Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 13 Oct 1982, p. 7

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Johnsburg Skyhawks Lose Fifth Straight Game BARB ANSELL For the second consecutive week, it was a game where the Johnsburg Skyhawks dominated, but could not produce enough points on. the scoreboard for a victory. The score was even closer this time, as the Skyhawks were defeated by the Bulldogs 14-12. "The statistics speak for them­ selves," said a frustrated Skyhawkt Coach Randy Obermebt. "We ran almost 90 offensive plays and Grant ran less than 50." It was a tough loss for the entire Johnsburg coaching staff, a game where Johnsburg had all the opport­ unities, but the determination of ihe Bulldogs to win its homecoming seemed enough to hold the Skyhawks down. The Bulldogs drew first blood when end Mike Gier connected with a 26 yard pass from Kevin Coe to start the first quarter, however, the two point conversion run by A1 Korn was un­ successful. The Skyhawks responded early in the second quarter, putting its first points on the board. Johnsburg's Jim Bentz ran the ball 22 yards to tie the game at 6-6. Jeff Jayko's two point conversion pass to Mike Hurckes was incomplete. The Bulldogs started the drive on its own 35 yard line and moved the ball down field for Dave Rowden to then carry the ball for seven yards for Grant's second touchdown. Coe's two point pass to Brett Johnson gave the Bulldogs a 14-6 lead. Skyhawk Spikers Lose To Zion-Benton By One SCOTT MCCLORY The Johnsburg girls' volleyball team travled to Zion-Benton on Saturday, to play in their annual round robbin tournament. The Skyhawk squad had a 6-2 record at the end of the tournament as did the Zee-bees from Zion. But in the second game against North Chicago, the Zion-Benton squad allowed the Warhawks to catch up to 14-14 a piece, and win the game 16-14. This gave them a total of 116 offensive points, while Skyhawk squad accumulated 115 offensive points, so the Zion-Benton squad was the champion of this division. The other teams that played were The McHenry Warriors and the An- tioch Sequoits. Johnsburg opened up against An- Yet the Skyhawks took advantage of the time remaining on the clock. Once again Bentz helped by moving the ball down field, while a 20 yard pass from Jayko to Eric Bear set things up for Bentz to carry the ball 10 yards to move Johnsburg closer. A run by Dan Gallagher failed to tie the score. By halftime the fate of the game was decided. During the third quarter, the Skyhawks had the ball in scoring range, but a fumble by Jim Hopp gave the ball back to Grant. Bentz managed to carry the ball 65 yards during the third quarter, only to be driven away from scoring by Grant's defense. Although Grant-ran the ball much of the fourth quarter, Johnsburg's Jayko threw six passes, attempting to score in the final minutes of the game, connecting with Hurkes, M.J. An­ derson and Tom Huemann. A key illegal motion penalty allowed Johnsburg one final pass after the clock ran down to attempt a touch­ down, but instead Jayko was sacked with no one to throw the ball to. The victory was Grant's first of the season and dropped the Skyhawk record to 0-5. Despite the outcome, it had been a good day for Bentz. He rushed for 207 yards out of the Skyhawk 282 total yards rushing. Jayko completed 12 out of 33 passes, covering 113 yards for the game. Oberembt believes the team can win. "We have the potential, now we have to hold together and maintain our concentration during the late part of the games and we can win." tiocn witn a split, as they lost the first game 16-14, but came back in to win the second game 15-12. Gail Gilwrobldwski had five straight serves. They then played the McHenry Warriors. They split this one also, losing the first game 15-11, but in the second game, Theresa Hauck had 11 straight serves, and Johnsburg won easily 15-1. In the battle of the birds, the Skyhawks of Johnsburg faced the Warhawks of North Chicago. John- sburg defeated them by a 15-11 score in the first game and 15-9 score in the second game. Diane Heard led the team in serves with five. They then faced undefeated Zion- Bention. Johnsburg won the first game 15-9 and narrowly defeated them 15-12 in the second game. Crown 13 McHenry 12 first downs yards rushing yards passing total yards penalties fumbles Crown McHenry c M 17 10 315 137 0 30 315 167 7-100 6-60 1-1 1-1 7 6 0 0 - 13 Grant 14 Johnsburg F2 first downs yards rushing yards passing total yards penalties fumbles Johnsburg Grant Rushing: Crown; Scott 29-164, Grant 15-106, Brezinski 14-41, Oshinski 1-4. McHenry; Milinac 7-40, Rudman 4-38, Lane 10-36, Love 6-23. Passing: Crown; Grant 1-0-3-0. McHenry; Love 11-8-1-30. Receiving: McHenry; Rudman 1-19, Shaver 1-11. Scoreboard v." ;!;! ' i 10-95 13-120 "4-2 1-1 0 12 V 0 - 12 _ . . , • 8 0 e - 14 Rushing: Johnsburg; Bentz 23-204, Hopp 10-41, Huemann 1-10, Jayko 10-2. Grant; Rowden 22-94, Gier 6-68, Bengston 11-30, Crock 1-3, Smejkal 1-2, Coe 6-(-6). Passing: Johnsburg; Jayko 33-12-0- 113. Grant; Coe 12-4-2-64. Receiving: Johnsburg; Hurckes 4- 41, Bear 3-42, Huemann 2-14, Anderson 2-27. Grant; Gier 4-68, Rowden 1-8, Johnson 1-6. COUKTRYOOMW! Insurance and Investment Services VMNB HONS KMATIINSTITUTE Ppvitnis OUR 14fch YEHR ANNIVERSARY CELEBRRTION SPECIRL FOR BEGINNERS! -3 MONTHS SELF-DEFENSE and KARATE LESSIONS, UNIFORM, BELT and PATCH Start Anytime, Now Thru November 1982 ONLY •77"°! We ore one of the oldest and largest in the Midwest and still growing, WHY? Instruction by Master YOUNG HONG and his assistont.AND LOW PRICES Call 338-7222 op visit 401 St. John's Rd.a Inside St. John's Lutheran Chupch Woodstock, Illinois (Continued from pog* 6) half time.' The Warriors took the opening kickoff from Crown and drove 72 yards for the touchdown. The two big plays were a 19 yard pass to Mladen Rudman and a personel foul against Crown. The nine play drive ended with a one yard run by Milinac. After the Warrior kickoff, the defense held and the Vikings punted on fourth down. Shaver caught the punt on the Warrior 30 yard line and scrambled 70 yards for the touch­ down. This time Shaver wouldn't be denied -- no penalty flags were thrown Cross Country All of a sudden the Warriors were down by only one point with still 8:04 left in the third quarter. The offensive success seemed to spark the whole team up. On the kickoff, Dennis Casey hit returner, Larry Kaifish so hard, a popping sound seemed to carry though the whole stadium. Nine plays later, Shaver picked off his second in­ terception tostall a Viking drive. But, the Viking offense used a grinding running game to control the ball for most of the fourth quarter. And an interception of a Love pass by Issa Lazar with 51 seconds left in the game, finished off the Warriors Carby Helps Warriors Finish Third At Peoria Steve Carby's second place finish helped the McHenry Warriors place third in the 44 team Peoria High Cross Country Invitational Saturday. The Warriors finished with 208 points. York captured the invitational for the fourth straight year with 66 points. Springfield Lamphier finished second with 134 points. Other top 10 finishers were; Bloomington 224, Proviso West 245, Spalding 281, Hoffman Estates 286, Main East 292, Sterling 296 and Manual 303. Carby led the whole race until the last 100 yards of the race, when Doug Schroer of York just overtook him. The winning time was 14:54.2 and Carby finished with 14:57. Warrior Coach Bill Hutchinson was pleased with the third place finish. "Our first three runners did a good job. Carby did a super job. He almost won it." Chris Cruetz was the second Warrior runner to cross the finish line. He was 16th with a time of 15:26. Not far from him, was Brian Wright in 18th place at 15:30. The next Warrior to finish, Marty Koleno, placed 47th at 15:54 and the fifth man for the Warriors, Jim Wynveen, finished in 125th place at 16:34. Hutchinson said these results are a pretty good indication of what the State meet results will be. "We need a fifth! man," said Hut­ chinson. "If Jimmy (Wynveen) brings his time up, we could be a tough team." Hutchinson said he was surprised with the strong finish by Jeff Pankiewicz. He was the 131st runner to finish and he had a time of 16:36. Terry Harth finished in 179th place with a time of 17:00. Skyhawks Lose Dual Johnsburg lost its fourth Northwest Suburban conference dual of the season, losing to Warren 25-34 at Glacial Park Thursday. Jay Jackson was the first runner to cross the finish line with a time of 14:09. Jackson is the holder of the Glacial Park course record. Right behind Jackson was Mike Lawrence in third place with a time of 15:36. His finish pleased Skyhawk Coach, Bob Texidore. "He did an outstanding job. His time is a 33 second improvement from last time. I keep telling him he can run with the likes of Jay Jackson." Third man for Johnsburg to finish was Jeff Nichols in seventh at 16:14. Mike Dodge was 11th at 17:00, Chris Tennison 15th at 17:18,Ken Schoening 18th and Steve Schneider 21st at 18:58. Brothers Help Hurricanes Trounce Over Harvard 25-6 SHAW MEDIA NEWS SSKVKE DICK PETERSON Marian Central's Hurricanes combined an explosive passing game with a steady running game enroute to its third straight win, a 25-6 trouncing over Harvard. Junior quarterback Chuck Hartlieb completed l2-of-24 passes for 212 yards, including touchdown strikes of 37 and 40 yards. He also ran in a ll- yard touchdown. Passing the ball -- and passing it a lot -- is what Marian Central head Coach Don Penza planned to do this year and he wants to continue it with the 3-2 Hurricanes. "We could do a little more running because of ef­ fective passing," he said. In addition to Hartlieb's 212 yards through the air, the Hurricanes rushed for 243 yards with sophomore back Andy Hartlieb gaining 118 yards on 12 carries. The Hurricanes first drive stalled on the Harvard 31-yard line. The Hornets gave Marian Central a scare when junior quarterback Jay Stiles, starting in place of Shawn Gerald, engineered the Hornets to the Marian 28. But the drive ended quickly when Stiles fumbled and a Hurricane recovered the ball. Marian marched down the field and with 2:41 left in the quarter, Chuck Hartlieb connected with Dave Kubacki for a 37-yard scoring pass. The extra point failed. The Hornets threw another scare at the Hurricanes, driving to its 29 yard line behind big ground gains by Curtis Johanson and Jim Hoey. Again, the Hornets turned the ball over when a Stiles' pass was in­ tercepted by defensive end Bob Wenzel with three seconds left in the quarter. He returned the ball to the Marian 36. The Hurricanes capitalized on the errant pass in a scoring way. Kubacki, who gained 86 yards on the ground, put the Hurricanes on the Harvard 29 with a 31-yard run. Kubacki also snared five passes for 67 yards. Four plays later, Andy Hartlieb scored from three yards out and the extra point was good to give the .Hurricanes a 13-0 lead midway through the second quarter. The Marian defense then kept the Hornets in line the rest of the half, not allowing Harvard a first down on two possessions. On the opening possession of the third quarter, the Hornets pushed the ball to the Marian 38, but Stiles was unable to convert a first down with a pair of incomplete passes. He com­ pleted 4-of-14 passes for 53 yards. Dave Holtfreter punted the ball to the Marian 12, and the Hurricanes were sent to the seven on an en­ croachment call. On the next play he handed off to Andy, who got away for 59 yards before being hit by Holtfreter on the Harvard 22. Chuck Hartlieb carried the ball into the end zone a nine-yard run. The extra point failed for the 19-0 lead with 5:30 left in the half. The Hurricanes made it 25-0 on its next possession when Chuck Hartlieb lofted a 40-yard scoring strike to Jeff Cychner with 1:07 left in the third period. Hartlieb completed three of five passes on the drive for 65 yards. With the Hurricanes substituting heavily in the fourth quarter, the Hornets finally registered numbers on the scoreboard. " happened to the senior speedster. Shaver did manage to return a punt in the third quarter 70 yards for a touchdown and no penalties were called. STAFF PHOTO -- WAYNE GAYLORD DON FORTIN WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS PH. 33S-3166 A WIPED OUT TOUCHDOWN -- Dennis Shaver of the McHenry Warriors found some running room on a punt return in the first quarter. John Clewis is leading the way on the play that went 70 yards for a touchdown. A clipping call, however, wiped out the six points. It was the second time in two weeks it For Life. KEITH SONNICHSEN McHENRY, ILLINOIS InsUre your future with guaranteed annual in­ come for as long as you live. We can explain how to set up your IRA or Keogh retirement plan using an annuity to provide a retirement in­ come you cannot outlive. Call today for complete details. Thafs the Spirit LOREN MILLER RICHMOND, ILLINOIS PH. 67S-M91 MILLER HIGH LIFE 24-12 OZ. NR BOTT. MM f PI Old Milwaukee 12-12 OZ. CANS $2" ^ \ gPli

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