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ASSOCIATED PRESS ARLINGTON, Texas — Tony Romo passed the first test with his surgically repaired back, and Bal- timore’s defense and special teams made three more scoring drives from Joe Flacco an afterthought. Deonte Thompson returned a kick- off 108 yards for a score after Romo threw a touchdown pass in his pre- season debut for Dallas, Flacco had a scoring toss and the Ravens beat the Cowboys 37-30 on Saturday night. The Ravens (2-0) also got a 26-yard fumble return for a touch- down when Courtney Upshaw picked up a botched handoff from Romo and stayed on his feet while Romo tried to drag him down by his jersey. Romo’s final play was a 31-yard touchdown pass to Dez Bryant mid- way through the first quarter. Dallas is 0-2 in the preseason. Baltimore led 14-7 before Flacco took the field for the first time late in the first quarter. He threw a 19-yard scoring pass to Torrey Smith for a 24-10 lead late in the first half. Romo was expected to take about a dozen snaps in first game since sur- gery for a herniated disk that kept him out of a loss to Philadelphia in playoffs-or-bust finale last December. Murray had 25 of his 34 yards rush- ing and a 21-yard catch on the next drive, which ended with Bryant leap- ing over Ravens cornerback Domi- nique Franks at the goal line and fall- ing into the end zone. Around the NFL GIANTS 27, COLTS 26: At Indianapolis, Ryan Nassib led New York to two touchdowns in the final four minutes, completing a huge fourth-quarter comeback with a victory over Indianapolis. TEXANS 32, FALCONS 7: At Houston, Jadeveon Clowney made big hits behind the line on consecutive plays and Ryan Fitzpatrick threw a touchdown pass to DeVier Posey in the Houston’s win over Atlanta. STEELERS 19, BILLS 16: At Pittsburgh, Ben Roethlisberger threw two touchdown passes in less than a half of work and Pittsburgh beat Buffalo. PACKERS 21, RAMS 7: At St. Louis, Aaron Rodgers and Sam Bradford each threw a touchdown pass in their preseason debuts and played into the second quarter in the Green Bay’s victory over St. Louis. JETS 25, BENGALS 17: At Cincinnati, Andy Dalton completed all eight of his passes and led the Bengals to a pair of touchdowns and a field goal during three impressive series before New York’s reserves rallied for a pre- season victory. DOLPHINS 20, BUCCANEERS 14: At Tampa, Fla., Backup quarterback Matt Moore led Miami on two touch- down drives in a preseason victory over Tampa Bay. VIKINGS 30, CARDINALS 28: At Minneapolis, Teddy Bridgewater gave the giddy fans chanting his first name a pair of go-ahead touchdown throws to cheer for in the fourth quarter, giving Minnesota a victory over Arizona. Saturday’s eighth annu- al Kids Tri Harder Triath- lon featured a field of 142 children ages 3 to 14 who swam, ran and biked their way to the finish line. The event featured four categories: mini, super, mega and extreme. The mini category con- sisted of a 25-yard swim, bike once around the block and a run around the West Deist Aquatic Center park- ing lot. The super category con- sisted of a 50-yard swim, bike twice around the block and run twice around the parking lot. The mega category con- sisted of a 100-yard swim, bike four times around the block and run four times around the parking lot. And the extreme catego- ry consisted of a 200-yard swim, a four-mile bike ride and a one-mile run. Here are the complete results. BOYS MINI Age 3: Owen Williams 15.25 Age 4: Masahiro Quan 6.58; Titus Meyers 17.30 Age 5: Bryan Stratton 7.16; Jace Mah- lum, 7.39; Josh Fellows 8.00; Kendrick Azevedo, 9.15; Brody Hill 9.29; Devon John 9.44; Ridge Tolman 9.51 Age 6: Joseph Waters 5.46; Graham Livingston 5.54; Kyle Kennedy 6.25; Rylan Borgmann 6.31; Dylan Anderson 6.34; Reese Chapple 7.08; Riley Clark 7.19; Luke Hesse 7.22; Bryce Hammond 7.59; Graham Taylor 8.35; Korbin Merrill 8.39; Max Traynor 8.56; Britton Pend- lebury 9.56 Age 7: Eddie Cramer 6.16 SUPER Age 5: Ethan Hansen 13.20 Age 6: Henry Smith 11.16; Carter Moore 11.34; Sam Porter 14.34 Age 7: Peter Molino 9.54; Brendon John 10.06; Chase Christensen 11.10 Age 8: Finley Borgmann 8.53; Jacob Demott 9.57; Jacob Dickinson 9.58; Quinton Azevedo 10.19; Henry Pavlock 11.50; Jaxson Bates 13.20; Charlie Medema 14.03 Age 9: Ethan Cramer 9.58; Jack Holmes 10.00; Kyle Nef 10.23; Kevin Nef 11.30; Ty Porter 15.25 Age 11: Caleb Curtis 11.02 MEGA Age 7: Bridger Hammer 22.23 Age 8: Ryker Moore 18.45; Jeron Jones 19.54 Age 9: Anthony Williams 18.13; Kaden Kress 18.31; Brandon Ellis 19.17 Age 10: Troy Johnston 16.53; Hayden Turnage 17.14; Aidan John 17.52; Jason Traynor 17.57; Adam Kennedy 18.39; Bridger Gose 20.56; Max Medema 23.32 Age 11: Calvin Decker 17.17; Max Pendlebury 24.06 Age 12: Carson John 18.31; Kevin Boyle 21.16 EXTREME Age 10: Graham Hannon 43.18; Erick Crowley 43.19 Age 11: Cody Hammer 32.12; Ryan Winfree 38.17 Age 12: Ben Maxwell 37.31 Age 13: Sam Pendlebury 29.12 Age 14: Kyler Tolman 38.04 Girls MINI Age 3: Quin Dixon 15.03; Raegan Porter 18.37 Age 4: Evelyn Borgmann 7.04; Julia Porter 10.35 Age 5: Lindsay Demott 7.56; Brooklyn Porter 8.39; Remington Rassum 9.20; Layla Hoffman 9.30; Lydia Williams 9.51; Hadlee Wilde 9.55; Bailey Oram 10.23; Izzy Hartley 10.46 Age 6: Isabella Causey 6.15; Sydney Holmes 7.17; Arianne Nef 7.56; Quincee Gose 8.00 Age 8: Anna Alboucq 6.57 SUPER Age 5: Isley Dixon 15.52 Age 6: Ryiah Jones 12.30; Devyn Asay 12.45; Hannah Hunter 12.55; Jen- na Williams 13.10; Phoebe Wright 14.42 Age 7: Sarah Russell 9.45; Abigail Stratton 10.00; Paige Stembridge 11.20; Sage Howell 12.43; Zion Hannon 13.11 Age 8: Evan Therese Roybal 9.05; Elise Livingston 9.57; Kylee Anderson 11.30; Lainee Jackson 11.35; Katelyn Traynor 12.17; Baylee Wilde 12.57; Ashley Markham 13.26 Age 9: Kaylin Boyle 9.53; Lucy Christensen 10.02; Kamry Fellows 10.43; Emily Giles 11.04; Kylee Ellis 11.12; Emree Wilde 12.45; Elizabeth Wright 12.49; Ashton Hays 13.01; Kiera Hannon 13.09 MEGA Age 9: Harlie Taylor 19.39; Adilyn Trejo 20.11; Kirsten Howell 21.39 Age 10: Nautica Hook 15.52; Presley Walker 16.29; Rees Weimer 19.39; Leah Alboucq 19.54; Kailey Johnson 20.25; Brooklyn Hammond 20.31; Mariel Stuart 20.33 Age 11: Journie Spencer 17.36; Kynlee Causey 18.40; Josie Hoffmann 19.50; Sophia Moberly 20.27; Mesa Winchester 21.23 Age 12: Emily Stuart 16.02; Aubree Dickinson 16.52; Rachael Alboucq 17.54; Aleah Jones 19.05 EXTREME Age 10: Annabelle Black 37.56; Zoe Johnson 40.39 Age 13: Mikayla Dickinson 40.38 Golf Junior Club Chamion- ship: Quinn Detrick and Kasey Beck tied for the boys champion while Hai- ley Potter won the girls title at the Idaho Falls Junior Golf Association Junior Club Championship held last week. Here are the complete tournament results. Boys club champion: Quinn Detrick and Kasey Beck, 37 Girls club champion : Hailey Potter (IGA) 43 and Cheyenne Walker 47 M ost improved boy: Easton Speirs BOYS Age 3 (1 hole): 1. Peyton Chastain 10 Age 4 and under (1 hole): 1. Jay Wilhelm 5; 2. James Chandler 10 Age 5 (3 holes): 1. Remington Ham- mer 11; 2. Ledger Searle 13; 3. Mason Deming 16; 4. Nash Peterson 24 Age 6: (6 holes): T1. Austin Landon 31; T1. Kody Landon 31; 2. Cooper Ranson 32; 3. Mason Davis 37; 4. Noah Wells 42; T5. Josh Chandler 45; T5. Conner Anderson 45; 7. Kameron Aicher 47; 8. Ethan MacMann 59 Age 7 (6 holes): 1. Lincoln Searle 26; T2. Caleb Scott 28; T2. Julian Lopez 28; 4. Jake Sorenson 30; 5. Logan Billings 34; 6. Carson Mitchell 40; T7. Sam Wood 42; T7. Brock Hansen 42; 8. Mason Blaine 45; 9. Luke Peterson 46 Age 8 (6 holes): 1. Max Haycock 24; T2. Henry Higham 27; T2. Jace Marlow 27; T4. Davis Mickelson 28; T4. Giles Anderson 28; 5. Jesse Belloff 32; T6. Logan Ranson 33; T6. Nathan Meldrum 33; 7. Paiton Martinez 34; 8. Eric Elzinga 37; 9. Brayden Merzlock 38; 10. Carson Kuhn 42 Age 9 (9 holes): 1. Hunter Higham 52; 2. Tristen Haight 65; 3. Landon Osgood 70; T4. Catcher Gummow 74; T4. Carson Bernabee 74; 6. Cooper Dahlberg 76; T7. Kade Andrus 77; T7. Danner Duhlberg 77; 9. Shawn Dineen 79; T10. Wade Kunz 81; T10. Nixon Beck 81 Age 10 (9 holes): T1. Karter Barfuss 53; T1. Kobe Kesler 53; 3. CJ Henry 57; T4. Spencer Wood 64; T4. Gabe Mitchell 64; 6. Chase Gourley 67; T7. Xavier Jones 74; T7. Rhett Birch 74; 9. Cooper Mitchell 75; 10. Shawn Mayes 76; T11. Tucker Criddle 81; T11. Canyon Allphin 81 Age 11 (9 holes): 1. Garrison Hammer 42; 2. Dutch Driggs 49; T3. Caleb Stod- dard 50; T3. Tyler Blaine 50; 5. Easton Speirs 54; 6. Jase Austin 55; 7. Cade Marlow 57; T8. Cooper Kesler 60; T8. Tanner Haycock 60; T10. Keanu Lopez 64; T10. Landon Merzlock 64; 12. Chris Palmisciano 65; T13. Sam Packer 69; T13. Gage Jarvis 69; T15. Dylan Watkins 70; T15. Logan Westwood 70; 17. Cy Gummow 72; 18. Josh Crandall 73; T19. Braxton Holland 78; T19. Ty Elzinga 78; 21. Stone Schneider 82; 22. Porter Christensen 106 Age 12 (9 holes): T1. Jack Bryan 50; T1. George McLean 50; 3. Mason Chan- dler 52; T4. Jaden Chamberlin 59; T4. Jaycen Biggs 59; 6. Kayden Toldsen 63; T7. Jaxon Moon 70; T7. Rhett Berguson 70; 9. Tyler Baird 79 Age 13 (9 holes): 1. Davis Weather- ston 47; 2. Trey Howell 52; 3. Matthew Morrison 54; 4. Riley Baird 60; 5. riley Judy 65; 6. Malcolm Archibald 66; 7. Zeke Archibald 69; 8. Jaden Andrews 76 Age 14 (9 holes): 1. Kasey Beck 37; 2. Brian Greenig 43; 3. Derek Marlowe 51; 4. Braden Haight 53; 5. Garrett Marlowe 55; T6. Michael Martin 57; T6. Tycen Biggs 57; 8. Logan Andrus 74 Age 15 (9 holes): 1. Quinn Detrick 37; 2. Gavin Thomas 42; T3. Tyler Campbell 44; T3. Trey Bowman 44; 5. Knight Scott 45; 6. Jade Walker 49; 7. Jared Meldrum 62; 8. Dylan Kaasa 63 Age 16 (9 holes): T1. Dillon Weather- ston 46; T1. James Staley 46 Age 17 (9 holes): 1. Aaron Denagy 48; 2. Tyler Welch 61 GIRLS Age 5 (3 holes): 1. Presli Harker 24; 2. Macy Marlow 25 Age 6 (6 holes): 1. Emmalee Gourley 45; 2. Madison Merzlock 50 Age 7 (6 holes): 1. Emma Vollmer 36; 2. Saige Bergeson 41; T3. Sammy Morrison 42; T3. Cambrie Alred 42; 5. Ashley Campbell 44 Age 8 (6 holes): 1. Emma Hess 28; 2. Kennedy Marlowe 35; 3. Maycie Alred 38; 4. Lana Henry 39; 5. Maya Wells 41; 6. Diane Osgood 46 Age 9 (9 holes): 1. Claire Yoo 57; 2. Hailee Cole 70; 3. Ellie Billings 74; 4. Marlee Oixon 75; 5. Phoebe Jones 85; 6. Vivian Baird 86; 7. Kaitlynn Ragan 88 Age 10 (9 holes): 1. Challis Potter 65; 2. Alexis Scott 70; 3. Savanah Ranson 77; 4. Jessica Ragan 80; 5. Allison Chandler 82; 6. Ruby Shively 83 Age 11 (9 holes) : 1. Paige Martinez 65; 2. Samantha Stoddart 68; 3. Sophia Anderson 71; 4. Olivia Stoddart 77; 5. Trinity Mecham 82; 6. Anna St. Michel 86 Age 12 (9 holes): T1. Kelsey Ranson 66; T1. Taygan Haycock 66; 3. Madisen Morrison 70; 4. Kaya Thinnes 77; 5. Alissa Andrus 79; T6. Cierra McCam- mon 81; T6. Sayler Kunz 81; T8. Julie Vetter 87; T8. Hailey Dineen 87; 10. Kira Wood 90 Age 13 IGA (9 holes): 1. Hailey Potter 43; 2. Jesse Glon 50 Age 13 (9 holes): 1. Natalie Dimick 66; 2. Michah Welch 68; 3. Sarah Hebdon 71 Age 14 (9 holes): 1. Cheyenne Walker 47; 2. Ally Adamson 50; 3. Abbie Mc- Cammon 63; 4. Kaelynn Chandler 69 Age 15 (9 holes): 1. Amanda Hebdon 51; 2. Taylor Walker 54; 3. Katie Vetter 63 Age 16 (9 holes): 1. Annika Baird 64 Age 17 (9 holes): 1. Brittany Meldrum 62 C2 Post Register Sunday, August 17, 2014 SPORTS stretch for him, he should still be considered a threat for the title at the end of the season. “It’s nice to have momentum entering the Chase. If it doesn’t hap- pen, we’ve won champion- ships that way, too,” John- son said. “So, we’re taking it as it comes.” Here are five things to watch in today’s race at MIS: STEWART’S REPLACE- MENT: Tony Stewart is skipping a second straight Sprint Cup race after his car struck and killed a driver at a dirt-track race in New ork last weekend. Jeff Burton is driving the No. 14 Chevrolet in Stewart’s place and qualified 27th. Burton has been making the transition to the broad- cast booth. This will be his third Cup start of the year. CHASE IMPLICA- TIONS: Michigan’s August race is usually when pres- sure has begun to mount for drivers who haven’t secured a spot in the Chase. If the season ended now, the 16 Chase spots would go to the 12 drivers who have won races, along with the top remaining drivers in the points standings — currently Matt Kenseth, Ryan Newman, Kyle Lar- son and Clint Bowyer. Any first-time winner in the next few weeks has a chance to shake things up. NEW RULE: Expect driv- ers to be particularly cau- tious after any crashes this weekend in the aftermath of Kevin Ward Jr.’s death last weekend. Ward’s car went spinning, and he got out during a caution period, walked down the track and was hit by Stewart. NASCAR on Friday barred its drivers from approaching the track or moving cars after accidents. “Regardless of rule changes or anything like that, I think that everything that went on last weekend I believe is a turning point internally for all the driv- ers,” Carl Edwards said. “I think people will be more careful.” ANOTHER BREAK- THROUGH?: Johnson won at Michigan for the first time in 25 Cup races back in June. The top remain- ing driver who hasn’t won at MIS? That may be Brad Keselowski, who is from Michigan but whose high finish there was a sec- ond-place showing in 2012. POLE WINNER: Jeff Gor- don has two wins at MIS, but the most recent came in 2001. He’ll expect to con- tend this weekend, though, after winning the pole Fri- day at a track-record 206.558 mph. 142 compete in Kids Tri Harder Triathlon POST REGISTER LOCAL ROUNDUP Photos courtesy of Brad Barlow / www.photographersidahofalls.com A young competitor dives into the pool at the Wes Deist Aquatic Center in Idaho Falls. Starter Matthew Strahm pitched three shutout innings with three strike- outs before the Osprey got to Cruz Guevara for two earned runs in 1.2 innings. But Sam Lewis shut the door, striking out six of the seven hitters he faced to close out the win. Valenzuela and Gonza- lez led the offense with two hits each. The Chukars and Osprey return to action at 5:05 today before wrapping up their four-game series Monday night. CHUKARS CHAT- TER: Saturday’s second game marked the halfway point of the second half of the Pioneer League sea- son. The Chukars trail first- place Grand Junction by two games in the South Divi- sion second-half race. Kyle Zimmer, Kansas City’s first- round pick in 2012, is sched- uled to make his 2014 debut with a rehab appearance for the Chukars in today’s game in Missoula. He is recovering from a lat injury sustained this spring. CHUKARS From Page C1 SLUMP From Page C1 Idaho State’s much-maligned defense had the better of play during the Bengals second scrimmage of fall camp on Saturday at Holt Arena. The defense had four interceptions and kept the ISU offense out of the end zone on the first seven posses- sions before allowing six touchdowns later on. “The defense played great,” ISU coach Mike Kramer said in a news release. “It took us about a half hour to get a first down so the defense played really outstanding. I liked the way we played in the back end. That has been an issue for us in how we have played there. The safeties played very well, too.” Erik Nelson, Joe Martin, Daniel Roundtree and Christian Gines had the interceptions for ISU. Former Blackfoot High School standout Trae Pilster, battling to be the Bengals’ backup QB, threw a 1-yard TD pass to Kai Campbell. He also led the offense to a field goal on his other drive under center. This was ISU’s last scrimmage that will be open to the pub- lic and media before opening the season at Utah on Aug. 28. Idaho The Vandals defense created five turnovers and piled up nine sacks, highlighting the team’s second scrim- mage of preseason camp. Senior defensive lineman Anthony Rice led the way with four sacks while Jayshawn Jordan added three sacks and an interception. Ryan Edwards to the Vandals with nine tackles. The offense had its moments as well, scoring 12 touchdowns and add- ing two field goals. The quarterback battle contin- ued, with Chad Chalich completing 15 of 22 passes for 195 yards and two touchdowns while Matt Linehan com - pleted 19 of 33 passes for 263 yards and two scores. He also had two interceptions. Kristoffer Ologbode had a big day on the ground, rushing for 158 yards and two touchdowns on 13 carries. Utah State The Aggies ran 100 plays during the team’s second scrimmage of fall camp Saturday at Romney Stadium. As expected senior quarterbac Chukie Keeton led the way, complet- ing 14 of 30 passes for 135 yards and two TDs while adding 29 yards rush- ing on five carries. Senior running back Joe Hill was solid as well, running for 59 yards on four carries. On the defensive side, sophomore corner Jentz Panter had a team-high six tackles while freshman corne Jalen Davis added three tackles and three pass breakups. Utah State opens the 2014 season at Tennessee on Aug. 31. Bengals D solid in scrimmage Romo back, Ravens top Cowboys COLLEGE FOOTBALL NFL ROUNDUP n The Bengal’s defense had four interceptions POST REGISTER Pilster
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