McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Feb 1981, p. 6

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PACE 8-PLA1NDEALER - WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 2S, Ml Warriors Trip Cards For 15th Victory 34 W BETTER POSITION-for the rebound helped Dundee senior Jeff Killoagh (dark 50) take this carom away from Warrior senior Bob Zeller (light 58). Both Killough, S'5", and Zeller, fj", represented the height during McHenry's (7*41 Fox Valley win Friday night over Dundee, and although KiDough got this rebound, Zeller outscored the Dundee giant, 17-14 as McHenry recorded its ISth victory of the year and moved them into a tie for second with Crystal Lake South in the Fox Valley Conference. Both 8-4 clubs met at McHenry Tuesday to decide second place for good. See Friday's sports page for the story. STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLORD Brown Picked As All Conference On 27 points by Carl Brown, the Marian Centra! Hurricanes beat St. Francis, 74-45 in a West Suburban Catholic matchup last Friday. Holding a slim 13-11 lead over the 3-11 St. Francis team, Marian exploded in the second quarter and outscored their opponents. 17-7 to take a commanding 33-19 lead into halftime. They again increased the lead in the third quarter to gain a 48-29 advantage and outscored St Francis , 28-16 in the final eight minutes to take a convincing victory. Other Hurricane scorers in double figures included Jim Mayer with 12 and Mike Sabatka with 10. Other good news also came out of Marian as Carl Brown was crowned as the West Suburban Conferences' high scorer, averaging 23 points per game. The 6'4" senior played in 11 con­ ference games this season, scoring 243 total points. Scott Isabel of Driscoll finished second in the scoring race with a 20 point-per-game clip. With the scoring honor. Brown was named to the first team on the WSCC All Conference squad as a forward Others serving on the all- conference first string were Pat Collins, a guard with first place Benet, Tom Krish, a 6'3" senior guard at Immaculate Conception, Keith Frainey. a 6'8" junior forward at Montini and Ken Meyer, a 6'9" senior center. Brad Gregory was selected as an honorable mention on the all con­ ference squad. Joel Wakitsch Girl Cagers Fall To Fox Valley Foes Coach Pat Wirtz and his girls' basketball team lost a pair of Fox Valley games the past week, losing to Crown 58-42, and to Cary Grove 55- 27. In the Crown game, the girls fell behind 20-6 in the first period and could never <piite ckse the gap. Trailing 48-23 going into the final Eiriod, the Warriors came to e outscoring the hosts 19-8, but it was not enough and they fell 58-42. On Saturday at Cary Grove, the locals hit a cold spell during the first half, making 1 of 30 attempts from the field. The Warriors fell behind 22-2 at the period, and were never in the game, making only 2 charity tosses during the period. Cary increased their lead to 30-6 at the intermission and coated the rest of the way in for the win Dick Rabbitt McHenry Eugene 1 0 2 fg ft tp Zeithen 9 0 18 Haddick 4 4 12 Bum bales 2 0 4 Karpavicius 0 2 2 Bowen 4 0 8 Berryhill 2 0 4 Pistano 7 0 14 Blume 0 0 0 Reutsche 1 1 3 Koerber 5 1 11 Dixon 1 0 2 Totals: 27 2 56 Bitterman 0 0 0 Geiger 5 1 11 McHenry 8 9 8 19 42 Crown 28 15 13 8 56 Totals: 17 8 42 McHenry vs Crown Cary Grove fg ft tP fg ft tp Heger 3 1 7 Haddick 1 0 2 Scasny Hurt, Still Scores 28 Points Little John's-Christopher's Men's Wear won an over­ time thriller over Old Bridge in the battle for first place by a score of 60-57. After a see­ saw first half in which the Bridge led as much as 7 points, Little John's came back to take a 5 point lead. The second half was a repeat of the first as Old Bridge came from behind to take a 5 point led of their own. Late in the game the Bridge led by 4 points, however Little John's whittled the score away until Ken Ludwig stole the ball and scored the tying bucket with 30 seconds left in regulation. In the overtime the winners went 8 for 10 from the free throw line with Gary Snell going 6 for 8 Snell along with Ludwig led the winners with 14 points each. Dan Stanowski TOP TEN SCORERS AS OF FEBRUARY 24,1981 g fg ft tP PPg Bill Scasny 6 79 35-44 193 32.2 Don Harris 8 59 12-21 130 16.3 Gary Snell 8 49 16-33 114 14.3 Kip Novotny 8 47 13-45 107 13.4 Mark Wilkinson 7 46 14-20 106 15.1 Ken Ludwig 7 47 6-8 100 14.3 Kevin Miller 8 42 12-18 96 12.0 Dave Lawson 7 40 15-19 95 13.6 Doug Linberg Marx Weinberg 8 8 37 34 12-19 17-29 86 85 10.8 10.6 TRANSMATIC ON RTE. 31 (7 Minutes south of 120) TRANSMISSION TUNE-UP SPECIAL *15.00 •ROAD TEST •REMOVE PAN •VISUAL INSPECTION •ADJUST BANDS & LINKAGE •REPLACE FLUID •CLEAN SUMP •REPLACE PAN GASKET •REPLACE FILTER OR CLEAN SCREEN 455-3666 TRANSMATIC 5210 Rte. 31 455-3666 Crystal Lake chipped in 12 points. Mark Wilkinson had 20 points for Old Bridge, Dave Lawson added 15 points and Don Prazek 13 points. River Shannon ran up a 46-27 lead at half time and then coasted to a 76-61 win over the Unknowns. The winners had a balanced offense as 5 players scored in double figures: Roger Wanta (17 points), Steve Schwarz (15 points), Kip Novotny (15 points), John Connell (12 points), and Doug Schmitt (12 points). Harry Ohrwall returned to the Unknown lineup after 6 weeks on crutches and scored 21 points. Paul Adelizzi had 12 points and Mark Weinberg 10 points. McHenry Sand 4 Gravel may have found the best way to stop league leading scorer Bill Scasny. Although done by accident, Scasny was poked in the eye and had to sit out during the second half while his Over the Hill Gang dropped a 70-45 decision to Sand & Gravel. Scasny came back in later in the game and finished with 28 points, 5 under his average. Doug Linberg added 16 points. Nelson had 16 points for Sand & Gravel, Jim Bacon 12 points, and Kevin Miller 10 Sophs Blume 2 i 5 Karpavicius . 0 8 Karpavicius 4 0 8 Berryhill 0 3 3 Geiger 1 1 3 Bitterman 1 0 2 Sproull 1 2 4 Dixon 0 0 0 Totals: 10 7 27 Cary Grove fg ft tP Bell 8 6 22 Brockway -- 0 0 0 Daniello 1 0 2 Deehring 7 8 22 Cassell 2 0 -4 Reilly 1 0 2 Jacobson 1 1 3 Totals: 20 15 55 McHenry 2 4 14 7 27 Cary Grove nstr; 22 8 14 ate 11 H 55 1 * Jim Mitter's two free throws with three seconds remaining enabled the Dundee sophomores to defeat McHenry Friday night 44-43. It was a most frustrating defeat for Bill Blankenhorn and his crew as the locals led by nine points with less than four minutes to play. The Warriors grabbed a 14-8 first period lead, and increased their margin to eight, 26-18, at the in­ termission. The young Cards cut the margin to seven going into the final period, 34-27, and it looked as if the Warriors were on their way to victory at the mid-point of the final period, leading 42- 33. Then disaster struck the Blankenhorn team. A Dundee press that seemed to baffle the sophomores got the Cards on their way, and from pie point on there was One-to-one service from Sentry Lite Ineurance. See me for personal service designed to meet your individual life insurance needs. Including: • Mortgage protection. • Estate planning. • Pension and profit sharing plans • Individual and group protection Sentry Insurance To meet all your insurance needs, you need a whole family of insurance companies Thai 's Sentry All 74J0 K,c*l Oriv* W«i4a« lak* . K. Mt*7 •IS 721493a no stopping them as they gradually cut the margin until the free throws in the final three seconds gave them the victory. Dick Rabbitt McHenry vs. Dundee fg ft pf tP Buenzli 4 0 2 8 Hermann 2 0 3 4 Wynveen 5 0 2 10 Babb 3 0 2 6 Gies 0 0 1 0 Freund 5 5 2 15 Totals: 19 5 12 43 Dundee fg ft pf tP Mitter 4 2 1 10 Gromer 6 0 0 12 Schmitt 1 2 0 4 Anderson 0 1 0 1 La del 1 0 0 2 Schmacher 2 0 3 4 Gilbert 5 1 3 11 Totals: 19 6 44 McHenry 14 12 8 9 43 Dundee 8 10 9 17 44 Those amazing McHenry Warriors won their 15th game of on, 8th in the Fax Valley with a the season, 8th In the Fax Valley with a 87-81 victory aver Dundee last Friday night at Buckner gym. The Warriors had to overcome an 11 pouit deficit at the ntermission to insure the win. If anyone had even suggested to me that the Warriors would have won 15 games tms season back in November, I would have called the padded van and had them taken away to an institution. The Warriors jumped out to a quick 8-2 lead in the early minutes, and Bryniarski's basket at 1:30 put the Warriors up 14-8. Then Bob Zeller went to the bench with his second foul, McHenry vs. McHenry Costigan Bauml 111 iiucu uiaimit ii uuoi uicijihui Burgdorf Greve Totals: 0 12 17 11 19 « 87 The second period was all Dundee. The cards got on the board quick and often, as the Warriors were unable to get more man one shot at the basket, and fell victim to bad passing, poor shooting and no rebounding. The Judson crew went into the locker room with a 38-25 halftime bulge. Costigsn, Bryniarski and Zeller all hit the hoop in the first 90 seconds of the third period, and it seemed that the Warriors were on their way, but Killough countered with a basket for the Cards. Finally, a Burgdorf bucket along with a Zeller and a Costigan free throw, left the Warriors trailing 40-38. Then the Warriors went into a semi tailspin. Three times they had possession of the ball, and three times they blew the advantage, the Cards then struck for five quick points until ZeUer's basket narrowed the margin, 45-40 at the end of the period. Meyer put the Cards up 47-40, and then the Warriors began to play some basketball. Using a press that seemed to bother the weak Dundee guards, Costigan, Zeller and Greve got rolling to bring the Warriors within one. Finally, at 5:37 Bob Greve hit one to give the Warriors the lead 50-49, and seconds later he stole an inbound pass for a layup to put the Warriors ahead 52-49. The Warriors were off and running for their 15th win of the season and 8th in conference play to stay tied with Crystal Lake South in second place in the Fox Valley. Coach Ken Ludwig was pleased with the victory. However, he was a bit disappointed with the play of the Warriors in the second period, when the Cards almost ran the home crew out of the gym. As I have said many times before, they are an exciting team to watch. They hustle, scrap, run and gun and do a lot of things wrong, but they give the fans their money's worth all the time. The two "Bobs" again led the scoring with Greve making 18 and Zeller 17 for the Warriors. Friday night the Warriors close out the regular season at Crystal Lake South, and next Tuesday open regional play at home against Hononegah of Rock ton at 7:30 p.m. Dick Rabbitt Dundee Schuring Caubre Killough Meyers Kefley Johnson Totals : McHenry Dundee 4 5 1 8 3 0 3 1 7 3 tP 10 7 14 8 7 IT 25 11 81 14 11 IS 27 87 14 22 • 18 81 Plaindealer Baseball Registration - The Wonder Lake Boys Baseball League will hold registration on March 14, 21 and 28 from 9 a.m to noon at Christ the King Church. Boys must register on one of these specified days or give up the right to play baseball this summer in the league. Boys must also be at least 8 years of age by Aug. 1, 1981, and cannot be over 15 by the same date. For more information, call Chuck SoweTs at 653-9549 Member Drive \ The Northwest Council Rifle Club is now taking new members in both the Junior and Senior Divisions. Members learn proper firearm safety during free instruction which is fully insured. The National Rifle Association affiliated club will feature competition among members. For fur­ ther information, call Bob Schindler at 385-7784. 'Hawks Swat Harvard The Johnsburg Skyhawk cagers continued their jinx on the Hornets of Harvard Friday night, beating the Hornets for the third time this season, a 62-58 thriller in overtime. The Sky hawks moved their record to 6-6 in the Shark and 15-10 overall with their second overtime win over the Harvard rivals this year. The locals had earlier edged the Hornets 68-66 in a double-overtime affair luick buckets and which gave Johnsburg the consolation championship of the Northern Illinois Classic last December. Tom Pieper with two qi RUBS Beck and Chuck Novy each with a basket opened up the strong first period for Johnsburg. Harvard's Paul Karmaczyk , who led the Hornets with 23 on the day, kept Harvard in the game. He couldn't counter tne Johnsburg hot streak, however, and the Skyhawks took an 18-10 lead into the second quarter. Harvard cut the lead to three at halftime, using strong rebounding on the offensive boards along with the hot shooting of 5'11" Ken Haldeman from the outside, rouped at the intermission with the tally reading, Skyhawks, 32, Harvard, 29. The second naif started with fine third quarter play by both teams. Johnsburg outscored the Hornets, 15-14 to take a four- point lead into the final stanza, 47-43. The final quarter brought on a Johnsburg cokl spell in which they hit only 3 of 10 field goals. Coupled with a rugged Hornet defense, Harvard tied the game with 2:41 left in the game, 51-51. They then went on to take a three-point lead on a Kramarczyk bucket amd Haldeman free throw. Johnsburg scored five unanswered points, however, taking a slight 58-54 lead. Tom Pieper, who led Johnsburg with 19 points, put in an 18-footer. Harvard committed a costly turnover which resulted in a Rick Neiss free throw on the front end of a one-and-one. Frank Jakubicek was then fouled trying to convert the rebound of Neiss's second free throw, and the big Johnsburg center put in both charity tosses to put his team up by two. Harvard's Tim Anderson missed an outside shot on the following play, but Johnsburg was not about to take advantage of the Instead the locals gave Harvard more tries at the basket, one of which was good with 6 seconds remaining by Paul Kramarczyk. Johnsburg missed a 32-footer at the buzzer, and the overtime period was necessary with the score sitting at 58-58 at the end of regulation time. In the overtime, Johnsburg won the tip and each team turned the ball over before any scoring unfolded. Tom Pieper hit one of two free throws as a result of s shooting foul,and Rick Neiss pulled down an important rebound on the errant free throw. He proceeded to drive to the bucket, converting tne layup and drawing a foul in the meantime. He accomplished the three-point play to put Johnsburg up by four. Chuck Novy finished up the Skyhawk scoring with a bucket after another Harvard turnover, and from there a four-corner delay offense ran out the clock and preserved the victory for Johnsburg. Johnsburg hit 24 of 47 field goals for 51 percent, while Harvard hit on 28 of 59 for 44 percent Johnsburg also hit 53 percent of its charity shots (14 of 28), and the Hornets only shot 12 all night, converting on half of them. Harvard did have a 38-30 advantage on the boards, but again did not take advantage of the situation against the Skyhawks. from the Rick Neiss gathered 18 points on 8 of 15 shots and 2 of 4 free throws. Both Skyhawk scorers also chipped in with 7 assists , and Pieper pulled down an impressive 6 of the 30 Johnsburg rebounds. uivuaww o^cuiioi urc For Johnsburg, Pieper hit 6 of 8 from field and 7 of 11 free throws for 19 points. 12 buckets Novy c and 1 of 2 free > paints throws. He also pulled down 5 rebounds for the local cause Frank Jakubicek only hit one of 6 field goals, but put in 4 of 7 charity tosses in putting in 8 total points. He also gained 11 of the 30 Johnsburg rebounds. Russ Beck and Scott Valentin each had two points in the winning effort. For Harvard, Haldeman had 18 and Anderson had 10 to go with Kramarczyk's 23. Kramarczyk and Anderson handled most of the rebounding duties, with 13 and 14 respectively. Johnsburg and Harvard will both compete in the Harvard regional this week. Joel Wakitsch Bowling Scores McHENRY SCHOOL LEAGUE 2-18-81 As the weather blossomed into spring, the bowlers began to perk up and rolled some great games and series. To begin with, 6 people made it easy pickings in the split department and Deciding on a Hearing Aid isn't Easy... Deciding where to Buy H should be I McNENRY HEARING AID CENTER that is a definite im­ provement. They were: S. Larkin, 3-7-1; M. Krauz, 5-7; C. Buittner (feeling heady about the weather), 1-4-7-9 and 2-10; A. Boeldt (who thought he was on another team), 6-7-10 and 5-7-9; B. Doran (even though in last place), 1-2-10 and 2-10; and T. Rome, 6-7. Men's high series and games were plentiful: A. Boeldt, 164, 207, 188 - 559; J. Sytsma, 171, 203, 160 - 534; and T. Stumbris, 154,188,190 - 532. Ruling with high games were: J. Golden, 180 and 188; J. Griffeth, 185; B. (sub.) Heneise, 185; B. Doran, 179; R. Glawe, 176; B. Street and D. Miller, 171; and L. Johnson, 170. Feminity was not to be over looked as E. Rogers had 182, B. Thompson, 174, S. Blume (what, no pizza?), 172, M. Raasch 171, and M. Krauz a 170. w Wonder Pins 54Vfc SSST's 52 Ronnie's Rapettes 48 25* 28 32 47 33 43 37 43 37 38 Vi 40* 36 44 34 48 31 49 30 50 Four Easy Pieces 24 58 K. Lescher Repeaters Pragmatic 10 Bird & Bees The Hi-Lo s Who's Up? Lyle & F reinds Gutter Dusters Four Flushes 1WIDNCSDAY ONLY 10 TO 5 I EVENINGS SY Al>PT. Robert Stenslend MGR- 25 years Experience Bohert Decker M.A. • Audiologist . We Make House Cells 1 FREE Hearing Tests 1 Batteries '/, Price 1 Sales I Repairs All Makes-Free Loaners Sonet CITIZEN mcwn contain 1. Professional Residential Carpet Cleaning Two Step Process Rotary Mochine Scrubbing 2. Steamex Rinsing CALL MN 385-3252 MORINZ MRINTSNHNCC %SS5 f •

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