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Youth b-ball league taking sign-ups The EIBC League is taking sign-ups for seventh- and eighth-grade girls and eighth-grade boys basketball. The games start Oct. 18 and will be played on Saturdays at Rocky Mountain Middle School. Sign-ups for sixth- and sev- enth-grade boys will begin Jan. 3. For information or to sign up, call Evan Belnap at 520-2135 or email loann@ cableone.net. Miles for Montessori run scheduled The second annual Miles for Montessori is scheduled for 9 a.m. Sept. 27 at South Tourist Park in Idaho Falls. For informa- tion on the race or how to register, visit http://www. milesformontessori.com. Madison League b-ball sign-ups open The Madison Basket- ball League is now regis- tering teams for the fall season. The league is for boys teams from grades four through eight and girls teams from six through eight. Games will be played on weekdays. The cost is $360 per team for six games starting the first week of November. This is a com- petitive league preparing teams for the upcoming school season. For infor- mation, email madisonbas ketballleague@gmail.com or call George Wilson at 403-2818 or Preston Berry at 390-9880. From Post Register reports At Sugar-Salem, the Sug- ar-Salem High School boys soccer team took a 1-0 lead in the second minute and continued to add on for the final 78. The Diggers went on to beat Aberdeen 4-0 on Saturday, maintaining their undefeated record. Josh Shirley scored the first goal for Sugar-Salem, who moved several players into different positions on Saturday. “I’m trying to find dif- ferent alternatives for my team for when we face different teams,” Diggers coach Oscar Buscos said. Three of the players who changed positions scored the other three goals for Sugar-Salem. Carter Smith, who moved from defense to forward, scored in the fifth minute. Braxton Esplin (defense to forward) scored in the 28th. And Tanner Puzey (midfielder to sweeper) scored in the 72nd. Sugar-Salem (8-0-0, 3-0-0) plays Rigby at home on Monday. RIGBY 3, MINICO 0: At Rigby, the Trojans picked up their second straight win, dominating Minico from start to finish in a non- conference game. “We’re playing better each game,” Rigby coach Bart Mower said. Oscar Pantoja and Kyle Bichsel combined on the first two goals. On the first one, Bichsel’s initial shot was blocked, but he sent the rebound over to Pantoja who put it home. On the second one, Pantoja slipped a pass to Bichsel who found the back of the net. Gustav Aaderman, an exhange student from Sweden, scored the final goal when he rocketed a shot from 25 yards out. Mower also praised the play of central defender Mitchell Behunin. The Trojans (2-5-2, 1-2-1) play at Sugar-Salem on Monday. NORTH FREMONT 2, TETON 1: At Driggs, Gerardo Parreno scored off a rebound with 10 minutes left and North Fremont held on for a win when goalie Forrest Moon made a diving save in the final seconds. “It was a crazy, intense, rough game,” North Fremont coach Shane Jacobson said. Aaron Williams ran onto a through ball and beat the keeper in the eighth minute to give North Fremont the lead, but Teton tied it in the 62nd minute. Moon finished with 10 saves, five in each half. “He had a fantastic game,” Jacobson said. North Fremont (3-6-1, 2-3-0) plays at South Fremont on Tuesday. Girls soccer RIGBY 4, MINICO 0: At Rigby, Samantha Richins led the Trojans to their first win with two goals in the first half. Minico had given up about 10 goals per game going into Saturday. “It’s been 8-0, 10-0 on those guys and I didn’t want to do that to them,” said Rigby coach Marciano Perez, who moved several of his players around. “We just controlled the game, held position and got the goals we needed.” Erin Howard and Shyanne Smith scored the game’s other two goals. Rigby (1-7-1, 0-2-1) plays at Blackfoot on Wednesday. TETON 3, NORTH FREMONT 0: At Teton, Chandler Sachse played a huge role for the home team despite not scoring a goal. Sachse assisted Teton’s first goal (scored by Shelyn Hansen in the 36th minute) and the last (scored by Tsehaye Wells in the 80th minute). Sachse also made the second-to-last pass on Crystal Moosman’s goal in the 64th minute. “If you discount the game against Shelley, we’re doing outstanding on defense,” Teton coach Sandy Buckstaff said. Teton lost to Shelley 3-2 on Sept. 9. In its other seven games, Teton has given up one goal. Teton (6-1-1, 5-1-0) plays at Snake River on Thursday. SHELLEY 7, FIRTH 0: At Shelley, the Russets stayed undefeated with the blowout win over Firth. Shelley’s player of the game, Brittney Baron, scored two goals (11’, 43’), as did Kira Marlow (30’, 37’). Eden Anderson, Gwean Marlow and Tymber Tenerowicz scored the other three goals, all in the second half. “Our second half was a little stronger as far as ball control,” Shelley coach Jim Gregory said. “Overall, the girls played extremely well.” The Russets (7-0-1, 5-0-1) play Snake River at home on Tuesday. Volleyball WEST JEFFERSON 3, CLARK COUNTY 0: At West Jefferson, the Panthers earned their second win of the season by sweeping Clark County 25-16, 25-21, 25-15. Sierra McDonald had 12 kills for West Jefferson, while Kallee Nickerson had six kills and six aces. Jade Skidmore added 23 assists and four aces. West Jefferson (2-3, 0-2) hosts Challis on Tuesday. sneak to put Virginia up 7-0 only 1:06 into the game. Hill connected with Jordan Leslie for an 8-yard TD toss, knotting the score 10-10. Virginia regained the lead on Frye’s second field goal, this one from 41 yards. On the Cavaliers next pos- session, however, BYU’s Robertson Daniel picked off a Lambert pass near midfield and returned it 36 yards. But all the Cougars could get from the turnover was a 37-yard field goal by Samson. A 22-yard field goal by Frye gave Virginia a 16-13 lead at the break. Hill gave BYU its first lead at 20-16 when he broke a tackle near the 10-yard line and then carried another Cavalier the final 5 yards of a 15-yard TD run. BYU’s run game finally found its form on the Cougars next drive with Hill and Jamaal Williams combining for 57 rushing yards of a 73-yard scoring drive that put the Cougars up 27-16. Williams capped the drive with a 2-yard TD run. After holding Virginia to another Frye field goal, a 46 yarder, Hill burned the Cavaliers again when he avoided a sack, rolled right and found Mitch Juergens behind the defenders for a 50-yard TD reception. Virginia made things interesting with Kahlek Shepherd’s 9-yard TD run to cut BYU’s lead to 34-26 with 8:06 remaining. The momentum was short lived, however, Hine took the ensuing kickoff and raced right up the middle for a score. “Between Taysom Hill and Adam Hine and what was happening there with that combination … that kind of kept us separated,” BYU coach Bronco Men- denhall said. C2 Post Register Sunday, September 21, 2014 SPORTS reputation as one of the game’s best slot receivers should even bother playing anymore. “I appreciate their concern, I really do,” said elker, who has 841 catches for 9,358 yards. “But at the same time, I feel great. I feel sharp and I feel ready to go.” An NFL player’s assess- ment of his own health is one of the most important factors in determining when he returns. It’s also a reason the NFL has no hard-and-fast rules about saying, for instance, that three concussions in less than 12 months should rule a player out. “It would create a tre- mendous disincentive to report that third concus- sion,” says Chris Nowinski, a driving force behind research on the topic. “You really want to leave the decision in the hands of a great doctor and an honest patient and let them make the best decision for that athlete.” The 5-foot-9, 185-pound elker has been going over the middle and taking punishment for decades — in high school, at Texas Tech, and with three NFL teams. But he passed the NFL’s revamped return-to-play protocols established in 2009; independent doctors cleared him to play after comparing his brain func- tion to the “baseline” numbers established in pre-training camp tests that look at memory, concen- tration and other cognitive functions. It is an inexact, still- evolving science, but the doctors say he’s ready to be back on the field, using a new, bigger helmet. Ultimately, it’s a deci- sion every player with a head injury makes for himself. Former Titans tight end Frank Wycheck got two concussions in the span of a month in 2003, missed six games, then finished the season. But Wycheck then made the difficult decision to retire, even though he was under contract and had the talent to continue playing. Like Wycheck, Welker is still in search of a Super Bowl ring. “The physical stuff you can’t hide from,” Wycheck said. “If you have lingering effects and you go back into a game, from all my reading and studying on it, … it could prove to be fatal. And I would hate for him to put himself in that situation just to chase a ring.” A ring. Fame. Money. Fans. Teammates. That all drives players to keep going, even when common sense dictates otherwise. “You don’t want to let your teammates down,” said Dr. Alex Valadka, who consults Major League Baseball and is the CEO of the Seton Brain and Spine Institute. “It doesn’t matter if you’re somebody who’s sitting on a bench as a third-stringer or you’re a star athlete making mil- lions and millions a year.” There is a growing and persuasive catalog of the devastation head injuries can cause: suicides by ex-players such as Junior Seau and Dave Duerson, whose brains revealed signs of a disease associated with multiple concussions; last week, data released by the NFL in connection with concussion lawsuits esti- mated that nearly three in 10 retired players would be expected to develop Alz- heimer’s disease or at least moderate dementia. “If you have an ankle injury and you rehab it and you’re 100 percent, then you should be allowed to return to play,” said Richard Figler, co-medical director of the Cleveland Clinic Concussion Center. “With a brain injury, the question is: Is that 100 percent the true 100 percent?” she has a hand in all of this.” Keely Lance’s generosity has continued to support the Rigby Wranglers more than two years after her death. Along with Alpine 4-H club and Miss Teen Rodeo Idaho, the Rigby Wranglers have received portions of the proceeds raised by the rodeo every year since its inception in 2012. The proceeds go into a scholarship fund in Keely Lance’s name, and have provided the Rigby Wran- glers with a bus, athletic equipment and money for travel expenses. Cutler said the proceeds have relieved the Rigby Wranglers of much finan- cial burden, and she hopes to add the “Cowboys and Angels” wings and hat logo to the bus. She, too, got to know Keely Lance, who was her son’s senior prom date. “She had a blast with all of us,” Cutler said. “This earth lost a great soul. When (Kristy) told us part of the (rodeo) proceeds would go to us, I was pretty tearful.” Just as thankful for opportunities made pos- sible in Keely Lance’s memory is Kylee Finn, who won the first scholarship awarded in Lance’s name in 2013. A cowgirl since age 7, she participated in women’s bull riding, barrel racing and slack team roping Saturday. Finn met Lance when she was 9 years old, and that first impression was a lasting one. “My little sister did a queen contest and she lost,” Finn said. “Keely brought her a crown for her own.” A Ririe High School junior, Finn won the 2013-14 Idaho High School Rodeo Association queen title and advanced to the National High School Finals Rodeo. She has competed on Lance’s horse, Spinner, for the past two years and did the tribute to Keely Lance at last year’s memorial rodeo wearing all white with angel wings. “It was pretty cool,” Finn said. “It was even cooler because after we did (the tribute), the picture got shared so much, it was done in a rodeo in Texas and they sent it back to my mom.” Finn said she and her family shed tears when she won the scholarship, but she has had several happy moments since then. She helps with the scholarship fund and strives to be the example Keely Lance left her. “Always be nice to everyone,” Finn said. “If you always smile, you can change somebody’s day.” Live like Keely Cheering loud in Barrus’ fan section Saturday was Alli Furniss, also a 2012 Rigby High School grad- uate and former Trojans basketball player. Because of her aca- demic and basketball com- mitments to the College of Southern Idaho, where she graduated from in the spring, Furniss was unable to attend the rodeo until Saturday. “It’s so hard having her not be here,” Furniss said. “She loved rodeo and loved horses.” Visible on the hands of Furniss and Barrus is something that has helped them and Keely Lance’s other close friends and rel- atives through the past two years — a ring that forms an angel in the shape of a heart. They’ve worn those matching rings ever since Keely Lance’s funeral, when they all put them on before the casket closed, and bought Kristy a neck- lace of the same design. “Keely has one, too,” Barrus said. “We put one on her hand before they buried her. I wear it all the time. I sleep in it.” “Just looking at it, we know we have Keely with us,” Furniss said. Although they’ve grown up quite a bit in two years — Barrus graduates from BYU-Idaho’s nursing program in December and Furniss will enroll at BYU-I next spring — the remain tight. They still get together to play basketball, although Furniss said it is hard without Keely, who was their best post. They still visit the Lances. Most of all, they aspire to make their inspiring friend proud as they face their futures. “She was an amazing friend to everyone,” Furniss said. “I always like to think, ‘what would Keely be doing with her life?’ She always had her life planned out. I want to make my life worth it.” Pat Sutphin / psutphin@postregister.com Tanner Butner takes off out of the gate for a saddle bronc ride that scores him 81 points Saturday during the Keely Lance Memorial Scholarship Rodeo at the Rigby Rodeo Grounds. Diggers dump Aberdeen, remain perfect POST REGISTER HIGH SCHOOL ROUNDUP WELKER From Page C1 BYU From Page C1 From Page C1 RODEO LOCAL SPORTS BRIEFLY
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