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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 21 Oct 1981, p. 6

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PAGE 6 - PLAINDEALER - WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21.1981 Dundee Spoils McHenry's Homecoming 21-12 PASSING OUT OF THE END ZONE - is McHenry (jaarterback Doug Mullen. Tom Wagner (21) and Tim Barry (BO) are blocking on the play as the Warriors look to better field position. Mullen's pass fell incomplete and Curt Rehberg was called on to^iunt from the end zone... STAFF PHOTO- WAYNE GAYLORD Cychner, Kubacki Spark Marian Past Aurora 21-6 (, Jeff Cychner and Dave Kubacki had a Homecoming game that they'll never forget The two junior running backs accounted for jjll three touchdowns in a muddy, slippery. Saturday afternoon game leading Marian Central to a 21-6 non- conference victory over Aurora Central Catholic. The Hurricanes under the guidance of first year coach Don Penza remain in first place in the SHARK con­ ference with a 3-0 record and stand at 5-1 overall. After receiving the opening kick off. Marian failed to move the ball gaining only three yards on three downs and called on Scott Spengel to punt. Aurora „was equally as ineffective on its first possession. Charger quar­ terback Haul Piscoran recovered his own fumble on hffcf down, then missed on fto straight passes therefore also being forced to punt With the punt return on, , Cychner took the ball on the fly and began moving to his right. Kubacki then came around on the reverse tiandoff and headed 80 yards untouched down the left sideline for the game's first Score. Spengel booted the £xtra point, and with 8 46 '.remaining in the first Quarter, Marian led 7-0 On the Chargers third ii . possession of the quarter they scored a tying touch­ down Running back Dan Koehler carried on the first two plays of the drive gaining six yards, then left the game after receiving a smashing tackle by the Hurricanes' John Jarvis. Koehler didn't return to the Charger line up and was through for the afternoon with five carries for 27 yards. His replacement. Lee De King picked up the slack, however, running for 11 yards on the next two plays, then taking a pitchout and going 52 yards for a score. The kick was unsuccessful and with 49 seconds left in Ihe period. Aurora trailed 7- (i Seconds later, it was again the Cychner to Kubacki combination for the Marian touchdown In what looked like a replay of the first Marian score. Cychner took the kick ;ind headed right only to give the ball to Kubacki on the reverse. Kubacki again sped untouched down the left sideline, thanks to a crun­ ching block by'Tom Pappas which took out two Chargers, to complete the 75-yard scoring play Spengel's kick was again perfect and the Hurricanes extended their lead to 14-6. "That block was the turning point in the game," said Penza. "We'd been working on that play for three weeks now and we finally made it work." Two running plays by Aurora ran out the clock in the first quarter. The second and third quarters were identically played with neither team mounting much of a threat, and neither team able to run more than five plays before turning the ball over on punts For the game Aurora was forced to kick eight times, while Spengel punted six times (four kicks over 41 yards) for Marian. In the fourth quarter, the Hurricanes struck again as back up quarterback Chuck Hartlieb hit Cychner with a pass down to the Charger 10- yard line. A penalty on Aurora gave Marian a first and goal on the five, and Cychner then carried for the final touchdown on the first play. Spengel was again perfect with his kick and Marian had its 21-6 victory. Cychner was the leading rusher for the Hurricanes with 47 yards in. 10 carries, and he was also the only receiver as he caught five passes for 39 yards. Four of those tosses came from Hartlieb and the first was from starter Don Rickert. Marian's defense held Piscoran with out a com­ pletion in 10 attempts and intercepted him twice. With four minutes remaining in the game, Jarvis picked him off, and with under two minutes to go, Tim Truckenbrod sealed the win with his first theft of the year. Marian will resume SHARK conference play this weekend hosting winless Marengo on Saturday, Oct. 24. The Indians are coming off a 24-8 loss to Johnsburg. Carl Moesche Plaindealer Marian Spikers Now First In SHARK By winning twice last yeek, and being aided by ohnsburg's win over )Hnnonegah. Marian Cen- tYal's volleyball team moved 4nto sole possession of first place in the SHARK con­ ference with a 5-1 record Coach Mary Stoner's team also improved its overall mark to 10-4. The Hurricanes defeated conference opponents Harvard Tuesday night and Biso Marengo Thursday nigh? to take the lead. i Johnsburg's victory over Hononegah Tuesday gave the Indians their second loss in the conference and dropped them into second place Johnsburg, mean­ while. stands at 2-3 in the SHARK Marian defeated the Hornets in straight sets by identical 15-13, 15-13 scores in a match played at Har­ vard. This avenged an earlier three set loss by Harvard on the Hurricanes home floor. The game also marked the return of junior member Holly Ryan. The Crystal Lake native had missed three games because of injury, but now appears to be ready to contribute significanty again. "She's helped us a lot since coming back," noted Stoner. "She's played really well." Against Marengo, Marian again won in straight sets defeating the Indians in a close match 16-14 and then putting them away rather MEAT PACKING CORPORATION "Where the TOP Area Restaurants Buy Their Meat" • U.S. GOVT. INSP EST. NO. 5701 easily 15-2. "I was real proud of the way our girls played," said Stoner. "We're playing with more consistency and working better as a team." Sarah Traver led a balanced Hurricane scoring attack as she finished with seven points. Julie Nylan- der, Beth Penza, and Ryan all contributed six points to the attack. The Hurricane freshmen- sophomore team also won over Harvard and Marengo last week. In the first set against the Indians, Marian's Diane Knox established a school record as she served 15 consecutive points for the win. Marengo had led 1-0 in the contest before Knox, a McHenry native, ac­ complished her feat. Marengo won the second set 15-13, but Marian came back to win the deciding third set 16-14 in another nailbiter. Carl Moesche It was the same old story. For the thirteenth straight year the McHenry Warriors iost their Homecoming game, this time to the Dundee Cardunals by a score of 21-12. The loss dropped McHenry into a six way tie for second place in the Fox Valley conference with a 2-2 record. The Warriors are also now 4- 2 for the year The Cards kicked off to the Warrior 33-yard line. The Warrior offense sputtered and were forced to kick to the Cards 33. A 15 yard penalty, one of many for the Warriors Friday gave the Cards the ball on their own 19. Dundee quarterback Pat Carroll then lofted a pass to his favorite receiver Daye^- Fielding and the split end gathered it in jor a 51-yard touchdown The extra point conversion was good and with 8:45 gone in the first period, Dundee led 7-0. After the kick off. the Cards again held forcing the Warriors to punt the ball. Dundee marched deep into McHenry territory until Denny Deja intercepted a pass on the four yard line halting the threat. After an exchange of punts, the period ended with Dundee still on top at 7-0. Taking the ball on their own 36, the Warriors mar­ ched 64 yards, their longest drive of the game to score. Quarterback Doug Mullen first hit tight end Tom Lynk with a pass to the Card 36. Mladen Rudman then gained nine yards on a reverse. Running back Tom Wagner carried for a first down to the 23. Deja then hit Rudman with a halfback option pass down to the one- yard line. Wagner then followed with a one-yard plunge for the score. The kick for the point after was wide and McHenry trailed 7- t i . On their next possession the Cards found themselves with d third down and 22 situation. Carroll then hit Klkins for a first down on the Warrior 44. Carroll then completed another long pass to the 33. The drive was halted, however, when linebacker Cu'ft Rehberg intercepted a Carroll pass and returned it to the 24. Dundee again held and forced a punt. But Deja picked off his second pass of the game to give McHenry the ball back. With time running out in the half, Mullen's attempted screen pass was picked off by Nelson who went 27 yards untouched for a touchdown. The kick was good and the Cardunals led at in­ termission 14-6. Dundee received the second half kick off and tailed to move the ball punting it to McHenry. The Warriors, however, followed suit and kicked it right back. This time the Cardunals capitalized as Elkins found an opening through the Warrior line and raced 39 yards for a score. The extra point kick was good and the Cards led 21-6. Late in the period, Mullen generated the Warrior of­ fense with his passing. Two completions to Lynk put McHenry deep into Dundee territory, then two plays later Wagner again found ' he end zone. The conversion was missed and the Warriors 'railed 21-12. In the final period, McHenry had a few scoring opportunities but came up >hort Mullen drove his team down to the 30 on one oc­ casion, but four straight incomplete passes from there sealed the victory for Dundee. The Cardunals outgained the Warriors 81 to 39 on the ground, although McHenry held a 203 to 129 yard ad­ vantage in passing. Mullen hit on only seven of 33 passing attempts for 181 yards and was intercepted three times. Carroll by comparison, hit on 11 of 23 passes and was also picked off three times. p The Warriors will hope to rebound next weekend when they travel to Crystal Lake Central on Friday night. The Tigers are in sole possession of first place in the Fox Valley, one game ahead of McHenry. Dick Rabbitt SCORING 1 1 1 % 0 6 8 0 21 12 Dundee McHenry McHenry: Wagner, 1 yard run, (kick no good). Wagner, 1 yard run (pass failed). Dundee: Fielding, 51 yard pass from Carroll, (Bratthauer kick). Nelson, 27 yard intercepted pass, (Bratthauer kick). Elkins, 39 yard run, (Bratthauer kick). 1st downs Yards rushing Yards passing Total Yards Passes att.-comp.-int. Penalties Total plays Rushing Wagner Whalen Rudman Deja Lomax Mullen 10-32 2-14 2-10 2-2 3-3 9 (-22) Passing Mullen 7-31-181 Deja 1-22 D M 10 12 81 39 129 203 210 242 11-23-3 8-33-3 8-70 4-50 55 61 Receiving Shaver 3-94 Rudman 2-61 Lynk 3-16 CLOSING IN - on Dundee quarterback Pat Carroll (10) are McHenry players Tim Barry (60) and Curt Rehberg (63). Carroll scrambled out of the pocket more than once to find an open receiver and spoil McHenry's Homecoming for the thirteenth year with a 21-12 win. STAFF PHOTO - WAYNE GAYLORD Johnsburg Wins First 24-8 It took six weeks for it to happen, but the Johnsburg Skyhawks finally won a game as Saturday Bob Sch- mitt's team won 24-8 at Marengo. The Skyhawks are now 1-3 in the SHARK conference and have an overall mark of 1-5. Pete Barroso led the way for Johnsburg with 131 yards rushing. Pat Rorig, the other half of the backfield, ac­ counted for 79 yards on the ground himself. The Skyhawks offensive unit, unlike in their other games this season, was the focal point to success. They totaled 231 yards on the ground, another 123 through the air, and accumulated 21 first downs along the way. Marengo received the opening kick off but didn't have the ball very long. On the first play from scrim­ mage, Russ Beck in­ tercepted a Marertgo pass to give Johnsburg the ball. After picking up two first downs, however, the Skyhawks turned the ball over to the Indians on a fumble But again the Johnsburg defense held and got the ball back four plays later on a punt. Quarterback Dan Williams (10 of 16 for 123 yards and 1 TD) got the Skyhawks moving with passes of 11 yards and then STOCK UP NOW WHILE PRICES ARE LOWER CALL US ABOUT OUR Top Quality - STEAKS GROUND BEEF & ROASTS 5 LB. MINIMUM PER ITEM McHENRY OPTICIANS of eight yards for a touch­ down to Scott Zalke. The point after was no good, but Johnsburg led 6-0. Marengo was unable to move the ball on its next possession and turned the ball over to the Skyhawks on its own 43. Barroso carry of 12 yards followed by a Williams to Zalke pass put the ball on the Indian 13. Williams then hit Beck for an apparent touchdown, but the ball was jarred loose from him in the end zone and the Indians recovered. After getting the ball back on downs, Johnsburg was able to sustain a drive leading to another score. Barroso accounted for 34 of the 56 yards in the drive, but the Rorig got the call for the touchdown as his score made it 12-0 Johnsburg at the half. The Skyhawk defense had almost completely shut down the Indian defense in the first half allowing them only 15 offensive plays. Johnsburg. meanwhile, had already piled up 11 first downs on 39 offensive snaps. To start the second half, Williams engineered a 63- yard touchdown drive with Barroso and Rorig carrying for most of the yardage. At the two yard line, Rorig again got the call again went over the goal line giving Johnsburg a 18-0 lead. The Skyhawks scored again early in the fourth quarter. Williams hit Zalke for a nine yard gain and a first and goal at the three- yard line. Junior running back Dan Gallagher then muscled his way through the middle on the next play to give Johnsburg a 24-0 ad­ vantage. Marengo scored on its last possession of the game, but by then it was too little too later as the Skyhawks left the Indians home field with their first victory of the year. Johnsburg will host SHARK conference rival Hononegah on Saturday, Oct. 24. beginning at 2:00 p.m. Joe Kost Scoreboard Fox Valley Conference Ail Crystal Lake Central McHenry Crown Cary Grove Dundee Jacobs Woodstock Crystal Lake South Friday's game Jacobs at Woodstock, 6 & 8 p.m. Saturday's games McHenry at Crystal Lake Central^ 12 & 2 p.m Dundee at Crown, 12 & 2 p.m. Crystal Lake South at Cary Grove, 12 & 2 p.m Shark Conference All w 1 Conf w 1 P' Da w 1 4 2 84 55 3 1 4 2 94 89 2 2 4 2 60 40 2 2 4 2 84 55 2 2 3 3 72 87 2 2 3 3 66 81 2 2 3 3 65 101 2 2 2 4 65 71 1 3 Conf Marian Central Hononegah Harvard Johnsburg Marengo Pf 102 113 84 50 48 pa 74 89 129 102 145 Saturday's games Marengo at Marian Central, 12 & 2 p m Harvard at Hampshire (non-conf.), 12 & 2 p.m. Hononegah at Johnsburg, 12 & 2 p.m. 1313 W. OLD BAY RD. PISTAKEE BAY - McHENRY, IL Monday thru Friday 9 am to 3 pm 815-385-8300 1301 RIVERSIDE DR. (Across from the Fox Hole) McHENRY, ILLINOIS 385-9240 GLASSES MADE WHILE YOU WAIT! (Single Vision Only) Ovor 3,000 First Quality FRRMES Metal or Plastic * ALL KIDS FRRMES Motal $ or Plastic 12 W % VISIT OUR BOUTIQUE DESIGNER SECTION SENIOR CITIZENS FREE FRRMES WITH PURCHASE OF LENSES EMERGENY REPAIRS & FRAME REPLACEMENT [8151385-9240 jCX} Jl DAILY 8 3(15 30. S A T " i WED 8 30 1 V. ^ ̂ 4 Johnsburg Junior High School Wildcat Booster Club ™ , Octobor 16,1981 TO. All students, parents, friends, relatives, teachers and coaches and workers who bought, sold or worked on our recent Cheese and Sausage Sale. Through your efforts the Cheese and Sausage Sale was a great success. I wont to thank each and every person who supported our sale. I hope you are all enjoying your cheese and sausage and also enjoying the satisfaction one feels from becoming involved in such a worthwhile project. The funds generated by this sale will enable us to continue providing athletic equipment and uniforms for the Johnsburg Junior High School. Because of your continued cooperation with us we will be able to provide our students and com­ munity with an active and superior sports program which they will always be proud to be a part of. I especially want all the people who worked so hard and gave so much of their time to know they are really appreciated and without you the Booster Club and sports program would not be as successful as it is. Thank You All Vary Much, Carol Toussoint, President Wildcat Boostor Club

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