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At Rexburg, the Madison High School boys soccer team converted when it mattered and survived an onslaught of Skyline shots on goal to earn a 2-0 win in 5A District 5-6 action Tuesday night. “We had a lot of chances and it just didn’t happen for us,” Skyline coach Byraun Moretz said. Among the missed chances was a one-on-one opportunity between Grizzlies forward Jorge Carmona and Madison’s goalkeeper. Madison scored both goals in the first half, in the 12th and 22nd minutes. Skyline (6-2-2, 2-2-1) hosts Hillcrest on Tuesday. SHELLEY 2, SNAKE RIVER 0: At Shelley, the Russets pitched their first shutout of the season. “That’s our best defen- sive effort all year,” Shelley coach Wes Stumbo said. “We’ve been working all season, and it finally seemed to gel today.” Jake Hargraves scored Shelley’s first goal late in the second half, and Jordan Moulton topped off the scoring in the second half. Shelley (5-2-0, 2-2-0) travels to Aberdeen on Sat- urday. NORTH FREMONT 3, SOUTH FREMONT 1: At St. Anthony, the Huskies raced out to 3-0 halftime lead and easily held off the Cougars in the second half to earn a 3A District 5-6 win. “Defensively we played really well. We were pushing them outside,” North Fremont coach Shane Jacobson said. “The midfielders also controlled the ball really well.” Huskies senior captains Aaron Williams, Carlos Romero and Polo Saenz all played key rolls in the three goals. Williams scored in the 12th minute off an assist from Oscar Altami- rano. Romero had a free kick in the 22nd minute that ricocheted off a South Fremont defender into the net. Saenz scored on a penalty kick in the 33nd minute. North Fremont (4-6-1, 3-3-0) hosts Aberdeen on Tuesday. Girls soccer SHELLEY 3, SNAKE RIVER 0: At Shelley, the Russets stayed undefeated with a dominant 3-0 win over Snake River. “We played a really strong passing game throughout, we were very quick going to the ball and we maintained possession throughout the game,” Shelley coach Jim Gregory said. Eden Anderson and Sam Gallup were Shel- ley’s players of the game, according to Gregory, due to their deft passing and strong pursuit on defense. Abby Crandall (22nd minute), Brie Stumbo (38th) and Kira Marlow (75th) scored Shelley’s three goals. The Russets (8-0-1, 5-0-1) travel to Aberdeen on Saturday. Volleyball RIGBY 3, PRESTON 2: At Rigby, the Trojans rallied from a 2-1 deficit to earn a 25-16, 19-25, 24-26, 25-15, 15-11 win over Preston in 4A District 5-6 action. “We just had some key players step up at key moments,” Rigby coach Crystal Jensen said. “And that pushed us over the top.” Hannah Shippen led the Trojans with 15 kills and 19 digs. Olivia Gneiting added 11 kills and Macady Boyce had 39 assists. Rigby (3-1 conference) plays at the Bonneville/Hill- crest Classic this weekend. SHELLEY 3, TETON 0: At Shelley, Brooke Sorensen led a balanced attack with seven kills and two aces as Shelley topped Teton 25-12, 25-10, 25-17 in a 3A District 6 match. Sam Waite had six kills, Myah Gillespie had five kills, Alexis Thompson had four kills, a block and five aces, Kallie Brown added 26 assists, two aces and four digs while Hannah Hanson finished with 13 digs for the Russets. Shelley (14-3, 2-0) plays at Snake River on Thursday. FIRTH 3, RIRIE 0: At Ririe, Firth bounced back from a conference loss at Salmon last week to earn a 25-16, 25-15, 25-12 league win at Ririe. “I was very pleased with their performance,” Firth coach Carla Reeves said. “We suffered a loss at Salmon, and needed a little refocusing. And we came to play tonight.” Bailey Nelson led the Cougars with 13 kills, four aces and nine digs. Ashley Sanders added 10 kills and three aces, Natalie Gibson had 21 assists and Kellie Tucker chipped in eight digs for Firth. The Cougars (10-5, 2-1) host North Fremont on Thursday. SALMON 3, NORTH FREMONT 1: At Ashton, Ririe earned a Nuclear Conference win over Ririe, beating the Bulldogs 25-21, 25-18, 22-25, 25-17. Alexa Litton led North Fremont with 10 Kills and 16 digs. Cyrita Lee added nine kills and nine blocks, Kristie Hawkes had 12 blocks and 14 digs, Kaiah Bohn had seven digs and four blocks, freshman Eryn Martindale had 10 digs and Katie Harrigfeld chipped in 24 assists, 17 digs and eight kills. “We need to reduce our hitting errors to stay in a match,” North Fremont coach LeAnna Trosen said. “We still need to be a better job focusing on the little things as well.” North Fremont (1-6, 1-1) plays at Firth on Thursday. CHALLIS 3, WEST JEF- FERSON 2: At West Jef- ferson, Challis — down two sets to one — trailed in the fourth set. But the Vikings roared back to take the final two sets and defeat the Panthers 23-25, 25-13, 16-25, 25-23, 15-9. “I think they got their competitive fire back, decided they wanted to play ball,” Challis coach Debbie Sheppeard said o her players. Brielle Sheppeard had 36 kills and 13 digs. Tara Chamberlain and Savannah D’Orazio had 27 and 15 assists, respectively, and Shayanne Bradsha added six aces. Jade Skidmore had 40 assists and two kills for the Panthers, while Sierra McDonald had 11 kills and eight digs. Challis (5-2, 1-0) heads to Butte County on Thursday. West Jefferson (2-4, 0-2) also plays next on Thursday on the road against Salmon. MACKAY 3, BUTTE COUNTY 1: At Mackay, the Miners defeated Butte County 25-22, 25-22, 16-25, 27-25 in a nonconference match. “We continuously wor on passing and it is starting to pay off.” Mackay coach Bridget Severe said via email. For Mackay, Cheyan James had 25 kills and three blocks, Chelbee Rosenk- rance had 15 kills, Shelby Tillotson had 11 kills and four aces and Morgan Betzer had 47 assists. Mackay (7-2) travels to Leadore on Thursday. And when the plays were onside, the shots that fol- lowed were mostly off the mark. “I think we dominated possession-wise,” Watts said. “We just couldn’t keep the shots on frame. And the ones we did keep on frame, they weren’t really great shots.” Highland strung together a good stretch of play around the 15-minute mark, sending one shot just side and another off the post before earning a corner kick in the 19th minute. On the corner, Zach Merrill made a run to the far post, leaped high over his marker and headed home a perfectly placed cross past Bees keeper Marlon Cruz. Bonneville responded well, controlling the middle of the field and created three shots from senior Mikey Garcia that sailed high. The story was the same in the second half, with Bonneville creating more chances but getting nothing to show for it. The Bees best chance came in the 10th minute when Hardy Lopez went down in the box while being pressured by a defender. The ref didn’t make a call, and Highland escaped what could have been a penalty kick. Eventually, the near- misses led to frustration, something Watts said his Bees need to fight through. “Things are going to happen during the game that you can get upset about,” he said. “But you can’t let it eat at you the entire game. It destroys your game and it destroys the players around you. That’s something we need to work on and I think it’s something we can fix quite easily.” Watts knows the Bees will have to be at their best when the 5A District 5-6 tournament rolls around. The league is as balanced as it’s ever been, and the team that deals with frus- tration best will likely be the last one standing. “It’s a tight confer- ence,” Watts said with a smile. “Districts are going to be really interesting.” The loss dropped the Bees (5-4-1, 1-4-1) into sixth place behind the Rams (4-6-1, 2-4-0). Bon- neville returns to action Thursday with another key conference matchup against second-place Idaho Falls. The game kicks off at 7 p.m. at the Idaho Falls Socce Complex. B2 Post Register Wednesday, September 24, 2014 SPORTS doesn’t happen. But with the long weekend, we’ll be doing something Saturday rather than being in LaVell Edwards Stadium. That’s the biggest change is what Saturday will look like.” The players said they have come to expect a bye week to be much the same as other weeks. “It will change a little bit because I’m sure the practice schedule will be a little bit different, but as coaches have said this isn’t going to be a week where we are just going to sit around,” junior defensive lineman Remington Peck said. “Other teams are playing and getting better, so we’re going to have to use it to get better as well.” Fellow defensive lineman Travis Tuiloma said instead of focusing on an opponent for much of the week they can zero in on correcting their own errors. “We are mainly studying ourselves,” Tuiloma said. “We’re working on what we need to take care of as a team. We don’t want to let off the gas. As a defense, we are looking to work on our fundamentals and taking care of our assign- ments.” Even though the work will still happen, there are positives and negatives to not taking to the field for another contest. “The timing for the bye week is good,” Mendenhall said. “It could be argued that we have momentum now — which we do — but we also have things to control in terms of our team, its readiness, areas to fix, get a little bit healthier and then relaunch the next phase of the season.” The players are hoping to get a lot of the nicks and bruises healed up. “It’s coming at a good time,” Peck said. “We’ve played four physical games so it will be a time where we can regroup and get healed but also a time that we need to use to get better and prepare for Utah State.” Mendenhall said he expects a weekend break to be the big difference for his players “We’ll practice hard Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, then Friday will be basically a Monday for Utah State,” Mendenhall said. “Then they will have Saturday and Sunday off. That should be enough, I think.” For more BYU coverage, visit www.cougarblue.com. is now 10-7. Bonneville graduate and Western Wyoming middle hitter Taeja Davis also had an efficient hitting day Friday during a 3-0 win over Seward County, hitting .435 with 11 kills. WWCC is 11-5. Idaho Falls graduate Kaitlyn Johnson totaled 26 digs over three matches at the Northern Colorado Classic this past weekend, helping lift Wyoming to 11-2. Katelyn Kinghorn had similar success for Boise State in a 3-0 win over Nebraska-Omaha, hitting .375 with nine kills and four digs. Ashlynn Ward (Madison) hit .538 with seven kills and seven blocks for MSU-Billings (8-4) Monday during a 3-0 win over Alaska-Fair- banks. Kimber Call (Shelley) and Kiarra Johnson (Idaho Falls) each had 27 assists Saturday. Call’s help came for Northwest College (13-7) in a 3-2 loss to Western Nebraska, and Johnson’s came for Casper (12-9) in a 3-0 win over McCook. Challis graduate Madisen Garlie hit .333 with seven kills in a 3-0 win over Warner Pacific on Saturday, helping lift her team to 14-4. Soccer Hillcrest graduate and Utah State freshman Erin Rickenbach assisted the winning goal Saturday to help the Aggies improve to 4-3-1 with a 1-0 win over UC Riverside. Skyline graduate and Drake junior Morgan Foster will redshirt this season following a knee injury, one season after setting a number of records at Butler Commu- nity College. Football Carroll College receiver Anthony Clarke (Black- foot) continued his strong play during a 33-8 win over Rocky Mountain, fin- ishing with eight recep- tions, 184 receiving yards, two receiving touchdowns and 21 rushing yards. Carroll is 2-1. Shelley grad Chad Leckington scored his first collegiate touchdown for Weber State on Sept. 13, punching one in from 3 yards out during a 42-31 loss to Sacramento State. WSU is 0-4. College of Idaho defen- sive end Tyler Andreason (Butte County) was all over the field Saturday during a 56-28 loss to Southern Oregon, fin- ishing with seven solo tackles, a 42-yard fumble recovery and a 6-yard sack. Also for COI, Bonne- ville’s Jordan Vielma had two tackles and Shelley’s Trevor Smith had one. The Yotes are 2-1. Snow College’s Trevin Swensen (Shelley) also had a strong day Sat- urday, finishing with eight tackles and one fumble recovery during a 21-19 win over Glendale. Sno is now 3-1. Cross country A trio of local- ly-groomed harriers helped Idaho State dom- inate the ISU open Sat- urday, led by Butte Coun- ty’s Carly Hansen , who finished fifth in the 4,000- meter run with a time o 16 minutes, 15 seconds. Also for the Bengals, Quincy VanOrden (Snake River) was eighth at 16:37, and Korbin Traughber (Butte County) was ninth at 16:43. Running in the same race for College of Idaho, North Fremont’s Jocelyn Allen was seventh (16:32), and Challis grad Angeline Getty was 19th (17:57). ISU won the team title with 19 points, followed by the Yotes with 43. “Neil and I have become friends from coaching. These two teams just get after it.” Giving Madison a spark as Alli Rigby, who had two shots on goal in the first half and two in the second. “Skyline’s defense, they were able to contain her,” Floyd said. “They did a great job on their back line.” Skyline and Madison both continue conference play Thursday. The Griz- zlies play at Hillcrest while the Bobcats host Highland. From Page B1 RAMS From Page B1 NOTEBOOK From Page B1 BYU From Page B1 SKYLINE LOCAL ROUNDUP Madison blanks Skyline in 5A showdown POST REGISTER The Blackfoot High School football team is back on top — at least in the weekly Idaho High School Football Media Poll. The Broncos, who dominated the 4A classification for several years before stumbling a year ago, earned the top spot in the latest 4A poll. Blackfoot (4-0) earned four first-place votes and 38 points to edge previous No. 1 Bishop Kelly (three first-place votes, 36 points). Shelley (3-1) maintained its top spot in 3A despite last week’s loss to 5A Bonneville. The Russets earned five first-place votes and 39 points. Timberlake (3-0) was second with 28 points while Gooding was third with 24 and Snake River was fourth with 20. Highland remained No. 1 in 5A, picking up six first-place votes and 40 points to edge Coeur d’Alene by a point. In 2A, Declo held the top spot while Firth remained in the poll at No. 5. In 1A Division 1, Troy beat out Raft River for the top spot while Butte County was among others receiving votes. And in 1A Division 2, Light- house Christian moved up a spot to No. 1 following Council’s loss, while Carey moved from third to second. Idaho High School Football Media Poll Week 5 Records as of Sept. 22 Class 5A Team (1st-place votes) W-L Pts. Prev. 1. Highland (6) 4-0 40 1 2. Coeur d’Alene (3) 4-0 39 2 3. Lake City 4-0 26 3 4. Eagle 4-0 20 4 5. Capital 3-1 9 5 Others receiving votes: Timber- line 1. Class 4A Team (1st-place votes) W-L Pts. Prev. 1. Blackfoot (4) 4-0 38 2 2. Bishop Kelly (3) 3-1 36 1 3. Kuna (2) 4-0 33 4 4. Middleton 3-1 11 — 5. Lakeland 3-1 9 3 Others receiving votes: Preston 3, Rigby 3, Canyon Ridge 2. Class 3A Team (1st-place votes) W-L Pts. Prev. 1. Shelley (5) 3-1 39 1 2. Timberlake (3) 3-0 28 3 3. Gooding (1) 3-0 24 4 4. Snake River 2-1 20 2 5. Weiser 3-0 9 — Others receiving votes: Fruitland 8, Emmett 7. Class 2A Team (1st-place votes) W-L Pts. Prev. 1. Declo (9) 4-0 45 1 2. West Side 4-0 34 2 3. Aberdeen 4-0 22 5 4. Grangeville 3-1 20 4 5. Firth 2-2 6 3 Others receiving votes: Malad 4, Orofino 2, St. Maries 2. Class 1A-I Team (1st-place votes) W-L Pts. Prev. 1. Troy (6) 4-0 39 1 2. Raft River (2) 4-0 32 2 3. Prairie 3-0 28 3 4. Valley 3-0 15 5 5. Kamiah (1) 4-0 10 — Others receiving votes: Oakley 7, Butte County 4. Class 1A-II Team (1st-place votes) W-L Pts. Prev. 1. Lighthouse Christian (5) 4-0 41 2 2. Carey (3) 4-0 38 3 3. Council (1) 3-1 24 1 4. Wilder 3-0 19 5 5. Dietrich 3-1 9 4 Others receiving votes: Rockland 2, Castleford 1, Timberline-Weippe 1. Poll voters David Bashore, Times-News Byron Edelman, Lewiston Tribune Jason Enes, Blackfoot Morning News Jimmy Hancock, Idaho State Journal Paul Kingsbury, IdahoSports.com Mark Nelke, Coeur d’Alene Press Jeff Pinkham, Post Register Rachel Roberts, Idaho Statesman John Wustrow, Idaho Press-Tri- bune Blackfoot grabs 4A top spot in Idaho media pol POST REGISTER
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