Friday, January 25, 2013

Late January


Tiger Cub girls take county swim title

Friday, January 25, 2013

(Photo)
Greencastle's senior captains Kaitlynne Mason (center) and Kaelynn Cox celebrate winning the 2013 Putnam County girls' swimming and diving championship by claiming the trophy with head coach Kent Menzel.
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The Greencastle girls' swimming and diving team completed a local tournament sweep on Thursday, winning the 2013 Putnam County meet at South Putnam with 315 points.
The Tiger Cubs won the West Central Conference title a few weeks ago.
At the county meet South Putnam finished second with 196 and North Putnam was third with 95.
GHS had county champions in 10 of the 12 events, including wins in each of the three valuable relays.
Mallary Meyer, Emily Wheeler, Amelia Smith, Corrie Romer, Libby Brush, Amelia Smith, Rosio Gomez, Kaelynn Cox and Rachel Custis each won individual or relay victories.
"Given where we are in our plans for next week, I think they swam very, very well," GHS coach Kent Menzel said. "I was particularly happy with our relays. I thought they were on top of things tonight ... I thought they all meshed really well."
The Tiger Cubs have been relaxing their training in preparation for the start of the postseason next week.
Preliminaries for the sectional meet are Thursday night in Avon, and Menzel said he is hoping the team will be peaking at the right time.
"The girls were working on events that they're going to be swimming next week at the sectional," Menzel said. "They're where we want them to be. As the next seven days unfold, I think we'll sharpen them up quite a bit."
The Eagles had one individual champion, freshman diver Maddison Plunkett, to combine with several strong races.
"She got a little worked up; I don't know that she was happy with her performance," SPHS coach Matt Edwards said. "But I'm happy to see both her and Courtney (Sullivan) come out on top for one and two. They were first and second in both conference and county.
"That's a pretty big accomplishment. They both work very hard. They're in here morning after morning, trying to perfect things."
The Eagles' girls had mixed emotions about the meet, Edwards said, because it is the final regular season meet of the year.
"They know that this is their last 'season' kind of meet," Edwards said. "A lot of them wanted to swim their best times. And they did a heck of a job with that.
"The biggest thing I noticed tonight was just their racing. They put on some really good races. I've got to give credit to North Putnam and Greencastle, because they're good competitors, and our girls know that.
"Tonight was really about beating the girls to the left and to the right of them ... and practicing good racing. They did wonders, and I'm really proud of them."
North Putnam came through with one with individual champion as well. Elizabeth Alford swam an impressive 2:19.27 in the 200-yard freestyle, winning the race by nearly six seconds.
"The standout was Elizabeth Alford," NPHS coach Tony Gray said. "She won the county championship in the 200 and almost pulled it out in the 100. She just didn't quite have a good turn in that last wall, but she's worked really hard this year. I think the best things are in the future for her."
The Cougars have been improving steadily throughout the year and the county meet was a positive conclusion to the regular season, Gray said.
"The girls did a good job," he said. "They had fun tonight, they competed hard. Maybe the times weren't exactly where we wanted, but they just started taper.
"They're smiling so I'm smiling."
With the postseason approaching quickly, each team competing Thursday came into the meet hoping to be ready for next Thursday's sectional 11 preliminary races at Avon.

(Photo)
Greencastle swimmers Mallary Meyer (top) and Rachel Custis fight for the finish line in the 100-yard backstroke event on Thursday. Meyer out-touched Custis to come away with a win and secure the county championship with a time of 1:12.97.
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At South Putnam
2013 Girls' Putnam County Championship
Team score -- Final
1, Greencastle High School, 315. 2, South Putnam High School, 196. 3, North Putnam High School, 95.
Event results
Girls 200 Yard Medley Relay: 1, Greencastle High School 'A' (Meyer, Mallary , Wheeler, Emily , Smith, Amelia , Romer, Corrie ), 2:09.02. 2, South Putnam High School 'A' (Deszi, Morgan , Kiste, Katie , Beasley, Lyndsie , Hansel, Katie ), 2:21.56. 3, Greencastle High School 'B' (Mason, Kaitlynne , Hansen, Beth Ann , Cassida, Sydney , Custis, Rachel ), 2:24.25. 4, North Putnam High School 'A' (Gray, Hannah , Roberts, Lyndsay , Muse, Rebecca , Livesay, Sierra ), 2:32.93. 5, South Putnam High School 'B' (Plunkett, Maddison , Arnold, Megan , Shaw, Katie , Sutkowski, Macy ), 2:36.15.
Girls 200 Yard Freestyle: 1, Alford, Elizabeth, NPHS, 2:19.27. 2, Beasley, Katie Jo, SPHS, 2:25.22. 3, Cox, Kaelynn, GHS, 2:32.82. 4, Moore, Rebecca, GHS, 2:37.80. 5, Deszi, Morgan, SPHS, 2:38.18. 6, Stevens, Kristen, GHS, 2:39.32. 7, Wilson, Ashley, SPHS, 2:46.48. 8, Roberts, Jessica, GHS, 2:53.08. 9, Mason, Kaitlynne, GHS, 2:53.11. 10, Frieje, Samantha, NPHS, 2:53.98. 11, Buchanon, Rorie, NPHS, 3:20.75.
Girls 200 Yard Individual Medley: 1, Brush, Elizabeth, GHS, 2:38.92. 2, Wheeler, Emily, GHS, 2:45.24. 3, Gomez, Rosio, GHS, 2:47.16. 4, Kiste, Katie, SPHS, 3:02.81. 5, Arnold, Megan, SPHS, 3:05.18. 6, Hansen, Beth Ann, GHS, 3:06.64. 7, Muse, Rebecca, NPHS, 3:08.45. 8, Kelley, Tasha, SPHS, 3:30.12.
Girls 50 Yard Freestyle: 1, Smith, Amelia, GHS, 28.12. 2, Romer, Corrie, GHS, 28.13. 3, Custis, Rachel, GHS, 29.35. 4, Hansel, Katie, SPHS, 30.03. 5, Moore, Alexandra, NPHS, 32.55. 6, Kiste, Tori, SPHS, 32.74. 7, Livesay, Sierra, NPHS, 33.17. 8, Brattain, Hannah, GHS, 34.94. 9, Gray, Hannah, NPHS, 36.03. 10, Hettich, Michayla, SPHS, 36.36. 11, Fauvergue, Madi, GHS, 39.93. 12, McDaniel, Erin, NPHS, 41.37.
Girls 1 meter Diving: 1, Plunkett, Maddison, SPHS, 138.75. 2, Sullivan, Courtney, SPHS, 136.15. 3, Cassida, Sydney, GHS, 112.35. 4, Fauvergue, Madi, GHS, 106.65.
Girls 100 Yard Butterfly: 1, Gomez, Rosio, GHS, 1:12.82. 2, Meyer, Mallary, GHS, 1:13.32. 3, Beasley, Lyndsie, SPHS, 1:22.94. 4, Shaw, Katie, SPHS, 1:34.69. 5, Muse, Rebecca, NPHS, 1:35.16. 6, Kelley, Tasha, SPHS, 1:38.21. 7, Roberts, Jessica, GHS, 1:42.97.
Girls 100 Yard Freestyle: 1, Romer, Corrie, GHS, 1:03.28. 2, Smith, Amelia, GHS, 1:03.35. 3, Alford, Elizabeth, NPHS, 1:04.17. 4, Cox, Kaelynn, GHS, 1:04.46. 5, Beasley, Katie Jo, SPHS, 1:05.90. 6, Kiste, Tori, SPHS, 1:12.70. 7, Moore, Alexandra, NPHS, 1:14.71. 8, Sutkowski, Macy, SPHS, 1:15.54. 9, Livesay, Sierra, NPHS, 1:17.89. 10, Roberts, Lyndsay, NPHS, 1:22.59. 11, Anderson, Caitlyn, GHS, 1:24.37. 12, McDaniel, Erin, NPHS, 1:37.24.
Girls 500 Yard Freestyle: 1, Brush, Elizabeth, GHS, 6:29.86. 2, Hansel, Katie, SPHS, 6:50.70. 3, Moore, Rebecca, GHS, 7:00.62. 4, Wilson, Ashley, SPHS, 7:16.07. 5, Stevens, Kristen, GHS, 7:16.93. 6, Frieje, Samantha, NPHS, 7:57.06. 7, Wolf, Autumn, NPHS, 8:00.19. 8, Buchanon, Rorie, NPHS, 9:34.65.
Girls 200 Yard Freestyle Relay: 1, Greencastle High School 'A' (Wheeler, Emily , Cox, Kaelynn , Romer, Corrie , Smith, Amelia ), 1:54.27. 2, South Putnam High School 'A' (Beasley, Katie Jo , Shaw, Katie , Beasley, Lyndsie , Hansel, Katie ), 2:02.82. 3, North Putnam High School 'A' (Alford, Elizabeth , Livesay, Sierra , Moore, Alexandra , Muse, Rebecca ), 2:05.87. 4, Greencastle High School 'B' (Roberts, Jessica , Mason, Kaitlynne , Gomez, Rosio , Moore, Rebecca ), 2:11.03. 5, South Putnam High School 'B' (Kiste, Tori , Arnold, Megan , Kiste, Katie , Sutkowski, Macy ), 2:13.71.
Girls 100 Yard Backstroke: 1, Meyer, Mallary, GHS, 1:12.97. 2, Custis, Rachel, GHS, 1:13.43. 3, Cassida, Sydney, GHS, 1:14.95. 4, Deszi, Morgan, SPHS, 1:18.02. 5, Plunkett, Maddison, SPHS, 1:28.02. 6, Gray, Hannah, NPHS, 1:30.48. 7, Wolf, Autumn, NPHS, 1:31.89.
Girls 100 Yard Breaststroke: 1, Wheeler, Emily, GHS, 1:22.68. 2, Hansen, Beth Ann, GHS, 1:25.47. 3, Brattain, Hannah, GHS, 1:27.87. 4, Kiste, Katie, SPHS, 1:35.30. 5, Roberts, Lyndsay, NPHS, 1:36.68. 6, Anderson, Caitlyn, GHS, 1:39.64. 7, Mason, Kaitlynne, GHS, 1:39.69. 8, Arnold, Megan, SPHS, 1:40.44.
Girls 400 Yard Freestyle Relay: 1, Greencastle High School 'A' (Brush, Elizabeth , Custis, Rachel , Cox, Kaelynn , Gomez, Rosio ), 4:32.88. 2, South Putnam High School 'A' (Beasley, Katie Jo , Shaw, Katie , Kiste, Tori , Beasley, Lyndsie ), 4:42.74. 3, Greencastle High School 'B' (Stevens, Kristen , Moore, Rebecca , Cassida, Sydney , Meyer, Mallary ), 4:42.95. 4, South Putnam High School 'B' (Wilson, Ashley , Kelley, Tasha , Plunkett, Maddison , Sutkowski, Macy ), 5:22.04. 5, North Putnam High School 'A' (Alford, Elizabeth , Moore, Alexandra , Frieje, Samantha , Wolf, Autumn ), 5:25.06.

No. 1 Tigers rely on roles unspoken

Thursday, January 24, 2013

(Photo)
DePauw senior Ellie Pearson does the dirty work inside for the Tigers, but each player knows her role.
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As the top-ranked DePauw University women's basketball team continued it dominant season by totally dismantling Wittenberg on Wednes-day, it became clear that the Tigers are capable of becoming more than a great team, but a legendary one.
DPU is more than just a collection of great players, though it is most certainly that. But it isn't their talent that makes the Tigers special, it's how perfectly constructed they are.
Their individual talents complement one another perfectly. Each player in the rotation has a specific role, tailored perfectly to her skills, and she rarely deviates from it.

(Photo)
"I think we really rely on people accepting roles on this team," DePauw coach Kris Huffman said. "We're looking for people that have that team mentality and selflessness."
As senior Ellie Pearson describes it, the team doesn't talk about roles, it's just a natural progression of how they all play.
"They're kind of unspoken roles," Pearson said. "We don't have any determined roles, but they're kind of known, if that makes sense."
Senior point guard Kate Walker sets the tone for the team -- passing before shooting, looking for open shooters as she attacks the lane -- but she isn't the lone leader.
Pearson is the team's leading rebounder, averaging nearly eight per game (in limited time).
She needs to average a little more than 15 rebounds per game for the rest of the season to set the DePauw career rebounding record, something she is capable of -- were she given the minutes -- but something she won't do because the team is too good for her to play enough.
(None of the starters gets more than 23 minutes per game. The Tigers blow out nearly every opponent. They learn more about execution in practice than they do in games. Echoing the UCLA men's teams of the late 60s, the only team that's physically a match for the DPU starters in the DPU bench.)
Junior Alex Gasaway is the team's leading scorer, utilizing an assortment of DeJuan Blair-like post moves to fight through contact and provide the team it's inside offensive threat.
Junior Ali Ross is the team's defensive stopper. She picks up the opposing point guard full court, hounding her opponent relentlessly.
The fifth starter, sophomore Savannah Trees, is an electric scorer capable of knocking down shots from the outside (she makes better than 50 percent of her threes) or putting the ball on the floor and knocking down a runner in the lane.
"On any given night anyone could go off for 20," Pearson said. "It's just kind of fun sitting in the locker room before the game thinking, 'All right, who is it going to be tonight?' Someone always steps up, but then if you go and look at our team it's very balanced scoring (averages)."
Each of the players is capable of more -- Walker, Ross and even Gasaway are capable of stepping outside and knocking down open threes, "In the flow of the game," Gasaway says; Pearson leads the Tigers in blocks and steals (she had four of each on Wednesday) -- but they never deviate, always staying within themselves.
The roles go beyond the starters.
Junior Alison Stephens would start for any other team in the country. She's and inside-outside scoring threat who is also second on the team in rebounds.
Senior Kat Molloy picks up the defensive pressure when Ross goes to the bench.
It goes on.
Whatever five-woman unit the Tigers have on the court, each player falls into her lane.
The players' willingness to take a step back with her personal numbers to help the team makes the difference between a great team and a legendary one.
It's why Butler made consecutive championship games and why the Los Angeles Lakers -- with four likely Hall of Famers -- are on pace to miss the NBA playoffs.
The players on DePauw's basketball team are very good, maybe even great. The team is phenomenal.

DPU women move to 18-0 by rolling past Wittenberg

Thursday, January 24, 2013
By halftime against Wittenberg, the only thing in question for the DePauw women's basketball team was whether or not it would double-up the score of its opponent. The host Tigers did exactly that, winning 74-37.
"We never go into a game (preparing) like we're better than an opponent. Coach (Huffman) always prepares us the same -- same scouting report, same amount of film, same prep during practice," DPU junior Alex Gasaway said. "But our goal is always to bury them."
Gasaway had a season-high 27 points against Wittenberg despite playing only 18 minutes.
"She had a nice game," Tigers coach Kris Huffman said. "She's coming off having the flu, so it was a good performance. And she wanted the ball, which was nice to see."
DePauw started the game slow, at least by its standards, leading by only two (16-14) with 10:44 left in the first half.
They rolled from there, finishing the half on a 20-4 run to take a 36-18 lead into the break.
Gasaway scored 11 in the first half, then continued where she left off in the second, attacking the basket and getting to the line. She mad 12-of-13 free throws in the game.
"I expect contact when I go in for layups or shots down low, but I don't typically expect for them to call it," Gasaway said. "Sometimes they call it, sometimes they don't. But I expect contact."
The win was DePauw's 43rd straight regular season victory, adding one more to the school-record to start a season. The Tigers are now 18-0.
They'll return to action Saturday when they host Ohio Wesleyan at 1 p.m.

(Photo)
DePauw junior Alex Gasaway pulls in a rebound over Wittenberg on Tuesday. She scored a game- and season-high 27 points.
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At DePauw
Wittenberg 18 19 -- 37
DePauw 36 38 -- 74
Individual scoring
Wittenberg (8-9, 4-4 NCAC): Rice 3-10 1-2 8, Haralamos 2-8 2-2 6, Lara 2-7 1-2 5, Daniel-Hamberg 2-8 1-2 5, Schroeder 2-3 1-2 5, Replogle 2-5 0-0 4, Skidmore 1-5 0-0 2, Miller 1-3 0-0 2.
DePauw (18-0, 9-0): Gasaway 7-11 12-13 27, Trees 5-9 0-0 11, Stephens 3-7 1-1 8, Molloy 2-4 2-2 7, Pearson 2-6 1-5 5, Walker 2-3 0-0 4, Ross 1-4 1-2 3, Ondik 1-2 0-0 3, Abendroth 1-4 0-0 3, Keller 0-1 2-2 2, McDonagh 0-0 1-2 1, Sarkisian 0-1 0-0 0, Stoner 0-0 0-0 0, Skordos 0-2 0-0 0, Hacker 0-1 0-0 0, Lukemeyer 0-2 0-1 0, Francis 0-0 0-0 0.
Team scoring (three-pointers)
Wittenberg 15-49 (1-15) 6-10 37, DePauw 24-57 (6-13) 20-28 74.
Rebounds (offensive)
Wittenberg 30 (9), DePauw 40 (15).
Turnovers
Wittenberg 23, DePauw 11.

Last-second shot helps Warriors knock out NPHS

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

(Photo)
Turkey Run junior Jordan Goddard pulls up for her game-winning layup, shooting over North Putnam juniors Bethany Wiatt (5) and Madi Asbell to get the win.
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ROACHDALE -- Big Ten fans know that in a slow-paced, every-possession-matters-more kind of game, every mistake and every success is magnified.
So when Turkey Run junior Jordan Goddard sank a layup from the right block as time expired to give her team a 33-32 win at North Putnam, the Cougars had numerous plays they could point to as a culprit.
North Putnam (4-14, 0-3 WCC) had several success on Tuesday: senior Sam Lucas scored 16 points and grabbed 13 rebounds; junior Bethany Wiatt had seven steals, to go along with her seven points; the squad had only 14 turnovers.
But the positives were balanced out by what the Warriors did well: winning the rebound battle 34-29; slowing the game down to their pace.
Most importantly, though, Turkey Run had the ball last.
"I told the girls at halftime that (Turkey Run) was going to try to slow the game down and keep the tempo down and make it low possession," NPHS coach Curtis Lawrence said. "When we see a short bench (Turkey Run dressed six players), we want to try to pick the tempo up."
As Turkey Run (2-17) slowed the pace of the game down to a crawl, the Cougars couldn't ever seem to inject energy.
The crisp, decisive passing of the Warriors negated the NPHS press, and falling back on defense meant sitting in a zone and waiting Turkey Run to make a mistake.
The Cougars capitalized in spurts, but that meant building a lead up to only five.
As the clock ticked away late in the fourth quarter, the Cougars up one point, it seemed like the Warriors would work it down for the last shot.
Turkey Run had tried to burn the final forty seconds of the third quarter in the Four Corners offense, but it turned the ball over late.
As Wiatt dove on a loose ball, the game tied with 11 seconds left in the fourth, they repeated their mistake.
Wiatt tied the ball up and the possession arrow pointed for North Putnam.
Lucas was fouled on the inbounds and sank one-of-two free throws to take the lead with 3.2 seconds remaining.
After a timeout, the Warriors took the ball out on the sideline near half court.
"It was a poor coaching move on my part at the end," Lawrence said. "I shouldn't have had (senior Cayla Kientz) guarding the ball out of bounds with 3.2. I should have had her back in the middle of the lane. That kind of made everybody help."
Senior Chelsie Wood appeared trapped on the sideline but found Goddard under the basket for a layup.
Goddard finished the game with 14 points (six-of-nine from the field) and seven rebounds.
The Cougars will be back in action Friday when they host Greencastle at 6 p.m. It is also the NPHS homecoming.


At North Putnam
Turkey Run 7 5 10 11 -- 33
North Putnam 8 5 12 7 -- 32

Individual scoring
Turkey Run (2-17): Goddard 6-9 2-3 14, Grayless 3-7 1-3 7, Thompson 1-4 0-0 3, Bowling 1-5 0-0 3, Wood 0-9 3-5 3, Basan 1-2 0-0 3.
North Putnam (4-14, 0-3): Lucas 5-11 6-8 16, Wiatt 3-6 1-2 7, Smith 3-10 0-2 6, Asbell 1-7 0-2 2, Kientz 0-1 1-2 1, Nauert 0-2 0-0 0, Aynes 0-3 0-0 0, Land 0-0 0-0 0.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
TR 12-37 (3-12) 6-12 33, NP 12-39 (0-0) 8-16 32.

Rebounds (offensive)
TR 34 (12), NP 29 (11).

Turnovers
TR 20, NP 14.

South Putnam has frustrating second half in loss to Bruins

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

(Photo)
South Putnam junior Sawyer Arnold plants and swings a crossover dribble around the Bruins on Saturday.
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LIZTON -- The South Putnam boys' basketball team was eliminated from contention for a West Central Conference championship on Friday, but it came back Saturday playing hard at Tri-West.
The teams were tight at the half but the Eagles' collective frustration seemed to get the best of them at the break as they lost 67-44.
"We haven't come out in the third quarter this year," SPHS coach Troy Burgess said. "(Friday) night against Monrovia. (It was a) one-point game after two, then a 14-point game after three. We've got to figure something out in that third quarter."
The Eagles (5-7, 1-2 WCC) trailed by only seven at the break (28-21), despite a perfect first half from the field by Bruins junior Austin Lynn (6-6, 14 points).
Instead of building, SPHS came out sloppy. The players committed nine fouls and 10 turnovers in the third quarter, then lost their defensive intensity in the fourth.
"We're not coming out with the same intensity in the third quarter that we play the first and second, and then we dig ourselves a hole," Burgess said. "I don't know. I made a joke last night about it. Maybe I don't go in and talk to them. Maybe I pour them some orange juice and let them sit."
Tri-West (6-6) made 13-of-14 free throws in the final period, and six-of-seven two-point shots, en route to a 24-point quarter.
Sophomore Trevor Waite made eight-of-eight from the line in the final quarter to help secure the win.
Waite and Lynn each finished with game-highs of 22 points.
Junior Sawyer Arnold led the Eagles with 15 points. Junior Trey Moore had nine points and eight rebounds, and senior Justin Bumgardner had three and nine.
"(Tri-West) is a good basketball team," Burgess said. "Against good teams like this, you can't dig yourself a hole."
The Eagles will host Cloverdale on Friday at 7:30 p.m. It will be South Putnam High School's homecoming.


At Tri-West
South Putnam 11 10 9 14 -- 44
Tri-West 14 14 15 24 -- 67

Individual scoring
SP: Arnold 5-13 3-3 15, Moore 2-5 6-9 10, R Chestnut 2-4 2-2 6, Vittetow 2-7 0-1 6, Pell 1-4 1-2 4, Bumgardner 1-6 1-4 3, Mitchell 0-3 0-0 0, Long 0-1 0-1 0, Franklin 0-1 0-0 0, D Chestnut 0-1 0-0 0, Snow 0-0 0-0 0.
TW: Lynn 9-11 3-5 22, Waite 6-12 10-11 22, Alexander 3-8 4-4 10, Burks 4-4 0-2 8, Hendershot 1-5 1-4 3, Phelps 1-3 0-0 2, Koelling 0-5 0-0 0, Musial 0-1 0-0 0, Stamm 0-2 0-0 0, Gadberry 0-0 0-0 0, Miller 0-0 0-0 0, Vervynckt 0-0 0-0 0.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
SP 13-45 (5-14) 13-22 44, TW 24-51 (1-15) 19-28 67.

Rebounds (offensive)
SP 41 (20), TW 19(7).

Turnovers
SP 27, TW 10.

Green stands ground in NP win over Cloverdale

Saturday, January 19, 2013

(Photo)
North Putnam senior Zach Green stands in the lane and braces for contact by Cloverdale junior Zach Dorman. Dorman was called for a charge that helped seal an NPHS win.
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CLOVERDALE -- As the North Putnam and Cloverdale boys' basketball teams traded baskets throughout the fourth quarter and the clock began ticking down, it was apparent that one big play would decide the game.
North Putnam senior Zach Green made that play and helped the Cougars win, 59-56.
As junior Zach Dorman slashed through the lane, down two points with 31 seconds to go, it looked like it would be his day.
Dorman's eyes widened at the sight of the rim, but he failed to see Green sliding in front of him, planting his feet and standing firm.
As Dorman's layup rattled out, a pile of Zachs clogged the floor of the lane. The official's whistle sounded as he signaled a charge.
"Zach (Green) was tremendous," NPHS coach Nathan Martindale said. "That's the best game I've seen him play. Ever. He came in, he was under control, he scored some, he was quicker than some of the (Cloverdale) guards and he was able to get into the paint and get some layups for us.
"Then he had that huge charge in the fourth quarter. That was a make-or-break situation and we got the call."
Green's play led to a shooting foul at the other end. Junior Shane Beaman made one of two, extending the lead to three.
Sophomore Brantson Scott, who tied with Dorman as the game's high-scorer with 17, answered with a layup with 10 seconds left.
The subsequent inbounds pass missed its intended target, but Brody Pfaff was called for a foul as he and NPHS junior Jordan Nauert dove after the ball.
Nauert sank the pair, putting NPHS up three with six seconds left.
"He can do whatever he wants," Martindale said. "He's the type of kid that can shoot it when he needs to. He can pass it when he needs it. We even had him on the big kid (Dorman) tonight ... He's a very versatile player for us. We can put him in many different positions. I don't know too many guys that can defend the post and go out and play point guard on the way down.
"It was a total team-effort. All eight guys played great minutes for us."
The Clovers had been in similar situations before. They entered the game 3-2 in one-possession games including a buzzer-beating shot to beat Clay City last Saturday.
Unlike the other situations, when the players were taught to drive to the basket, Cloverdale trailed NPHS by three.
CHS coach Pat Rady called for a timeout.
"We wanted to get a three-point shot," Rady said. "We had two people lined up and they covered the other one (Collet) pretty well, so we went for the three-point shot (with Scott)."
Scott's attempt rattled out and Beaman hauled in the rebound to run out the clock.
The game hadn't always been close.
Cloverdale trailed 34-23 at the break, then proceeded to go on a 19-4 run to start the third quarter. Scott and junior Kedrick Collet (seven points in the quarter) sparked the rally that had the two teams enter the fourth quarter tied at 42.
The Clovers were helped by the foul trouble of the North Putnam bigs, seniors Jameson Brewer and Jake Haste.
"Our bigs played a little tentative because of fouls, so (Cloverdale was) able to get some things that they normally wouldn't have gotten," Martindale said.
Rady said that was all part of the plan.
"When we got certain guys in foul trouble, we were trying to put (Brewer and Haste) in low-post position and force them to have to defend," Rady said. "A lot of times when a guy's got foul trouble he won't defend as well."
Green finished with 11 points and a team-high seven rebounds.
North Putnam hosts Greencastle on Friday at 7:30 p.m.
Cloverdale travels to South Putnam on the same date and time.

(Photo)
North Putnam junior Jordan Nauert blocks a slamdunk attempt by Cloverdale junior Zach Dorman in the third quarter on Friday.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]


At Cloverdale
North Putnam 16 18 8 17 -- 59
Cloverdale 10 13 19 14 -- 56
Individual scoring
North Putnam (3-10, 1-1 WCC): Brewer 8-17 0-3 16, Green 5-13 0-0 11, Hazelgrove 3-8 2-4 10, Nauert 1-6 3-4 6, Roberts 2-2 1-3 5, Beaman 1-2 1-2 4, Haste 2-6 0-0 4, Flynn 1-1 0-0 2.
Cloverdale (3-11, 0-4): Z Dorman 6-14 5-8 17, Scott 6-11 4-7 17, Collet 5-10 0-0 13 Pfaff 1-3 2-4 4, B Dorman 1-2 0-0 3, Schroer 0-4 0-0 0, Cupp 0-1 0-0 0.
Team scoring (three-pointers)
NP 23-55 (6-13) 7-16 59, CL 19-45 (5-15) 11-19 56.
Rebounds (offensive)
NP 30 (12), CL 30 (10).
Turnovers
NP 10, CL 17.

Clovers fend off pesky Cougars

Saturday, January 19, 2013

(Photo)
Cloverdale senior Amillia Nally drives down the lane to hit a runner over the outstretched arm of North Putnam junior Bethany Wiatt. It was Nally's only field goal, but she assisted on seven others.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN)
CLOVERDALE -- The North Putnam girls' basketball team has come a long way since the Putnam County Tournament in November, but Cloverdale's changes were more evident on Friday when the Clovers won 46-32.
Cloverdale (7-11, 1-3 WCC) was led by senior point guard Amillia Nally, who assisted on seven of the team's 12 field goals.
"She's stepped up really big in these last three or four games," CHS coach Matthew Langdon said. "She's just really finding what it means to be a true point guard. She's the calming effect on the team. She's starting to learn when to attack and when not to attack.
"And that's great. There's going to be times when there's chances for those assists and there's times to dribble it out and pull it back and set it up."
North Putnam (4-13, 0-3) counted on the rebounding of senior Sam Lucas to keep it in the game. She finished with 11 boards.
Though neither team is dominant in both the perimeter and post, basketball comes down to matchups and the Clovers and Cougars present nightmares for one another.
Cloverdale's strength is in its guard play, where senior Nally, Paige Gruener and Bristy Skiles, along with sophomore Bailee Stevens, cause headaches with their aggressiveness and quickness.
North Putnam's forwards, seniors Lucas, Cayla Kientz and Cassie Aynes and freshman Taylor Nauert, have the size and aggressiveness the Cloverdale struggles with.
"It was physical both ways," NPHS coach Curtis Lawrence said. "Matthew (Langdon)'s kids did an outstanding job against us, just bodying our kids up and not letting us get those easy buckets on the inside."
The Cougars hung tough until halftime, trailing only by five (23-18) but the third quarter is where they've struggled all year.
"They held us for the first (ten) minutes of the second half to one point," Lawrence said. "If you go through a stretch like that, you're not going to win many ball games ... We had talked about, in the locker room (at halftime) coming out and trying to win the third quarter, and that seems to be the quarter we struggle with offensively."
The low-scoring third begat what was, by comparison, an explosive fourth.
Cloverdale's guards penetrated straight to the rim, drawing fouls and won the game at the line.
The Clovers made 10-of-14 from the charity stripe in the fourth, seizing the game.
The host Turkey Run on Tuesday at 7:00 p.m. Cloverdale is back in action Friday in a pivotal conference showdown at South Putnam at 6 p.m.


At Cloverdale
North Putnam 8 10 1 13 -- 32
Cloverdale 11 12 5 18 -- 46

Individual scoring
North Putnam (4-13, 0-3): Wiatt 4-6 1-5 9, Asbell 2-14 3-4 8, Smith 1-6 2-2 5, Lucas 2-14 3-4 5, Kientz 1-1 0-1 2, Aynes 1-2 0-0 2, Nauert 0-3 0-0 0, Land 0-0 0-0 0.
Cloverdale (7-11, 1-3): Gruener 5-9 2-2 14, Shrum 3-5 2-2 8, Skiles 2-7 0-0 6, Clark 3-8 0-4 6, Stevens 1-1 3-6 5, Walters 1-1 2-2 4, Nally 1-8 1-2 3.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
NP 11-46 (1-6) 8-15 32, CL 12-40 (4-12) 10-15 46.

Rebounds (offensive)
NP 25 (10), CL 31 (7).

Turnovers
NP 20, CL 15.

Winning by a hair: pre-wrap versus headbands

Friday, January 18, 2013

(Photo)
North Putnam sophomore Morgan Smith and Southmont senior Jess Chadd demonstrate the two biggest factions in hair restraint. Smith, wearing a headband here, said she prefers to wear pre-wrap during games.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
ROACHDALE -- When the North Putnam and Cloverdale girls' basketball teams clash tonight, the fans and coaches will have only one goal in mind: have the basketball drop through the hoop for us more than the opponent.
Basketball is a team game and when five players work together in synchronicity on the court, goals like winning the game are usually met.
But the players will each fight an individual battle, one that can divide teammates and fracture the pregame morale.
On this one topic, school pride takes a backseat to personal benefit. The battle not with the scoreboard, but with their hair.
Pre-wrap or headband?
"I use pre-wrap when I tape my ankles. I don't want it in my hair," North Putnam senior Cayla Kientz said. "I like headbands. The pre-wrap comes off my head and headbands stick better."
Her teammate, NPHS sophomore Morgan Smith had a notably different perspective.
"I have three rolls of pre-wrap in my bag right now -- orange, black and maroon," Smith said.
Others, like NPHS senior Cassie Aynes and junior Bethany Wiatt, don't have much use for either. With longer hair and no bangs, a ponytail is sufficient enough.
"If I start the game with a headband, it falls off before the game is over," Aynes said.
Needless to say, Wiatt and Aynes aren't looking forward to the game next Friday when they and the rest of the team will where pink headbands to support breast cancer awareness.
The hair-restraining products shouldn't be an issue at all, but the pesky Indiana High School Athletic Association requires everyone's uniform to be ... uniform.
Headgear has to match the color of the uniform, and everyone has to be the same. If one player wears blue, so does everyone else.
For this reason alone, pre-wrap is a more sensible solution.
A three-dollar roll can last all season long -- more if the player uses the knotted strip for multiple games and practices. Most don't, but some do.
Players can pass the roll around in the locker room before games and get their hair taken care of quickly.
The problem is that what works for one doesn't work for everyone else.
Pre-wrap can be hairsprayed to stay in place, though not everyone sprays her hair.
Different types of hair require different solutions.
"Normally I wear pre-wraps because they stay in better," NPHS freshman Taylor Nauert said. "If a headband has the grippy stuff it will stay in better."
Wide, elastic headbands work well for curly hair, but for others neither a headband nor pre-wrap will get the job done.
"The Nike (sweatbands) are the only thing that will stay in my hair," NPHS sophomore Brooke Smith said. "Pre-wrap, headbands, nothing else will stay."
Regardless of the technique, every girl has a system that works for her, though it can change over time.
NPHS JV coach Laura Blaydes wore a sweatband for every game in high school, then switched to pre-wrap when she played at IUPUI.
"When I played at IUPUI I wore pre-wrap every game," Blaydes said. "All of my teammates wore pre-wrap."
Aside from the economic difference, pre-wrap has another advantage to headbands; it's versatility.
Worn wide, pre-wrap can help snag loose bangs. Twisted together tightly, it holds everything with minimal attention.
A few extra years of experience has given Blaydes, a 2011 graduate of IUPUI, a chance to pick up a few extra pre-wrap tips.
"I double-layered it so it doesn't break," she said, mimicking stretching out pre-wrap and folding it overtop of itself before tying it.
The techniques are passed down from one class to the next; seniors sharing secrets with freshman.
Growing in popularity, pre-wrap has become more accessible in recent years.
Just a couple years ago Blaydes had to buy plain white on the Internet by going to what she called "middle-school websites."
Now, pre-wrap comes in a variety of colors and designs and is available at niche clothing and accessory stores.
There are other solutions, or combinations, that are out there for long-haired basketball players.
Several of the girls, speaking on the condition of anonymity, also said a deliberately placed bobby pin can help do the trick, but be careful.
"You're not allowed to wear bobby pins," one girl said.
"You have to hide them under your hair and pre-wrap is good for that," said another.
Whatever the product, when the game is on, function takes precedent over fashion. Like ill-fitting undergarments that require constant adjustment, hair can be a distraction during games.
Bangs can slip out and block vision. Tangles can bunch up and become uncomfortable. Anything it takes for an athlete to keep her hair in position and keep her focus on the game is what she'll do.
When it comes to pre-wrap versus headbands, the only winning side is the side that works.

(Photo)
Morgan Smith demonstrates her technique for tying pre-wrap for each game. Smith often prefers holding her hair back with headbands in social situations, but pre-wrap when it's time to compete. Pre-wrap is inexpensive and takes only a few seconds to custom-fit for each person by tying a single knot.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN)
Note to readers:
1) By request, interviews with Cloverdale players and coaches have not been included.
2) Please don't take this story too seriously.


(Photo)













Tiger women chew up Big Red

Thursday, January 17, 2013

(Photo)
DePauw senior Ellie Pearson deflects a pass from Denison sophomore Mary Margaret Habel. Pearson had four steals and eight rebounds in the win.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
The DePauw women's basketball team might not be the best team in the country. They're undefeated, and they've been ranked No. 1 for most of the year, but it won't be confirmed until March.
But after an 85-48 dismissal of visiting Denison on Wednesday, it's becoming pretty clear that the only team that will challenge DePauw until the postseason is itself.
"I guess I'd say we're kind of chasing at perfection in a sense," DPU coach Kris Huffman said. "And we'll never get there, so we really evaluate every possession and not the scoreboard so much.
"We know that any team left on the schedule can beat us, so we're trying to avoid that letdown."
The only chance the Big Red had on Wednesday came when the Tigers had all five starters off the floor, but even then Denison had to fight just to stay even.
When seniors Kate Walker and Ellie Pearson, junior Ali Ross and Alex Gasaway and sophomore Savannah Trees were on the court, it was no contest.
The Tigers played a complete game, forcing Denison into tough shots and turnovers on defense and then getting into the paint with efficiency on offense.
Game-highs went to Gasaway in points (18), Ross in assists (six) and Pearson in rebounds (eight).
DPU's only disadvantage against Denison, it's lack of height in the front court, was turned into a positive when the Tigers showed off their quickness and athleticism.
The hosts had a 34-23 rebounding advantage in the game, outscoring Denison 13-0 in second-chance points.
Huffman said she is trying to keep the team vigilant and focused on execution more than results, but when the results are there it's hard to worry about why.
The Tigers (16-0, 7-0 NCAC) play at Oberlin (7-8, 2-4) Saturday at 1 p.m.
Huffman warned the team not to overlook its opponent.
"We'll have a tough matchup at Oberlin with their offensive scheme. Sometimes it's not about records, it's how you match up with an opponent," Huffman said. "Sometimes their strengths are your weaknesses, and you never know where that's going to take you."


At DePauw
Denison 22 26 -- 48
DePauw 41 44 -- 85

Individual scoring
Denison (8-8, 3-4 NCAC): Habel 4-5 5-6 13, Nuzzo 4-13 2-2 11, Coggins 3-7 1-1 7, Parker 2-4 0-0 6, Love 2-6 0-0 4, Rogers 1-3 1-2 3, Staubach 1-2 0-0 2, Freundlich 1-1 0-0 2, Arter 0-0 0-0 0, Lindquist 0-0 0-0 0, Byrne 0-1 0-0 0, Bryant-Lees 0-0 0-0 0.
DePauw (16-0, 7-0): Gasaway 8-14 1-3 18, Stephens 4-7 2-2 11, Pearson 5-9 0-0 10, Trees 3-7 3-3 9, Walker 4-6 0-0 8, Ross 3-5 0-0 8, Ondik 2-3 0-0 6, Abendroth 2-4 0-0 5, Molloy 2-7 0-0 5, Keller 1-1 0-0 2, Frost 1-1 0-0 2, Stoner 0-0 1-2 1, Francis 0-0 0-0 0, Skordos 0-0 0-0 0, McDonagh 0-0 0-0 0, Hacker 0-0 0-0 0, Lukemeyer 0-1 0-0 0, McGinnis 0-0 0-0 0.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
DEN 18-42 (3-13) 9-11 48, DPU 35-65 (8-16) 7-10 85.

Rebounds (Offensive)
DEN 23 (5), DPU 34 (14).

Turnovers
DEN 23, DPU 10.

Halftime cures what ails DPU in men's win versus Denison

Thursday, January 17, 2013

(Photo)
DePauw junior Jeff Sustarsic blocks Denison junior Alex Longi as he goes in for a layup in the game on Wednesday.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN)[Order this photo]
The DePauw men's basketball team took control in the second half against Denison on Wednesday, opening up a three-point game at halftime into a 79-65 win.
DPU senior Barry Flynn finished with a game-high 23 points on only 11 field goal attempts.

The Tigers found their rhythm from beyond the arc, making 9-of-20 three-pointers in the game.

"That's a real strength of ours," DPU coach Bill Fenlon said. "But we didn't really shoot them that well early, and I thought we shot them too early in the possession in the first half, and it led to some transition baskets for (Denison). The game didn't really have a good feel to it because we we're extending them defensively."

The Tigers led 32-29 at the break, then allowed a quick game-tying three and continued to force their shots early in the shot clock.

"(The shots) come inside-out," Fenlon said. "They come off penetration, and you're just a little more opening because you've extended (the defenders) a little bit. You've run them around."

DPU got it together with Flynn leading the way. He was five-of-five in the second half.

The Big Red lost their focus and the Tigers stretched the lead to six.

Four minutes into the second half Denison coach Bob Ghiloni pulled all five players on the court, platooning a group with instructions.

"You know why you're going in," Ghiloni told his players. "Pick it up."

On the subsequent possession Denison junior D.J. Bridges went straight to the rim with a breakaway dunk.

But energy can only get a team so far against a team executing like DPU did in the second half.

Another hoop from Flynn, this one from the top of the key, extended the lead and forced a Denison timeout.

That didn't help either.

The Tigers continued their run, stretching the lead to as much as 13 on multiple occasions.

After closing the gap to five with 3:23 left in the game, Denison watched DPU sophomore Connor Rich pull up for a ridiculous 30-foot three-point attempt that rattled through with 10 seconds left on the shot clock.

Rich finished with 13 points and three three-pointers.

DPU (10-6, 3-4 NCAC) will travel to Oberlin on Saturday, hoping to carry the rhythm of shooting and defense it showed against Denison (4-12, 2-5).

"I thought we had some stretches where we were really good defensively," Fenlon said. "(We had) just less mistakes. That's what (Denison) is trying to get you to do. They're setting a zillion screens and trying to get you to screw it up.

"We screwed it up a little bit less in the second half. "






At DePauw
Denison
29 36 -- 65
DePauw
32 47 -- 79
Individual scoring
Denison (4-12, 2-5 NCAC): Barnes 8-13 4-5 21, Longi 6-12 3-7 15 Akpapunam 4-10 2-2 11, King 3-6 0-0 6, Weingart 1-4 0-0 3, White 1-4 0-0 3, Bre. Woolard 1-2 0-0 2, Bra. Woolard 1-2 0-0 2, Bridges 1-3 0-0 2, White 0-3 0-0 0, Keller 0-0 0-0 0.
DePauw (10-6, 3-4 NCAC): Flynn 9-11 5-9 23, Wilkison 4-10 4-4 16, Rich 4-8 2-2 13, Botts 2-6 4-4 10, Payne 4-4 0-2 8, Haggin 1-2 1-2 3, Sustarsic 1-3 0-0 2, Johnson 0-1 2-4 2, Burns 1-2 0-0 2, Fernitz 0-0 0-0 0, Patton 0-0 0-0 0.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
DEN 26-59 (4-17) 9-14 65, DPU 26-47 (9-20) 18-27 79.

Rebounds (offensive)
DEN 29 (8), DPU 29 (4).

Turnovers
DEN 12, DPU 9.

Cougars hang with Mounties until late in 60-48 loss

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

(Photo)
North Putnam senior Jameson Brewer lines up for a shot from the block over Southmont defender Zach Dinius in the first quarter. Brewer finished with 22 points in the 60-48 loss on Tuesday.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
CRAWFORDSVILLE -- For the talented but inconsistent North Putnam boys' basketball team, it's getting closer to the time of the year when the players must finish a complete game.
Offense comes through some nights, defense others, and on Tuesday against Southmont, the Cougars got everything going at the same time.
For the first three quarters.
The host Mounties put together a run early in the fourth quarter to extend a close lead and seal their 60-48 win.
"It was a tale of a three-minute stretch," NPHS coach Nathan Martindale said. "Defensively, that was the best half of basketball that we've played in the first half. Offensively, it was the same thing."
Southmont (8-1, 2-1 Sagamore Conference) entered as a clear favorite, but North Putnam, and senior Jameson Brewer, refused to back down.
Brewer had 12 of his team's 22 points in an efficient first half, but the three-headed backcourt of Southmont (seniors Drake Cooksey and Cody Thomas, junior Devon Burton) scored all of the Mounties' 23.
The teams played slow, high-percentage basketball throughout, making skill less important than luck, and Southmont seemed to have all the luck.
In one stretch early in the third quarter, missed Mounties' shots rolled out of bounds three straight time but the offense retained possession each time.
Brewer versus the Southmont backcourt remained the theme.
Cooksey, Thomas and Burton had 15 in the third, Brewer had 10.
"Once we get some guys that are normally good shooters to start getting hot and add that to our inside game, we'll be fine," Martindale said. "We're fine in what we're doing. Our guys are locked-in to our gameplan. We're going to eventually come around on the offensive side of the basketball. There's no doubt about it."
The solid backcourt play by the Mounties finally wore the Cougars down.
Their 11-point run to start the fourth quarter slammed the upset-door shut.
"Burton got a couple open looks," Martindale said. "We came down and missed a couple shots, and they were able to expand the lead.
"If we sure that up, we're right there in the end and it's going to be a one-possession ball game. We just lacked (during) that short, short spurt there were we needed to take care of some things and didn't."
Brewer finished with 22 points and 11 rebounds.
Burton led Southmont with 22 points of his own and added five assists.
It may not have been a moral victory for the Cougars, but the loss won't defeat their morale.
"We've got to understand that we cannot take any plays off," Martindale said. "As the season goes on, you've just got to extend your good play. At the beginning of the year, you're not going to have long stretches of good play."
NPHS (2-10, 0-2 WCC) will return Friday with a game at Cloverdale.
The Cougars came out on top in the Putnam County Classic, 66-41.

(Photo)
North Putnam junior Bennett Hazelgrove scores his only points of the game, a layup in the second quarter.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]


At Southmont
North Putnam 10 22 16 10 -- 48
Southmont 14 9 17 20 -- 60
Individual scoring
North Putnam: Brewer 10-22 0-1 22, Beaman 3-4 0-0 7, Nauert 2-7 3-3 7, Gren 3-8 0-0 6, Hazelgrove 1-2 0-4 2, Haste 1-4 0-0 2, Flynn 0-1 0-0 0, Roberts 0-0 0-0 0.
Southmont: Burton 8-13 2-3 22, Thomas 6-13 1-2 17, Cooksey 6-11 2-3 15, Dinius 1-3 1-2 3, Whalen 0-0 2-2 2, Stewart 0-1 0-0 0, Dehne 0-0 0-0 0.
Team scoring (three-pointers)
North Putnam 20-48 (5-17) 3-8 48, Southmont 21-43 (9-21) 9-14 60.
Rebounds (offensive)
North Putnam 24 (4), Southmont 31 (8).
Turnovers
North Putnam 9, Southmont 11.

Early January


COLUMN: Free throws, pressure and time

Thursday, January 17, 2013

(Photo)
Nate Christy [Order this photo]
With the game and an NCAA tournament berth on the line, Memphis freshman Darius Washington Jr. was fouled shooting a three, down two points, with no time left on the clock.
The Tigers were playing Louisville in the 2005 Conference-USA title game and Washington -- a high school all-American, the best player on the team, and a consensus first-round draft pick for the NBA whenever he chose to leave -- was confident.

(Photo)
He sank the first of three. Memphis trailed by one.
Washington was the first in a now long-line of freshman phenom point guards recruited by John Calipari.
Next came Derrick Rose, then Tyreke Evans, John Wall, Brandon Knight and Marquis Teague.
None, as a freshman, had the skill and athleticism of Washington. At the McDonald's All-American Game skills contest, he took second-place in both the three-point shootout and the dunk contest.
I can't remember anyone else competing in both.
Washington turned to his coach and teammates on the sideline, winked and said, "I got this."
He bricked the second.
Washington averaged 15.4 points per game as a freshman and made 73 percent of his free throws.
Against Louisville he had 23 points and six assists.
He was 3-of-5 from the line at that point with one free throw left. Make it and go to overtime with a chance to move on to the NCAA tournament.
He missed. He collapsed to the court, covering his head. Calipari rushed to comfort him, but Washington was inconsolable.
With his confidence shot, the guard struggled his next year. His averages dropped across the board and he left school to pursue the NBA.
Undrafted, Washington now plays in Israel on a Macedonian passport.
As a devoted sports fan, the memories of all this came crashing into me last Friday.
Greencastle outplayed South Putnam for most of the game but still trailed late.
Tiger Cubs senior Nate Christy took an outlet pass to the rim and was fouled, down one, with no time on the clock.
Christy was injured coming into the game and, during the contest, he fell and split his chin wide open.
With blood on his first jersey, Christy switched into a backup that was at least three or four sizes too big.
He approached the free throw line, bobbing his head, swaying with confidence, ready to shoot.
The referee called him back. Blood on the replacement jersey needed to be cleaned up. Christy had more time to think about the pending shots.
He nodded, stayed loose and sank them both.
The pressure of the lengthening moment should have dragged him in, should have weighed on him, but Christy ignored it.
He ignored the crowd, the players, the coaches and the photographer who ran to a place just above him in his line of sight.
There's no way to know what the consequence of missing would have been, both for Christy and the team.
Until the season is over, we won't know the importance of making the shots. But Christy stared at the pressure on Friday and made it back down to him.
The young Tiger Cubs began the year playing scared. They have now found a leader who is unafraid.

Edgewood sidles past Greencastle

Monday, January 14, 2013

(Photo)
Greencastle junior Holden King gets two Edgewood defenders to bite on his pump-fake under the basket before putting in an easy layup on Saturday. King finished wtih 15 points.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN)[Order this photo]
ELLETTSVILLE -- Every game can't be a classic, or none of them would be.
Such is conundrum the Greencastle boys' varsity basketball team found itself in on Saturday night, a 59-51 loss at Edgewood.
The young Tiger Cubs wrapped up the most intense game of the year less than 24 hours earlier against South Putnam, their county adversary.
"One of the things I told them before the game was, I was curious how we would respond after a big win last night," GHS coach Troy Greenlee said.
The Mustangs came out with a physical presence, a swagger, that Greencastle attempted to match.
The result in the first quarter was 10 Tiger Cub turnovers , nine Tiger Cub fouls and at 13-9 deficit.
"Initially (Edgewood's) physical play on the ball hurt us," Greenlee said. "We were a little bit caught off guard, even though we tried to tell them it's going to be physical.
"Once we understood, (Edgewood) is going to be physical, we're not going to get a lot of calls, we played through it."
The Cubs got their turnovers, and fouls, under control, then got junior guard Holden King going.
"For a while there in the first half, we weren't even getting shots," Greenlee said. "When you dig yourself a hole like that, it's tough to come back."
King had 13 points in the first half, sinking three-of-five treys and making up for the loss of five players (Nate Christy, Colyn Foxx, Brody Bollman, Nick Gilliam and Adam Gerard; two each) to foul trouble.
GHS is inexperienced, and inconsistent, but they're also deep. As King became an afterthought in the second half, Bollman took over the offense.
He scored 10 of his 12 points after the break, reeling the Mustangs in.
GHS took a one-point lead on a Bollman free throw with 6:53 left in the fourth, but Edgewood's 9-2 run that followed put the game away.
"We were right there until the fourth quarter," Greenlee said. "It could have gone either way. A couple plays here and there and we're right where we want to be."
Greencastle (2-9, 2-0) plays at West Central Conference opponent Cascade on Friday at 7:30 p.m.


At Greencastle
Greencastle 9 12 14 16 -- 51
Edgewood 13 16 8 22 -- 59

Individual scoring
Greencastle: King 6-13 0-0 15, Bollman 4-7 4-6 12, Gilliam 3-6 2-2 8, Mitchell 1-3 2-2 4, Foxx 2-2 0-2 4, Christy 1-5 0-0 3, Gerard 1-3 1-1 3, Winslow 1-3 0-2 2, Brotherton 0-2 0-0 0, Hughes 0-2 0-0 0, Newgent 0-0 0-0 0.
Edgewood: Black 6-10 4-5 16, Newman 5-9 3-4 14, Selburg 5-6 2-5 12, Settle 2-4 0-0 6, Bowman 1-5 3-4 5, D Driver 2-4 0-2 4, Miller 1-2 0-0 2, Collier 0-0 0-0 0, Brown 0-0 0-0 0, Johnson 0-0 0-0 0, Fuller 0-0 0-0 0, A Driver0-0 0-0 0.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
Greencastle 19-56 (4-14) 9-15 51, Edgewood 22-43 (3-11) 12-20 59.

Rebounds (offensive)
GC 25 (10), ED 29 (12).

Turnovers
GC 17, ED 14.

Brown (County) can do in the Tiger Cubs

Sunday, January 13, 2013

(Photo)
Greencastle sophomore Jessica Lenihan goes in for a layup against Brown County.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
NASHVILLE, Ind. -- Coming off a hard-fought win on Friday night, the Greencastle girls' basketball battled to the end before losing in the final minute at Brown County on Saturday, 49-45.
The Tiger Cubs were just hours removed from beating county-rival South Putnam when they made the long trip to Nashville and the crew came out flat in the first quarter, falling behind 17-12.
In a preview of things to come, junior Whitney Williamson and senior Sasha Robinson combined for 12 points in the frame.
The pair eventually finished with 37 of the team's 49.
"We knew going into it those were the two we had to stop, we just did not do a very good job," GHS coach Bradley Key said. "We did a good job on the initial series and made them shoot a low-percentage shot, but then we gave them that second chance."
The Cubs got back to their game in the second, picking up the tempo and crashing the boards.
The Eagles' duo combined for another 11 points, but GHS surrendered only two to the rest of the team and closed the gap to two points at the half, 30-28.
GHS outrebounded the hosts 21-12 in the first half and shot a very-solid 44.8 percent (13-for-29) from the field.
They also drew only five fouls, and got to the free throw line only once. The Tiger Cubs appeared bothered by the length of 6'0" Robinson and Williamson.
"They were able to block shots without having to foul," Key said. "We've got to understand that. You can't get your shot blocked five times and then wonder why you're not getting fouled. "
Robinson had four blocks and altered several other shots.
The two teams struggled in the third but GHS eventually got all the way back, taking a 39-38 lead with 5:35 left after a pair of free throws by sophomore Jessica Lenihan, the Tiger Cubs' leading scorer with 14.
That's when Robinson and Williamson took over. The pair scored 10 straight Eagle-points and dominated the paint and spurring an 11-4 run in the final few minutes.
Even when GHS got an initial stop, Williamson still found a way to score. She hauled in four offensive rebounds in the fourth quarter and finished with 18 rebounds in the game.
GHS senior Rayleigh Amis had 15 rebounds of her own, but it wasn't enough.
"We talked about (in the huddle), when the shot goes up, they only get one opportunity. It doesn't matter if you're playing Brown County or the state champions," Key said. "Hopefully this is a game we can learn from."
Key said playing back-to-back close games will help the team later in the year.
"It's never easy coming back after an exciting South Put victory, after an emotional high," he said, "but I like it to prepare for sectional. Hopefully we learn from this experience. We had a big game last night, that's fine, but we've got to rally back and play again.
"I think we're getting better."


At Brown County
Greencastle 12 16 7 10 -- 45
Brown County 17 13 6 13 -- 49

Individual scoring
GC: Lenihan 6-14 2-3 14, Taylor 4-11 0-0 8, Basile 3-12 0-0 7, Amis 2-4 0-0 4, T Stoltey 2-4 0-0 4, Earl 1-4 0-0 3, Bridgewater 1-4 0-0 3, Covert 1-4 0-2 2.
BC: Robinson 9-21 1-4 21, Williamson 8-11 0-0 16, Chapman 2-9 1-2 5, Wedan 1-11 0-0 3, Brady 1-6 0-2 2, Southerland 1-3 0-0 2.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
GC 20-59 (3-11) 2-6 45, BC 22-61 (3-16) 2-7 49.

Rebounds (offensive)
GC 43 (16), BC 36 (14).

Turnovers
GC 22, BC 15.

Christy's free throws beat South Putnam

Saturday, January 12, 2013

(Photo)
GHS senior Nate Christy and his teammates react to the game-winning free throw he sank against South Putnam on Friday.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
When Greencastle's Nate Christy walked into McAnally on Friday, he was unsure if he'd even play.
The senior has been nursing a groin injury for the past few weeks and his pregame warm-up, he told his coaches he was 100 percent.
"I knew I wasn't going to start," Christy said. "But I knew coming off the bench I had to make an impact, and that's what I tried to do."
With blood oozing from a gash on his chin as he stared from the free throw line, down one with the game clock reading 0:00, Christy's injury was the last thing on his mind.
"I was pretty much just thinking, 'I've got to hit these,'" Christy said. "Just how my game was going, I was pretty confident when I stepped up to the line. I was a little bit nervous on that first one, because it was bouncing around the rim. When it fell down, I knew I'd make my second."
Christy made them both, lifting Greencastle past South Putnam 53-52.
The Tiger Cubs reclaimed the bucket and avenged a loss to South Putnam in the Putnam County Classic.
After the early-season tournament game, South Putnam head coach said Greencastle was a team you don't want to play in March. He was a couple months off.
"Give them all the credit," Burgess said. "They played their butts off. They won the game."
Christy hit four-of-five threes en route to 13 points in the first half, but GHS trailed South Put by one at the break, 26-25.
The teams traded baskets for most of the third quarter with GHS sophomore Brody Bollman scoring seven of his team's 12 points
SPHS senior Justin Bumgardner had nine in the quarter and finished game-highs in points (20) and rebounds (10).
Greencastle trailed by four entering the fourth but a three-pointer by sophomore Anthony Mitchell tied the game with five minutes left.
The teams traded baskets again and, following a South Putnam turnover, Christy brought the ball up the court looking for a lead.
He was trapped on the sideline and lost the ball. In his attempt to save possession he fell and split a large gash open on his chin.
Christy was removed from the game, covered in blood, and the Eagles regained control.
Junior forward Trey Moore (10 points, nine rebounds, four assists in the game) led South Put back on top as the Eagles carried a four-point lead into the final minute.
Christy, No. 12, returned, wearing a new jersey, No. 50, that was several sizes too big for him.
"My pants and everything were huge," Christy said.
Trailing by two points with 42 seconds remaining, Greencastle committed its sixth foul of the half and the Eagles prepared to take the ball out from under the Cubs' basket.
Moore was called for an offensive foul before the ball could be inbounded, but GHS failed to capitalize.
Christy threw an errand pass that was tipped by Bumgardner, who dove to save the ball from going out of bounds and lofted it to senior Ryan Chestnut.
Chestnut was sent to the line for a one-and-one.
He missed the first, but Bumgardner hauled in the rebound.
Bumgardner made one-of-two from the line to secure a three-point lead.
Before Greencastle could get a shot, Chestnut fouled Bollman, who sank both free throws.
SPHS senior Sawyer Arnold was fouled on the inbound play, up one with 5.8 seconds remaining.
"We talked about, know the situation of the game," GHS coach Troy Greenlee said. "If we need a two, take it to the basket, if we need a three, penetrate and try to kick it out."
Arnold missed his free throw and Bollman pulled in the board, spun and fired a pass to Christy.
The senior headed straight for the basket, but his layup attempt rattled out as the final horn sounded.
The sound of a whistle drowned out the horn. The Eagles fouled the shooter.
Christy walked up to the line, and an empty lane, ready to shoot for the win.
More blood. Christy stepped to the sideline to get cleaned up.
"Our kids did a great job of executing when they had to," Greenlee said. "My gosh, what an incredible two free throws by Nate. I thought, 'There is a lot of time between the fouls and him actually shooting it. That's hard to do. He just seemed so confident.
"I told him, 'I've been coaching a long time, but I don't know if I've ever had a kid have a performance like that."
The win moved GHS to 2-8 for the season, but more importantly, 2-0 in the West Central Conference.
"It was great team effort," Greenlee said. "I thought we had great contributions from just about everybody tonight."
GHS will look to carry the momentum into tonight's game when they travel to Edgewood for a 7:30 p.m. start.

(Photo)
South Putnam senior Logan Pell splits through the Greencastle defense to score a finger roll layup on Friday.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]


At Greencastle
South Putnam 6 20 15 11 -- 52
Greencastle 8 17 12 16 -- 53
Individual scoring
South Putnam: Bumgardner 7-13 5-7 20, Moore 4-4 2-2 10, Arnold 3-9 2-3 8, Pell 2-5 0-0 4, Chestnut 1-5 2-5 4, Franklin 1-2 1-2 3, Vittetow 1-3 0-0 3, Long 0-1 0-0 0.
Greencastle: Christy 5-9 3-4 18, Bollman 4-9 3-4 11, Mitchell 3-5 0-0 7, King 2-9 0-0 6, Winslow 2-7 0-4 4, Foxx 1-2 0-0 3, Gerard 1-3 0-0 2, Brotherton 0-0 2-2 2, Gilliam 0-7 0-0 0.
Team scoring (three-pointers)
SP 19-45 (2-7) 12-19 52, G 17-50 (9-21) 8-14 53.
Rebounds (offensive)
SP 41 (12) G 23 (8).
Turnovers
SP 21, G 10.

Tiger Cubs edge Eagles 59-55

Saturday, January 12, 2013

(Photo)
Greencastle sophomore Callan Taylor gets past the entire South Putnam team on her way to the basket on Friday.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
Greencastle hosted senior night for its girls' basketball team on Friday, but sophomore Jessica Lenihan was the team's go-to player, scoring 13 of her 19 points in the second half of the 59-55 win over South Putnam.
The Tiger Cubs held off a late rally from SPHS, securing the win with the defensive abilities of seniors Rayleigh Amis and Jessi Covert.
"This is the best game (Covert) has played in four years and I couldn't be more proud of her," GHS coach Bradley Key said. "South, no matter when you play them, it's going to be a close game. We proved that the last three times we've played them. It's a game of runs, and we got up on them, they were able to come back. Give credit to their players. They always play hard."
The two teams were locked in a 53-all tie with 1:50 remaining but Greencastle executed better down the stretch, making four-of-six free throws, and another hoop by Lenihan, late in the game.
The Cubs were put on the ropes early when SPHS senior Mallory Cash started the game by scoring 19 first-half points on seven-of-10 shooting.
When Eagles' senior Leanna Masters was sent to the bench after picking up her second foul, the game opened up for the Cubs.
"Our game plan was, No. 1, to take (Masters) away," Key said. "We did that, but then Cash showed up, just like she did in the County (Tournament)."
Four players scored at least six points for GHS in the first half, led by Covert's seven, and the Tiger Cubs went to the break with a 30-27 advantage.
With Masters returning to the court for the start the third quarter, the Eagles got back into the fight.
Until she picked up her third two minutes later.
GHS got back on the run it started in the second quarter and carried an 11-point lead into the fourth.
Then Masters, and junior Aubrey Nichols (also with three fouls) got back in game.
"It was a combination of (Masters returning) on the inside and Aubrey Nichols, our best perimeter defender," SPHS coach Lindsey Blackman said. "When they're not on the floor, it hurts."
With Masters and Nichols back on the court, the Eagles made their move.
Masters picked up a pair of assists, one to Nichols for a corner three, and the comeback was on.
South Putnam ripped off 11 straight points to tie the game with five minutes left.

(Photo)
South Putnam senior Mattie Varvel scores a layup against Greencastle after putting a delay move on the Tiger Cubs' Lauren Bridgewater.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
With Masters working the high post and senior Mattie Varvel scoring (16 points) and organizing the offense (seven assists), the Eagles looked to have all the momentum.
Fouls again emerged as a problem. Masters picked up her fourth and played with more restrain for the rest of the game.
In all, GHS was fouled 22 times, eventually attempting a ridiculous 32 free throws.
They sank 17, but it was enough to secure the win.
Masters finished with two points and 10 rebounds in her limited minutes.
Amis (12 points, 11 rebounds) and GHS sophomore Callan Taylor (10 points, game-high 13 rebounds) each finished with a double-double.
"The last couple weeks in practice we're looking better as a team," Key said. "Our overall goal is to play our best basketball in February."
The Tiger Cubs won't have long to enjoy the victory as they play again today at Brown County at 1:30 p.m.
For the Eagles, a chance to forget the painful loss comes quickly as well. They'll host the South Putnam Classic today, beginning at 9:30 a.m. with a game against Turkey Run.
The consolation game is at 12:30 p.m., and the finals is at 2 p.m.
"It was tough tonight," Blackman said. "When those two (Masters and Nichols) are on the bench, it's hard for us to be successful."


At Greencastle
South Putnam 13 14 11 17 -- 55
Greencastle 11 19 17 12 -- 59

Individual scoring
South Putnam: Cash 7-13 4-4 21, Varvel 8-24 0-1 16, Nichols 2-8 3-4 8, Masters 1-5 0-0 2, Birt 1-5 0-0 2, Barnes 1-7 0-2 2, York 1-2 0-0 2, Hewitt 0-6 2-2 2, Cundiff 0-0 0-0 0.
Greencastle: Lenihan 6-14 7-10 19, Amis 5-9 1-3 12, Taylor 3-7 4-4 10, Covert 3-5 1-9 7, Basile 1-8 2-4 4, Earl 1-3 2-2 4, Bridgewater 1-1 0-0 3.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
SP 21-69 (4-10) 9-13 55, G 19-47 (2-6) 17-32 59.

Rebounds (offensive)
SP 45 (21), G 43 (12).

Turnovers
SP 11, G 17.

South Putnam gets comforting win over Owen Valley

Friday, January 11, 2013

(Photo)
South Putnam swimmer Morgan Deszi competes in the 100 backstroke event against Owen Valley. Deszi edged out teammate Katie Jo Beasley by one one-hundredth of a second in the back, and also picked up a win in the 200 individual medley.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN)[Order this photo]
For the third time in five days, the South Putnam boys' and girls' swimming and diving team participated in a competitive meet on Thursday.
For the first time, both squads were able to pick up a team win with the girls topping Owen Valley 124-48 and the boys winning 117-57.
"A lot of people swam different events today," SPHS coach Matthew Edwards said. "Some of that is due to people being sick ... but some meets we just try to try new things, and we did a little bit of that today."
Several swimmers competed in events that were either brand new or unfamiliar to them, including Morgan Deszi and Tayler Arnold.
"I don't know that (Deszi) has ever swam (the 200 IM) in her life, but she won it today," Edwards said. "Tayler Arnold has a history of swimming backstroke ... we put him back in it tonight just so he wouldn't forget it all together. He did great. He saw a great time. He's got the (school's) backstroke record."
Deszi also picked up wins in the 100 back, and as a member of two relays.
Arnold has been focusing on sprints this year and picked up wins in the 50 free and on two relays.
Ben Albright won each event he participated in, the 200 free, 500 free, 200 free relay and 400 free relay.
It was also a solid night for the diving team.
Because Owen Valley had such a small team, they had no divers competing. Edwards said this his athletes to focus on themselves, and their technique, when they dived.
"This is the time of year when we're starting to look toward sectional meets and we're starting to get our 11 dive lists set in stone and figure out the dives that we're going to work on the rest of the season," Edwards said. "All of the divers tried a new list tonight with higher D.D. (degree of difficulty) dives tonight, and it was nice for them to not have that pressure. They were really nice and relaxed, and they did great.
"All of them (Maddison Plunkett, Courtney Sullivan and Tyler Neumann) had different lists, dives that they haven't done in any meets this year, and they handled it really well."
Sullivan got a personal best 149.20 but was edged out by her teammate's 152.50.
The Eagles will have a short break before going to Cascade on Tuesday at 5:30 p.m.


At South Putnam
Girls -- final
South Putnam 124, Owen Valley 48

Boys -- final
South Putnam 117, Owen Valley 57

Event results
Girls 200 medley relay: 1. SPHS A (Deszi Morgan, Katie McHugh, Lyndsie Beasley, Katie Hansel) 2:20.28; 2. OVHS A (Ariel Holcombe, Canon Cattorini, Paige Wetzel, Becca Walcott) 2:27.40; 3. SPHS B (Maddison Plunkett, Katie Kiste, Katie Shaw, Megan Arnold) 2:35.04.
Boys 200 medley relay: 1. SPHS A (Tayler Arnold, Zeke Evens, Matthew Lund, Zane Crosby) 1:59.96; 2. OVHS A (Jared Peterson, Johnathan Carey, Eli Carlson, Michael Megenhardt) 2:01.52; 3. SPHS B (Zach Rayce, Tyler Neumann, Wyatt Nees, Dakota Kiste) 2:05.66; 4. OVHS B (Eric Hellman, Jacob Smithson, Hunter Stogsdill, Jacob Staley) 2:31.04.
Girls 200 free: 1. Cattorini, O, 2:36.20; 2. McHugh, S, 2:36.83; 3. Macy Sutkowski, S, 2:54.12; 4. Tori Kiste, S, 3:03.16.
Boys 200 free: 1. Ben Albright, S, 2:10.54; 2. Lucas Booher, O, 2:29.13; 3. Staley, O, 2:33.31; 4. Nick Chambers, S, 2:44.25.
Girls 200 IM: 1. Deszi, S, 3:05.23; 2. Arnold, S, 3:06.03; 3. Maddie Summerlot, O, 3:13.95; 4. Jodi Hicks, O, 3:22.54; 5. Tasha Kelley, S, 3:28.86.
Boys 200 IM: 1. Rayce, S, 2:42.57; 2. Nees, S, 2:44.51; 3. C Evens, S, 2:55.54; 4. Peterson, O, 2:59.84; 5. Smithson, O, 3:09.82.
Girls 50 free: 1. Hansel, S, 30.04; 2. Walcott, O, 30.90; 3. Wetzel, O, 33.21; 4. T Kiste, S, 33.46; 5. Holcombe, O, 33.62; 6. Sutkowski, S, 34.78.
Boys 50 free: 1. Arnold, S, 25.17; 2. Carlson, O, 25.68; 3. Crosby, S, 26.07; 4. Megenhardt, O, 27.76; 5. Duggan, S, 30.19; 6. Hellman, O, 33.87.
Girls diving: 1. Plunkett, S, 152.50; 2. Sullivan, S, 149.20.
Boys diving: 1. Neumann, S, 147.30.
Girls 100 fly: 1. L Beasley, S, 1:24.70; 2. Shaw, S, 1:31.04; 3. Wetzel, O, 1:36.69; 4. Hicks, O, 1:37.07.
Boys 100 fly: 1. Carlson, O, 1:02.66; 2. Lund, S, 1:07.69; 3. Nees, S, 1:17.52; 4. Stogsdill, O, 1:22.48.
Girls 100 free: 1. Katie Jo Beasley, S, 1:07.66; 2. Walcott, O, 1:11.56; 3. Kiste, S, 1:16.73; 4. Makayla Hettich, S, 1:23.46.
Boys 100 free: 1. Crosby, S, 57.19; 2. Megenhardt, O, 1:03.30; 3. Kiste, S, 1:04.50; 4. Carey, O, 1:06.91; 5. Duggan, S, 1:09.05; 6. Jonathan Soderqvist, O, 1:17.88.
Girls 500 free: 1. Hansel, S, 7:05.64; 2. Wilson, S, 7:15.92; 3. Summerlot, O, 7:31.05; 4. Kelley, S, 8:17.37.
Boys 500 free: 1. Albright, S, 5:53.15; 2. Z Evens, S, 6:21.01; 3. Staley, O, 6:53.36; 4. Stogsdill, O, 7:36.72; 5. Chambers, S, 7:39.22.
Girls 200 free relay: 1. SPHS A (K Beasley, L Beasley, McHugh, Hansel) 2:05.50; 2. OVHS A (Cattorini, Wetzel, Summerlot, Walcott) 2:11.31; 3. SPHS B (Arnold, Sutkowski, K Kiste, Shaw) 2:12.14; 4. SPHS C (T Kiste, Hettich, Kelley, Wilson) 2:26.37.
Boys 200 free relay: 1. SPHS A (Arnold, Albright, Lund, Crosby) 1:45.44; 2. OVHS A (Megenhardt, Peterson, Carey, Carlson) 1:53.30; 3. SPHS B (Fields, Neumann, Duggan, Chambers) 2:01.96.
Girls 100 back: 1. Deszi, S, 1:18.00; 2. K Beasley, S, 1:18.01; 3. Holcombe, O, 1:46.19; 4. Plunkett, S, 1:47.67.
Boys 100 back: 1. Arnold, S, 1:03.34; 2. Peterson, O, 1:18.67; 3. Fields, S, 1:20.94; 4. Rayce, S, 1:32.16; Hellman, O, 1:58.67.
Girls 100 breast: 1. Cattorini, O, 1:21.72; 2. McHugh, S, 1:29.60; 3. K Kiste, S, 1:37.85; 4. Arnold, S, 1:41.99.
Boys 100 breast: 1. Carey, O, 1:16.31; 2. Z Evens, S, 1:18.19; 3. Neumann, S, 1:19.17; 4. C Evens, S, 1:28.23; 5. Smithson, O, 1:29.60.
Girls 400 free relay: 1. SPHS A (K Beasley, Shaw, Deszi, L Beasley) 5:08.72; 2. SPHS B (Sutkowski, T Kiste, Wilson, Plunkett) 5:21.87.
Boys 400 free relay: 1. SPHS A (Albright, Nees, Rayce, Lund) 4:08.95; 2. SPHS B (Kiste, Chambers, C Evens, Fields) 4:48.10; 3. OVHS A (Staley, Smithson, Stogsdill, Booher) 4:49.31.

DPU tops rival Wabash 60-49

Thursday, January 10, 2013

(Photo)
DePauw junior Michael Wilkison attempts a floaters over Wabash freshman Daniel Purvlicis in the rivalry game on Wednesday.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
As long as there are no large pieces of out-of-date locomotive equipment at stake, DePauw University seems capable of playing well against rival Wabash.
That showed with a 60-49 win in men's basketball on Wednesday.
DPU (9-5) trailed 24-20 at the half, then went on an 11-2 run to open the second frame.
Freshman Adam Botts and sophomore Connor Rich each hit a three-point bucket to spark the second-half run.
"That's kind of our strength. We have a lot of guys who can shoot the ball," DePauw coach Bill Fenlon said. "We shot it better, but that was the result of better ball movement."
The Tigers shot a scorching 56 percent from the floor in the second half, mostly from outside shooting.
No one on DePauw scored in double figures. The scoring was spread almost equally between starters (34) and bench points (26).
"The ball was really kind of sticking on one side of the floor a lot in the first half," Fenlon said. "We really tried to emphasize at halftime to stop holding it and staring and just ... move it."
Senior Barry Flynn led the Tigers with seven rebounds.
Wabash opened the game with a 17-11 lead, working the offensive glass with eight boards on that end in the half.
DPU couldn't get a foothold on the boards, and momentum, until after the break.
"Our objective (offensively) was to work the ball to at least three sides of the floor to get the defense moving," Flynn said, "and then to keep moving it and wait for the defense to break down and seize the opportunities they provided us."
Following the scoring spree to start the half, the DePauw defense stepped up.
The Little Giants shot just 34.6 percent after the break.
Fenlon said he believes his players came out excited to play against their rival school and once the adrenalin settle down, they were able to get back to execution.
"I felt like in the first half we didn't do a good job defensively at all, even though they only had 24 points," Fenlon said. "Because (playing Wabash) is a bigger deal to other people, it becomes a bigger deal to the players ... I'm happy that they're excited to play, but they can't be so excited that they can't execute. I don't think we really executed well in the first half in a lot of the things we were doing, and that could be a result of that."
The two schools square off each fall in the Monon Bell Classic football game, but the rivalry carries over to hoops as well.
Wabash has won the last 4 football games, but DePauw has now won two of the last three games on the hardwood.
"They fought us tough; they always do, but it's nice to get a home win against them," Flynn said.
The Tigers play again at Wooster at 3 p.m. Saturday.


At DePauw
Wabash 24 25 -- 49
DePauw 20 40 -- 60

Individual scoring
Wabash: Purvlicis 6-8 4-8 16, Nicksic 5-10 5-5 15, Sponsler 2-13 3-5 7, Hawn 2-6 0-0 5, Wagner 2-2 0-0 4, Burton 1-2 0-0 2, Hodges 0-5 0-0 0, Kammrath 0-0 0-0 0, Surenkamp 0-0 0-0 0, Walsh 0-4, 0-0, 0.
DePauw: Botts 2-6 3-4 9, Johnson 3-4 3-4 9, Wilkison 4-11 0-0 8, Rich 3-7 0-1 8, Haggin 3-5 0-0 7, Burns 3-5 0-0 6, Flynn 2-6 1-2 5, Fernitz 2-3 0-0 4, Patton 1-2 2-2 4, Dillon 0-0 0-0 0, Sustarsic 0-0 0-0 0, Fey 0-2 0-1 0.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
W 18-55 (1-16) 12-18 49, D 23-51 (5-15) 9-13 60.

Rebounds (offensive)
W 32 (11), D 34 (8)

Turnovers
W 10, D 10

DPU women take wire-to-wire win over Kenyon College 57-47

Thursday, January 10, 2013

(Photo)
DePauw sophomore Savannah Trees drives to the basket in the second half of the women's basketball game against Kenyon College on Wednesday. Trees finished with 11 points.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
The DePauw Uni-versity women's basketball team faced its stiffest home test of the season on Wednesday, a 57-47 win over Kenyon College.
The top-ranked Tigers (14-0) led throughout the contest but allowed a late Kenyon run to make the game close.
"It's a great win for us at home," DPU coach Kris Huffman said. "Kenyon is a very talented team and we're two teams that like to grind it out defensively, so it's hard to score."
Kenyon (11-4) trailed 31-15 at the half, but with DePauw's defense making it seem like much more.
Second-half lapses allowed the Ladies to fight their way back.
DPU never got the lead to more than 17 as Kenyon refused to back down from the highly-regarded hosts.
"I didn't know their record (coming in), but I knew they were good and undefeated in the conference and so are we," senior Ellie Pearson said. "Everybody wants to knock us off because we've got that big target on our back being No. 1, so I was definitely expecting a tough game."
Kenyon senior Kayla Ernst scored 14 of her game-high 16 points in the second half.
"They have two of the greatest scorers that we'll face this year in Ernst in the post and Kriete on the perimeter," Huffman said. "We expected this type of outcome."
Sophomore Lauren Kriete finished with 15.
DePauw began the game with an edge, led by sophomore guard Savannah Trees, who scored five of the team's first seven points. It soon became clear Kenyon wasn't afraid.
Sophomore Lauren Kriete hit back-to-back threes, narrowing the DePauw lead to 11-8 with 15:46 remaining in the half.
Pearson (13 points, 6-of-8 shooting in the game), the teams' leading rebounder, got aggressive offensively, making 3-of-4 shots in the half.
"I think if you do something aggressively and decisively, you're not going to make a mistake," Pearson said. "more."
Senior point guard Kate Walker scored all 12 of her points in the first half to give DPU a burst, but she appeared to be hobbled by a knee injury and was uncharacteristically sloppy with the ball.
Pearson (13, 6-8) and junior center Alex Gasaway (10, 5-13) were the only Tigers who found room to work in the second half.
The humble Tigers were slowed by Kenyon's defense, but they were just as relentless as their unranked opponents.
The Ladies shot 42.3 percent in the second half as they upped the tempo in the comeback effort, but just 32.7 percent for the game.
Pearson said despite the team's success and talent that dwarfs many of its opponents, it's easy to prepare defensively for tough games.
"Our practices are so competitive, and we've got such a deep team ... that keeps engaged. Even if the game is a blowout, our practices aren't blowouts," Pearson said. "(Being ranked No. 1) is not talked about in a positive way, it's more of a, 'heads up, you have a huge target on your back. Don't get cocky.'"
DePauw will look to continue its perfect season on Saturday when the play at Wooster at 1 p.m.


At DePauw
Kenyon 15 32 -- 47
DePauw 31 26 -- 57

Individual scoring
Kenyon: Ernst 7-15 1-2 16, Kriete 6-11 0-0 15, Hirt 3-13 2-2 8, Adlam 1-8 0-0 3, Boelter 1-4 0-0 3, Anderson 0-0 2-2 2, Williams 0-4 0-0 0, Hobbs 0-0 0-1 0, Ladson 0-0 0-0 0.
DePauw: Pearson 6-8 1-3 13, Walker 4-6 3-4 12, Trees 4-12 2-2 11, Gasaway 5-13 0-0 10, Stephens 2-6 1-1 6, Abendroth 1-2 0-0 3, Molloy 1-3 0-0 2, Ross 0-4 0-2 0, Ondik 0-1 0-0 0, McGinnis 0-0 0-0 0.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
K 18-55 (6-20) 5-7 47, W 23-55 (4-14) 7-12 57.

Rebounds (offensive)
K 31 (14), D 40 (17)

Turnovers
K 12, D 13

Clovers lose heartbreaker at West Vigo

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

(Photo)
Cloverdale senior Amillia Nally draws a foul driving to the basket late in the fourth quarter of the team's loss to West Vigo on Monday.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
WEST TERRE HAUTE -- As the Cloverdale girls' basketball team continues to make strides toward success, they must deal with tough losses.
Such was the case Monday when the Clovers lost a heartbreaking game to West Vigo, 38-37.
Cloverdale took over the lead in the second quarter, maintaining it until last in the fourth, but despite phenomenal defense and effort, the squad couldn't make a shot when it needed to.
"It's tough because you're so proud of the girls for battling," Clovers coach Matthew Langdon said. "We've not talked to the girls about some of our close games, but those close games have been seven, eight point losses. Tonight we stayed in there mentally and battled all the way to the end."
CHS had numerous chances to seize the game, but couldn't convert.
They made only 2-of-11 free throws in the fourth quarter, missing their last five.
"(We) put ourselves in so many chances to just put away the game because of our defense," Langdon said. "What do you say? We didn't seize the opportunity? But every single time we didn't seize the opportunity we came back with another big stop and another big steal and another big effort play."
Senior guard Amillia Nally made numerous defensive plays down the stretch, getting two late steals and attacking the basket.
Syndey Shrum, a senior who led the team in the first half with her scoring, pulled in four late defensive rebounds in traffic.
Cloverdale struggled in the first quarter, making only 2-of-10 shots and trailed 9-4 going into the second, but they caught fire.
The Clovers (5-10) shot the ball with their most confidence all season, stepping up for each open chance as soon as it was presented.
They made 8-of-11 two-point shots in the 20-point quarter and led at halftime 24-20.
"I think we go a lot with confidence," Langdon said. "When we're confident with the ball, everything improves for us. We're not a great shooting team, but it usually keeps us in the game. When we just handle the ball confidently, we're a different team."
For all the good in the first half against West Vigo (4-10), there was also the bad.
The Vikings hauled in 23 rebounds to the Clovers' 12 and made up for a turnover disadvantage by capitalizing on several of their 12 second-chances.
West Vigo junior Lexis Elkins had eight of her game-high 13 rebounds in the first half, five of them on the offensive end.
Cloverdale's shooting confidence remained, but the shots stopped falling in the third quarter.
Tough defense kept the Clovers ahead, but Charity Lane scored all nine Vikings points, on three-of-four three-point shooting, in the third, trimming the deficit to 30-29.
Senior Paige Gruener and Shrum each scored to extend the lead to four points with 6:16 left. The pair finished with team-high 11 points each.
Beginning at the 4:30 mark, the Vikings scored on three of their next four possessions, taking a two point lead with 2:28 left on freshman Kylie Cardinal's shot from the high post.
Gruener got to the line and trimmed the deficit to one, but another three from Lane followed with 1:54 left.
Cloverdale got to the charity stripe with 1:08, but missed both free throws.
They battled for the board, gaining possession back.
Senior Bristy Skiles worked herself open in the left corner and sank a three with :54 left. The Clovers trailed by one.
Nally got a steal and drew another foul.
She missed the pair, then stole it back again.
Gruener missed. Cloverdale got it back.
Nally pushed the ball up the court with 15 seconds remaining, worked it around the perimeter, then took a three from the top of the key.
It rimmed out, and Cardinal was fouled after getting the rebound. She missed on the front end of the one-and-one. Shrum pulled in the rebound with three seconds left and pushed it up court to Gruener, but she couldn't get a shot off from half court.
Monday's game was only the second one-possession contest the Clovers have played this season. The first was a three-point win over Union (Dugger) on Nov. 8.
"It's tough to fault the girls," Langdon said. "It's one that was fun to be a part of. It's fun to be in these types of games now. It's just not a fun one to be on the other side of it."


At West Vigo
Cloverdale 4 20 6 7 -- 37
West Vigo 9 11 9 9 -- 38
Individual scoring
Cloverdale: Gruener 4-12 3-4 11, Shrum 4-10 2-4 11, Stevens 4-9 1-4 7, Nally 2-9 0-4 4, Skiles 1-5 1-3 4, Walters 0-0 0-0 0, Wellington 0-1 0-0 0.
West Vigo: Lane 5-8 0-0 14, Cardinal 2-8 3-5 8, L Elkins 3-4 0-2 6, Voils 2-10 0-0 4, S Elkins 2-8 0-0 4, Morrison 1-6 0-0 2, Byrley 0-1 0-0 0, Edington 0-3 0-0 0, Houser 0-2 0-0 0.
Team scoring (three-pointers)
C 14-45 (1-5) 8-20 37, WV 15-49 (5-15) 3-7 38.
Rebounding (offensive)
C 28 (7), WV 48 (16).
Turnovers
C 16, WV 26.

Tiger Cub girls slip past Cascade for 2013 conference swim title

Monday, January 7, 2013

(Photo)
The Greencastle High School girls' swim team celebrates its 2013 West Central Conference championship by jumping into the pool together on Saturday at DePauw.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
Kaelynn Cox swam the final leg for the Greencastle girls' swimming team in the final event on Saturday, staving off her competitors to get a win and secure the 2013 West Central Conference title for the Tiger Cubs.
Libby Brush, Rosio Gomez, Corrie Romer and Cox entered the event knowing it would determine for than just the fastest 400 freestyle relay team.
"The girls' meet was a dead-heat, a pure tie, going into it based on the seeding," GHS coach Kent Menzel said. "(Our 400 free relay swimmer) knew that to win the meet they had to win that relay, and all went into the water with that goal in mind and were able to seal the deal for us."
The Tiger Cubs finished with 377 points, edging out second-place Cascade by three. The Cadet relay team finished 1.66 seconds behind the Cubs in the final event.
South Putnam was third at the meet with 237. North Putnam finished with 120.
Cascade dominated the individual events in wins, but Greencastle's depth kept the team in the hunt.
The Cadets had wins from Alexis Brown (200 free), Hayley Rosales (200 IM, 100 fly), Regina Solik (50 free, 100 breast) and Victoria Breeding (100 and 500 free).
The only individual events not won by Cascade were the 100-yard backstroke and diving.
GHS swimmer Rachel Custis was credited with a win in the back, surpassing teammate Mallary Meyer.
South Putnam diver Maddison Plunkett picked up the Eagles lone win.
The Tiger Cubs started the swimming portion of the day with medley relay win by Meyer, Emily Wheeler, Brush and Amelia Smith.
GHS also had a number of events they finished in second- and third-place, racking up points and putting itself in position to get a win in the final race.
"I told the girls' they need to find ways to be great today; find ways to be extraordinary," Menzel said. "From the final result you can see that they were able to do that.
"There were some great swims by the Cascade girls, particularly in the 200 IM and the 200 free, that created a little bit of concern for us, but then our backstrokers and our breaststrokers ... just brought the meet right back for the girls."
For the Eagles, coach Matthew Edwards said his team got off to a great start and carried that momentum throughout the competition.
"It was a really good performance by our divers scoring first and second (Courtney Sullivan)," Edwards said. "Being that we did diving in the morning, the rest of the girls got here and found out that we got a great start, so we needed to maintain that."
For North Putnam, a small, inexperienced team, the WCC meet was about more than winning.
"We had a personal best, at least one, by every single swimmer that swam tonight, so I was really, really enthused by that" NPHS coach Tony Gray said. "The No. 1 objective for them is just to have fun. As long as they have fun, it's been a successful meet for them. With their numbers, they weren't going to be able to win these types of meets but as long as they keep having fun and swimming their personal bests, its going to be a success."
Greencastle hosts Cascade in a dual meet on Wednesday at 6 p.m.
North Putnam hosts Cascade and Covington on Thursday, Jan. 17 at 6 p.m.
South Putnam hosts North Montgomery on Tuesday at 5:30 p.m.
"You hope that whether you win or lose is not as important as how you swim," Menzel said. "But that being said, for both (boys' and girls') teams to be able to jump into the pool together and celebrate like that is an amazing thing and a great thing.
"It's easier that way, and certainly a lot more fun."


2013 West Central Conference Swim Meet
Girls - Final
1, Greencastle 377. 2, Cascade 374. 3, South Putnam 237. 4, North Putnam 120.

All-conference swimmers
200 Medley Relay: Meyer, Wheeler, Brush, Smith, GHS
200 Free: Brown, CAS
200 IM: Rosales, CAS
50 Free: Solik, CAS
Diving: Plunkett, SPHS
100 Fly: Rosales, CAS
100 Free: Breeding, CAS
500 Free: Breeding, CAS
200 Free Relay: Solik, Rosales, Heegan, Breeding, CAS
100 Back: Custis, GHS
100 Breast: Solik, CAS
400 Free Relay: Brush, Gomez, Romer, Cox, GHS

GHS boys take WCC swimming crown

Monday, January 7, 2013

(Photo)
The Tiger Cubs boys' swimming and diving team celebrates after winning the 2013 West Central Conference championship.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
The Greencastle boys' swimming and diving team came to play on Saturday, winning the 2013 West Central Conference swim meet by 65 points.
The Tiger Cubs won eight total events, including the bookend relays, en route a 349 points. North Putnam had three wins and finished second with 284 points. South Putnam (255) and Cascade (220) rounded out the field.
"Going into the meet, we felt that the boys had a little bit of an edge (on the competition)," GHS coach Kent Menzel said. "We worked hard the last two weeks, but paid attention to our technique and paid attention to the way we thought about races, and I think that helped the boys come through."
Nathan Gardner, Elijah Brattain and Nash Firebaugh each had four wins for the Cubs, two individual each and wins in the 200 medley and 400 free relays.
Taylor Secrest swam the fly for GHS in the medley relay, and Jason Ummel swam the second leg of the 400 free relay.
"Our county competitors, both North Put and South Put, showed great things today," Menzel said. "The South Putnam relays are outstanding, and they have some very good freestyle swimmers who are always on our mind.
"North Putnam is a great swim team as well. I thought they had some outstanding swims. Dane Gray, particularly, swam well and had a good day. I know that they were working hard the last couple weeks so they will be on our radar for the county meet, and also the sectional meet."
North Putnam was led by a strong performance from Dane Gray.
He picked up wins in the 200 IM and 100 breaststroke and swam the second leg of the victorious 200 freestyle relay.
"Dane Gray has to stand out," NPHS coach Tony Gray said. "The other members on the relay team, Trevor Troyer, Jonah Creamean and Nick Kaufman all deserve the credit for their all-conference effort."
The Cougars' coach said he used as much strategy as he could to help put the team in position to score points, stacking the teams' 200 freestyle relay team, rather than the 400.
"We knew coming in that we weren't going to beat (Greencastle's) 4x100 relay team, so I put my better resources in the 4x50 relay team so we could win that event," Tony Gray said. "The boys swam pretty well. We didn't taper or rest for this meet. Maybe that was the coaches mistake, but I knew coming in it was going to be a difficult hill to climb beating Greencastle, so I decided just to keep us in training.
"When we get to county (on Feb. 7) hopefully we can turn the result around."
South Putnam started the day with a second-place finish by diver Tyler Neumann but couldn't carry momentum into the swimming events.
Tayler Arnold finished second in the 100 free and the 200 freestyle relay team of Zane Crosby, Ben Albright, Matt Lund and Arnold took second.
"With Tyler Neumann getting second in diving, that was a great start," SPHS coach Matthew Edwards said. "It was a really good job by our seniors today. We've also been dealing with some sickness over the last week, so we had to switch some relays at the very end. But they didn't let it get to them. They did everything they could, and everything they needed to."
Cascade diver Kyle Trent won the one-meter event with a 192.00.
Greencastle hosts Cascade in a dual meet on Wednesday at 6 p.m.
North Putnam hosts Cascade and Covington on Thursday, Jan. 17 at 6 p.m.
South Putnam hosts North Montgomery on Tuesday at 5:30 p.m.


At DePauw
2013 West Central Conference Swim Meet
Boys - Final
1, Greencastle 349. 2, North Putnam 284. 3, South Putnam 255. 4. Cascade 220.

All-conference swimmers
200 Medley Relay: Gardner, Secrest, Firebaugh, Brattain, GHS
200 Free: Brattain, GHS
200 IM: Gray, NPHS
50 Free: Firebaugh, GHS
Diving: Trent, CAS
100 Fly: Gardner, GHS
100 Free: Firebaugh, GHS
500 Free: Brattain, GHS
200 Free Relay: Troyer, Gray, Creamean, Kaufman, NPHS
100 Back: Gardner, GHS
100 Breast: Gray, NPHS
400 Free Relay: Brattain, Ummel, Gardner, Firebaugh, GHS

North Putnam boys' top Falcons

Monday, January 7, 2013
ROACHDALE -- It wasn't their prettiest game -- there were no highlight-reel backdoor cuts or electric blocked shots -- but the North Putnam boys' basketball team did everything it needed to on Friday to get a home win over North Vermillion, 51-44.
The Cougars had a 38-29 rebounding advan tage and turned the ball over just 11 times.
"A win's a win, and we'll take it any way we can get it," NPHS coach Nathan Martindale said. "We were able to control the glass. Any time you control the glass and the paint, you're in pretty good shape as a ballclub."
The hosts dominated in the paint against the much smaller, younger Falcons.
Senior forward Jameson Brewer finished with 13 points and 17 rebounds and senior center Jake Haste had 17 and nine.
NPHS shot nearly 50 percent (18 for 40) on its two-point field goals and had 15 offensive rebounds, six by Haste.
"We had a good game from Jake Haste, who was a able to get a little more aggressive on the offensive end, which is what we need from him," Martindale said. "JB (Brewer) came through and helped us out on some things ... He's been a double-double machine. At Western Boone he had 15 (points) and 13 (rebounds). Last night (against Turkey Run) he had 27 and 20."
For the duration of the first half, it looked as though the Cougars would be able to salt away the win simple with ball control, but the Falcons changed the tempo to a halt to start the second half.
NPHS appeared impatient at times as it continues to learn how to play with a lead.
"We're learning how to play, and I think that's the key," Martindale said. "If a team slows you up like that, especially with the lead, we're fine. On the offensive end we're not in a rush to do anything. We've still got to get to the point where we know we've got to feed the inside game, and if we don't have a good shot, we don't need to take it ... As the night progressed we got better at it, and I think as the season progresses we'll get better at it."
With the North Vermillion offense unable to get started in the first half, junior Brayden Woodard took the game into his own hands in the second.
Woodard scored 18 of his game-high 21 points after the break.
Every time it seemed the Cougars were ready to make a run, Woodard answered, either by getting to the rim for a layup or getting to the free throw line.
The Falcons cut the nine-point halftime deficit to as close as four several times, but the Cougars kept battling -- and kept feeding Haste in the post.
Junior Jordan Nauert and senior Zach Green each knocked down a pair of free throws to secure the win.
"There's still things we need to work on as a team and understand," Martindale said. "We're trying to get to the point where we establish an inside game. There was a point there in the second quarter where we started getting three-point happy again and I had to call timeout and really just kind of settle them down."


At North Putnam
North Vermillion 7 7 10 20 -- 44
North Putnam 13 10 8 20 -- 51

Individual scoring
North Vermillion: Woodard 8-13 5-8 21, Wright 3-7 4-6 10, Zumwalt 3-10 0-1 6, Earl 0-2 4-6 4, Hollowell 1-5 0-0 3, Sams 1-2 0-0 2, Martin 0-1 0-0 0, Davis 0-0 0-0 0.
North Putnam: Haste 8-14 1-5 17, Brewer 6-18 1-2 13, Nauert 1-5 6-7 8, Hazelgrove 1-4 2-4 4, Green 1-2 2-2 4, Beaman 1-4 0-0 3, Roberts 1-2 0-1 2, Flynn 0-0 0-0 0.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
NV 15-40 (1-11) 13-22 44, NP 19-50 (1-10) 12-21 51.

Rebounds (offensive)
NV 29 (7), NP 38 (15).

Turnovers
NV 12, NP 11.

Free throws, 45-point half leave Cubs just short against Sparkplugs

Saturday, January 5, 2013

(Photo)
Greencastle senior Rayleigh Amis gets underneath the Speedway defense to score two of her 13 points on Friday.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
The Greencastle girls' basketball team was hoping Christmas would never come as the team carried a three-game winning streak over a 17-day break.
The layoff took its toll early against Speedway and GHS couldn't overcome the deficit in the 63-59 loss.
"We had a slow start and we could have given up three or four times," Greencastle coach Bradley Key said. "We just kept fighting until the end."
The Tiger Cubs scored 45 points in the second half, including a 28-point barrage in the fourth quarter.
"As long as you have Alex Basile and Callan Taylor, you know that they're going to fight to the end," Key said. "Those two fought to the end. They both had great fourth-quarters."
The pair combined for 19 points in the fourth quarter. Basile finished with 21 points, and Taylor with 12.
Basile also had six steals.
"I really like how Alex Basile took it upon herself to fighting," Key said. "She's a fighter."
GHS also sank 19-of-20 free throws in the game, an accuracy rating that surprised even its coach.
"We practiced them (over break) but ... that's nice," Key said.
The two teams were curiously evenly matched.
Each finished with 34 rebounds, 12 of them offensive.
Speedway had 20 turnovers, and Greencastle had 22.
Speedway shot 41.4 percent (24-58) from the field, Greencastle shot 33.3 percent (18-54).
It was the slow start that doomed the Tiger Cubs.
Senior Rayleigh Amis marked Speedway's star junior guard Allison Nash for most of the game, allowing 24 points but limiting her overall game.
Amis finished with 13 points.
GHS will face conference- and county-rival South Putnam in its next game, a rematch of the County Tournament final.
"We've got to see if we've improved since early November," Key said. "It's good to be back in the gym."
The Tiger Cubs host the Eagles on Friday
at 6 p.m.


At Greencastle
Speedway 14 17 15 17 -- 63
Greencastle 5 9 17 28 -- 59

Individual scoring
Speedway: Nash 10-19 1-2 24, Adkins 5-11 4-9 15, Hall 1-5 2-4 4, March 1-2 0-2 2, Tavis 0-2 2-4 2, McGraw 1-4 0-1 0, Perry 0-1 0-0 0.
Greencastle: Basile 6-20 7-7 21, Amis 3-6 7-8 13, Taylor 4-11 2-2 12, Lenihan 4-10 0-0 8, Stoltey 1-3 1-1 3, Earl 0-0 2-2 2, Bridgewater 0-4 0-0 0, Covert 0-0 0-0 0.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
Speedway 24-58 (6-15) 9-18 63, Greencastle 18-54 (4-14) 19-20 59.

Rebounds (offensive)
Speedway 34 (12), Greencastle 34 (12).

Turnovers
Speedway 20, Greencastle 22.

Fourth-quarter rally still not enough as Greencastle falls short against Speedway

Saturday, January 5, 2013

(Photo)
Greencastle senior Nick Gilliam works his way to the rim in the fourth quarter of the game against Speedway on Friday.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN[Order this photo]
The Greencastle boys' basketball team knew it had an athletic mismatch against Speedway on Friday, but the team fought to the finish in a 58-46 loss.
The Tiger Cubs (1-7, 1-0) focused on rebounding and defense in the game, trying to overcome the size and speed the Sparkplugs brought to Greencastle High School.
Sophomore Lane Winslow finished with 11 points and eight rebounds, and 5'9" freshman guard Ryan Coble chipped in another five boards.
"We just talked about making sure that we take care of the ball as well as we could and fighting for offensive rebounds," GHS coach Troy Greenlee said. "For a team that is as experienced and athletic as (the Sparkplugs) are, I thought our kids competed very well."
The hosts were missing starting senior Nate Christy with an injury, and began the game with their eighth different starting lineup in as many games.
While Speedway dominated the ball, the Tiger Cubs were able to leak out and beat them in their execution.
GHS had only three turnovers in the first quarter and trailed 10-9 after one.
The Sparkplugs kept up the pressure and extended their lead to nine at the have, but the Tiger Cubs remained in contention. An 8-0 Speedway run to open the second half changed the momentum.
"We were pretty flat coming out after halftime. I'm not sure why," Greenlee said. "In the first half we got (Speedway) playing more of our type of game. We slowed them down a little bit. We didn't allow them to get as many transition baskets.
"Once they started getting in transition and turning it over on us, we struggled to hang on."
GHS got down, but didn't quit.
Senior Nick Gilliam began to take over in the fourth quarter.
Gilliam seemed inspired by Speedway's style of play and attacked the rim with reckless abandon.
He scored 10 of his team-high 15 points in the fourth, getting to the rim and the foul line at will.
GHS scored 20 points in the fourth, but the offense wasn't enough.
"We're getting better a little bit at a time," Greenlee said. "I was a little disappointed with our defense in the fourth quarter. I thought we allowed the idea that they were more athletic and stronger than us to allow us not to be as aggressive defensively."
The Tiger Cubs play again tonight as the team host West Vigo at 7:30 p.m. Another new starting lineup could be in store for the hosts.
"We're going to look at who played well tonight and look at matchups," Greenlee said. "We're going to talk about that game, probably in the morning, and we'll see what kind of starting lineup we can come up with."


At Greencastle
Speedway 10 21 15 12 -- 58
Greencastle 9 13 4 20 -- 46

Individual scoring
Speedway: Furlow 6-10, 2-6, 15; Jones 6-11, 2-3, 14; Ross 4-9, 0-0, 8; Brent 3-6, 2-3, 8; Anderson 3-3, 0-0, 7; Anglea 2-8, 0-0, 5; Kinnick 0-1, 1-2, 1; Ahrens 0-3, 0-0, 0; Dobbs 0-0, 0-0, 0.
Greencastle: Gilliam 5-11, 5-7, 15; Winslow 5-9, 1-2, 11; Bollman 3-8, 0-0, 6; Hughes 1-2, 1-1, 4; Foxx 1-5, 0-2, 2; Coble 1-2, 0-0, 2; King 0-0, 2-2, 2; Mitchell 0-1, 2-2, 2; Gerard 1-3, 0-0, 2.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
Speedway 25-51 (3-13), 7-14, 58; Greencastle 16-41 (1-10), 11-16, 46.

Rebounds (offensive)
Speedway 24 (6); Greencastle 30 (9).

Turnovers
Speedway 8; Greencastle 19.

Eagle girls top Eminence 67-19 to end five-game losing streak

Friday, January 4, 2013

(Photo)
South Putnam senior Leanna Masters scores a layup to open the game against Eminence. Masters finished with 11 points.
(Banner Graphic/GRANT WIEMAN)[Order this photo]
The South Putnam girls' basketball cruised to a comfortable win in its first game since Dec. 13, beating Eminence 67-19 on Thursday.
It was the Eagles' first win since Nov. 20.
"We wanted to set the tone from the beginning of being aggressive and that helped us," SPHS head coach Lindsey Blackman said. "The first half was just not taking anything for granted, play our game, play hard. Once we built the lead it was more, 'OK, let's work on ourselves. Let's work on going through the offense. Not looking for the first shot, but seeing what the best shot is.'"
Eminence (1-10) has struggled this season and the Eagles used the game, and long layoff, to try to jumpstart their team.
"I feel like we started off the year really focusing on (overall team defense)," Blackman said. "We started the season off wanting to be a pressing team, and it didn't work for us. So over break we made that kind of a focus of working on our press; getting Leanna (Masters) in the habit of not getting back in transition and setting it up. We wanted to work on that from the beginning of the game."
SPHS took a 24-7 lead after the first quarter, but still seemed out of sync.
The Eagles' 21-0 run to open the second quarter is when things truly began to click.
Masters, a senior scored seven of her 11 points in the quarter. She also hauled in six total rebounds while sitting out much of the second half.
With all but the final score decided by halftime (SPHS led 45-9 at the break), the Eagles were able to focus on execution for much of the second half.
They had zero three-point attempts after the break, and worked each possession to an extra pass and quality shot.
"The best comment of the game was, (junior) Aubrey Nichols at some point said, 'Wow, our offense works when we run all the way through it.'" Blackman said. "Just being able to do that ... Sometimes we get so much into the heat of the game we just start throwing up that first shot instead of looking for the best one."
Four Eagles reached double-digit scoring, including Masters, senior Mattie Varvel, 11, senior Mallory Cash, 10, and junior Amanda Barnes, 10.
Senior Nikki York pulled in a game-high eight rebounds.
The Eagles will face a much stiffer challenge on Tuesday when they play at Riverton Parke (11-1).


At South Putnam
Eminence 7 2 4 6 -- 19
South Putnam 24 21 12 10 -- 67

Individual scoring
Eminence: Gore 3-10, 1-2, 7; Moore 2-2, 0-0, 4; Hall 2-4, 0-0, 4; Stierwalt 1-4, 0-0, 2; Foote 1-2, 0-0, 2; Jobes 0-9, 0-0, 0; Belcher 0-3, 0-0, 0; Ninitte 0-0, 0-0, 0; Storm 0-2, 0-0, 0.
South Putnam: Masters 5-6, 1-2, 11; Varvel 4-10, 3-3, 11; Cash 4-7, 0-0, 10; Barnes 5-9, 0-0, 10; Hewitt 4-8, 0-1, 8; Nichols 3-8, 0-0, 6; York 1-4, 2-2, 5; Cundiff 1-3, 3-4, 5; Birt 0-0, 1-2, 1; Whitaker 0-2, 1-2, 1; Dobson 0-1, 0-0, 0.

Team scoring (three-pointers)
Eminence 9-36 (0-4), 1-3, 19; South Putnam 27-58 (2-4), 11-15, 67.

Rebounds (offensive)
Eminence 19 (5); South Putnam 41 (17).

Turnovers
Eminence 29; South Putnam 14.

Huffman's Hall of Fame induction 'truly an honor'

Thursday, January 3, 2013

(Photo)
DePauw University's women's basketball head coach Kris Huffman has lad the Tigers for more than 20 years, led the team to a 2007 national championship and won more than 400 games.
When you're as successful as Kris Huffman has been as head coach of the DePauw University women's basketball team (the Tigers are ranked No. 1, have made nine consecutive NCAA tournaments and won 2007 national championship), recognition comes often.
Huffman has won four different national coach of the year awards and she learned recently she will be inducted into the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame.
"It's truly an honor," Huffman said. "It still doesn't seem real, although I've been notified."
Huffman received a call recently from Donna Sullivan, a hall-of-fame coach herself, explaining that Huffman would be the 2013 Silver Medal Award recipient.
The Silver Medal Award is presented each year based on outstanding contributions to Indiana high school basketball.
Aside from offering many Indiana high school basketball players an opportunity to continue their careers at the college level, Huffman has had several former players go on to become high school coaches.
This includes current South Putnam head coach Lindsey Blackman.
"Some of our best players have been Indiana born and bred," Huffman said. "To think that some of them have stayed in the profession is also very rewarding."
Huffman had another explanation for her honor.
"'They must not know I'm from Iowa' was one of my first reactions," Huffman said. "I think (IBHF) would want to take care of one of their own before they'd invite a guest, and I feel like I'm a guest in this state in many ways."
Huffman has been coaching at DePauw for more than 20 years, and also works as an assistant athletic director and part-time instructor for the school.
She won the 1985 Iowa Miss Basketball award, leading her Ford Dodge team to a state championship, then graduated Northern Iowa as the school's second all-time leading scorer.
Huffman was elected to the Iowa Girls' Basketball Hall of Fame previously, but said being elected in Indiana is an entirely different honor.
"I think of the Iowa Hall of Fame and the induction was kind of from your high school athletic performance," she said. "And we had great teams and great coaches. I felt like I kind of carried the torch for the successful teams that we had.
"This one is maybe more special being in a state that kind of reveres basketball."
Along with Huffman, 10 other new members will be elected into the 12th Women's Induction Class on April 27.
They are:
Laura (Lori) Augustyniak, Leo, 1978: All-State as a senior at Leo High School, she went on to play at Northwestern University where she remains the record holder for career games played (122).
Nancy (Cowan) Eksten, Crown Point, 1984: Scored a then school-record 1,778 points and led her team to a state championship in 1984. Played one season at the University of Kentucky before finishing her eligibility at Indiana University.
Annie (Kvachkoff) Equihua, Crown Point, 1985: Broke Eksten's record for career points (1,910). Averaged 23.2 points, 10.4 rebounds, 7.4 steals and 6.8 assists as a senior. Won state championships in 1984 and 1985. Played in 101 games at Purdue University, where she was named the team's most valuable player in 1989.
Joe Johnson, Ben Davis, 1969: Won 288 games in 21 years as inaugural head coach at Mooresville, reaching seven regionals and one final four.
Milissa (Kilgore) LaGrange, Rushville, 1983: Scored 986 points in high school before becoming a four-year starter at Butler, where she set numerous records.
Kim Land, North Central (Indianapolis), 1979: Scored 1,235 points as a four-year starter. Played one season at Ohio State University before transferring to IU.
Lisa Sanchez, East Chicago Roosevelt, 1980: Won a state title as a junior, then went on to become a three-time MVP at California Lutheran University.
Karen (Bauer) Stenftenagel, Jasper, 1979: Made the state finals in 1979, then became Ball State University's first woman to receive a full-ride athletic scholarship. She was inducted into the BSU hall of fame in 2000.
Vicki Vaughan, Lawrenceburg, 1981: Set school records for career (1,062) and single game (41) points. Two-time all-state, she played for four years at Illinois State University.
Alan Vickrey, Decatur Central, 1968: Won 469 games as a coach over his 32-year career, including two state championships.