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before ultimately winning 25-17. Six lead changes occurred in the third set, but Taylor pounded down the final point to finish the set 25-22 and complete the sweep. The loss was Bonne- ville’s first in what has become a tight 5A District 5-6 race with two confer- ence matches remaining for everyone before dis- tricts. “We got our butts kicked,” Bonneville coach Chantal McMurtrey said. “I thought I.F. played awesome and we played the poorest we have all season long. We blocked one ball all night.” Taylor, who hit a ball into the stands in the second set, led Idaho Falls with 15 kills, two blocks and 12 digs while Madi Johnson had 19 digs. Sutton had nine kills and one block and Maddy Reeb added one ace, 36 assists and six digs. Haylie Keck led Bonne- ville with 10 kills and nine digs while Halle Hess had five kills and three aces. Bonneville (26-3, 7-1) hosts Rigby and Hillcrest in a tri-match Tuesday while Idaho Falls (23-9, 6-2) plays Wednesday at Skyline. Both coaches agreed that there is plenty o parity in 5A District 5-6 this season, adding that it is bittersweet that only two advance to the state tour- nament. “Each team is gonna have to bring their A-game and play tough (at dis- tricts),” Johnson said. strengths line up well with Bonneville’s weaknesses. The Knights backfield combo of quarterback Beau Crouch and running back Morgan Pyper should have a field day running behind an offensive line that should have its way with the Bees. And Hillcrest’s aggres- sive front seven will keep Bees quarterback Bradley Smith running for his life. The Bees can keep it close if Smith and wideout Teagan Handy can connect on a few long passes. Other than that, it’s looking like a long night for Bonneville. Hillcrest 33, Bonneville 18 Madison at Idaho Falls It’s Homecoming for the Tigers, and that should add an emotional lift (and a big home crowd) for a Tigers team coming off a blowout loss to top-ranked Highland. But unless I.F. fixes the defensive break- downs it suffered against the Rams, tonight presents many of the same prob- lems. Madison passing attack and physical front seven present major issues for the Tigers. Madison 32, Idaho Falls 22 Skyline at Highland The Grizzlies melted down late in last week’s loss to Hillcrest, handing the Knights 30 yards in unsportsmanlike penal- ties on their game-win- ning drive. Despite those issues, Skyline still had a chance to win. The same mental mistakes will hurt even more against a High- land team that is deep, big, physical and fast. My guess is Skyline will main- tain its composure this week, but that won’t be enough to claim a win at Holt Arena. Highland 29, Skyline 12 Preston at Blackfoot I had my first in-person look at Blackfoot last week, and this group reminded me of the Broncos teams that won four 4A titles from 2007 to 2012. The team has explo- sive skill position players, but the offense can still be physical when needed. And the defense, led by the best secondary in the area, is tough to break down. Preston is an improved program, but they’re not nearly improved enough to hang with the Broncos. Blackfoot 41, Preston 13 Pocatello at Rigby I’ve run out of explana- tions for Rigby’s 3-3 start. The Trojans appeared to have the most returning talent in District 6, but they haven’t played like it through the first six games. If Rigby wants to take the next step and contend for a state title, that has to end tonight. And I think it will. Rigby 33, Pocatello 22 Butte County at Shoshone The wins are piling up for the Pirates, who made their first appearance of the season in the 1A Division 1 media poll this week. Unfortunately, so are the injuries. But if any small school has the depth to overcome multiple inju- ries, it’s Butte County. Butte County 40, Sho- shone 12 South Fremont at Shelley Will all of you who had Shelley losing two straight games at some point this season please step forward. … I thought so. But that’s exactly what’s happened to the Russets, who got blown out by Bon- neville and shut down by Snake River in their last two games. Fortunately for Shelley, those losses only look bad on the won/loss record and won’t affect their playoff hopes. Here’s betting Travis Hobson will have his team breathing fire tonight. Shelley 26, South Fremont 6 Teton at Sugar-Salem Sugar-Salem put it all together in last week’s win over 4A Jerome. Jared Purser and Camry Ingram both ran for more than 100 yards and the defense had three sacks, an intercep- tion and forced a fumble. That’s bad news for a Teton team that has strug- gled with consistency. Sug- ar-Salem 18, Teton 12 Ririe at North Fremont North Fremont had its best performance of the season in last week’s 34-19 win over 3A Teton. Tanner Oberhansley ran wild for the Huskies, helped by the return of Michael Mower in the backfield. A win tonight would nearly lock up a playoff spot for North. North Fremont 34, Ririe 17 Snake River at American Falls Snake River opened plenty of eyes with last week’s dominating win over Shelley. The Panthers defense won the physical battle, keeping the Russets out of the end zone for the full 48 minutes. And while the offense wasn’t domi- nant, it did exactly what it had to do. This is the first of what will be two blowout conference wins for Snake. Snake River 54, Amer- ican Falls 0 Firth at West Jefferson West Jefferson doubled its season win total with a solid win over Ririe last week, and joined a crowded playoff chase in the Nuclear Conference. Firth has not played like the Firth of the past couple years, but the Cougars will have more than enough to maintain its spot atop the Nuke standings. Firth 26, West Jef- ferson 12 Grace at Challis These two teams com- bined for 142 points when they met Sept. 19, with the Vikings coming out on top 78-64. Challis quarterback Brandon Hamilton ran wild in that game, piling up 323 yards and eight touchdowns. And by the way, he also threw for 326 yards and three more TDs. Better buckle up those chin straps, Grizzlies. Challis 56, Grace 51 Mackay at Clark County Both teams have had two weeks to heal up and gear up for the stretch run, so no edge there. But the Miners do hold the advantage in playmakers — expect Jacob Green and Wes Roscoe to be the dif- ference. Mackay 39, Clark County 29 Watersprings at North Gem Watersprings is coming off an impressive win at Mackay two weeks ago, and hopes the momentum carries over to this league matchup with North Gem. That extra rest will come in handy for a Water- springs team that’s small in numbers but big on talent. Watersprings 32, North Gem 22 Football Standings 5A District 5-6 Overall Conf PF PA Highland 6 0 2 0 257 80 Hillcrest 5 1 2 0 190 70 Madison 3 2 1 1 124 100 Skyline 3 3 1 1 146 118 Idaho Falls 1 5 0 2 106 224 Bonneville 1 5 0 2 99 186 4A District 5-6 Overall Conf PF PA Blackfoot 5 0 1 0 164 55 Rigby 3 3 1 0 139 159 Pocatello 3 3 1 1 173 186 Century 1 5 1 2 68 243 Preston 4 2 0 1 169 120 3A District 6 Overall Conf PF PA South Fremont 5 1 1 0 189 130 Shelley 3 2 1 0 87 70 Sugar-Salem 3 2 0 0 144 100 Teton 1 5 0 2 115 182 3A District 5 Overall Conf PF PA Snake River 4 1 0 0 157 32 American Falls 1 4 0 0 53 109 Marsh Valley 0 5 0 0 60 213 2A District 6 Overall Conf PF PA Firth 3 2 1 0 125 74 North Fremont 2 3 1 0 94 127 Salmon 2 3 1 1 108 169 West Jefferson 2 3 1 1 126 91 Ririe 0 6 0 2 85 278 1A Division 1 District 5-6 Overall Conf PF PA Butte County 5 0 2 0 260 84 Challis 2 3 1 1 170 315 Grace 2 3 0 2 204 193 1A Division 2 District 5-6 Overall Conf PF PA Rockland 4 1 2 0 206 117 North Gem 1 4 1 1 78 190 Watersprings 1 4 1 1 147 235 Clark County 2 2 0 1 126 110 Mackay 2 3 0 1 200 198 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Scoring Player TD 2pt XP FG Pts B. Hamilton, CHA 16 16 0 0 112 W. Roscoe, MAC 12 6 3 0 84 J. Hjelm, BC 14 0 0 0 84 M. Pyper, HIL 11 0 0 0 66 Z. Harrell, BC 10 0 0 0 60 M. Peterson, BF 5 0 20 2 56 J. Thornberry 9 1 0 0 56 D. Buell, WAT 8 0 0 0 48 J. Crane, MAD 7 0 0 0 42 D. Ostermiller, SS 7 0 0 0 42 B. Crouch, HIL 6 1 0 0 38 B. Whyte, SKY 6 1 0 0 38 J. Thompson, FIR 6 0 2 0 38 J. Green, MAC 6 6 0 0 37 Passing Player Cmp Att Yds TD INT K. Stoneberg, MAD 92 163 1230 12 8 H. Livingston, RIG 75 124 1146 9 5 B. Mitchell, SKY 107 172 1104 15 5 B. Hamilton, CHA 98 151 1080 7 6 P. Hayes, BF 54 95 1032 10 3 J. Green, MAC 68 115 903 11 6 M. Mathison, WAT 28 62 836 7 9 B. Smith, BON 56 113 805 6 6 J. Gonzalez, SF 39 78 736 8 2 B. Leckington, SHE 62 114 723 7 0 B. Cate, FIR 48 88 693 6 4 B. Cole, SAL 50 104 599 6 5 B. Crouch, HIL 36 58 589 7 1 S. Miller, SR 31 64 517 6 4 F. McCashland, TET 27 44 388 4 1 J. Thornberry, IF 35 61 292 3 5 J. Isham, BC 15 24 281 3 0 E. Arnold, SS 16 40 257 3 3 T. Tomlinson, WJ 10 25 219 3 2 K. Nelson, RIR 13 33 181 2 2 T. Hott, IF 13 31 132 0 2 C. Smith, RIR 3 12 94 2 0 Rushing Player Att Yds Avg. TD J. Hjelm, BC 89 942 10.6 14 B. Hamilton, CHA 76 900 11.8 15 J. Thornberry, IF 147 893 6.1 9 M. Pyper, HIL 89 649 7.3 8 J. Thibault, SAL 103 593 5.8 4 T. Oberhansely, NF 83 576 6.9 3 J. Burtenshaw, WJ 52 523 10.1 4 J. Thompson, FIR 67 491 7.3 4 Z. Harrell, BC 35 464 13.3 8 D. Ostermiller, SS 61 433 7.1 7 P. Lundholm, WJ 36 357 9.9 2 J. Johnson, MAC 60 357 6 3 K. Nelson, RIR 85 354 4.2 3 B. Crouch, HIL 52 335 6.4 7 M. Mower, NF 53 319 6 4 D. Buell, WAT 39 316 8.1 5 D. Ames, SKY 73 314 4.3 2 W. Roscoe, MAC 45 313 7 5 K. Stoneberg, MAD 88 309 3.5 3 W. Vogler, SR 33 304 9.2 3 D. Bodkin, BF 47 294 6.3 3 S. Collins, BC 40 275 6.9 3 H. Livingston, RIG 46 264 5.7 4 J. Gonzalez, SF 37 256 6.9 5 R. Coverley, SF 24 256 10.7 2 D. Huber, SF 42 250 6 3 R. Sutherin, SHE 43 249 5.8 2 Receiving Player Rec Yds Avg TD W. Roscoe, MAC 39 611 15.7 8 J. Crane, MAD 35 611 17.5 6 Z. Corrigan, CHA 33 464 14.1 0 T. Barney, SF 20 442 22.1 4 M. Peterson, BF 18 420 23.3 5 Z. Anderson, MAD 27 370 13.7 3 T. Phillips, RIG 20 339 17 4 T. Handy, BON 18 328 18.2 4 Z. Miner, SAL 26 327 12.6 3 H. Landon, RIG 21 303 14.4 1 J. Hoskins, BF 19 294 15.5 3 D. Buell, WAT 6 293 48.8 3 A. Peterson, SKY 26 282 10.8 3 B. Whyte, SKY 19 267 14.1 6 B. Hayes, WAT 13 265 20.4 1 C. Francia, RIG 17 262 15.4 3 B. Nelson, SHE 18 245 13.6 2 L. Orme, FIR 14 239 17.1 4 L. Martin, SKY 24 244 10.2 4 J. Hathaway, SHE 21 243 11.6 3 B. Tamayo, BON 14 229 16.4 2 N. Whitworth, MAC 21 208 9.9 3 D. Stillwaugh, CHA 21 203 9.7 2 M. Pyper, HIL 13 199 15.3 2 Tackles Player G Tackles Avg S. Taylor, RIG 6 75 12.5 B. Davis, SKY 6 59 9.8 D. David, HIL 6 58 9.7 K. Krenka, MAC 5 58 11.6 J. Doherty, SKY 6 56 9.3 S. Storms, SKY 6 56 9.3 B. Hamilton, CHA 5 54 10.8 K. Lambson, BC 5 53 10.6 J. Green, MAC 5 52 10.4 S. Collins, BC 5 51 10.2 D. Robison, SHE 5 50 10 P. Stenerson, SKY 6 48 8 C. Christensen, WAT 5 46 9.2 Z. Danz, BC 5 45 9 T. Payne, IF 6 44 7.3 T. Olson, SF 6 44 7.3 J. Hjelm, BC 5 44 8.8 A. Barzee, WJ 5 44 8.8 Z. Anderson, RIR 6 43 7.2 T. Tallman, HIL 6 42 7 B. Hayes, WAT 5 42 8.4 B. Albertson, WJ 5 41 8.2 D. Brown, SKY 6 40 6.7 B. Kenney, IF 6 39 6.5 D. Bingham, FIR 6 39 6.5 R. Cotant, CHA 5 38 7.6 J. Cortez, SKY 6 38 6.3 C. Harker, SHE 5 36 7.2 N. Evans, MAD 5 36 7.2 B. Smith, SHE 5 34 6.8 Sacks Player G Sacks D. Brown, SKY 6 8 K. Nelson, SHE 5 5 J. Olson, CHA 5 4 G. Blattner, BC 5 4 C. Hansen, HIL 6 3 J. Orr, SS 5 3 P. Erikson, SHE 5 3 T. Bean, SHE 5 3 J. Doherty, SKY 6 3 T. Tallman, HIL 6 3 D. Scrogum, SKY 6 2 C. Erickson, MAD 5 2 D. Beard, BC 5 2 Q. Hildreth, SAL 5 2 B. Jacobs, WJ 5 2 G. Jarnagin, SAL 5 2 S. Storms, SKY 6 2 S. Taylor, RIG 6 2 D. Ostermiller, SS 5 2 S. Price, SHE 5 2 T. Todd, RIR 6 2 T. Tweedie, HIL 6 2 D. David, HIL 6 2 K. Lambson, BC 5 2 A. Gregory, MAC 5 2 D. Grimaud, IF 6 2 D. Bingham, FIR 6 2 Z. Johnson, FIR 6 2 Interceptions Player G Interceptions W. Roscoe, MAC 5 5 W. Dobson, IF 6 4 M. Barnes, WJ 5 3 T. Walker, RIG 6 2 B. Bryan, IF 6 2 Z. Miner, SAL 5 2 A. Caudillo, RIG 6 2 R. Coverley, SF 6 2 S. Collins, BC 5 2 L. Gamett, BC 5 2 J. Isham, BC 5 2 B. Bryan 6 2 L. Elverud 6 2 B. Cole, SAL 5 1 B. Ricks, SKY 6 1 P. Stenerson, SKY 6 1 B. Davis, SKY 6 1 T. Miller, SS 5 1 B. Neff, MAD 5 1 J. Burtenshaw, WJ 5 1 B. Kenney, IF 6 1 K. Wadsworth, HI 6 1 L. Kontes, HI 6 1 S. Farr, CHA 5 1 A. Garza, SKY 6 1 T. Williams, MAD 5 1 D. Ball, MAD 5 1 B. Albertson, WJ 5 1 D. Beard, BC 5 1 Z. Anderson, RIR 6 1 B. Barrus, HIL 6 1 B. Peterson, HIL 6 1 M. Pyper, HIL 6 1 B2 Post Register Friday, October 10, 2014 SPORTS Standings, leaders Jeff Victor This Week’s Games The So-Called Experts (P.R. Sports Staff) Marlowe GAME OF THE WEEK: Hillcrest at Bonneville Last Week: 9-3 10-2 9-3 Season Record: 65-16 58-23 57-24 Preston at Blackfoot, 7 p.m. / Fri. Blackfoot Blackfoot Blackfoot Pocatello at Rigby, 7 p.m. / Fri. Rigby Rigby Rigby Madison at Idaho Falls, 7 p.m. / Fri. Madison Madison Madison Skyline at Highland, 7 p.m. / Fri. Highland Highland Highland Bonneville at Hillcrest, 7 p.m. / Fri. Hillcrest Hillcrest Hillcrest South Fremont at Shelley, 7 p.m. / Fri. Shelley Shelley Shelley Teton at Sugar-Salem, 7 p.m. / Fri. Sugar-Salem Sugar-Salem Sugar-Salem Ririe at North Fremont, 7 p.m. / Fri. North Fremont North Fremont North Fremont Snake River at American Falls, 7 p.m. / Fri. Snake River Snake River Snake River Firth at West Jefferson, 7 p.m. / Fri. Firth Firth Firth Grace at Challis, 7 p.m. / Fri. Challis Challis Challis Butte County at Shoshone, 7 p.m. / Fri. Butte County Butte County Butte County Mackay at Clark County, 4 p.m. / Fri. Mackay Mackay Mackay Watersprings at North Gem, 3 p.m. / Fri. Watersprings Watersprings Watersprings Quarterbacks, receivers and running backs some- times have little-to-no involvement during plays. A quarterback might take a snap and hand off to a running back. A running back and a wide receiver might run a route and watch a pass sail to another receiver. Linemen have specific roles on every play. They have diverse blocking assignments, but they usually go up against the same one or two players, unlike their skill position brethren. “When you go up against the same people so many times, you start knowing their strengths, their weak- nesses, what moves will work,” Smith said. Smith and Hansen kno each other well. Not only are they friends off the field, they line up directl against each other on offense and defense. “He’s got a quick outside rush, and he’s pretty quic off the ball,” Smith said of Hansen. “He’s got long arms, so he keeps a dis- tance.” Hansen thinks more about Smith’s size (6-foot-1, 300 pounds) and his trash talk. “Me and him will get down on the line and we’ll hear him be like, ‘I’m coming for you guys. I’m coming,’ ” Hansen said. The trash talk on the line is mostly friendly during the game. But the linemen’s ferocity will be amplified tonight because they’re playing for brag- ging rights, as opponents and as friends. Right now, Bonneville has bragging rights, which has elevated the intensit of this year’s Civil War in the minds of Hansen and Austin. “We have the chance to make the goal posts red again,” Austin said. “It’s just more exciting.” Quarterback Beau Crouch and running bac Morgan Pyper might get more credit if the Knights win, but the linemen don’t care as long as they get to spray-paint the goal posts. Plus, they know their coaches and skill players appreciate their value. “Without the offensive line,” Crouch said, “there would be no football.” WAR From Page B1 points to take a 24-10 lead early in the third quarter. UCF was able to answer with a pair of touchdowns to tie it. UCF was lined up for a potential go-ahead field goal in regulation, but bobbled a snap on an initial 43-yard field goal. After a timeout UCF tried again from 50 yards out, but Shawn Mof- fitt’s kick was blocked by Mitch Matthews. BYU recovered from a sluggish start, and needed less than three minutes to score three straight touch- downs and take its 14-point lead early in the third quarter. The Cougars tied it at 10 on the opening drive of the half with a 4-yard touch- down pass from Stewart to Colby Pearson. Following a quick UCF three-and-out, the Cougars were then the recipient of some luck a few series later when their own drive stalled and a punt Scott Arella- no’s bounced off the leg of UCF’s Sean Beckton. BYU’s Algernon Brown recovered it, and set up a 15-yard touchdown pass from Stewart to Devin Mahina, that made it 17-10. UCF’s misfortunes con- tinued on the next play from scrimmage, when Hol- man’s pass was picked off by Skye Povey on the BYU 14. Stewart went back to the air after the changeover and immediately found Mahina again for a 14-yard touch- down pass to make it 24-10 with 9:05 left in the third. The Knights finally settled down, and closed within seven, finishing off an eight-play, 37-yard drive with Stanback’s 2-yard touchdown run. UCF’s defense rode that rush of momentum, and sacked Stewart on the third snap of BYU’s next series. Stewart recovered, and drove the Cougars all down to the 15, before a hit by UCF’s Terrance Plummer forced and recovered Brown’s fumble. The Knights traded punts with the Cougars, before using a 37-yard strike from Holman to Josh Reese to tie it at 24 with 10:17 remaining. BYU punted again, and UCF had a chance to take the lead back. But Moffitt’s 46-yard field goal attempt missed wide left. The Knights defense forced another punt, giving the Knights offense another chance. But on the fifth play of the drive, Holman’s pass over the middle was inter- cepted by Kai Nacua, giving the ball back to the Cougars with 3:15 left. From Page B1 UCF From Page B1 TIGERS From Page B1 PICKS
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