Explore Flipsnack. Transform boring PDFs into engaging digital flipbooks. Share, engage, and track performance in the same platform.
From magazines to catalogs or private internal documents, you can make any page-flip publication look stunning with Flipsnack.
Check out examples from our customers. Digital magazines, zines, ebooks, booklets, flyers & more.
Pre-made templates to create stunning publications in minutes
Here are eight reasons why you should consider choosing interactive, digital flipbooks instead of boring and static PDFs. Check them out!
play-through-it crew. The senior back showed off his power and his speed despite playing through an injured ankle that forced him out of the previous two games. Vogler had runs of 24, 23, 50 and the two 66-yarders for touchdowns. On both of those long TD runs, Vogler started up the middle, cut to the right and outran the defense down the right sideline. “When he gets to the edge you’re not going to catch him,” South Fremont coach Chad Hill said. “He’s an explosive player.” Hill lamented his team’s mistakes Saturday, but had a hard time being upset. His Cougars finished the year 7-3, with the three losses coming to Snake River (twice) and Shelley, who will meet in next week’s 3A state semifinals. He praised the play of his offensive and defensive fronts despite their size dis- advantage, and was happy to see them play hard to the final seconds despite the lopsided score. “They never quit,” Hill said. “We lose a lot of really good seniors who did a lot for this program, so we’ll have to find people to replace them and that won’t be easy. Hopefully the younger guys take this and see what we can be.” A player in each of those categories shined Saturday. Senior quarterback Junior Gonzalez escaped pressure all game and completed 13 of 34 passes for 200 yards and two touchdowns. Both of those TDs went to 6-foot-6 sophomore Blake Bartschi, who caught six passes for 69 yards. Now the Panthers (9-1) turn their attention to a familiar foe. Snake Rive beat Shelley 19-0 during the regular season, but the Russets have ended the Panthers’ season in the playoffs the past two years. That hasn’t been for- gotten. “I think we have more reason to win,” Vogler said. “The past two years.” “In the locker room at halftime, we all knew we had confidence in each other,” Livingston said. “We knew it was going to be a ballgame … we didn’t know we were going to win, but we knew it was going to be a ballgame.” Lakeland opened its campaign with 10 consecu- tive rushing plays, utilizing the wildcat formation and going 57 yards to take a 7-0 lead on Tuekota Tate-Van- dever’s 2-yard jaunt. The Trojans were able to drive inside the Hawk 10 on its next two pos- sessions, but Lakeland’s defense stiffened, forcing a turnover on downs on each drive. Lakeland’s offense was also getting the job done in the first half. Quarter- back Tyrel Derrick threw two second-quarter touch- downs – the first a 71-yard bomb to a very wide-open Dylan Piva and the second a sparkling 30-yard strike to Jason Rose. And when senior line- backer Chris Washburn stepped in front of a Liv- ingston pass and rumbled 62 yards to make it 28-0 with 2:29 left in the half, the rout was on. Or was it? “I call it the three-second rule,” said Livingston, who finished 25 for 39 for 281 yards. “You just acknowl- edge what you did wrong and then shake it off and go play football. That’s what you gotta do and I thank my teammates, who didn’t quit on me.” The Trojans racked up 186 first-half yards but couldn’t muster any points until Livingston hit Perre- noud on fourth-and-goal from the 1 with 6 seconds remaining in the half, slicing the Hawks’ lead to 28-7. At the time, it seemed harmless. “That late score was huge,” Waite said. “If we wouldn’t have got that, I don’t think we come back at all.” The Trojans’ passing game began to heat up in the second half as Living- ston hooked up with Tyrel Phillips from 33 yards out to make it 28-14. After a long missed field goal by the Hawks, Rigby drove 80 yards on 14 plays, culminating with a Livingston 4-yard back- shoulder throw to Connor Francia – 28-21 with 8:07 left. The Hawks punted on their next possession, setting up Livingston for the game’s defining drive, which covered 79 yards in just two minutes. “There’s just example after example after example in that game where it could have gone a different way,” Lakeland coach Tim Kiefer said. “Just a little tiny thing and it could have changed the outcome of the game.” Lakeland finished with 260 yards of offense, but just 97 yards in the second half. Rigby wideout Haydn Landon had 155 yards receiving, and Phillips fin- ished with 93. The Trojans’ Drew Zagula led all rushers with 73 yards. “I’ve been on the wrong side of games like that and I’ve been on the right side of games like that,” Kiefer said. “We just didn’t get it done, and that’s the bottom line.” ASHTON — The long walk back to the locker room was somber for the members of the North Fremont High School football team as the sun set behind them Saturday. The Huskies saw their 28-14 lead disappear with five fumbles and 35 unanswered points in the fourth quarter, ultimately sealing a 49-28 loss to Grangeville in the 2A state football quarterfi- nals. The loss ended North Fremont’s season at 6-4, giving the Huskies their first back-to-back winning seasons since 2004. As the Huskies helped the coaching staff put away their football gear Sat- urday, it was still tough to grasp the end of their run. “Too many turnovers,” North Fremont coach Ben Lenz said. “We couldn’t get the bleeding stopped. If we could’ve gotten one more stop in that fourth quarter, it might’ve been a different story.” The game had been a different story through three quarters. Four plays after North Fremont senior defensive tackle Blaine Marshall recovered a Grangeville fumble, senior tight end Tevyn Bell caught a 54-yard pass from junior running back Tanner Oberhansley to set up first-and-goal at the 5-yard line with 3:30 on the clock. Oberhansley scored on the next play, giving the Huskies a 6-0 lead they would carry into the second quarter. Grangeville turned the tables at 4:18 in the second quarter, recovering a North Fremont fumble and taking a 7-6 lead off a 3-yard Jake Kaschmitter touchdown and TJ Wiltse extra point. The lead was short- lived, however, as a 70-yard Mower run on North Fre- mont’s next possession set up a first-and-goal at the 7-yard line. Oberhansley ran in the touchdown on the next play for a 12-7 lead that carried into halftime. Oberhansley and Mower scored for North Fremont in the third quarter, which ended with a 28-14 Huskies lead, but the Grangeville duo of Kaschmitter and Michael Wilson took over from there. Kaschmitter ran in a 1-yard touchdown 53 seconds into the fourth quarter to cut the deficit to 28-21. Two minutes and two North Fremont fumbles later, Grangeville took a 35-28 lead off an 11-yard Wilson touchdown. The Huskies committed three more fumbles in the final six minutes — two of which Grangeville recov- ered for touchdowns. Lenz commended the Huskies for banding together after starting 0-3 and coping with numerous injuries. Sophomore Stockton Dye filled in for senior starting quarterback Shane Hill, who tore his ACL over the summer, and Mower and Oberhansley were also injured early in the season. “It felt like we were drowning, then we started conference at West J and we were able to come out with a win,” Lenz said. “That was the turning point. With a small numbe of kids, they lean on each other.” Oberhansley said he has learned much from Lenz, who is in his third season, and pinpointed this season as one that especially helped him. “There’s a lot of people that grew up a ton this year, including myself,” Ober- hansley said. “I’m learning how to become a leader. It means a lot.” Fumbles cost North Fremont in loss to Bulldogs football crowd since 2005. Idaho State’s success and the larger crowd are not coincidental. After a decade of irrelevance, the Bengals are giving fans a reason to spend their Saturday after- noons at Holt Arena. “Every game they seem to keep improving, and it’s fun to watch,” Thompson said. Holt Arena’s attendance numbers were small earlier this season. In fact, the Bengals saw far more fans per game (7,512) during its two-win 2011 season than they have so far this season (6,478). Idaho State (7-3, 5-1 Big Sky) looked in for another down season after two blowout losses to open this season. In their first home game, the Bengals nearly blew a 27-point lead to Chadron State. It would be hard to blame fans for thinking, “here we go again.” But Idaho State has only lost once since. And that loss — 56-53 at Eastern Washington — was the first game to catch Thompson’s attention. “That’s when I went, ‘Hey, we have a team,’ ” Thompson said. Eastern Washington cur- rently leads the Big Sky and has dominated the confer- ence for years. A recurring doormat nearly beating the best team in the conference opened eyes all over eastern Idaho. “It seems like Pocatello is a lot more excited about (the Bengals),” Cassie Erickson, 32, said. “People are a lot more behind them now that they’re winning.” Erickson and her friend, Carrie Skerjanc, 35, said they’ve seen more Idaho State flags flying around the city. Skerjanc has seen more Facebook posts from people going to Bengal games. It reminds her of the passion surrounding Boise State’s football team. “It’s kind of nice to have someone good on this side of the state for once,” said Skerjanc, an Idaho Falls resident. Ron Sabel, 79, has lived in Pocatello since 1976 and has attended at least one Idaho State game with his wife, Fran, for decades. But the team Sabel has grown to love is Boise State. “They used to come in here and kick the lump out of (Idaho State),” Sabel said. “I never forgot that.” After Saturday’s game, Idaho State head coach Mike Kramer, his assistant coaches and his players said they focus on one game at a time. They were happy to beat Cal Poly but will quickly start preparing for next week’s opponent, Montana State, which is also tied for second in the Big Sky. But Kramer’s tone shifted when he discussed a couple of plays in his post- game news conference. Bengals’ quarterback Justin Arias attempted a deep pass to Madison Mangum twice on fourth down and short. The second occurred in Idaho State ter- ritory with a 23-21 lead midway through the fourth quarter. They were risky plays, to say the least, but they worked both times. “We’re Idaho State. What do we have to lose?” Kramer said. “Who thought we’d be, on November 8, playing for the Big Sky con- ference lead?” The fact that the Bengals are playing for the confer- ence lead likely caused the crowd size to swell Sat- urday. And the crowd’s noise helped Idaho State earn the victory, according to Kramer. “That’s the way a home crowd has to (perform) in the fourth quarter,” Kramer said. If Idaho State continues to win, more fans like Thompson will end their hiatuses and continue to make Holt Arena crowds a factor. The Bengals hit the road for Bozeman, Mont., and a game against Montana State on Saturday. ISU then wraps up the regular season at home against Weber State on Nov. 29. Eastern Washington leads the Big Sky stand- ings at 6-1, followed by ISU, Montana State and Northern Arizona at 5-1. Cal Poly fell to 5-2 while Montana is 4-2. From Page C1 RIGBY From Page C1 ISU n Grangeville had 35 unanswered points in the fourth B y MARLOWE HEREFORD mhereford@postregister.com SNAKE RIVER 49, SOUTH FREMONT 28 South Fremont 0 6 6 16 — 28 Snake River 16 7 12 14 — 49 First quarter SR- safety ( ) SR-Dalley 1 run (D. Serna kick) SR-Vogler 39 pass from S. Miller (D. Serna kick) Second quarter SF-Bartschi 6 pass from J. Gonzalez (failed run) SR-Dalley 21 run (D. Serna kick) Third quarter SR-Vogler 1 run (W. Vogler failed run) SF-Stoddard 1 blocked punt (J. Gonzalez failed pass) SR-Dalley 1 run (L. Albertson failed run) Fourth quarter SF-Bartschi 11 pass from J. Gonzalez (T. Barney run) SR-Vogler 66 run (K. Keller pass) SR-Vogler 66 run (D. Serna failed kick) SF-Barney 53 pass from J. Gonzalez (J. Gonzalez run) INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING - SF, D. Huber 10-26; J. Gonzalez 8-23; T. Olson 4-7; A. Pope 1-6; SR, W. Vogler 19-274, 3 TDs; L. Albertson 10-93; S. Miller 7-44. PASSING - SF, J. Gonzalez 13-34-4-200; C. Tucker 0-1-0-0; SR, S. Miller 5-12-1-89. RECEIVING - SF, B. Bartschi 6-69, 2 TDs; A. Pope 3-60; T. Barney 1-53, TD; R. Coverley 2-12; D. Huber 1-6; SR, W. Vogler 1-35, TD; T. Coombs 2-22; C. Hrabik 1-20; L. Albertson 1-12. GRANGEVILLE 49, NORTH FREMONT 28 Grangeville 0 7 7 35 — 49 North Fremont 6 6 16 0 — 28 First quarter NF-Oberhansely 2 run (J. Gonzalez failed pass) Second quarter Grangeville-Kaschmitter 3 run (J. Gonzalez kick) NF-Oberhansely 7 run (T. Oberhansely failed run) Third quarter NF-Oberhansely 1 run (T. Bell pass) Grangeville-Harris 1 run (kick) NF-Mower 2 run (T. Oberhansely run) Fourth quarter Grangeville-Kaschmitter 1 run (kick) Grangeville-Wilson 37 run (kick) Grangeville-Wilson 11 run (kick) Grangeville-Kaschmitter 24 run (kick) Grangeville-Kaschmitter 11 run (kick) INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING - Grangeville, J. Kaschmitter 16-93, 4 TDs; M. Wilson 7-78, 2 TDs; J. Lawrence 3-47; W. Dewey 2-3; L. Harris 4-(-17); NF, M. Mower 19-151, TD; T. Oberhansely 23-84, 3 TDs; S. Dye 7-16; L. Nedrow 2-5. PASSING - Grangeville, L. Harris 6-13-0-119; NF, T. Oberhansely 1-1-0-54; S. Dye 0-2-0-0. RECEIVING - Grangeville, M. Wilson 3-62; D. Lindsley 1-31; A. Parks 1-18; C. Lindsley 1-3; NF, T. Bell 1-54. RIGBY 29, LAKELAND 28 Rigby 0 7 14 8 — 29 Lakeland 7 21 0 0 — 28 First quarter Lakeland-Tate-Vandever 2 run (T. Coffey kick) Second quarter RIG-Perrenoud 1 pass from H. Livingston (T. Phillips kick) Lakeland-Washburn 62 interception (T. Coffey kick) Lakeland-Rose 30 pass from T. Derrick (T. Coffey kick) Lakeland-Piva 71 pass from T. Derrick (T. Coffey kick) Third quarter RIG-Francia 4 pass from H. Livingston (T. Phillips kick) RIG-Phillips 33 pass from H. Livingston (T. Phillips kick) Fourth quarter RIG-Livingston 11 run (B. Perrenoud pass) SATURDAY’S SCORES CLASS 1A DIVISION 1 Quarterfinal Raft River 56, Genesee 6 Valley 58, Troy 40 CLASS 1A DIVISION 2 Quarterfinal Council 62, Kendrick 0 CLASS 2A Quarterfinal Grangeville 49, N. Fremont 28 Orofino 23, St. Maries 6 CLASS 3A Quarterfinal Fruitland 42, Timberlake 28 Snake River 49, South Fremont 28 CLASS 4A Quarterfinal Rigby 29, Lakeland 28 P reP F ootball S coreboard C2 Post Register Sunday, November 9, 2014 SPORTS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL From Page C1 SNAKE Doug Lindley / Idaho State Journal Cal Poly’s Kyle Lewis slips out of the reach of Idaho State’s CJ Langlow at Holt Arena in Pocatello on Saturday. AUTO RACING B y JENNA FRyER AP Auto Racing Writer AVONDALE, Ariz. — Denny Hamlin had a cham- pionship within his sights before, four years ago when the Sprint Cup title was his to lose. It slipped away over the final two races of the season, including a demoral - izing defeat at Phoenix Interna- tional Raceway. He arrived in Phoenix as the points leader and had Jimmie Johnson on the ropes as Hamlin led more than half the laps and appeared headed to the win. Instead, he needed to make a late stop for fuel that took him out of con- tention for the victory. The disappointment carried into the season finale the following week as Hamlin was flat and battled nerves on a day he could have claimed his first NASCAR championship. Instead, watched Johnson celebrate a fifth consecutive title. Four seasons later, Hamlin feels he’s more pre- pared for this opportunity even though the format has changed and he doesn’t believe his Joe Gibbs Racing team is as strong as it was in 2010. Hamlin goes into Sun- day’s race at Phoenix tied for the series points lead with Joey Logano and needing to finish only 11th or better to get into next week’s championship finale. “We have a position where we can control our own destiny,” he said. “I feel like this year the pres- sure on our race team is a lot less than what it was in 2010. The expectations are a lot less from the media and the fans’ perspective. “So with that, you just race a little bit looser, and I’ve been in this position before and nerves aren’t going to be an issue. I’ve done this tons of times, been part of a champion- ship picture, but every- one’s got to do their part, including myself.” Hamlin will start from the pole on Sunday, with Chase for the Sprint Cup championship contenders Brad Keselowski, Kevin Harvick, Logano and Matt Kenseth right behind him. Down to eight drivers in the Chase field, there are four spots in next week’s race at Homestead-Miami Speedway up for grabs on Sunday. A victory at Phoenix will earn a Chase driver an automatic berth into the championship race. Hamlin does not want another title to slip away Hamlin
The cookies we use on Flipsnack's website help us provide a better experience for you, track how our website is used, and show you relevant advertising. If you want to learn more about the cookies we're using, make sure to check our Cookie policy
We use essential cookies to make our site work for you. These allow you to navigate and operate on our website.
We use performance cookies to understand how you interact with our site.They help us understand what content is most valued and how visitors move around the site, helping us improve the service we offer you.
We use marketing cookies to deliver ads we think you'll like.They allow us to measure the effectiveness of the ads that are relevant for you.