Rend Lake College wrestlers went 2-1 at the Lincoln Duals

LINCOLN, Ill. (Jan. 22, 2013) – Rend Lake College wrestlers went 2-1 at the Lincoln Duals this past weekend at Lincoln College. Rend Lake defeated Muskegon Community College 23-19 and Olivet 27-15, and lost to host Lincoln College 31-14.

Rend Lake College sophomore wrestler Eric Tozzi (Ramseur, N.C.) went undefeated at the Lincoln Duals where the Warriors finished 2-1 as a team.

Rend Lake College sophomore wrestler Eric Tozzi (Ramseur, N.C.) went undefeated at the Lincoln Duals where the Warriors finished 2-1 as a team.

Against Olivet: RLC’s Gabriel Bartok (Carbondale) won by forfeit at 133 pounds; Eric Tozzi (Ramseur, N.C.) won by major decision over Olivet’s Matt Darling 11-2 at 141 pounds; Skyler Procasky (Belleville) won by technical fall over Olivet’s Bryce Baase 16-0 at 149 pounds; Justin Cash (Franklin, Tenn.) won by decision over Olivet’s Daniel Fleet 8-4 at 157; Olivet’s Rocky Cantu won by decision over Juan Stimpson (Asheboro, N.C.) 2-1 at 165; RLC’s Anthony Jehn (Beech Grove, Ind.) won by decision over Nicholas Affricano 5-3 at 174; Nicholas Allen won by injury default over RLC’s Austin Warren (Newburgh, Ind.) at 184; Olivet’s Thomas Hall won by forfeit at 197; and Coltyn Pease (Pittsfield) won by injury default over Olivet’s Dustin Gajowiak at heavyweight.
Against Lincoln: LC’s Ignace Hakizimana won by forfeit at 125; Alex Jones won by decision over Bartok 8-5; Tozzi won by forfeit; LC’s Takil Agnew won by decision over Procasky 10-3; Cash won by technical fall over Luke Dunn 25-10; Darnell Thomas won by decision over Stimpson 10-7; Alex Young won by major decision over Jehn 17-5; Warren won by decision over Kyle Harris 6-2; LC’s West Cathcart won by forfeit; and Dequence Goodman won by pin over Pease at 3:25.

Against Muskegon: Tyler Gibson (MCC) won by forfeit; Bartok won by decision over Andrew Nold 4-3; Tozzi won by technical fall over Michael Lackney 15-0; Procasky won by decision over Chase Singleton 6-3; Cash won by pin over Brandon Smith at 2:34; Stimpson won by decision over Dillon Francisco 5-3; Justin Johnson won by major decision over Jehn 13-4; Zachary Johnston won by decision over Warren 7-6; Thomas Bolday (MCC) won by forfeit; and Pease won by decision over Jeffrey Tautolo 3-2.
Next up for the Warriors is the Greyhound Open Tournament, Feb. 2, in Indianapolis, Ind. For all things athletic at The Lake, visit RLC online at www.rlc.edu/warriors.

We saw a great show …

 

By Tom Wheeler

Monday night I took my wife Lynda and daughter Dhana to the best show I have seen in a long time. We traveled to downtown Ina and made a stop a Jim “Hummer” Waugh gymnasium to see Rend Lake College take on John A Logan College in a great college basketball contest.

Two of my favorite southern Illinois athletes were coaching the two teams. Benton native Randy House took time off from his insurance business to coach the Warriors to a 87-64 win as the Warriors raised their record to 13-2 (6-2 in the conference) and maintained their ranking as the number 8 team in the nation in their division. This was also the first victory for House over arch rival Logan in his three years of coaching, losing four games, two by one point and another by 2 points.

wheeler pic 1

Logan’s coach in his first year as the “main man” Kyle Smithpeters led Harrisburg to an undefeated football state championship as a quarterback, (and SIU legend Carl Mauck still tells him he played the wrong sport in college), played basketball at Harrisburg JC (SE Illinois College) where he led his team to a final four berth and a two year record of 55-6. Kyle then played two years at SIU (like House) as his team won two Missouri Valley Championships.

He returned to Logan after a year with Paul Lusk at Missouri State and felt very comfortable with the move in following Mark Imhoff who he had served under for four years.
Logan came into the Monday night game after a tough loss to Vincennes on Saturday afternoon while the Warriors had defeated Wabash Valley on the same day. Rend Lake roared out to a ten point half time lead and never looked back behind double figure scoring of Noel Allen 15, (Guttenburg, NJ), Cortez Macklin 14, (Louisville, KY) and Woodlawns Dawson Verhines with 12.

Logan was led in scoring by Marion’s Aaron Adeoye, 15 as the only player in double figures while our nephew Connor wheeler was close with 9 points. The Vols weren’t bad from the field shooting42% but were killed on the boards 41-33 (RLC’s Bronson Verhines, had 14) and Logan had an uncharacteristic 16 turnovers.

There are many reasons this was such a great game:  Very well played, very well officiated and a very enthusiastic crowd. Both teams played hard, it wasn’t a game for the weak but it also wasn’t a game full of cheap shots and whining to the officials, (again this is a compliment to the two coaching staffs).

As Mitch Haskin’s assistant for six years at RLC, I watched a lot of games in Hummer Gym but not sure I ever saw two teams as unselfish as these two Monday night. I also loved how Randy and Kyle were involved in a chess match, changing defenses, changing match-ups, changing the tempo of the game. Midway in the first half I started thinking, who was the starters in this game, usually a team falls back a little when starters are out, but both teams have great benches and neither has a “five” best, again compliments to both staff for convincing guys to play their roles.

wheeler pic 2

Another major reason I will take my family back to see these two squads play is because of the local players we were all familiar with. Playing for Logan was DuQuoin’s Connor Wheeler, Marion’s Aaron Adeoye, Herrin’s Jamie Jones (who hit a couple 3’s),Murpysboro’s Pierre House and Carterville’s Drew Bonner.

Coach House played the Verhines brothers of Woodlawn, Coery Ayala of Massac County and the Trico duo of Jesse Smith (whose father Jackie played at RLC) and Dennis Froemling (who brought the crowd to their feet with a long three).

Yes, it was a great show and we plan to be back to another one, in fact Benton basketball authority Kenny Irvin was there, doesn’t that tell you something??

Okawville senior golfer Fuhrhop signs with Lady Warriors

fuhrhop signs with rlc

Okawville senior golfer Kaylyn Fuhrhop signed her national letter of intent last week to play golf at Rend Lake College in the fall. Seated, FROM LEFT, are Okawville Athletic Director Jon Kraus, Kaylyn Fuhrhop, and her mother, Susan. Standing: RLC Head Women’s Golf Coach Cindy Corn is flanked by Kaylyn’s sisters, Madalyn and Lyndsay. Fuhrhop is a Metro-East and First-Team Belleville News selection who finished fourth in LPGA of Southern Illinois and has a nine-hole scoring average of 37.

Oakland City Sweeps Morthland in Doubleheader

WEST FRANKFORT, Ill.- The Morthland College men and women basketball teams fell tonight to visiting Oakland City University at Max Morris Gymnasium. The Lady Patriots were defeated, 103-43, while the men fell, 90-82.
The Lady Patriots (0-8) could not keep pace with the hot shooting of OCU (11-8) who drained 13 three-pointers on the night. Six Lady Oak players scored in double-digits and leading the way was Chelsea Jones who scored 20 on the night.
morthland patriots logo

Morthland was led by Jade Vaughn who scored a team-high 17 points while Latisha Bennett chipped in 10 points and 4 assists.

The Morthland men looked for revenge after a lose to OCU earlier in the season. The Patriots trailed by 12 after the 16-minute media timeout, battling back and forth until halftime when the Patriots trailed 41-32.

Morthland (1-15) stayed in the game with timely three’s by freshman Roby Boatright and Matt Weeks who drilled nine on the night, rallying to their first lead on the night at the 7:52 mark of the second half, but Oakland City’s Mitch LeFear made 6-of-8 three-pointers on the night and many acrobatic baskets late in the half, putting the game just out of reach of the Patriots.

MC was led by Will Carmickle who had 21 points and 16 rebounds. Three other Patriots scored in double digits including Roby Boatright (15), Matt Weeks (15) and Jordan Stanton (13).

The Morthland men will be back in action on Saturday, Jan. 26 when they host Logan Chiropractic at Max Morris Gym in West Frankfort. Tip is set for 3 p.m.

Herrin’s Jones erupts for 33 points in Vols’ 95-53 win over Lewis & Clark

 

 

BY JOHN D. HOMAN

Logan Media Services

CARTERVILLE – John A. Logan College men’s basketball coach Kyle Smithpeters may have found a new weapon Wednesday night as the Volunteers crushed Lewis & Clark College on “Carterville Night” in a Region 24 match, 95-53.

In his first college start, sophomore forward Jamie Jones of Herrin unloaded for 33 points and tied a school record for most 3-pointers made in a game with nine. He now shares the record with Russell Jupiter first set in 1991. Jones did manage to set the record for consecutive triples with eight.

“I guess the extra shots in the gym are paying off,” said Jones, who was unable to suppress a smile. “On a couple of them I heard the crowd yell…I didn’t even know I made them.”

JALC sophomore forward Jamie Jones goes up for a 3-pointer Wednesday against Lewis & Clark College. Jones cut loose with nine bombs that reached their destination, tying a 21-year-old school record. (Photo courtesy Jonathan LeBlond)

JALC sophomore forward Jamie Jones goes up for a 3-pointer Wednesday against Lewis & Clark College. Jones cut loose with nine bombs that reached their destination, tying a 21-year-old school record. (Photo courtesy Jonathan LeBlond)

Jones said it felt like anything he shot was going to go in the basket. On one occasion, one of his long-range bombs was even tipped, but still found the mark.

“It’s a great feeling to have. I guess I made Coach look good for starting me tonight,” he joked. “The only thing better is if this had happened on Herrin Night. I guess I’ll have to make 10 threes next week.”

Smithpeters had only praise for Jones.

“Jamie’s done everything we’ve asked him to do since Day One,” he said. “He has struggled at times just because of his size and the physicality of the game, but he can shoot the basketball. We had one of our best practices of the year Tuesday and I told everybody that whoever plays well and competes hard is going to play a lot.

“And Jamie’s had a great month of January, both in practice and in the games. Tonight, everything fell into place for him and I’m very happy for him. He’s a great weapon. It’s good to have somebody on the floor who can hit shots and force the other team to guard you. When that happens, things open up inside.”

While it was Jones’ night to shine, his supporting cast was none too shabby. Freshman center Kaylen Shane scored a season-high 19 points on 8-of-12 shooting from the field and yanked down seven rebounds. Freshman forward Sondale Conner followed with 14 points, including two ferocious windmill slams and a pair of triples.

“I felt really comfortable out there tonight. We needed this one. We needed to come out and play hard and get a win,” Conner said. “Now, it’s a matter of staying focused and carrying this momentum over to the next game.”

Jamie Jones (middle) gets congratulated by Carterville native Drew Bonner (left) and Du Quoin grad Connor Wheeler after Jones knocked down his eighth-straight 3-pointer. (Photo courtesy Jonathan LeBlond)


Jamie Jones (middle) gets congratulated by Carterville native Drew Bonner (left) and Du Quoin grad Connor Wheeler after Jones knocked down his eighth-straight 3-pointer. (Photo courtesy Jonathan LeBlond)

Freshman forward Jay Johnson was also in double figures with 11. Aaron Adeoye chipped in eight points. Julian Hernandez knocked down a trey and finished with five points.

Freshman point guard Connor Wheeler didn’t shoot once, but had a whopping nine assists with no turnovers. Stephen McCarty’s 16 points led the Trailblazers.

The Vols led 40-27 at the half and never looked back.

Smithpeters said it was important to get back on the winning track after dropping consecutive road games at Vincennes and Rend Lake.

“I’m very happy for the guys. They did this for themselves and showed what kind of team they can be,” he said. “But we have to be consistent. It can’t be one game and then take another one off.”

The Vols, now 11-6 overall, travel to Mattoon Saturday night to take on Lake Land.

“They have big guys to match us inside and quick guards. We’re going to have to come out and compete hard and keep them off the glass,” Smithpeters said. “It will be a very tough game for us, but hopefully, we’ll be ready to go.”

Northern Iowa coasts past Saluki Men’s Basketball, 58-45

CEDAR FALLS, Iowa – Northern Iowa used suffocating defense and timely 3-point shooting to coast past Southern Illinois, 58-45, on Wednesday night.

The Salukis (8-11, 1-7) were held below 50 points for the first time this season and the 45-point total was the lowest for SIU in the 51-game history of the series between the schools.

“The thing they do defensively is they make you shoot jump shots,” SIU head coach Barry Hinson said. “They’re absolutely the best. They play man-zone and they back off, make you hit jump shots, and when you don’t have a guy who can score inside, it makes you a jump-shooting team.”

Dantiel Daniels led SIU with 11 points.

Dantiel Daniels led SIU with 11 points.

Trailing by six points at halftime, Southern went more than four minutes to start the second half without scoring. That allowed the Panthers (11-9, 4-4) to run off 10 unanswered points. The final six came on 3-pointers by Marc Sonnen, who converted 5-of-8 shots from downtown and led all scorers with 15 points.

“He’s put in a ton of time for the past 18 months — a minimum 500 shots a day in the off-season,” said UNI head coach Ben Jacobson. “The confidence he’s playing with is a result of working hard.”

Northern made 8-of-15 shots from 3-point as a team, and Hinson said Sonnen’s hot shooting was no surprise.

“He just sits over there in that corner and waits,” Hinson said. “Seventy-two percent of his shots have been threes on the year. We knew it, we expected it. I’ll give up a wide-open three before I give up a dunk or a layup.”

As it has all year, Southern played small-ball, always using a lineup with four or five guards. Jacobson said it was difficult, at times, for his team to run offense against such an unusual alignment.

“You don’t practice against five guards and you don’t play against five guards except in this game,” he said. “When they have four or five guards on the floor, it changes the way you can run your offense. We were able to get a few more touches (inside) in the second half and that jump-started us.”

The Panthers led by as many as 19 points in second half, and the closest the Salukis came was 13. SIU attempted a season-low 41 shots, but that was partially by design, Hinson said.

“The pace was exactly what we wanted,” he explained. “The last two teams to come in here got beat 31 and 13. We knew that we would have to literally grind it a little bit. Mr. (Henry) Iba would have been proud of me tonight.”

Dantiel Daniels was SIU’s only double-figure scorer with 11 points. Hinson pointed out that the team’s primary big man only had one rebound, however, and Southern lost the battle of the boards, 29-22.

“Dantiel has to play a lot better for us, and I think he can,” Hinson said. “When you’re that size and you get one rebound, I think that speaks volumes with what’s going on with energy and effort. Offensively, it’s not an issue, but he’s got to come out of a game with more than one rebound.”

Midway through the second half, the officials stopped play, reviewed the in-house video and ejected SIU forward Jeff Early for committing a Flagrant 2 foul. Hinson said he didn’t see the play, but acknowledged that his senior leader may have to serve a one-game suspension after the league reviews the incident that occurred between Early and Jake Koch.

“I think there were two culprits, but the second guy gets caught,” Hinson said.

After losing its first two conference games, Northern Iowa is starting to get hot, having won four of its last six. The Panthers are certainly in contention for one of the coveted top six seeds at the conference tournament.

“We bounced back and forth for so long and our guys deserve credit for not allowing that early part of the season to distract from our preparation,” Jacobson said.

The last time SIU won at Northern Iowa was 10 years ago, nearly to the day, when Bruce Weber guided the Salukis to an overtime victory.

The Salukis have lost 12-straight MVC road games dating back to last season. It is the second-longest streak in school history behind a 15-game road losing streak in conference games from 1982-84 under head coach Allen Van Winkle.

Herrin’s Horn to spike for Logan

Horn signs

Herrin High School senior Abby Horn signed a letter of intent Thursday to play volleyball on scholarship at John A. Logan College next fall. The three-sport standout is expected to play either the middle or outside-hitting position on the front row for the Vols. (Logan Media Services photo)

BY JOHN D. HOMAN

Logan Media Services

HERRIN – One of the premier female prep athletes in Southern Illinois accepted a scholarship offer Thursday to play volleyball at John A. Logan College next fall.

Herrin High School senior standout Abby Horn is a multi-year All-Conference and All-South spiker and was a key component of the Tigers’ regional championship team in 2011. She has mostly played middle hitter for Herrin, but can also play the outside or rightside hitter’s positions. Horn is a skilled passer from the back row, as well, making her an all-around talent.

The signing was music to the ears of Vols head coach Bill Burnside.

“We’re real excited. I think Abby is a heck of a volleyball player, will get even better the next two years, and is going to have a big impact on our program,” he said. “She’s very good defensively, blocking in the front row, and even better offensively as a hitter. She can help us a number of different ways.”

Burnside said that once Horn locks in on one sport, there’s no telling just how good she can be.

“I think that Abby is one who will focus on becoming the best player she can be. If she progresses as I think she will, she can be an impact player with a four-year school when she leaves Logan.”

Burnside said this year’s senior class is exceptionally talented throughout the region.

“I’m glad to say we have quite a few of these local kids signed,” he said. “I think it’s going to be nice to represent this area the way we will be able to next fall. It will make winning matches that much more enjoyable.”

Many of the Logan players already know one another.

“They’ve played quite a bit of volleyball together at the SIU club, so I think they can build on that experience here at Logan,” he said.

Also a talented basketball player and track athlete, Horn said she is ready to specialize in one sport.

“It’s been a long time coming to just focus in on one sport and then have time to recover after the season is over,” she said. “Don’t get me wrong. Playing the other sports has been fun. I wouldn’t trade those experiences for the world, but it’s kind of exciting not knowing exactly what my potential could be when I compete in volleyball only. By getting to work with college coaches every day, I’m excited to see how far that instruction takes me.”

Horn said choosing Logan was made easier by the fact that she had already played for Vols assistant coach Jimmy White at the club level and has competed with and against so many other current and future Logan players.

That list includes current JALC freshmen Kasey Krough and Ryley Miller of Carbondale and Alyssa Sturgeon of Murphysboro, as well as incoming freshmen, Audrey Vaughn and Jessica Stanton of Murphysboro, Alison Webb of Goreville and Erin Dodd of Marion.

“I’m looking forward to having these girls as teammates,” Horn said. “It’s going to be fun going to school together and rooming together. I just hope that we can help make the team even more successful than it already is.”

Herrin head coach Irv Lukens had high praise for his prize pupil.

“I’m very happy for Abby,” he said. “It’s always pleasing to see one of your players move forward to the next level and I think she can be a good one for Logan. She handles herself well around the net, can spike the ball very well and is a good blocker – a real force.”

Sycamores upend Salukis 72-57

By Bill Ford
SIUSalukis.com

TERRE HAUTE, Ind.— The Southern Illinois women’s basketball team couldn’t keep Indiana State off the glass in a 72-57 loss to the Sycamores Thursday night at the Hulman Center.

ISU (11-5, 3-2 MVC) scored 20 second-chance points off 23 offensive rebounds as the Salukis (4-11, 1-3) dropped their second consecutive Missouri Valley Conference road game.

SIU played solid defense throughout the game, holding the Sycamores to 38.7 percent shooting from the field, but couldn’t capitalize on the glass.

“I’m just really discouraged that we can not get defensive rebounds right now,” said SIU head coach Missy Tiber. “We guarded pretty well. We just didn’t go pursue the basketball when they missed shots.”

SIU freshman forward Jameeka Bouie.

SIU freshman forward Jameeka Bouie.

The Saluki defense was especially effective through the first 11 minutes of the game. Southern’s 2-3 zone gave ISU problems early, resulting in transition opportunities for sophomore Cartaesha Macklin.

Macklin scored SIU’s first eight points of the game, helping the Salukis to a 13-10 lead at the 12-minute mark before eventually taking its biggest lead of the game at 20-16 on a 3-pointer by junior Jordyn Courierat the 9:15 mark.

Southern’s rebounding struggles began shortly thereafter as the Sycamores dominated the final nine minutes of the half. ISU closed the first half on a 23-5 run to take a 39-25 lead into the break. The Sycamores out-rebounded SIU 27-12 in the first half with 16 offensive rebounds in the opening frame.

SIU also fell into foul trouble in the first half as Courier and Azia Washington both picked up three fouls andAlexus Patterson had two. The Sycamores shot 16 first-half free throws to SIU’s three.

 

“We didn’t allow them to get a lot of easy shots in the first 12 minutes of the first half. They were missing shots. We just were not getting the rebound,” Tiber said. “We had some transition opportunities that we just didn’t convert on. Plays like that could maybe change the game for us.”

SIU couldn’t make any headway out of the break as ISU pushed the lead as high as 24 ad the midway point of the second half. The Salukis found their way to the free throw line more, but shot just 52.9 percent (9-for-17) for the game. SIU also struggled against ISU’s ball-hawking defense as the Sycamores scored 20 points of 19 Saluki turnovers.

“Nineteen turnovers is too many. They were crazy turnovers too,” Tiber said. “We were throwing the ball all over the place and I’m not sure why.”

SIU ended the game on an 11-4 run, but the effort was too little, too late. Macklin finished with a game-high 17 points to go along with five assists while Jameeka Bouie added 12 points and Courier added nine. Dyana Pierre and Washington each had eight boards for the Salukis.

“We’re not getting enough out of our guards on the defensive end. They are not rebounding, they are not guarding,” Tiber said. “Our bigs can’t do it all.”

SIU ends a three-game MVC road swing Saturday at Illinois State. Tipoff is scheduled for 4:05 p.m. CST in a game that will be televised regionally on Comcast SportsNet Chicago

Carmickle lifts Morthland to first program win

WEST FRANKFORT, Ill. – Will Carmickle scored a career-high 39 points to help the Patriots cruise to their eventual 91-66 win over Crowley’s Ridge College Thursday night. This marks the first win in Morthland College men’s basketball history.

Morthland (1-13) started the game slow trailing 6-0 before Rich Herrin put on the press and the Patriots reeled off a 13-5 run to take the lead. “This is the first time we were able to play nine players,” said head coach Rich Herrin. “We decided to press early in the game and it turned out to be the right decision.”

The Patriots got it rolling midway through the first half leading by as many as 22 points behind the strong bench play of freshman guard Alex Davis who scored 14 points and dished out 6 assists on the night helping Morthland to a 46-28 halftime lead.

Rebounding and solid defense helped Morthland maintain their lead despite a late push by Crowley’s Ridge to cut the deficit to 13 points at the 11-minute mark in the second half. The Patriots grabbed a season-high 62 total rebounds in tonight’s win while CRC had just 39. Twenty-two offensive rebounds helped the Pats to a 56-24 scoring advantage in the paint and 27 second chance points.

Eldorado native Will Carmickle paced Morthland tonight with 39 points and 19 rebounds while Clay Payne chipped in 14 points and 9 rebounds. Freshman Roby Boatright scored 12 points while Nick Bonner added 5 points off the bench.

Morthland College will go for its second win on the season on Monday, Jan. 14 when they host Victory University at Rend Lake College with tip-off slated for 7 p.m.

Sluggish performance results in loss for Lady Vols


BY JOHN D. HOMAN

Logan Media Services

CARTERVILLE – There was no carryover from Monday night’s stellar win over Southeastern Illinois for the Lady Vols of John A. Logan College Wednesday.

The Kaskaskia Blue Angels outrebounded Logan an astonishing 51-to-24 and rolled to a 78-69 Great Rivers Athletic Conference win over the host Vols. Logan falls to 2-2 in the league and 8-5 overall.

Vols head coach Marty Hawkins was disappointed with the results as his troops appeared a step or more slow to react, perhaps a result of having played two nights earlier.

“It was like we were standing in quicksand out there at times,” he said. “They (Blue Angels) had more offensive rebounds (25) than we had total rebounds,” he said. “And they kept the lead because they were able to get so many stickbacks on us.”

Top scorer for the Vols was freshman guard Briya Wilborn with 17 points. Kyra Navarrete followed with 14. Aneta Sloma notched 13. Autumn Miller added eight.

The Blue Angels were led by Miranda Burroughs’ 16 points. Four other teammates reached double digits.

Logan returns to the hardwood Saturday evening at Olney.

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