Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Hawks Face Powerhouse Stanton Tonight

EG TRAVELS TO SW IOWA FOR PLAYOFF OPENER

East Greene heads to Stanton tonight to face the Stanton Vikings in an 8-Man State Playoff game. Kickoff is at 7 p.m. Stanton is an 8-Man football powerhouse, qualifying for the playoffs for the fifth straight year.

The two teams head into the game with identical 7-2 records with Stanton qualifying as the district runner-up in District 8 at 6-1 and EG as the No. 3 team in District 7 at 5-2.

The Vikings were 8-Man state champs in 2007. Stanton also qualified in 2002 and 2003 in 8-Man, and the Vikings made it to the playoffs in 1984, 1998 and 1998 in Class A. This is Stanton’s 10th football playoff appearance. The Vikings have a total combined won-loss record in the playoffs of 11-8.

This is East Greene’s first 8-Man playoff berth and the fourth in school history, as the Hawks went to the playoffs in Class A three years in a row, 1987-89, and compiled a 3-3 postseason record.

Stanton, state-ranked earlier this season until falling to District 8 champion Fremont-Mills (Tabor), is predominantly a running team, lead by Greg Focht, who has rushed for 769 yards in 123 carries and scored 11 touchdowns, and Tyler Havrum, who has a carried 131 time for 724 yards and 15 touchdowns. Havrum handles the QB duties for the Vikings and he has thrown for 464 yards, good on 49 of 108 passing attempts and four touchdowns. But Havrum has been intercepted five teams. Jeff Marshall has also seen quarterbacking duties with 5 touchdowns and no interceptions with a completion rate of 18 of 22 for 230 yards.

Stanton has passed for a total of 716 yards this year but its rushing yardage is a whopping 2,588.

East Greene counters, however, with the sixth-best defense in the state in 8-Man, giving up an average of just 14.3 points a game while scoring 41.7 (26th best). Stanton has scored at 48.7 points-per-game clip, 12th best in the state, while giving up 24.11 (20th best). [Add those up and 12th and 20th equals 32 divided by two equals 16, and 6th and 26th also equals 32 and divided by two equals 16, so these teams come out with exactly the same level of offense/defense when ranked among all the state’s 8-Man teams.]

Team stats are very close as EG has rushed for 2,293 yards and passed for 856.

The Hawks’ offense is led by running back Schyler Bardole, who ranks among the top all-time career leaders in touchdowns, total points scored, and rushing yards in Iowa 8-Man football. This season Bardole has scored 29 touchdowns and 7 two-point conversions (188 points) on 190 carries for a whopping 1,652 total yards.

He is also an anchor of the EG defense along with linebackers Zach Dearborn and Tory Beger. The Hawk’s have been known for their solid defense the last several seasons. Last year, Tom Beger, who played the same positions that younger brother Tory, a sophomore, plays this year (QB and linebacker on defense), was named second team all-state as a linebacker in his senior season. Tom is now playing defensive linebacker for the Simpson College JV team. Kyle DeMoss of rural Rippey, a graduate of Ogden High School, plays for the Simpson varsity this year as a senior running back and kickoff specialist.

The Begers are sons of EG co-coach and athletic director Tony Beger. Bardole is the son of co-coach Tim Bardole, an EG graduate who lettered in football in Iowa State after his days as a Hawk gridder a generation ago. Another son, Gabe, is a freshman on this year’s team.

The Begers are an “all EG” family as Traci Beger, wife of Tony and mom to the “Beger Boys,” is lead elementary teacher at the EG elementary school in Rippey and the high school girls basketball and softball coach. And there is still a third “Beger Boy” to wear the green and white, as Tyler will be in high school in a few years and has played in the youth county league in football.

100-POINT TURNAROUND: This football season has marked many accomplishment for the EG gridders, among them the first winning season since 2001, best season record since the 1980s, first 8-Man Playoff appearance, and first playoff berth in 21 years. Most indicative of the Hawks’ success is a 100-point turnaround against a very solid football program like Ar-We-Va.

EG shut down the Rockets 50-0 last Friday night in Westside to put a dramatic flourish on the last game of the regular season. Just three years ago—in 2007—the Hawks took a 57-7 drubbing from Ar-We-Va. The gap closed the next year to 39-20 in 2008 and last year, EG opened the season in Westside, losing to the Rockets in a tough, defense-oriented battle, 15-2. That’s an amazing 100-point turnaround in just three seasons.

The Hawks rolled up 388 total yards and 19 first down in last week’s game while holding the Rockets to just 48 yards rushing in 13 attempts and 8 of 29 passes for 88 yards—and no first downs for the entire game.

Bardole led the charge with 192 yards and five touchdowns. Beger had a great night at quarterback with 8 of 16 passing for 152 yards and two touchdowns. He threw one interception on the night but the Hawks had the overall advantage as they intercepted five Ar-We-Va passes and recovered a fumble.

Beger’s passes were spread among four receivers: Nic Nicoliasen, 3 catches for 68 yards; Reed Ostrander, 3 for 45 yards with two of them for touchdowns; Cooklin, one for 25; and Aaron Lyons, one for 14.

Beger and Bardole were sharp on the defensive side, leading the Hawks with 10 and 7 tackles respectively. Cooklin snared two of the interceptions and returned them for 56 yards total while Lyons, Beger and Rob Ritchie each picked off a pass.

Stanton also heads into tonight’s game after a big, lopsided win last week as the Vikings drubbed winless South Page (College Springs), 82-14.

STANTON’S DEEP TRADITION: This is the third year that East Greene’s district (7) and Stanton’s district (8) have been matched up in the playoffs with each of the top four finishers in the two districts facing off in the first and second rounds, and then the state quarterfinals. Two years ago, Coon Rapids-Bayard, the runner-up to CAM (Anita) in District 7, and Stanton, undefeated champion of District 8, met in the quarterfinals with Stanton winning 42-17 and advancing on to the semifinal round where the Vikings lost to Armstrong-Ringsted, which fell in the title game to Lenox. Last year, Adair-Casey, D7 co-champ and top seed, moved through the first two rounds and, again, the team advancing on the opposite side of the quarterfinal bracket was Stanton, but this time the D7 team had the upper hand as AC disposed of the undefeated Vikings, 42-26. AC met the same fate as Stanton had the year before, falling to Armstrong-Ringsted, 64-22, with AR going on to claim the state title.

Armstrong-Ringsted was the team Stanton defeated in the 2007 championship, 32-24. The Mustangs have now been in the last three straight championship games, winning the crown in 2008 and finishing as runner-up in 2007 and 2009. AR (9-0) has qualified again as the No. 1 seed from District 2 and the winner of the D7-8 quarterfinal matchup will again face the winner from D1-2 in the semifinal round in the UNI Dome in Cedar Falls. The Mustangs head into the playoffs as the No. 2 ranked team in 8-Man football by the Des Moines Register and the Associated Press, just behind Lenox, the team it beat last year for the title.

Lenox (9-0), District 3 champion, handed Stanton (7-2) one of its two losses this year in a non-district home opener for both teams, beating the Vikings 44-8 in Stanton. That loss snapped Stanton’s win streak of 30-regular season games, the longest in the state, and when Stanton lost to Fremont-Mills (Tabor) a few weeks later, that snapped a 26-game winning streak in district games.

Since 2001, its last year in Class A, Stanton has finished first or second in its district except for one year, 2004, when the team went 2-2 and 5-3 and finished third of five teams in District 5.

THE COFFEE POT TOWN: Stanton is a stand-alone town and school district in Montgomery County, located between Red Oak, the county seat, and Villisca. Total K-12 enrollment is 267 compared with EG’s 308. Stanton has a vibrant Scandinavian history and one of its most famous daughters is longtime character actress Virginia Christine, who gained fame as Mrs. Olsen of the successful television advertising campaign for Folgers Coffee. She also had significant roles in such films as “Guess Whose Coming to Dinner?” (1967), Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), and High Noon (1952).

Ms. Christine remained loyal to her hometown and despite her busy life as an actress in Hollywood she visited Stanton often. And in her honor and the height of the success of during her 21 years as Folger’s Mrs. Olsen, the town rebuilt its water tower to look like a coffee pot. And Stanton topped that when it built a new water tower in 2000 and this one was built to look like a coffee cup. Stanton has also kept the first water tower. Both are designed with a Swedish motif, in further expressing the town’s deep Swedish heritage.

Stanton has a modern school facility on the north edge of town and the football field is just adjacent to the school at a lower elevation. The home side bleachers are actually built into the side of the hill, or rise, between the school and the field with the visiting team’s bleachers on the opposite side of the field. A new elementary wing was added to the school in 1994 and the facility now serves grades K-12.

Stanton has retained its older school building from the early 20th century and turned that into the Swedish Heritage and Cultural Center. It is located in the heart of the community not far from another landmark in the town center, the high-steepled Mamrelund Lutheran Church.

Stanton’s population is 714 (U.S. Census, 2000) and it is located on U.S. Highway 34 between Red Oak (pop. 6,197) and Villisca (1,344), the two other main communities of Montgomery County.

However, these communities are coping with declining populations and smaller school enrollments, as are most small towns of rural Iowa. As of 2009, the projected census for Stanton was 680, a 4.8% drop, while Villisca has decreased 8.8% to 1,226 and Red Oak is now down to 5,626, a 9.2% drop. Comparatively, towns in Greene County are seeing declines of anywhere from 10 to 14% but there are more communities in Greene County: Jefferson, Grand Junction, Rippey, Dana, Paton, Churdan, Scranton, Cooper and Farlin, all but two of them incorporated. Montgomery County has just 5 incorporated towns and one unincorporated: Red Oak, Villisca, Stanton, Elliott, Grant and Goburg (unincorporated). Overall, however, Montgomery County has a slightly larger population, 10,796 based on 2009 U.S. Census estimates, than Greene County, 9,251, due to the size difference between the two county seat towns, Red Oak and Jefferson. Montgomery’s population has decreased 8.3% since 2000 while Greene’s population has dropped 10.8%.

Stanton’s BEDS enrollment figures for high school sports classification is 71 compared to East Greene’s 84. Villisca, which is also an 8-Man school in District 8, is 94.

Stanton has long competed among the 10-member Corner Conference which was comprised of 10 school districts in the four southwestern-most counties of Iowa: Mills, Fremont, Page and Montgomery. Along with Stanton, the longstanding Corner Conference schools were Nishna Valley (Hastings), Malvern, Fremont-Mills (Tabor), Sidney, Hamburg, Farragut, Essex, South Page (College Springs) and Villisca.

The alignment has changed in the just last few years as Nishna Valley and Malvern embarked on a sports sharing and now whole-grade sharing arrangement and have renamed themselves East Mills as a combined entity with elementary students attending a school in each of the two main towns, Malvern and Hastings. The high school is in Malvern and the middle school in Hastings. When East Mills was formed, that dropped the Corner down to 9 teams but then Clarinda Academy, a private school formed a few years ago in Clarinda, the county seat of Page County, was added to make the league 10 teams again.

This past year, Hamburg and Farragut joined forces to share sports and now compete as Nishnabotna, taking up the slack since Nishna Valley is just the name of a school district and elementary school in Hastings (for the time being). Nishnabotna got out of the blocks in a good way as the baseball team qualified for the state tournament last summer, the first state baseball appearance for either school.

Nishnabotna finished fourth (4-3, 6-3) in District 8 and will travel to Glidden-Ralston tonight to face the Wildcats, the D7 champions and the seventh-ranked team in the state. Nishnabotna drubbed Essex (1-7, 1-9) in its district game on Friday, 92-6. East Mills heads to Coon Rapids-Bayard to take on the Crusaders, the No. 2 team from D7. Fremont-Mills, ranked sixth in the state, will host Boyer Valley (Dunlap), the fourth-seeded team from D7. F-M won the D8 crown Friday night in Tabor with a big 56-20 win over EM.

The Corner Conference is now reduced to 9 teams and it looks as if more sharing is on the horizon. It does not appear that Stanton or Villisca have approached any type of teacher or classroom sharing with either other or neighboring districts like Red Oak and Corning (just east of Villisca and the county seat of Adams County) nor in sports in the past few years. But now discussions are underway in earnest. Villisca has agreed to discuss pursuing whole grade sharing with Corning while Stanton is looking at several neighboring districts (one of them was Villisca) but it is most likely it would align with Red Oak, which is only 8 miles away.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Hawks Defuse AWV Rockets, 50-0

IT’S ON TO STATE (AND STANTON)!

East Greene shut down Ar-We-Va 50-0 tonight in Westside to put an exclamation point on an amazing 2010 football season.

But the Hawks are not done yet. The 50-0 blitzing of Ar-We-Va is just icing on the cake of a season that saw the Hawks clinch a playoff berth several weeks ago. By finishing third in Division 7 of 8-Man football, the Hawks will get the No. 3 seed and face off on Wednesday against the No. 2 seed from Division 8—the Stanton Vikings. Game time is 7 p.m. in Stanton.

Friday, Oct. 22 Scores:
East Greene 50, Ar-We-Va 0
Glidden-Ralston 32, Coon Rapids-Bayard 27
Boyer Valley 53, Walnut 12
Woodbine 66, Charter Oak-Ute 21

Final Division 7 Standings:
Glidden-Ralston 7-0, 8-1
Coon Rapids-Bayard 6-1, 7-2            
East Greene 5-2, 7-2  
Boyer Valley 4-3, 6-3
Woodbine 3-4, 3-5     
Ar-We-Va 2-5, 3-6     
Walnut 1-6, 1-8
Charter Oak-Ute 0-7, 0-9




Friday, October 22, 2010

Hawks Head to Ar-We-Va

LOOKING FOR FIRST WIN EVER AGAINST ROCKETS

Three points and three seconds. It could not have much closer, unless maybe it had been 1 point and 1 second.

Either way, East Greene suffered a heartbreaking loss to longtime rival Coon Rapids-Bayard in Coon Rapids Friday night as the Crusaders scored with just 3 seconds left to beat EG 29-26 and remain unbeaten in Division 7 at 6-0 while the Hawks fell to 4-2.

Of course, the loss was tempered somewhat by EG having clinched a spot in the 8-Man Football playoffs. It’s the Hawks’ first-ever playoff appearance in 8-Man football and the first since qualifying 21 years ago after three straight appearances (1987-89) in Class A (11 man).




East Greene came up short, 15-2, in last year's game at Ar-We-Va,
but running back Schyler Bardole, one of the all-time leading career
rushers in 8-man football in Iowa, will look to lead the Hawks to a
win tonight in Westside. (Photo from AWVCSD.com)                  
   East Greene heads to Ar-We-Va (2-4, 3-5) tonight to close out the regular season. The Hawks have qualified for the State Playoffs as the No. 3 team in Division 7 and will be waiting for the results to come in tonight from games in Division 8 as to determine that division’s No. 2 seed. That school—which could be Fremont-Mills (Tabor), East Mills (Malvern) or Stanton—will host the Hawks on Wednesday with kickoff slated for 7 p.m.

Coon Rapids-Bayard takes a perfect D7 mark (7-1 overall) to Glidden where it will face Glidden-Ralston (also 6-0 in D7 and 7-1 overall) to determine the Division winner and top-seed in the playoffs. First-place bragging rights will be determined in the “Lincoln League” (D7) right on the Original Lincoln Highway (today’s U.S. 30), where the GR gridders play, although both teams will host playoff games next week against the No. 3 and 4 seeds from Division 8.

Boyer Valley has already nailed down the No. 4 spot in Division 7 and will head to the top-seeded team in D8 on Wednesday.

CRB 29, EG 26: East Greene has had a fierce rivalry in boys and girls sports with CRB over the years, and this game was more of the same. It was a thriller from start to finish. According to the website of KCIM radio station in Carroll, CRB QB Michael Schwenk left the game in the first half with an injury, but returned to action in the second half. His top receiver, Jacob Esdohr, filled in at QB during his absence.

East Greene went into halftime with a 1 point lead but CRB went back in front after the break. But the Hawks kept battling and it looked like victory was in hand when they scored with just 35 seconds left in the game to go up 26-21. A two-point conversion would put them up by eight points forcing CRB to run the field in just 35 seconds, score a TD and then either kick to tie or add a two-point conversion to win.

But EG’s two-point conversion attempt was stopped and then the unthinkable happened. The Crusaders drove the length of the field in just 5 plays and scored with just 3 seconds on the clock. They added insult to injury by succeeding on their two-point conversion.

The Hawks only had time left to get the kickoff after the touchdown and return the ball all the way to payday, but that did not happen, so CRB got the win and the chance to host a playoff spot at home, in addition to setting up a somewhat expected CRB-GR finale for the Division title.

EG did everything it could to keep itself in the driver’s seat for a possible three-way tie atop D7. The Hawks certainly had the firepower, amassing a whopping 465 total yards to CRB’s 298. EG was clearly moving the ball as it had 27 first downs compared to just 12 for the Crusaders.

But four fumbles and an interception by QB Tory Beger really did the Hawks in. This is a problem that plagued the Hawks last year throughout the season but not as much this year, so that level of miscues in a big game was troubling.

The Hawk defense again rose to the occasion, limiting Schwenk to 13 completions in 27 attempts for 210 yards and intercepting him twice. Schwenk is one of the state’s all-time leading quarterbacks, and these numbers were way below his season average. EG’s Schyler Bardole showed why he is one of the state’s all-time best running backs as he racked up 268 yards on 48 carries and scored three touchdowns and a two-point conversion.

QB Tory Beger went 5-9 for 73 yards and the interception. Beger also carried the ball 18 times for 53 yards and a TD. Tyler Cooklin rounded out the offense with 12 carries for 68 yards.

Bardole, Beger and Cooklin all had good efforts on defense. Bardole led the Hawks with 9 tackles and he intercepted a pass and ran it back 12 yards. Cooklin intercepted a pass and ran it back 22 yards while Beger recovered a fumble.
 
HAWKS vs. AR-WE-VA: The Hawks will need to bounce back for a road trip to Westside to take on a tough Ar-We-Va Rockets squad. Ar-We-Va has a strong tradition, having qualified for the playoffs four straight years in 8-Man (2006-2009) and three times in the 1990s in Class A.


Nic Nicoliasen heads down the sideline toward the goal line after hauling in a pass deep in Rocket territory in last year's game at Ar-We-Va. (Photo from AWVCSD.com)
 
Ar-We-Va was eliminated from a playoff spot a few weeks ago, but will be playing for pride and upholding its advantage over EG, as the Hawks have never beaten the Rockets since Ar-We-Va moved to 8-Man in 2002, a year after EG made the switch.

Ar-We-Va gave D7 co-leader Glidden-Ralston a very tough game on Oct. 8, losing 24-13, and the Rockets fell to Boyer Valley by just one, 28-27, earlier in the season. The Rockets are 2-4 in Division 7 and 3-5 overall.

Most of the attention in D7 will be on the game in Glidden however, as the Wildcats are ranked 8th in state by the D.M. Register and the Crusaders are among a handful of teams right behind the top 10.

UPDATING THE RECORD BOOKS: Bardole ranks No. 4 for all-time career touchdowns in 8-man football, and the three scored at CRB moved him to 88, just one TD behind Shane Nicholson who played at Melcher-Dallas from 2005 to 2008. One touchdown against Ar-We-Va will move him into a tie and two or more touchdowns will move him past Nicholson into the No. 3 slot. Bardole is fifth in most points scored in a career (574) and four more points will move him to No. 4 past Jared Bruce (577) who played at Aurelia from 2007 to 2009. Nine points scored will move him into the No. 3 slot, now filled by Nicholson at 582. In career rushing yards, Bardole is fourth at 4,296 and closing in on Jeff Struecker (4,377) who played for Sentral (Fenton) from 2000 to 2003. Bardole has a been a starter in the backfield since his freshman season in 2007.

District 7 Standings
Coon Rapids-Bayard 6-0, 7-1
Glidden-Ralston 6-0, 7-1
East Greene 4-2, 6-2
Boyer Valley 3-3, 5-3
Woodbine 2-4, 3-5
Ar-We-Va 2-4, 3-5
Walnut 1-5, 1-7
Charter Oak-Ute 0-6, 0-8

Oct. 22 Results:
Ar-We-Va (Westside) 55, Walnut 22
Boyer Valley (Dunlap) 54, Woodbine 13
Glidden-Ralston 92, Charter Oak-Ute 6
Coon Rapids-Bayard 29, East Greene 26

Oct. 29 Games:
Coon Rapids-Bayard at Glidden-Ralston
East Greene at Ar-We-Va
Walnut at Boyer Valley
Woodbine at Charter Oak-Ute

EYE ON GJ SAYS: If the Hawks need any incentive for tonight’s game, they need only think back to July and the susbstate baseball championship game in Denison where Ar-We-Va edged the Hawks 3-2 and advanced to the state tourney at Principal Park in Des Moines. Most of the Hawk starters—Beger, Cooklin, Aaron Lyons, Zach Dearborn and Wes Onken with the exception of Bardole, a non-baseball player—played key roles on that Hawk baseball squad.

Or some of the pummelings taken in years past at the hands of the Rockets should get them psyched up. In 2007, when Bardole was a freshman, the Hawks were whipped 57-7 as Ar-We-Va rolled up an 8-1 record and 4-1 in Division 2, losing only to GR. Both teams qualified for the playoffs that year and posted first-round wins. In a quarterfinal rematch, Ar-We-Va drubbed the Wildcats 44-6 to get revenge for the regular season loss and advance to the semifinal round, where they lost a heartbreaker to Armstrong-Ringsted, 45-42, in overtime. In 2008, EG closed the gap, falling to AWV 39-20 in a non-division game in Grand Junction. Last year, the Hawks traveled to Westside in the season opener, but fell in a tough, hard-fought game, 15-2. The game goes back to Westside again this year as both teams are back in the same division again, this time it’s D7 whereas in the mid 00s it was D2. Next year the Hawks will host.

EG @ ?? ON WED.: Teams vying for the top spots in Division 8 are first-place Fremont-Mills (6-0, 8-0), along with East Mills (5-1, 6-2) and Stanton (5-1). Fremont-Mills hosts East Mills tonight in Tabor while Stanton is at home against winless South Page (College Springs). The most likely scenario tonight is that Fremont-Mills prevails over East Mills, claiming the D8 crown at 7-0 and dropping East Mills to 5-2 and third place in the district with Stanton easily dispensing of South Page to grab the No. 2 spot at 6-1. EG would then travel to Stanton next Wednesday in a first-round playoff game.

If, however, East Mills should beat FM, ranked seventh in the state in 8-man, one spot ahead of Glidden-Ralston, and Stanton should prevail, then all three of those teams would end up deadlocked for first at 6-1 and they would have to go the points differential tie-breaker. FM has an advantage there, however, as they have won all their games by 13 points or more, so a close loss would not drop their points down too much. Stanton’s point difference is presently at 8.17 but most likely they will beat South Page by more than 13, so their differential would increase slightly while a win by EM, which stands at 9.17 with the tie-breaker, would also increase, based on how many points it would score in the win against the points it would give up, so a 2-, 3- or 6-point win might not really shift its differential by much, so it really all comes down to the points, and that might leave FM in first, and allow EM to keep it advantage over Stanton.

But seriously, EG fans might want to get their maps out and start planning their route down to Stanton, which is in southeastern Montgomery County, six miles from Red Oak, the county seat.

Interestingly, no matter which D8 team EG takes on, should the Hawks win, they would then meet the winner of the first-round game matching the D7 winner (CRB or GR) with the D8 No. 4 team, which is Nishnabotna, presently at 3-3 in fourth place with a game tonight at Essex (1-5, 1-7). Villisca and Sidney are both 2-4 and they face off in Sidney, but even if Nishna were to lose tonight and drop to a tie with the Villisca-Sidney winner, Nishna would get the No. 4 spot in the head-to-head tiebreaker, as it has beaten both teams this season.

If EG does get by its D8 opponent in round one, it would meet the winner of the game between the No. 1 seed in D7 (GR or CRB) and the No. 4 seed in D8 (Nishnabotna). The way the playoffs are constructed in the second round, if a team that travels in the first round meets a team that had the home field in that round, then the traveling team gets to host in round two—that would be East Greene, versus [most likley] GR or CRB

Clearly, EG matches up well with CRB as noted in the 29-26 squeaker from last week but the incentive would be there to get one back from GR, too, as the Hawks are a much better team than the squad that ended up at the wrong end of this year’s Homecoming game with the Wildcats, 40-8.

CRB Ends Hawkettes’ Season

LOSE IN REGIONAL FIRST ROUND, FINISH 9-15

Coon Rapids-Bayard swept East Greene in three games, 25-19, 25-16, 25-12, in first round regional volleyball action at Coon Rapids on Wednesday. CRB (23-6) advances to the quarterfinal round in Madrid where they will face the Madrid Tigers, winners over Earlham.

EG ends the 2010 season with a 9-15 record. The Hawkettes finished in eighth place in the Rolling Hills Conference with a 3-6 mark.

Only AC and ICA were winners among the 10 conference teams in regional action on Wednesday. Adair-Casey sidelined conference foe Walnut to advance to a Region 3 quarterfinal match against Riverside (Oakland) next Tuesday in Adair. Iowa Christian beat Southeast Warren Liberty Center and will take on Martensdale-St. Mary’s on Tuesday at Melcher in Region 5. Regional quarterfinal winners will advance to the semifinal round on Friday, Oct. 29.

Paton-Churdan lost on Wednesday night to Southeast Webster in Burnside in Region 2, while Jefferson-Scranton got by Ogden in Class 2A first round regional action in Ogden. The Rams (16-21) move on to face Kuemper (21-10) next Tuesday in Carroll.

In the conference tournament at Elk Horn last week, EG took on Paton-Churdan in an opening round match, beating the Rockettes to advance to a second round match against Iowa Christian Academy, the No. 2 seed in the league tourney. ICA, ranked 12th in the state in Class 1A, beat the Hawkettes 21-9, 21-18 to advance to the semifinals. The Blazers won their semifinal match but fell to Adair-Casey in the championship. In a consolation round game, EG was edged out by CAM (Anita) 21-18, 18-21, 15-11.

FINAL CONFERENCE STANDINGS
(Conf. Record, Season Record Through 10-20-10)
Iowa Christian 9-0 18-8
Adair-Casey 8-1 23-6
Ankeny Christian 5-4 12-12
CAM (Anita) 5-4 9-15
Orient-Macksburg 5-4 8-17
Glidden-Ralston 4-5 10-15
Elk Horn Kimballton/Exira 4-5 6-17
East Greene 3-6 9-15
Paton-Churdan 1-8 2-30
Walnut 1-8 8-23

EYE GJ SAYS: It was an up and down season for the Hawkettes this year. After a strong start with a season-opening win over Southeast Webster-Grand and a good showing at an invitational tournament in Coon Rapids—and starting out 2-1 in the Rolling Hills—in looked like the Hawkettes could compete for an upper division finish in their first year in the RH. But key losses to teams like Orient-Macksburg and Ankeny Christian resulted in EG falling into the lower half of the conference which was dominated all season by Adair-Casey and Iowa Christian. EG did put some together some solid performances during the season, beating former league rival Guthrie Center, last year’s West Central Conference champion, and they pulled out some close matches which showed they could play well under pressure. After EG beat Guthrie, the Tigerettes turned around and upset Adair-Casey, but both EG and GC suffered from inconsistency throughout the season.

The West Central Conference fared much better in opening round regional action than the RH with the 9 teams posting a 6-3 mark. And two of those three losses were to other WC teams. Guthrie got by CAM (Anita), a Rolling Hills team, and will next face East Union (27-7). Madrid beat league foe Earlham to also advance in Class 1A. Woodward-Granger and Des Moines Christian, which has been ranked for part of the season, advanced in 2A as did Van Meter, which beat fellow conference member West Central Valley. The only 2A team to lose to a non-league for was Panorama.

The West Central will became a 10-team league again next year, as Ogden will leave the Heart of Iowa-Small after this season and fill the vacancy created by East Greene’s move to the Rolling Hills.

Five East Greene seniors played their last match in the regional loss: Katlynn Gannon, Molly Neese, Tia Lowe, Brittanee Heaning and Jasmine Kinney. Several younger players made significant contributions to the team this year, especially Chelsi Wilkens, who had a big impact on the front line as just a freshman starter, leading the team in blocks. Wilkens and sophomore reserves Tori Lowe and Brittany Gunn will serve as the nucleus for the varsity next year.

There were no juniors on the squad, so Coach Carly Tiffany will be fielding a young team next year in a somewhat of a rebuilding phase. EG also has a strong group of 8th graders moving up to the high school level for next year’s team—including Tiffany’s daughter Bailey Godwin— who could step in and play key roles. The team that takes the court next fall will essentially be in place for back-to-back seasons, so this year’s sophomores will be called upon to show leadership for the younger team members.

Friday, October 8, 2010

Hawks ‘Crush’ Walnut, 56-8

BV, AWV LOSE; EG CLINCHES PLAYOFF SPOT

East Greene rolled over Walnut in Grand Junction tonight, 56-8, to move its season record to 6-1overall and 4-1 in District 7.

The win over Walnut with Ar-We-Va’s loss to Woodbine guarantees EG a spot in the playoffs as the Hawks are in third place at 4-1, just behind co-leaders Coon Rapids-Bayard and Glidden-Ralston at 5-0. GR rolled over Boyer Valley 46-6 to drop the Bulldogs to 2-3 in D7.

The top four teams in the 8-team division qualify for the playoffs.

Ar-We-Va and Woodbine entered tonight’s game with 1-3 records in the division standings, which made the matchup an “elimination round” game as the loser would end up with 4 division losses and even with two more wins to close out the year, would still end up at only 3-4, making it nearly impossible to the get the fourth playoff  spot.

If BV had upset GR, moving to 3-2 in the league, and then won its final two games to finish 5-2, and Ar-We-Va had beaten Woodbine to go 2-3 and then win its next two games (Walnut, EG), and EG were to enter that AWV game at 4-2 having lost to Coon Rapids-Bayard the previous week, then AWV and EG would tie at 4-3 for fourth. And BV could easily finish in third place at 5-2 since its last two games are against Woodbine and Walnut. Glidden-Ralston and Coon Rapids-Bayard would finish in first and second depending on the winner of their matchup the last week of the season.

AWV would have gotten the fourth playoff spot based on beating EG which is the tie-breaker (head-to-head competition) when two teams tie. If more than two teams tie, and each as a loss to one of the other two teams, then the point differential is used.

If GR were to have actually been upset by BV and then beat CRB in the finale, they would get the No. 1 seed in D7 as both teams would finish tied at 6-1 but GR would get the top spot because the tie breaker between two teams is the winner in head-to-head competition. And if CRB were to win in that game under the same circumstances, then the Crusaders get the top seed.

Ar-We-Va had put a scare into GR last week before falling by just 11 points, and that coming just a week after GR had drubbed then undefeated EG by 32 points. GR, ranked No. 7 in the state, seemed vulnerable again tonight, leading BV by just 16-6 at the half, but the Wildcats prevailed by outscoring BV 30-0 in the second half to win 46-6. Meanwhile, Ar-We-Va trailed Woodbine by just 8 points in the first quarter, 14-6, but Woodbine put 12 points on the board just after halftime to go up 26-6 and hang on for the win, 34-20.

BV’s loss to GR drops the Bulldogs to 2-3 and even if BV wins its next two games and ends up 4-3 and the above scenario of EG losing its last two games were to happen, EG would finish at 4-3 and still get the tie-breaker because EG beat BV in head-to-head competition. Another concern, though, was if this same scenario had played out but Ar-We-Va actually beat Woodbine, and then won out for the season, going from 1-3 to 4-3 and beating EG, then then all three teams would have tied for third, and the No. 3 and No. 4 spots would be determined by the points differential.

Fortunately, for the Hawks, the Woodbine win over Ar-We-Va means that EG has already beaten the two teams in the No. 4 spot, and has a two-game lead over them, 4-1 vs. 2-3.

EYE ON GJ SAYS: The Hawks actually still have a chance for the Division 7 title despite their loss to GR two weeks ago. If EG gets by CRB next week, and then the Crusaders should beat GR in the season finale—while EG gets by Ar-We-Va—then GR, EG, and CRB all would finish in first place with 6-1 records. The tie-breaker invoked then in is the points differential, and that final number would not be determined until the games are played and the margins of victory and defeat calculated for all three teams.

EG’s biggest challenge right now is Coon Rapids-Bayard. The game is in Coon Rapids, so the Crusaders have the home field advantage. They bring a high-powered passing game into this showdown of longtime Central Valley and West Central conference rivals. CRB’s Michael Schwenk set a new state mark in an 85-12 drubbing of winless Charter Oak-Ute last night— scoring 9 touchdowns in the first half.

The Hawks will need to put the breaks on the Crusader offense and make sure they keep their own offense in gear. The Hawks have scored 52 and 56 points in their last two games, while the defense has given up an average of just 10. For the season, the Hawks are scoring at a 41.7 average while holding opponents to just 13.1. CRB has a whopping 58.9 per game scoring average and a 24.1 defensive average.

Friday, Oct. 8 games:
East Greene 56, Walnut 8
Coon Rapids-Bayard 85, Charter Oak-Ute 13
Glidden-Ralston 46, Boyer Valley (Dunlap) 6
Woodbine 34, Ar-We-Va (Westside) 20

Standings, Division/Season Records, Pt. Diff. Average
Coon Rapids-Bayard 5-0, 6-1             (13)
Glidden-Ralston 5-0, 6-1                    (12.6)
East Greene 4-1, 6-1                           (7.8)    
Boyer Valley 2-3, 4-3                         (-5)
Woodbine 2-3, 3-4                              (-2.6)  
Ar-We-Va 1-4, 2-5                              (-5)     
Walnut 1-4, 1-6                                   (-7.8)
Charter Oak-Ute 0-5, 0-7                    (-13)

Friday, October 1, 2010

Hawks Win Big Over Woodbine 52-12!

CLINCH FIRST WINNING SEASON SINCE 2001

East Greene beat the Woodbine Tigers, 52-12, in Woodbine tonight to move to 3-1 in District 7 and 5-1 overall. The Hawks are in sole place of third place in District 7—the “Lincoln League”—and the win guarantees a winning season with just three games left on the 2010 schedule.

East Greene hosts Walnut (1-3, 1-5) next Friday, Oct. 8, at Karber Field for Parent’s Night.

Tonight’s District 7 Games and Updated League Standings:

East Greene 54, Woodbine 12
Glidden-Ralston 24, Ar-We-Va 13
Coon Rapids-Bayard 76, Walnut 0
Boyer Valley 62, Charter Oak-Ute 8

Coon Rapids-Bayard 4-0, 5-1
Glidden-Ralston 4-0, 5-1
East Greene 3-1, 5-1
Boyer Valley 2-2, 4-2
Ar-We-Va 1-3, 2-4
Woodbine 1-3, 2-4
Walnut 1-3, 1-5
Charter Oak-Ute 0-4, 0-6

GR Spoils EG Homecoming

HAWKS LOSE FIRST GAME, NOW THIRD IN D7

Glidden-Ralston put the clamps on East Greene, 40-8, in a District 7 showdown last Friday night in Grand Junction.

The loss put a bit of a damper on East Greene’s Homecoming activities. GR remained in first place in D7, the “Lincoln League,” with a 3-0 mark, tied with Coon Rapids-Bayard, which beat Boyer Valley, 67-44. EG dropped into third place in the district with a 2-1 mark.

EG, GR and CRB are each 4-1 overall for the season. The win helped push GR to the No.10 spot in the Des Moines Register’s 8-Man state football rankings this week.

The Hawks put forth a solid effort. It tied the lowest point total the Wildcats have been held to all season (40 in a 3 OT loss to Newell-Fonda, 46-40) but the GR defense was unyielding and the offense got off to a fast start. GR rolled to a 34-0 halftime lead and upped that to 40-zip early in the third quarter.

The Hawks did get on the board with a touchdown run by Scyhler Bardole and run for the 2-point conversion by Reed Ostrander in the third quarter. Despite a poor first-half showing, the Hawks did play the Wildcats even for the second half, and actually outscored them 8-6.

East Greene was able to move the ball—racking up 237 yards and 11 first downs—but just could not punch the ball across the goal line. GR had only 25 more total yards (262) and just two more first downs (13) but the Hawks hurt themselves with three turnovers—an interception and two fumbles.

Bardole racked up 128 yards on 21 carries while Nic Nicolaisen ran 5 times for 23 yards. Bardole also led the receiving corps with 3 catches for 18 yards. QBs Tyler Cooklin and Tory Beger passed for 85 yards against the GR defense, but it took them 20 attempts and only 8 of those passes were completions. Cooklin completed 1 of 6 passes for seven yards, while Beger connected on 7 of 14 for 78 yards and one interception.

GR unleashed a running back “triple threat” with Taylor Hackett, Mitchell Lensch and QB Wade Hoyle each scoring two running touchdowns. Hackett had 13 carries for 114 yards and Lensch added 99 yard on 17 carries.

Despite his scoring two TDs, the Hawks did hold QB Hoyle pretty much in check, limiting him to just two completions in six passing attempts for 12 yards, and just 33 yards on the ground in 9 carries.

East Greene travels to Woodbine tonight while the Wildcats host Ar-We-Va.

EYE ON GJ SAYS: Well, there are baseball towns and there are football towns. Clearly, Glidden is a football town, and with EG having made the substate in baseball the last two years, Grand Junction and Rippey are baseball towns.

But, that being said, it really was disappointing to see GR win by a such a large margin when it seemed both teams were pretty evenly matched, and especially since last year, when EG came so close to beating GR, losing a hard-fought battle, 14-6. That game showcased how much improvement the Hawks have made over the last several years, considering GR drubbed EG 48-8 in 2007 and the Hawks pulled closer in 2008, 34-14, and then the loss by just a touchdown last year.

The Hawks will need to re-group as they have a long road trip this week to Harrison County to take on Woodbine, now 1-2 in D7 after rolling over Walnut last week, 52-12. The Tigers are 3-2 on the season, but their losses are to very strong teams—D7 co-leaders GR and Coon-Rapids Bayard (combined records of 8-2) and East Mills (3-1) which is in third place at 2-1 in District 8, just behind co-leaders Stanton and Fremont-Mills (3-0). East Mills’ only losses this season have been to top ranked Lenox (5-0) and No. 5 Stanton (4-1) whose only was to Lenox in the season opener.


Woodbine's Kyle Kuhlmann heads down the sideline
in last week's game at Walnut. Photo by Dawn Powers
of the Logan Herald Observer/Woodbine Twiner.

The Hawks will need to get their offense back in gear while the defense will need to stop the Tigers’ Kyle Kuhlman (see photo) and QB Zach Archer. Archer has thrown for 393 yards and 8 TDs and passed for 313 yards and 5 TDs through the air so far this season, while Kuhlman has rushed for 647 yards and scored 9 running TDs along with 118 yards receiving and 2 passing TDs.

EG has its own offensive weapons with Bardole now having racked up 823 yards for the season, a hefty 164 yards per game average, and a 1-2 punch at quarterback with Beger and Cooklin.

Tonight’s matchup with Woodbine begins a key stretch of four key games for the Hawks that mark the back half the season. After the road trip, EG returns to face Walnut (1-4) in Grand Junction on Parents’ Night on Oct. 8, and then the Hawks go on the road to finish the season with tough games at Coon Rapids against CRB and in Westside against Ar-We-Va the final two weeks of the season, Oct. 15 and 22.

The Hawks will need to make sure there is no letdown after losing in a big game that was even bigger because it was against a longtime rival like GR and that it came at homecoming.

It should be noted that when the Hawks scored that impressive victory over Boyer Valley on Sept. 10—even more important when tallying up the District 7 standings as BV went on to beat Ar-We-Va, a solid team year-in and year-out—it also matched all of last year’s EG win tally (3). And the thrashing of Charter Oak-Ute the following week moved the EG season win total to 4, which surpassed last year’s mark and equaled the four wins of the 4-5 record of the team two years ago. That 2008 season was the best EG grid showing since its first year of 8-man football in 2001, when EG went 6-2 with its only losses to the same team—state champion Adair-Casey.

One more East Greene win will clinch a winning season, the first since that 2001 campaign.

It’s a bit premature to begin talking about a berth in the substate in the postseason, as there are still 4 of the 7 total district games to be played, but it’s not at all out of the realm.

First things first, and that’s the road game at Woodbine. This will be a night where the lights are really shining bright on the Lincoln. Not only do “Lincoln League” schools EG and Woodbine faceoff in a key game in Woodbine, but Ar-We-Va travels east “on the Lincoln” to the other side of Carroll to Glidden to take on GR in another key battle of LL teams—these two being the smalls school rivals who are the east and west neighbors of county seat Carroll and its 2A schools Kuemper and Carroll public.

Ar-We-Va rolled over Charter Oak-Ute by 54 points last week and will no doubt be psyched to knock GR off its first-place D7 perch and out of the state-wide rankings. Last year GR squeaked by with a 20-19 win while Ar-We-Va had the upper hand in 2008, winning 32-12.

District 7 Standings
Coon Rapids-Bayard 3-0, 4-1
Glidden-Ralston 3-0, 4-1
East Greene 2-1, 4-1
Boyer Valley 1-2, 3-2
Ar-We-Va 1-2, 2-3
Woodbine 1-2, 2-3
Walnut 1-2, 1-4
Charter Oak-Ute 0-3, 0-5

Sept. 24 Results:
Glidden-Ralston 40, East Greene 8
Coon Rapids-Bayard 67, Boyer Valley 44
Ar-We-Va 56, Charter Oak-Ute 2
Woodbine 52, Walnut 12

Tonight’s Games:
East Greene @ Woodbine
Ar-We-Va @ Glidden-Ralston
Boyer Valley @ Charter Oak-Ute
Walnut @ Coon Rapids-Bayard