Barry Hinson announces the signing of two JUCO players

Tom Weber – Southern Illinois University Media Services

 

SIU recruits

CARBONDALE, IL  — Southern Illinois men’s basketball coach Barry Hinson announced the program has signed a pair of junior college transfers — guard Eric McGill and center Kavion Pippen — to bring an immediate infusion of court-ready talent for the 2017-18 season.

A native of Memphis, Tennessee, McGill (6-3, 185) played his freshman season in 2016 at SEMO, where he saw action in 27 games and averaged 7.0 points, 2.4 rebounds and 1.8 assists. He made 13 starts for the Redhawks and shot 32 percent from 3-point range. In 2017, McGill played for Panola College, where he averaged 11.6 points, 3.4 rebounds and 5.6 assists per contest. He shot 39 percent from 3-point.

“This is a young man who has played Division I basketball and who scored 20 points in a game against Murray State as a freshman,” Hinson said. “We felt like we needed to add an athletic guard who can not only pass, dribble and shoot, but who can get to the rim. We wanted a guard who realized the importance of being unselfish and distributing the basketball.”

Panola College, which is located in Carthage, Texas, finished the season 26-9 and won the NJCAA Region 14 North Division. McGill was named honorable mention All-Conference. The Ponies advanced to the NJCAA tournament, where McGill was named to the Region 14 All-Tournament team. He gives SIU two Panola College alums, joining senior Jonathan Wiley, who transferred to Southern last spring. Assistant coach Brad Autry was the lead recruiter on both players.

Hinson said next year’s team will have multiple options at the point guard position, including Saint Louis transfer Marcus Bartley, sophomore Aaron Cook, and McGill.

“I’ve always said, if we could ever get to a point in a basketball game where we play three point guards at one time, and you can find these guys with any size and length, that’s what your ideal basketball team would look like,” according to Hinson. “My thought process is we don’t put numbers on our kids. We don’t want to put limitations on them.”

If the name Pippen sounds familiar, that’s because Kavion is the nephew of NBA great Scottie Pippen. A native of Hamburg, Arkansas, Kavion is also the cousin of one of SIU’s all-time great volleyball players, Taylor Pippen. 

“Taylor was a wonderful ambassador for our university,” Hinson said. “She was able to draw upon her family relationship with Kavion. This was a great example of how a sport crossed lines to help another sport. She was just wonderful.”

The 6-foot-10, 220-pound pivot played in 27 games and made 17 starts for Three Rivers Community College last season. Located in Poplar Bluff, Missouri, Three Rivers finished 25-8 and advanced to the NJCAA District 4 playoffs. Pippen averaged 10.5 points, 7.3 rebounds and 1.9 blocked shots per game. 

“I go to church on Sunday and I’ve got everybody asking me if we’ve got a big man yet,” Hinson joked. “We had a specific need on the interior. We feel like this young man can come in and contribute immediately and make an impact on our program.”

Assistant coach Anthony Beane, who himself played at Three Rivers for head coach Gene Bess, was the lead recruiter on Pippen. 

“We haven’t had a guy in our program in a long time, a true center, that can play with his back to the basket, can defend and score around the basket,” Hinson said. “We think Kavion’s upside is absolutely incredible.”

SIU returns eight lettermen and three starters — Armon FletcherSean Lloyd and Thik Bol — from last year’s team that finished 17-16, but must replace the production of its top two scorers and assist leaders in Mike Rodriguez and Sean O’Brien. The composition of the 2017-18 roster is brimming with upperclassmen — three seniors, seven juniors, one sophomore and one freshman on scholarship. Five of the 10 upperclassmen are transfers from either a junior college or four-year institution.

“With the mass transfer exodus that’s gone on in college basketball in recent years, we’ve really put a heavy emphasis on junior college players,” Hinson said.

RLC Baseball makes it six-straight with doubleheader sweep

Reece Rutland – Rend Lake College Media Services 

RLC sophomore Jake Vernon (Elkhart, Ind.) launches a double during game one of Tuesday's doubleheader against Lake Land College.  (Reece Rutland/RLC Public Information)

RLC sophomore Jake Vernon (Elkhart, Ind.) launches a double during game one of Tuesday’s doubleheader against Lake Land College.
(Reece Rutland/RLC Public Information)

The Rend Lake College Warrior baseball team notched a pair of victories in dramatic fashion on Tuesday as they sealed the double-header sweep with a walk-off victory in the second game against conference foe Lake Land College.

In the first contest of the day, Warrior bats came out strong in support of starting pitcher Blake Deatherage (O’Fallon). For his part, Deatherage tossed five frames of one-hit ball and recorded 10 punch-outs.

Offensively, Jake Vernon (Elkhart, Ind.) led the charge with a pair of clutch doubles that resulted in four RBIs. Every other RLC position player reached safely at least once in the contest. The final tally of the first game saw the Warriors with an 8-2 victory.

REND LAKE BOX SCORE;  GAME ONE

 

HITTERS AB R H RBI BB SO LOB
Ian Walters 2b 4 2 0 0 1 0 2
TJ Byrd cf 5 1 2 1 0 1 3
Jake Vernon rf 3 2 2 4 2 1 0
Cody Clark c 4 0 1 1 1 1 3
Sam Troyer ss 5 0 1 1 0 3 4
Brady Austin lf 4 0 1 0 0 2 3
Dixon Craft 1b 4 1 2 0 0 1 1
Grant Brueggenjohann dh 3 0 1 0 1 2 1
Tanner Maskey 3b 2 2 1 0 0 0 1
Blake Deatherage p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
   Darick Hayes 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
   Jay Benard 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 34 8 11 7 5 11 18
BATTING
2B: Jake Vernon 2; Cody Clark; Tanner Maskey
3B: Brady Austin
RBI: TJ Byrd; Jake Vernon 4; Cody Clark; Sam Troyer
Sac: Tanner Maskey
BASERUNNING
SB: Ian Walters; TJ Byrd 2; Tanner Maskey
PITCHERS IP H R ER BB SO HR
Blake Deatherage (W, 2-1) 5.0 1 2 1 2 10 0
Jay Benard 2.2 0 0 0 1 3 0
Darick Hayes (Sv, 3) 1.1 1 0 0 1 0 0
Totals 9.0 2 2 1 4 13 0

Game two had all the drama. RLC railed four runs in the bottom of the seventh to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. Warrior batters showed great patience, earning three consecutive walks from a fresh Lakers’ reliever. It was all downhill from there for the visitors 

Following the trifecta of free passes, Cody Clark (Calverty City, Ky.) singled to drive in a run. Sam Troyer (Goshen) got plunked to move another Warrior across home. Things just got worse for the Lakers as Bailey Schimpf (Zeigler) was also hit by a pitch to bring the score level, allowing for Grant Brueggenjohann (Ballwin, Mo.) to perform walk-off heroics with a single to plate the winning run for a final of 7-6.

REND LAKE BOX SCORE:  GAME TWO

 

ITTERS AB R H RBI BB SO LOB
Ian Walters 2b 3 2 2 1 1 0 0
TJ Byrd cf 3 1 1 1 1 0 2
Jake Vernon c 3 2 1 0 1 0 1
Cody Clark 1b 4 0 3 2 0 0 1
Sam Troyer ss 3 0 0 1 0 2 3
Brady Austin lf 4 1 1 0 0 1 4
Dixon Craft p 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Grant Brueggenjohann rf 4 0 1 1 0 1 1
Tanner Maskey 3b 2 0 0 0 1 1 1
Blake Deatherage 1 0 0 0 0 1 0
Bailey Schimpf 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Zach Zarifian 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 28 7 9 7 4 6 14
BATTING
2B: Ian Walters; TJ Byrd; Cody Clark 2
RBI: Ian Walters; TJ Byrd; Cody Clark 2; Sam Troyer; Grant Brueggenjohann; Bailey Schimpf
Sac: Martin Ward
PITCHERS IP H R ER BB SO HR
Dixon Craft 1.1 4 5 5 2 2 0
Martin Ward 3.2 4 1 1 1 4 0
Josh Hart 1.0 0 0 0 1 2 0
Brady Austin (W, 1-0) 1.0 1 0 0 0 1 0
Totals 7.0 9 6 6 4 9 0

 

The pair of victories moves the team to 21-15 on the season and a sterling 11-4 in conference play. RLC’s Warriors have won six straight, all conference games. They are back in action on Thursday, traveling to powerhouse Olney Central (12-0 in conference play) for a 4 p.m. first pitch. They return home Friday for a doubleheader against the Blue Knights, starting at 1 p.m.

 

 

Grace Pytlinski of Waltonville seated as new RLC Student Trustee

ReAnne Palmer – Rend Lake College Media Services 

Grace Pytlinski, CENTER, was seated tonight as the 2017-18 Student Trustee during the Board meeting. She is pictured with Board of Trustees Chair Eric Black, LEFT, and President Terry Wilkerson, RIGHT. (ReAnne Palmer / RLC Public Information)

Grace Pytlinski, CENTER, was seated tonight as the 2017-18 Student Trustee during the Board meeting. She is pictured with Board of Trustees Chair Eric Black, LEFT, and President Terry Wilkerson, RIGHT.
(ReAnne Palmer / RLC Public Information)

 

Waltonville’s Grace Pytlinski was seated as the 2017-18 Rend Lake College Student Trustee tonight during the monthly meeting. Pytlinski replaced Eric Schumm of Wayne City and follows in the footsteps of her older sister Claire who sat on the board during the 2015-16 school year.

Pytlinski is a freshman double major, focusing on Agriculture Business and Production Management. At RLC, she is active in the Collegiate FFA (Future Farmers of America) and is a member of the Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society. In February, Pytlinski was also crowned RLC’s Homecoming Queen. In her spare time, she is completing internship hours at Syngenta as a general assistant.

After she leaves RLC, Pytlinski said she plans to attend a four-year university, possibly Murray State, to work on her bachelor’s degree in Plant and Soil Science. She hopes to become an agronomist.

But before she leaves, she has a big seat to fill. As Student Trustee, Pytlinski represents the student body and has an advisory vote during each monthly Board of Trustees meeting. She said she’s excited for the new challenge.

“I’m very grateful to have been given the opportunity to represent both the Agriculture Department and the student body on such a large scale,” said Pytlinski. “I look forward to getting to work with the Board and staff at Rend Lake, on both a personal and professional level. It will be a new experience; however, I know the staff at RLC will be more than willing to help me along the way.”

Pytlinski said she initially heard about the position when her sister held it two years prior, but encouragement from one of her agriculture professors gave her the final push and she decided to run.

“[Associate Professor] Kathy Craig asked me to run for the position,” she said.   “I was interested, because it is a great way to form relations with people who truly care about your best interest and will be there to help you, even after your time at Rend Lake is through. I also enjoy the idea of getting to represent the student body, getting to be their voice, and having the opportunity to make sure their voices are heard.”

Pytlinski continued, “I think Rend Lake is a spectacular college and I have greatly enjoyed my first year as a student. I look forward to having a chance to help the college continue to strive at its highest potential. I would also like to thank the student body for voting for me as their 2017-18 Student Trustee, and greatly look forward to getting to represent them.”

Outside of school, she enjoys farming, hunting, fishing, trapshooting, and spending time with her family and friends.

 

 

 

 

 

A historic church near Benton survives despite decades of inactivity

findagrave.com

findagrave.com

REND CITY, IL (Cesar Maragni – Benton Evening News Please Click to read the whole story. Here is an excerpt) While the historic Mt. Pleasant Church is located much closer to the village of Valier, and just a bit down the road from the ghost town of Rend City, the church actually has a Benton address. The picturesque old structure sits atop a hill that overlooks the church’s 100-year-old cemetery, and beyond that hundreds of aces of nearby farmland. The church was built in 1916. This was the fourth church building constructed on the site. The third building burned down. It sat just in front of this building in the corner of the cemetery.

Thompsonville First Baptist Church to perform He’s Alive April 14th to 16th

Kevin Smith (left) and Renee Anderson (center) discuss the drama with News 3 This Morning anchor Callie Carroll

Kevin Smith (left) and Renee Anderson (center) discuss the drama with News 3 This Morning anchor Callie Carroll

THOMPSONVILLE, IL (Callie Carroll, WSIL -TV. Please click to watch the video.) Easter is April 16 and many churches will celebrate the season accordingly. First Baptist Church in Thompsonville is celebrating with a performance. The Easter drama “He’s Alive” will be performed Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 7 p.m. at the church. For more information on this drama watch this video.

Valier homeowners soon to see reduction in insurance rates

by Steve Dunford 

From the Valier FD Facebook page

From the Valier FD Facebook page

Homeowners in the village of Valier will be paying cheaper insurance premiums, due to the Valier Volunteer Fire Department receiving a rating from the Insurance Service Office of a four.

The Insurance Service Office provides the guidelines for underwriting for major insurance companies.  On average most small village departments the size of Valier, have a rating of seven.  The fire suppression rating is on a scale from one being the best, to ten being the worst.

The rating will go into effect July 1st.  Please check with your insurance agent for possible reductions in your rates.

Valier Fire Chief Mike Gulley gave the following reasons for the rating improved from a six to a four:  “He said first of all his department is dedicated to training.  Second he said they have upgraded equipment , especially with two newer fire trucks. Infrastructure upgrades in the village, including a new water tower, which increased hydrant flows added to the improved rate.   He also cited improvment in the record system.”

Congratulations to Chief Gulley and the rest of the volunteers of the Valier Fire Department for this accomplishment.  Most of all thank you to them and all the rest of the local departments for providing fire protection at all times of the night, in adverse weather conditions, and especially on holidays.

Here is a reminder from the department’s Facebook page.  During severe weather events, the First Baptist Church and the Second Baptist Church, will be open to provide shelter for the residents of the community.

Two-time Regional Baseball Champion Coach Rich Campbell entering RLC Sports Hall

RLC Sports Hall of fame class of 2017 inductee, former baseball coach Rich Campbell

RLC Sports Hall of fame class of 2017 inductee, former baseball coach Rich Campbell (Rend Lake College Media Services) 

by Bob Kelley, retired Sports Information Director, Rend Lake College 

INA, IL – Winning baseball and Rend Lake College have been synonymous for the better part of a 50-year relationship. Which should tell you, the Warrior program has been in pretty good hands during that stretch.

Consider some of the “managers” calling the shots from the dugout.

RLC Sports Hall of Fame Charter Member Mike McClure earned his status and established the program’s reputation with nine consecutive winning seasons, mostly in the 1970s, 312 victories and a .638 winning percentage.

He was succeeded by Head Coach Kirk Champion, whose fourth and final team was 40-19; “Champ” for many seasons was a AA and AAA Minor League Pitching Coach for the Chicago White Sox and today is Director of Instruction for Player Development, responsible for overseeing how the entire organization he has been a part of for 29 years teaches defense, hitting and pitching. He was the Pitching Coach for Team USA in 2001, 2009 and 2011 World Cup competitions.

In three seasons, Paul Evans guided Warrior squads to 201 wins, winning 67.9 percent of the time, and within one victory of an elusive berth in the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) World Series; he left to become Assistant Coach for Missouri State University, née Southwest Missouri. The Bears have made nine post-season NCAA D-I Tournament appearances, including eight in the last two decades and a 2003 World Series berth, in his 29 seasons there. He was named National Assistant “Coach of the Year” in 2015 by D1Baseball.com.

Jim McGuire continued the tradition at a .655 winning clip over four seasons before leaving to become an Assistant Coach at Middle Tennessee State. Today he is in his fifth season as the Blue Raiders Head Coach, recognized in 2015 with Conference USA Keith LeClair “Coach of the Year” laurels after a 32-win campaign.

There have been many other success stories.

But only one Head Coach of 10 total has guided the Warrior Nine to a pair of Region XXIV Championships. Only one individual has three Sectional titles to his RLC coaching credit.

And for those accomplishments and more, former Head Coach Rich Campbell will be joining McClure in the RLC Sports Hall of Fame. Induction Ceremonies for the 18th Class will be Saturday, April 22, at 5:30 p.m. in James “Hummer” Waugh Gymnasium on the Ina campus.

Campbell will share the spotlight with All-America Women’s Golfer Danielle Kaufman (2003-05) and the record-setting 1983-84 Men’s Basketball Team (25-7).

Had he stuck around for one more year before being lured away by the business world, “Soup” could have become the program’s biggest winner as well. His 302-225 record (.573) covering nine seasons – 1992-2001 – ranks second to the 10-year slate of McClure.

Campbell was named Louisville Slugger Region XXIV “Coach of the Year” following championship seasons in Spring 1997 and 1999 and an American Baseball Coaches Association / Diamond Sports Company NJCAA D-I Regional “Coach of the Year” in 1999.

During his stay, he recruited and coached at least 64 players who continued their careers at the four-year level, and signed 11 professional contracts. Among those standouts: Second Baseman Dan DeMent (1996-98) and First Sacker Mike Breyman (2000-02), both of whom preceded him into the Hall of Fame in Spring 2009 and Fall 2009, respectively.

Yet another inductee, this time from the Class of 2013, Pitcher Craig Sands (1987-89), served as Campbell’s Assistant Coach the first two seasons.

According to the profile of the 30-year-old mentor in the Spring 1997 Warrior Program, “His fifth season… brings with it high hopes, considering perhaps his deepest pitching staff yet, several key returnees off last spring’s 35-14 squad ranked 30th in the country at season’s end and a promising recruiting class.”

Campbell’s fifth Warrior club did not disappoint with a 39-19 record capped by his second Sectional crown and his first Region championship. RLC started the spring 7-0, then ran off eight straight wins to improve to 16-3 and climbed to 31-11 before dropping a couple of one-run decisions, another by two runs and five in a row altogether before ending the sudden skid with a 16-run outburst in its regular-season finale.

It seemed the late-season slump might have been a precursor of things to come when the Warriors dropped their Sectional Tournament opener, 8-6. But then the bats woke up and the hurlers rose to the occasion.

Home runs by sophomore first baseman Chris Hargett and freshman outfielder Jeff Houston powered a 10-hit attack and freshman Eric Asbury (10-1) tossed a two-hitter in a game reduced to six innings by the 10-run rule, 11-1 over host Wabash Valley College (WVC). It was more of the same in a rematch with first-game conqueror Southeastern Illinois – 13 RLC hits, including three-run homers by Hargett and freshman second baseman Jacob Wallace, who also had three runs batted in (RBIs) in the rout of WVC; sophomore southpaw Ryan Spille gave up four singles in his complete game cut to just five innings by the margin of victory.

In the winner-take-all game four showdown, after WVC inched to within 9-8, DeMent bashed a two-run home run in the eighth and Wallace and sophomore outfielder Chris Beggs turned it into a 16-8 celebration rout with a two-run single and three-run dinger in the ninth; sophomore Adam Biggs pick up the save with three innings of one-hit relief.

Soup’s team was Mmm Mmm Good in the Region Tournament, considering the 3-0 route it took to the title. Game one was anything but easy, however.

Homestanding John A. Logan scored four times and took a 6-4 lead in the eighth of the opener, before RLC tied it in the ninth and won thanks to Hargett’s leadoff round-tripper in the 11th. Beggs went 4-6 with three RBIs and Hargett was 3-5 with three runs scored in an 18-hit attack; Sophomore Greg Sprehn worked five innings in middle-relief for the win, his eighth, and Spille got the final out with a strikeout for the save in a 7-6 verdict.

Great Rivers Athletic Conference (GRAC) Champion Belleville Area College (BAC, now Southwestern Illinois College), 11-3 during the regular-season against league foes and 46-14 overall, was a 9-5 and 25-9 victim the next two days. Sophomore catcher Mike Thompson and freshman third baseman Corey Cinnamon divided six of the 11 Warrior hits and Biggs went the distance for the 9-5 win; the victors were up, 5-3 after six, before scoring four more times in the seventh. The third game was no contest as RLC clubbed a season-best 28 hits and scored in every inning but the ninth, including nine in the third and six in the sixth; Thompson was 5-8 with three extra-base hits and six RBI, while Wallace, DeMent and freshman shortstop Dan Firlit enjoyed four-hit games and both Cinnamon and freshman outfielder Beau Parton had three safeties.

The Warriors upped their post-season winning streak to seven by traveling to the Chicago suburbs of River Grove and defeating Triton, 8-2 in the second game of the Great Lake District Tournament to eliminate the hosts. The Region XXIV reps, who finished with 10 hits, led 2-0 before adding five runs in the sixth. Biggs threw a shutout until the seventh and ran his record to 8-3 with the complete-game.

Indian Hills (Iowa), a 10-2 winner earlier versus Triton, awaited in the final game of the day. Spille faced just five batters over the minimum over eight innings, whiffing eight and allowing just five hits and one earned run. But a team that had averaged better than 15 hits per game in eight post-season outings was stymied on four hits and struck out 13 times, in a 2-1 setback. RLC scored after two were out in the ninth but left the tying run on third and the potential winning run on first.

Revenge against the same Indian Hills foe the next day was not to be, despite holding the Iowans to one hit for five innings. Hargett supplied a two-run homer in the first, his 10th, Parton led off the fourth with another blast and DeMent made it 4-0 with a home run in the fifth, only to let Indian Hills break loose with six unearned runs in the sixth.

All-Region pick DeMent boasted a record 16 triples and batted .408 en route to career records of 29 and .415. Biggs posted a 1.73 earned run average, a forerunner to his career ERA (earned run average) record low of 1.99.

The team hit .329 that spring, .319 overall (team scores were not counted in the fall, but individual statistics were). Behind DeMent were Beggs, .368; Cinnamon, .361; Hargett (50 bases on balls), .336; Houston (12 HR), .321; Wallace, .320; Firlit, .310; and Parton, .291.

How good were the 1997 Region champions? Good enough for their 1997-98 successors to be ranked No. 4 in the country in the NJCAA Division I Pre-Season Baseball Rankings “on the strength of seven returning everyday players and two veteran starting pitchers.”

That team carried the weight of high expectations to a 33-17 mark in 1997-98, settling for second behind GRAC Champion BAC for the second time in three seasons, before failing to advance out of Section play. Leave it to the 1998-99 gang, loaded with first-year collegians, to win the Warriors’ fifth Sectional and third Regional.

That team likewise featured outstanding pitching behind Freshman Neal Frendling, a 16th-round draft pick the previous summer by the Devil Rays, and Zack Brinson. All-GRAC / All-Region Tourney honoree Frendling took care of business before signing with Tampa Bay with a record of 11-3, 3.35 ERA and 136 strikeouts (Ks) in 118 1/3 innings; Brinson was 7-2, including the Region Tournament ”Most Valuable Player.”

A robust offense could count on third baseman Tommy Pearce, lone Warrior on the regular-season All-Region squad, and All-GRAC with his .429 batting average (BA), 15 homeruns (HR), 66 RBIs, with 27 multiple-hit games, including three or more on 13 occasions, and .732 slugging percentage; pitcher and first baseman Luke Miller, .391, with 20 multiple-hit games to go along with three complete games on the mound; catcher Joe Flick, .323, 15 HR, 65 RBI, .617 slugging percentage; right fielder Dan Albers, .358; designated hitter Derrick Langfels, .351; left fielder Matt Eldridge, .331; outfielder Matt Davis, .289; and center fielder Dustin Vugteveen, .287 (.299 spring).

The first three batters to face Frendling in the post-season scored, but he settled down for a nine-inning, complete-game victory over Lincoln Trail College (LTC), 8-5, behind a 12-hit attack by his teammates. Host Logan smacked RLC, 14-3 in five innings, but the Warriors went up 4-2 in game three against LTC and held on for an 8-7 win to wrap up Sectional honors. Freshman Jimmy Linder, the lone lefty on the hill staff, got the save by retiring all five batters he faced, four on strikeouts. Defensive specialist Corey Alsop went 3-4 for the second time in a six-game span.

In similar fashion in the Region XXIV Tournament, RLC defeated GRAC Co-Champions Southeastern Illinois College (SIC), 9-3, and BAC, 2-1, before getting thumped by BAC, 14-4.

Frendling won the opener, per usual, backed by three hits each from Pearce, Miller and Eldridge, among 16 hits. In game two, the Warriors left the bases loaded in the first off an all-conference pitcher and immediately trailed 1-0 when BAC‘s leadoff batter was hit by a pitch and eventually scored on a sacrifice fly. It stayed that way until the ninth, when Albers reached on a one-out walk and Davis crushed his second home run of the spring.

Unfortunately, the crush of the celebration at home plate following the game-winner damaged the knee of our hero. Davis was finished for the remainder of the festivities.

BAC took advantage the following day to force an extra game, scoring in six of eight innings against the unbeaten Warriors. No sweat. Campbell & Co. rolled into the NJCAA Interregional as MVP Brinson picked up his second Regional triumph, 6-3, thanks to a save from Frendling (1 2/3 innings, no hits) and 15 hits. Back-to-back home runs by Flick and Vugteveen in the second gave the champs a 2-0 lead, which they expanded to 6-1 four innings later when the first four batters hit safely and all scored. Flick and Miller joined the two hurlers on the all-tourney team.

A first-ever trip to the Juco (Junior College) World Series depended on a happy homestand for a Warrior team hosting the Northern District Tournament for the first time. It seemed even more probable after Frendling took care of business, striking out 13, scattering nine singles and winning, 3-2. Run-producing singles by Miller and Flick followed two bases on balls to start the third and gave their team a 2-1 lead; tied at 2, Vugteveen won it with a lead-off homer to left-center in the bottom of the sixth. Easy with the home plate celebration.

End of road, though, as the homebodies could not improve on win No. 37, falling to Muscatine (Iowa), 7-3, and Triton, 7-2, despite 11 hits, including three by Shortstop Simon Auter. Muscatine advanced with a 5-2 verdict over Triton.

About the only accomplishment to elude Campbell’s teams was a GRAC crown. Campbell & Friends boasted three runner-up finishes – 12-4 in 1993-94, one game behind John A. Logan; 8-4 in the rain-shortened 1995-96 season, behind BAC at 11-3, and 9-5 (tied with Olney Central) in 1997-98, trailing BAC by one.

McGuire was responsible for bringing Campbell to RLC as his Assistant Coach in 1991-92. He succeeded McGuire a couple of weeks before the start of the 1992 Fall campaign.

Prior to that, he was a Warrior nemesis. Campbell was a two-time All-GRAC pitcher for rival John A. Logan, highlighted by a 10-1 sophomore season. Surrounding his introduction to the league, he was an undefeated junior hurler for the Hamilton (Ohio) Class 3A State Champions and capped two seasons under Coach Itchy Jones for the Southern Illinois University Salukis with 8-3 credentials as a senior.

His coaching career got its start with two years at Eastern Illinois University as Pitching Coach for Dan Callahan.

Campbell met his match while at Rend Lake College. Mrs. Campbell is the former Karen Liggett, a former Lady Warrior softball player. They were married November 1, 1997. Daughter Hannah Nicole joined the family October 2, 1998; Madison, now 15, completed the family three years later.

He left coaching to become a Financial Representative for Country Mutual Insurance Co. in Monroe County. For the past 11 “seasons” he has been the award-winning Agency Manager in Carterville for Country Financial, with a team of 23 representatives in a six-county Southern Illinois radius.

Thompsonville teacher passes on love for performing

Several members of the Annie Junior cast.  (Samantha Sullivan photo.  Please give her a call at 499-6465 to have her photograph you event.)

Several members of the Annie Junior cast. (Samantha Sullivan photo. Please give her a call at 499-6465 to have her photograph you event.)

THOMPSONVILLE, IL (Holly Kee- Benton Evening News. Please click on link to read the full story. Here is an excerpt) Kim Ward’s directorial debut is in the books. A first-year teacher at Thompsonville schools, Ward and her students staged “Annie, Jr.” last weekend in the small Franklin County town. They performed two nights to crowds that swelled the seating in the auditorium at Community of Christ Church, where the performances took place. “I loved interacting with the kids outside the classroom,” Ward said. “It was fun to pass my love of performing on to another generation.” Ward is no stranger to the stage, having performed in multiple theater and band shows while attending Johnston City schools. But being the director gave her a few challenges.

46TH REND LAKE WATER FESTIVAL – MAY 10-13, 2017

benton grade school bandBENTON, IL – Please click for the schedule for the Rend Lake Water Festival, from the Benton-West City Chamber of Commerce. Here is the theme this year. 2017 Theme: Communities Moving Forward! With the upcoming construction, new opportunities coming to our area in the coming years, and the turbulence of 2016 – we think this is an optimistic attitude for 2017. We encourage parade entries to celebrate how you think we are moving forward. Business expansion, community programs, our youth achievements on the field and in the classroom, our military & public safety services, the Eclipse, increased tourism and recreation activities, our rich history and traditions all contribute to our community – and the goals of becoming an even more prosperous area for future generations. Let’s make it great!!

W-S-V Spartans win their own invitational

wsv baseballWALTONVILLE, IL (Mt. Vernon register news staff report. Please click to read the full story. Here are some excerpts) The Waltonville/Sesser-Valier baseball team won a pair of games at its own invitational Saturday. WSV started the morning with a 15-0 victory over Webber in four innings. The Spartans followed with a 12-10 afternoon victory over Gallatin County. In the Webber Game, WSV scored 10 runs in the opening inning and tacked on five more in the second. In the Gallatin County game,The Spartans trailed 5-2 after four innings, but scored eight times in the fifth to take control of the game. Gallatin County closed the gap with four runs in the seventh.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News