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At Challis Hot Springs, Skyline High School won the boys team title at the annual Mile High Classic cross-country meet for the second year in a row while Shelley won the girls title. The Grizz had seven top-20 finishes to win the title with 54 points to run- ner-up Shelley’s 69 points. Ryan Barna, a sophomore, led Skyline with a third- place finish of 16 minutes, 53.9 seconds. Nick Barna was sixth in 17:11.0, James Nevarez was 11th in 17:20.3, McKay Harms was 16th in 17:33.7, Connor Olson was 18th in 17:42.5, Harrison Roberts was 19th in 17:45.6 and Chet Ells- worth was 20th in 17:46.6. Shelley junior Austin Stewart won the boys indi- idual title for the second year in a row, finishing in a season-best 15:57.1. David Searle (fifth, 17:05.5), Mark Crandall (13th, 17:22.5) and Chase Barrow (14th, 17:23.7) joined him in the top 20. The Shelley girls won with 49 points to run- ner-up Jerome’s 80. Soph- omore Paytin Drollinger led the Russets with a sec- ond-place finish of 19:50.1. Cambria Hassell (fourth, 20:01.1), Klarissa Andersen (sixth, 20:03.0) and LeAnn Larkin (11th, 20:45.3) also had top 20 finishes. Black- foot senior Rachel Cannon won the girls individual title in 19:43.1. Blackfoot took third in a tight boys race with 71 points. Freshman Derek Thomas led the Broncos with a seventh-place finish of 17:16.6 while Traegan Thomas (10th, 17:20.3), Gregory Drake (15th, 17:28.5), and Benji Bigler (17th, 17:34.9) also had top-20 finishes. Salmon was third in the girls standings with 84 points. Sophomore Emily Stenlund’s 12th place time of 20:55.5 led Salmon, which also had top-20 finishes from Katie Jo Gebhardt (14th, 21:01.3), Morgan Smith (15th, 21:02.3) and Kaitlyn Burgess (17th, 21:19.2). Senior Billy Godfrey was Salmon’s lone top-20 fin- isher on the boys side, taking runner-up to Stewart in 16:22.6. Snake River’s Joseph Van Orden (fourth, 17:00.9) and Sugar-Salem’s Kaden Hamblin (12th, 17:20.8) were the area’s other top-20 boys finishers. Other area top-20 fin- ishers in the girls race were Skyline’s Danielle Barna (fifth, 20:02.4), Black- foot’s Abby Hurst (seventh, 20:03.5), Blackfoot’s Michelle Pratt (eighth, 20:05.1), Skyline’s Halli Olson (13th, 21:00.5), South Fremont’s Chaylce Hirschi (18th, 21:27.9), Sugar-Sa- lem’s Hanna Larson (19th, 21:37.7) and Sugar-Salem’s Indya Price (20th, 21:40.4) Girls soccer MADISON 5, BONNE- VILLE 2: At Madison, the Bobcats raced out to 3-1 halftime lead and never fal- tered. Bonneville coach Mike Wedman said his team con- trolled the middle of the field, but Madison didn’t need the middle to succeed. “We had a hard time containing them on the outside,” Wedman said. “We let them have the crosses and they made us pay.” Emma Christensen scored Bonneville’s lone first half goal, and Sam Atterbury found the net in the second half. Bonneville (3-7, 1-7) fin- ishes the regular season at home against Skyline on Tuesday. TETON 5, FIRTH 1: At Driggs, Teton built on a 3-1 halftime lead and rolled to a conference win over Firth. The first goal was by Maddie Chamberlin, who Teton coach Sandy Buck- staff said knocked in a left footed “laser beam” from 40 yards off a corner kick. CJ Hopkins scored in the 13th minute off a free kick and Shelyn Hansen made it 3-0 with a 17th minute goal off an assist from Bailey Hopkins. “That six minute stretch from the 11th minute to 17th minute was the best soccer we played all season,” Buckstaff said. Firth’s Fanny Hanson scored in the 37th minute to make it 3-1 at half- time. Teton’s Tsehaye Wells scored off a Crystal Moosman assist in the 58th minute and Tayler Arnold, who is the Redskins’ starting keeper, scored the final goal unassisted. “She played the entire second half as a forward,” Buckstaff said. “She’s a good athlete.” Although the Redskins got starting midfielder Jessica Naylor back from injury, Buckstaff said they lost sophomore CJ Hopkins after halftime to a broken collarbone. She collided with a player in the first half and continued to play until halftime, when she started feeling pain and then went to the hospital. Teton (7-2-3, 6-2-0) next plays Tuesday at home against South Fremont. Boys soccer SUGAR-SALEM 2, SOUTH FREMONT 0: At St. Anthony, the Diggers moved to 12-0-0 overall with a shutout conference win over South Fremont. A South Fremont own goal put Sugar-Salem up early in the first half and Josh Shirley scored the other goal in the second half. Sugar-Salem (5-0-0 conference) next plays Tuesday at home against Shelley. Volleyball MALAD TOURNAMENT: At Malad, the Dragons defeated Firth in the cham- pionship of the Malad Tournament 10-21, 22-20, 15-8. Firth cruised over Wendell 21-8, 21-9 to get to the final and maintained its hot play in the first set against Malad. But the Cougars couldn’t keep it going in. “I think we lost our focus,” Firth coach Carla Reeves said. “We have lots of things to work on in Monday’s practice.” Bailey Nelson led Firth with 53 kills and added 10 aces and six blocks. Ashley Sanders had 32 kills, Shall Taylor added 12, Kelsee Harrison had nine and Kellie Tucker had eight. Firth hosts Salmon on Tuesday for “Pink Night,” where fans are encour- aged to wear pink for brest cancer awareness. HIGH SCHOOL CROSS-COUNTRY MILE HIGH CLASSIC Saturday at Challis Hot Springs Boys team scores: 1. Skyline 54, 2. Shelley 69, 3. Blackfoot 71, 4. Sugar-Salem 116, 5. Jerome 126, 6. Salmon 175, 7. Snake River 187, 8. Challis 209, 9. Ririe 226, 10. Leadore 268 Boys individual results (top 50) 1, Austin Stewart, Shelley, 15:57.1. 2, Billy Godfrey, Salmon, 16:22.6. 3, Ryan Barna, Skyline, 16:53.9. 4, Joseph Van Orden, Snake River, 17:00.9. 5, David Searle, Shel- ley, 17:05.5. 6, Nick Barna, Skyline, 17:11.0. 7, Derek Thomas, Blackfoot, 17:16.6. 8, Dallon Suitter, Jerome, 17:18.2. 9, Nathaniel Nordquist, Jerome, 17:19.3. 10, Traegan Thomas, Blackfoot, 17:20.3. 11, James Ne- varez, Skyline, 17:20.3. 12, Kaden Hamblin, Sugar-Salem, 17:20.8. 13, Mark Crandall, Shelley, 17:22.5. 14, Chase Barrow, Shelley, 17:23.7. 15, Gregory Drake, Blackfoot, 17:28.5. 16, McKay Harms, Skyline, 17:33.7. 17, Benji Bigler, Blackfoot, 17:34.9. 18, Connor Olson, Skyline, 17:42.5. 19, Harrison Roberts, Skyline, 17:45.6. 20, Chet Ellsworth, Skyline, 17:46.6. 21, Luis Hernandez, Sug- ar-Salem, 17:49.7. 22, Niels Mitchell, Skyline, 17:57.2. 23, Cole Thomas, Blackfoot, 17:57.5. 24, Daniel Searcy, Sugar-Salem, 17:58.2. 25, Jacob Despain, Blackfoot, 18:01.8. 26, Kayl Williams, Snake River, 18:07.9. 27, Kendall Beyeler, Leadore, 18:08.2. 28, Alex Clegg, Jerome, 18:10.2. 29, Jared Meldrum, Skyline, 18:10.3. 30, Cory Anderson, Ririe, 18:15.9. 31, Nate Fogle, Sugar-Salem, 18:17.3. 32, Nathaniel Wheelwright, Blackfoot, 18:17.5. 33, Cameron Garner, Sugar-Salem, 18:17.6. 34, Joshua D’Orazio, Challis, 18:28.3. 35, James Anderson, North Fremont, 18:28.8. 36, Taylor Hill, Sugar-Salem, 18:28.9. 37, Brennan Anderson, Sugar-Salem, 18:29.3. 38, Kaden Brownlee, Butte County, 18:31.2. 39, Taft Harris, Skyline, 18:32.1. 40, Ty Redick, Challis, 18:33.2. 41, Brandon Win- ward, Shelley, 18:38.5. 42, Porter Ricks, West Jefferson, 18:47.7. 43, Braxton Stocking, Sugar-Salem, 18:54.2. 44, Cole Roylance, Salmon, 18:55.2. 45, Dylan Brewer, Salmon, 18:57.7. 46, Carlos Hernandez, Sugar-Salem, 18:57.9. 47, Tyler Williams, Jerome, 18:59.1. 48, Ammon Tolman, Salmon, 19:00.1. 49, Kaden Shaw, Ririe, 19:01.6. 50, Jake Cole, Skyline, 19:07.4. Girls team scores: 1. Shelley 49, 2. Jerome 80, 3. Salmon 84, 4. Sugar-Salem 94, 5. Blackfoot 108, 6. Skyline 119, 7. West Jefferson 164, 8. Snake River 196, 9. Ririe 271 Girls individual results (top 50) 1, Rachel Cannon, Blackfoot, 19:43.1. 2, Paytin Drollinger, Shelley, 19:50.1. 3, Shaylee Hill, Sugar-Salem, 19:51.2. 4, Cambria Hassell, Shelley, 20:01.1. 5, Danielle Barna, Skyline, 20:02.4. 6, Klarissa Andersen, Shelley, 20:03.0. 7, Abby Hurst, Blackfoot, 20:03.5. 8, Michelle Pratt, Blackfoot, 20:05.1. 9, Kathryn Craig, Jerome, 20:30.2. 10, Abigail Craig, Jerome, 20:38.5. 11, LeAnn Larkin, Shelley, 20:45.3. 12, Emily Stenlund, Salmon, 20:55.5. 13, Halli Olson, Skyline, 21:00.5. 14, Katie Jo Gebhardt, Salmon, 21:01.3. 15, Morgan Smith, Salmon, 21:02.3. 16, Rachel Leavitt, Jerome, 21:04.2. 17, Kaitlyn Burgess, Salmon, 21:19.2. 18, Chalyce Hirschi, South Fremont, 21:27.9. 19, Hanna Larson, Sug- ar-Salem, 21:37.7. 20, Indya Price, Sugar-Sa- lem, 21:40.4. 21, Allie Severe, West Jefferson, 21:50.6. 22, Tanisha Hiatt, Jerome, 22:04.0. 23, Kyra Trahant, Snake River, 22:24.4. 24, Emily Hart, Skyline, 22:25.6. 25, Nicole Cook, Jerome, 22:28.0. 26, Aylee Andersen, Shelley, 22:35.1. 27, Fallon Born, Salmon, 22:46.5. 28, Ashley Willis, Sugar-Salem, 22:54.2. 29, Whitney Taylor, Sugar-Salem, 23:07.2. 30, Rylee Mansfield, Grace, 23:09.3. 31, SuePrize Bishop, North Fremont, 23:09.4. 32, Meagan Tucker, Salmon, 23:12.2. 33, Ka- tie Purser, Sugar-Salem, 23:13.7. 34, Kaylee Newman, West Jefferson, 23:20.4. 35, Mailee Van Orden, Snake River, 23:27.0. 36, Emmy Jackson, Salmon, 23:29.7. 37, Bailey Palmer, North Fremont, 23:41.7. 38, Addi Newman, West Jefferson, 23:41.8. 39, Hannah Frew, Shelley, 23:49.3. 40, Torrie Pancheri, West Jefferson, 23:50.7. 41, Melanie Weeks, Chal- lis, 23:53.3. 42, Emma Danielson, Skyline, 23:58.9. 43, Carli Smith, Salmon, 24:02.1. 44, Joslyn Sommers, 24:03.3. 45, Rachel Cook, Jerome, 24:19.7. 46, Kelsie Despain, Black- foot, 24:22.6. 47, Brittany Winward, Shelley, 24:25.7. 48, Wylee Smith, Butte County, 24:27.7. 49, Karly Hill, Salmon, 24:29.1. 50, Jessica Jones, Skyline, 24:45.7. C2 Post Register Sunday, October 5, 2014 SPORTS LOCAL ROUNDUP Skyline boys, Shelley girls tops at Mile High Classic P reP S coreboard POST REGISTER again.” Luckily for Bair, his wife, Jordon, and their three girls, a couple college connections came through. Kelly and Azzinaro had moved from Oregon to the Philadelphia Eagles. They signed Bair in 2013. Bair was healthy again, but he was relegated to the Eagles’ practice squad that season. This past offseason, Bair changed his routine. He spent the summer training with the Eagles instead of going back to St. Anthony to see his family and tending to his businesses (he owns The Zone in Rexburg and has part ownership in a St. Anthony cattle farm). The work paid off. Bair made the active roster and has played in each of Philadelphia’s first four regular season games. In week one against Jack- sonville, he blocked a field goal. “I moved right into these games and I felt like that’s where I was supposed to be,” Bair said. “You have to kind of look back at it every once and a while and think about how neat it is and how great of an opportunity it is for me and my family.” Honoring the bet One day during Bair’s freshman year at Oregon, he handed Miller a $5 bill. “This kid is so tight with money, he squeaks,” Miller said. “So it really surprised me that he coughed up $5.” Miller wasn’t surprised, however, that he won the bet he made a decade earlier. Now, Miller gets to watch his stepson make plays on Sundays instead of dragging his feet on a bucking horse. Montana State,” Kramer said. “He is a very good player. He is smart and plays within himself.” The Eagles converted on a fourth-and-2 at the Idaho State 30 with 2 minutes left to secure the win. EWU (5-1, 2-0) finished with 617 yards. Adams threw for 354, Mario Brown ran for 126 and Kupp had 132 and three TDs on eight receptions. “Their offensive line is very good and that allows their quarterback to be unbelievable,” Kramer said. Idaho State (2-3, 1-1) had 614 yards. Arias threw for 421, Xavier Finney rushed for 118 and Madison Mangum had 132 and two scores on seven catches. The Bengals also ran for 193 yards, the fourth highest total since 2007. The 614 total yards was the third most for ISU since 2004. ISU From Page C1 hitters on our team. So we do other things.” The Royals led the majors with 153 stolen bases this season, and were such a threat on the base paths that Oakland manager Bob Melvin crafted his lineup to deal with their speed. It didn’t do a whole lot of good. The Royals wound up swiping seven bases in last Tuesday’s wild-card game, matching the record for a postseason game shared by the 1907 Cubs and 1975 Reds. And all those stolen bases proved invaluable, too, in what resulted in a 9-8, 12-inning victory. “That’s one of their strengths,” Melvin said. “It affected us, no doubt about it.” It’s not lost on Angels manager Mike Scioscia, either. “It’s the way their team is built,” he said. “One of their best tools is their ability to create on the base paths, and they do it as well as anybody I’ve seen. It’s reminiscent of the Cardinals back in ‘85 — maybe not quite to that extent, but that’s how they pressure teams.” By the way, those ‘85 Cardinals? They lost to the Royals in the World Series. All of this makes sense, too. The number of home runs this year fell by nearly 500 to 4,186 comparted to last year, according to STATS, and the number of runs scored also dropped by about 500. So many teams have had to get creative scoring runs, and that’s resulted in a return to small ball. years at Kansas, and three of the last four races there overall. Each time, he had arrived with high hopes. Each time, he left in frus- tration. “We’ll see how this time goes,” said Busch, who nearly backed his Nation- wide car into the wall during practice Friday. “There have been some times where we felt like we should have been faster some places this year and haven’t quite been, so no reason to think that Kansas being one of our worst tracks we can’t go there and try to run well.” Kansas hasn’t always been Busch’s personal house of horrors. He’s raced well at the track in the Truck Series and the Nationwide Series, and even this week he has been strong in practice. He’ll roll off Sunday from the seventh starting position. But when Busch hops into his Sprint Cup car, everything goes haywire. The wall seems to jump out and bite him, chewing up a big chunk of his title hopes along the way. Or some other misfortune hits, such as getting busted for speeding on pit road. Even when he’s managed to get to the checkered flag, Busch usually isn’t close to the front. His best finish at Kansas is just seventh, and that was in 2006. BUSCH From Page C1 Civil War tickets go on sale Tuesday Tickets for the annual Civil War high school foot- ball game between Bonne- ville and Hillcrest will go on sale Tuesday at the two high schools. Ticket sales will be held at the schools through noon Friday. The game is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Thunder Stadium. Gates open at 5 p.m. Cube Cyclocross set for Oct. 25 The City of Rexburg will host the Cube Cyclocross on Oct. 25 at Nature Park. Adult Divisions B and A will be at 11 a.m. and noon, respectively. A youth race begins at 10:30 a.m. To reg- ister, visit thecube.rexburg. org. I.F. youth hockey sign-ups open The Idaho Falls Youth Hockey Association is accepting registrations for players ages 5 to 18 for the 2014-2015 season. The opening informational meeting will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Skyline High School commons area and a gear/skate swap will be held at Play It Again Sports from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday. For information, visit www.ifyha.com. Firth volleyball to host Dig Pink Rally The Firth High School volleyball team will host the Dig Pink Rally begin- ning at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. The event will raise aware- ness and money to fight breast cancer. The Cougars have raised $1,200 in shirt sales this year. Fans are encouraged to wear pink to the game. Bonneville Wrestling Club sign-ups set Bonneville Wrestling club will hold sign-ups Oct. 20 at the Bonneville High School wrestling room from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. The Club is open to wrestlers prekindergarten through sixth grade. For informa- tion, call Travis Banks at 406-3379 or Zairrick Wad- sworth at 351-4649. Free ice skating lessons scheduled The Idaho Falls Parks and Recreation Department and the Idaho Falls Figure Skating Club will host a “It’s Great To Skate” event Sat- urday at the Marmo/Lehto Ice Arena in Idaho Falls. Free 30-minute lessons for all ages and skill levels will be offered at 12:15 p.m., 12:45 p.m. and 1:30 p.m., and a public skate will follow at 2 p.m. There will be a skate swap held in conjunction with the event. Sign up at www.ifrec.org, then arrive 15 minutes early to your lesson to check in. Adult Hockey team sign-ups open The Idaho Falls Adult Hockey League is taking sign-ups for the 2014-15 season. This is a USA Hockey affiliated, coed, no-check league open to players 18 and older. All skill levels are welcome. The season runs from Oct. 12 through mid-March. The cost is $40 for USA Hockey, $6 for affiliate fee, $210 for for the IFAHL player fee ($110 for IFAHL goalie fee). For information or to sign up, visit https:/ idahofallsadulthockey. sportngin.com/register form/072105436. Apple to host youth hoops clinics Barbara Ehardt, a former Division I women’s basket- ball coach for 15 years, will hold her annual basketball clinics beginning Thursday. The 10-week session meets Thursdays through Dec. 18, with various sessions for all ages beginning at 3:30 p.m. and running until 6 p.m. For information and brochures, contact Apple Athletic Club at529-8600, coach Ehardt at 403-6686 or visit www. AppleAthleticClub.com. Youth basketball league forming The Idaho Falls Parks and Recreation Department is excepting team registra- tions for its fall youth bas- ketball league. The league is open to boys and girls in grades one through six. The cost is $40 per player. Packets are available at the Rec Center or online at www.ifrec.org. For informa- tion, call 612-8480 or visit www.ifrec.org. LOCAL SPORTS BRIEFLY ROYALS From Page C1 From Page C1 BAIR Ben Margot / Associated Press Philadelphia’s Brandon Bair takes on the block of San Francisco’s Joe Staley during last week’s game in Santa Clara, Calif.
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