. New this season will be a boys gymnastic program running at 5:45 p.m. on Tuesday or Thursday and at 8:10 a.m. Saturday. The program is for ages 7-12. For more information, call the YMCA at 815/ 459-4455. QED. the leaders in the Men's Sunday 12-inch Softball League, lost its final game Sunday, but won the title anyway by a comfortable two- game margin. Details from Sunday's outings: Gary Lang 15, QED 9 QED took an early 5-1 lead, but Gary Lang fought back to tie it and go ahead in the fifth. But QED rallied to knot the game in the bottom of the sixth, before Gary Lang broke the contest wide open with a seven-run seventh. QED tried to come back in the bottom of the frame, but Len Chutka recorded all three outs with an unassisted double play and a snare of a line drive to end the game. For the winners, Jim Huff had three hits and six RBI, while Jack Thennes doubled, tripled and drove in four runs. Gary Thennes scored four runs, while Jim Fleming tri­ pled in one. Dru McDonnell had two hits to pace QED. Brian Smith and Jeff Major had two RBI each. John's Sport Stop 11, Mike's 9 Dante Jacobson hit a grand slam homer to key John's Sport Stop's six-run third en route to an 11-9 win. Mike's Buzz Out West scored six runs in the top of the sixth to get back into the fray, but it wasn't enough to overcome John's huge lead. Steve Olson, Scott Buss, Jacobson and Jim Borak all had two hits to lead John's. Jacobson had six RBI. while Borak and Buss chipped in two each. Ken Kless had two hits and two RBI, while Billy Turner tripled in two runs. John Kujia doubled and scored. Scott B's 8, Garrelts' 3 Tim Klapperich singled, homered and drove in three runs to lead Scott B's to an 8-3 win over Garrelts' Plumbing. Bill Gleason added three hits, while Jim Klapperich and Greg O'Halleran tossed in two apiece. Bill Cunningham allowed just six hits to collect the win. Just Video 13, Hair Hut 7 Terry Harvey, Benny Beamon, Kevin Maxson and Larry Harvey all had two hits and three RBI to lead Just Video to a 13-7 win over His & Her Hair Hut. Tom Cunningham was the win­ ning pitcher and added two hits an an RBI to the Just Video offense. Shortstop Larry Harvey, second baseman Beamon and left center- fielder Maxson all contributed fine defensive plays to help Just Video. WL soccer program set WONDER LAKE - Jacobsen Park soccer director Mike Gilliand has announced that a soccer pro­ gram will begin in September. The program will accept boys and girls age 5 through 12 and will group these participants into three divi­ sions. Fundamentals will be stressed as the main emphasis of the program. Each Saturday morn­ ing srrimmaoes will be held under the direction of volunteer coaches. In October, competition with other soccer leagues in the area will be scheduled. Parents interested in assisting the program should call 728-0674. Sign up for the program will be accom­ plished through flyers issued at Greenwood and Harrison schools in late August. McHenry Men's 16-inch Softball Leagii* The McHenry Men's 16-inch Soft­ ball League was turned upside down last Tuesday night when last place Old Bridge rallied to beat Ray­ mond's Bowl-Huff's Decorating, 11- 10. The loss dropped Raymond's from its first place tie with Palace Bowl-Dean Concrete, and into sole possession of second place. Regular season play winds up this week with a pair of games Tuesday night. A playoff may be needed to determine the league champion and the third place team. If so, those games will be played Thursday night, with the playoffs beginning next Tuesday. An all-star game between the Mc­ Henry Men's League and the Indus­ trial League will take place Friday at 7 p.m., with a contest between the league's two champions to fol­ low at 8 p.m. All games are played at the VFW Field. Details from last week's games: After the Fox 20, Knights of Colum­ bus 12 After the Fox kept its playoff hopes alive with an impressive 20-12 victory over Knights of Columbus. ATF scored 13 runs in the first two innings, and never was headed off, banging out 20 hits and taking advantage of five K of C errors. Ollie Miller had a perfect 4-for-4 night for the winners, knocking in a pair of runs and scoring four. Clem Dore had four hits, three RBI and three runs scored. Mike Hughes and Bob Friel had three hits and three runs apiece, with Hughes collecting five RBI. Dan Peschke had three hits for K of C. Bob Moehling had two hits and three RBI, while Mike Miller and Doug Strain chipped in two hits each. Old Bridge 11, Raymond's-Huff s 10 The leaguejs biggest upset of the year occuirqfi later in the evening, when Old Bridge scored twice in the bottom of the seventh to shock Ray­ mond's Bowl-Huff's Decorating, 11- 10. Dwayne Oeffling hit a sinking line drive to left field in the bottom of the seventh which left fielder Jim Knox of Raymond's dived for, but couldn't come up with. The ball rolled all the way to the fence in left center for an inside-the-park homer, leading Old Bridge to the win. Tim Byers, Bob Lunkenheimer and John Doessel all had two hits to pace the Old Bridge attack. Oeffling had three RBI. For Raymond's, Gary Schmitt had a double, homer and four RBI, while Bernie Klapperich^had two hits and drove in thretfruns, and Dan Miller and Terry Hovseth two safeties each. Novotny-McH Truck Lines 11, Old Bridge 4 Old Bridge couldn't sustain its up­ beat play on Thursday night, how­ ever, falling to Novotny Sales-Mc- Henry Truck Lines, 114. Old Bridge scored three in the bottom of the first to take a 3-2 lead, but Novotny's broke the game wide open witha five-run fifth, going on to win easily. Jim Yaworski and Mike Yaworski paved the way for the winners' 17- hit attack with three singles each, Jim driving in two runs. Dave Miller and Randy Vauk chipped in two hits and three RBI each. Dan McAuliffe had two hits and two RBI to lead Old Bridge. Bob Sharp singled and scored two runs. H&M 14, After the Fox 8 H&M Machinery Movers started slowly, but eruped for seven runs in the third to finish its first season in the league with five wins. The tri­ umph also knocked After the Fox from playoff contention. Corey Scott, Jim Kerher, Jeff Cychner, Bob Loedding and Scott Bujac all had two hits to lead the winners. Kerher and Cychner drove in two runsrapiece. Mike Deverlle had three hits and four RBI for ATF. Bob Friel and Lee Schwartz chipped in a single and double apiece, while Terry Link had two RBI. GET MONEY Call Your Bryant; Air Conditioning Dealer. Shopping for a central air conditioning system or heat pump? Then get a written bid on a deluxe Bryant 545, 544 heat pump. 569. 568 or 567 air conditioner. After you buy any equivalent unit (even a competitive brand), Bryant will give you a $50 savings bond. Free! 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