South Putnam Eagles | Archive | September, 2008

XC: South Putnam Dominates Cloverdale In Dual Meet

 

Reprinted Courtesy of:

Greencastle Banner

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

With just two weeks until the Putnam County cross country meet and WCC
and sectional following shortly thereafter, teams are really
concentrating on peaking for those big meets.

Based on Monday night, the South Putnam teams are heading in the
right direction, as they completed a sweep of county rival Cloverdale.

The Eagle boys’ took the top five positions in the meet, defeating
Cloverdale 15-48. In the girls’ meet, the Eagles edged the Clovers
26-30 to pick up their first win of the year.

SP boys’ coach Brian Gardner was pleased with his team’s
performance, but would like to see them having to push themselves a
little more.

(Photo)
Eagle senior Tyler Heavin won the boys’ race in a time of 19:09.
[Click to enlarge]

“Taking the top five spots helps. I thought
the kids ran pretty well,” Gardner said. “The thing about a dual meet,
when our top guys are all in front, is they don’t have another team
pushing them, so our times weren’t necessarily as good as I’d like to
see them.”

In spite of this, Gardner knows his team is pushing and dealing with the tough practices that come this time of year.

“I thought we competed well. I saw our guys not necessarily just
running in a pack, they were trying to actually better their time,”
Gardner said. “We’ve had some pretty hard practices coming up through
this time. County and conference are coming up, and we’re really
pushing toward that time.”

Tyler Heavin led the way in the boys’ race, winning with a time
of 19:09. Fellow senior Andrew Northrup was next in a time of 19:22.
Tanner Barr was third, with Josh Olczak following in fourth. Paul
Rubino rounded out the scoring for the Eagles in fifth.

Also in the top 10 for the Eagles were Andrew Kelly (7th), Jorge Cavell (8th), Jacob Parker (9th) and Tim Toland (10th).

For the Clovers, Kyle Chambers led the way, finishing sixth in a
time of 20:14. Brian Stout was next for the Clovers in 15th, followed
by Chuck Strunk in 17th. James Murphy placed 19th, and Joe Fidler was
21st.

Cloverdale coach Katie McLaughlin had to leave the meet early and was not available for comment afterward.

In the girls’ meet, the Clovers’ Nikki Routh won with a time of
23:53. However, it was the Eagles meet, and coach Elaine Bye was happy
for her squad.

(Photo)
Cloverdale freshman Nikki Routh won Monday’s girls’ race in a time of 23:53.
[Click to enlarge]

“They did great tonight. We won our first
meet, which is really exciting. We had some more PRs. Girls that are
injured are recovering. I’m optimistic,” Bye said.

Amanda Lund led the Eagle effort with a second-place finish in
24:27. Madison Marsteller was fourth, followed by Brittany Fitzpatrick
and Mikayla Cherry in fifth and sixth. Brittany Cox finished ninth, and
Robbie Urton was 10th.

The Eagles have struggled with various illnesses and injuries
this season, but the coach said things are getting where they need to
be.

One of the runners struggling with these issues has been
Jessica Stewart. Although she is still recovering from illness, Bye has
had her running in races, but not pushing farther than she needs to go.

On Monday, Bye had Stewart run the first mile to get a taste of competition.

With the big meets approaching, both Eagle coaches like what they see.

“We’re moving to where we need to be,” Bye said. “We have some
hard practice days coming up that we don’t have meets, so we can get in
some hard work there. We’re looking forward to it. They’ll be doing a
good job.”

Gardner knows he has a team that should be in the mix for
county and conference, but also knows the times need to continue to go
down.

“I think we’re getting there,” Gardner said. “We’ve got a very
tight conference with Cascade, Greencastle, Monrovia and us. All four
of those schools are in position. And I know North Putnam has three
good runners. We’ve got to compete and our times have to go down.

“We’re in a position where we can hopefully get to that point,” he
added. “I like where the guys’ mindsets are and how hard they’re
working, but we’ve just got two more weeks where we can work and get
after it.”

Both South and Cloverdale have more than a week off before
their next meet. The Eagles host Cascade at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct.
1. The Clovers visit Eminence for a three-way with the hosts and North
Putnam on Thursday, Oct. 2.

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GG: South Putnam Captures Putnam County Titile

 

 

Reprinted Courtesy of:

Greencastle Bannrr

South Putnam takes Putnam County

Friday, September 19, 2008

(Photo)
Heather Hughes

CLOVERDALE — It all came down to one hole.

After nine holes, two girls had battled to matching 41s on the front
nine at Clover Meadows Thursday evening. One of them would be Putnam
County Champion and the other would go home second.

After a pair of good drives, the approach shot really made the
difference. South Putnam’s Heather Hughes landed her shot just inches
off the green, while Greencastle’s Chelsea Samuels put hers several
yards behind the green.

From there, Hughes got up and down in two for a par, while Samuels chipped on and two-putted for bogey.

For the second straight year, Hughes was the county champion.

The junior’s individual performance echoed that of her entire
team, as the Eagles fired a 194, defeating second-place Greencastle by
20 strokes. Cloverdale was third with a 233.

The difference in the playoff hole might have been one of experience. As the defending champion, Hughes had been there before.

“Heather played a really good round for us. She likes those
pressure situations, like where she gets in that playoff. She kind of
thrives on that kind of thing,” South coach Debbie Steffy said. “I was
happy to see she was able to repeat as county champion.”

(Photo)
Chelsea Samuels

Samuels, on the other hand, might have been a little tight.

“Chelsea was quite nervous in that playoff, and it kind of
showed on that second shot. But she played a good hole; she just got
beat. We were very pleased with that. It gave us something to build on
going into sectional,” GHS coach Brad Kingma commented.

For the champion Eagles and Steffy, Thursday was a mix of meeting and exceeding expectations.

“I thought, overall, we played very, very well. We had everybody
under 60, which was a goal of ours. To be able to compete, we knew we
had to be under 60,” Steffy said. “To have three people in the 40s,
that was big for us. 194 is our best score of the season.”

The three under 50 were Hughes, with a 41, Grace Aker with a 48 and Kelsey Searles with a 49. All three girls made All-County.

With an average score of 59, Searles was the surprise of the tournament.

“Kelsey Searles did an outstanding job for us, shooting a 49,”
Steffy said. “She almost had a hole-in-one there on No. 7, and then
obviously birdied it. She was just striking the ball really well
today.”

Searles was as surprised as anyone at her performance on No. 7.

“I mean, it just came out of nowhere,” she said of her outstanding tee shot.

Sarah Dobson was next for the Eagles with a 56, closely followed by Cassie Warren’s 57.

(Photo)
Kelsey Searles

The return of the veteran Aker was a big key
for the Eagles, though, as she had missed all of South’s matches last
week, including the WCC meet, with migraines.

“Grace and Heather have been around for a long time, playing on
varsity for three years now. Just the leadership she brings to the
whole program, that’s a big plus for us on a day like today,” Steffy
said.

“I was happy for her that she was able to play, and she played
well,” she added. “Sure, she had a couple of bad holes as far as
putting, but other than that she played well It was nice to see her out
here and obviously it did help our team score quite a bit.”

Greencastle’s second place finish was led by All-County
performances from Samuels and Katie Hedge. Samuels had a 41, and Hedge
fired a 47.

Diane Wokoun was next for GHS with a 60. Kristen Hutcheson and Kay Wood each had a 66.

“It’s pretty much where we expected that we would be. We didn’t
shoot as well in the three or four spots as we have been. That’s where
South Putnam was able to get us. They had a couple of really good
scores come in. A couple of girls played really well. Hats off to them.
We’re happy,” Kingma commented.

The Clovers also had a pair of All-County golfers in Kayla Langdon (47) and Elizabeth Wiley (54).

(Photo)
The South Putnam girls’ golf team shot a 194
Thursday at Clover Meadows, capturing the Putnam County title by 20
strokes. Team members include (from left) Sarah Dobson, Kelsey Searles,
Grace Aker, manager Drew Steffy, County Champion Heather Hughes, Cassie
Warren, coach Debbie Steffy and manager Alex Steffy.

[Click to enlarge]

Coach Ken Williams said his top two could have shot better, but they still made All-County, which is nice.

“Kayla and Elizabeth, neither one of them had great rounds, but they
had enough to make All-County. That’s a real plus for them,” Williams
said. “We’re just hanging in there. It was nothing special tonight.
There were no great performances, but everything was OK.”

Victoria Boyette was next with a 62, and Erica Looper added a
70. Williams would like to have seen his team closer to the 219 they
fired on Tuesday, but he wasn’t complaining at night’s end.

“233 is not a good as we’ve been doing. We’d like to have had a 219 like we had the other night, but it wasn’t to be,” he said.

The attention now turns to Saturday’s sectional at Forest Park.
The competition will be tough to advance out as teams, but a number of
local girls have a chance to make it out as individuals.

“We see as many as six or eight kids that could advance
individually, and Kayla’s one of them,” Williams said. “Elizabeth’s a
dark horse there, and if she plays well, she could be in it perhaps.
That’s what we’re going for and the experience for the other two.”

KIngma wants to see his team post a good score and see if Samuels has what it takes to advance to regional.

“We have an early tee time, so we’ll see how it goes. We’ll be
able to hopefully post a good score and get those in there,” Kingma
said. “Chelsea’s been playing really well, so hopefully she’ll be able
to get through. Teamwise, there a few big schools in front of us in the
two Terre Haute schools and Northview. But there’s a whole bunch of
schools that can go four through eight or nine pretty evenly. It should
be quite a fun day.”

For Steffy’s Eagles, Hughes and Aker should both have a good
shot. The key for the whole team will be to remember the disappointment
they felt after last Saturday’s WCC meet while building on Thursday’s
performance.

(Photo)
Kayla Langdon

“We were a little disappointed after Saturday
at the conference. We knew we didn’t play quite as well as what we
thought we could or wanted to. We worked hard in practice this week —
a couple of days out at the range and on the greens just to try to get
things straightened out,” Steffy said.

The Northview Sectional begins at 9 a.m. at Forest Park Golf Course in Brazil.

At Clover Meadows

Putnam County Tournament

South Putnam 194, Greencastle 214, Cloverdale 233

All-County Team — Hughes (S) 41*, Samuels (G) 41, Langdon (C) 47, Hedge (G) 47, Aker (S) 48, Searles (S) 49, Wiley (C) 54.

South Putnam (194) — Hughes 41, Aker 48, Searles 49, Dobson 56, Warren 57.

Greencastle (214) — Samuels 41, Hedge 47, Wokoun 60, Hutcheson 66, Wood 66.

Cloverdale — Langdon 47, Wiley 54, Boyette 62, Looper 70.

Next match — All three teams travel to Forest Park on Saturday for the Northview Sectional. The tournament begins at 9 a.m.

*–Hughes won medalist over Samuels in the first playoff hole.

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BXC: Cascade, South Putnam Finish 1-2 In Northview Invite

 

Reprinted Coutesy of:

Greencastle Banner

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

BRAZIL — The South Putnam boys cross country team showed on Tuesday
night at the Northview Invitational that they might be a force to be
reckoned with as the postseason rapidly approaches.

Just a year removed from a fifth-place team finish in the
eight-team invite, the Eagles ran a strong strategic race on the way to
a narrow second-place behind a tough Cascade squad.

South Putnam’s Tyler Heavin finished eighth in the race in
18:51 to lead the Eagles, but it was the efforts of the second through
sixth-place runners that helped the team to a score of 57, slightly
behind the Cadets’ 51.

Dylan Hayes placed 12th for the Eagles in 19:08 to lead Tanner
Barr, Andrew Northrup, Josh Alczak and Paul Rubinho across the line in
14th through 17th place just four seconds apart.

“I think we’re getting there,” said coach Brian Gardner of his
boys’ team. “We’ve still got a tight pack, which helps. It’s very
evident that we wanted to compete tonight. Every place counts.”

Northview’s Connor Strain took advantage of his only home meet
of the season to break former teammate, James Grounds’ course record at
Craig Park.

Strain rolled to a time of 16:36 to win the race by 27 seconds
over Cascade’s Luke Holt. Strain bested his time in the meet from last
year by a remarkable 1:28 to take the record and pace his team to a
third-place finish.

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