Indiana State | Archive | August, 2006

Photo Diary: Carmel wins (the game and our All-Sports Trophy)!

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Friday Night Football: 5A No. 2 Ben Davis survives 5A No. 3 Penn's monumental comeback, 35-32, in OT


By Brandon Jones
Running Sports Coordinator

pic
Penn’s Steven Depositar scores to give Penn an early lead.
 
Photo by Brian Drumm,
Triple Play Photo

INDIANAPOLIS
â??? With just over two minutes remaining in the third quarter of its
annual battle against Class 5A second-ranked Ben Davis, it appeared
that fellow 5A perennial powerhouse Penn would be in for a long night,
and an even longer drive back up U.S. 31 to Mishawaka.

Ben Davis running back LaVarus Williams had just plunged in for his
second touchdown of the evening (to go along with one receiving TD
earlier), and the host Giants appeared well on their way to closing the
door on their third-ranked rival from Northern Indiana.

And why not?The Giants had just scored 29 consecutive points to take
a monstrous 29-7 lead and, with just over 14 minutes of football to be
played, one had to think this one was in the bag. Right?

(The yearâ??s first Lee Corso alert!) Not so fast, my friend!

&&&&

The Giants had built that lead by taking advantage of four Kingsmen
turnovers that resulted in great field position, allowing Ben Davis to
break open a 7-7 halftime tie in a big way.

pic
Penn’s Jason Wright (19) leaves
a rooster tail of that ground-up
tire stuff that lurks beneath Field Turf as he is dragged toward
paydirt by Williams.  
Photo by Brian Drumm,
Triple Play Photo

First,
Pennâ??s Steve Depositar fumbled on the Kingsmenâ??s third play from
scrimmage in the second half. Ben Davis took over on the Penn 46-yard
line, and Giants junior quarterback MarQueis Gray juked his way through
the Kingsmen defense two plays later en route to a 54-yard touchdown
romp.

Four thousand of the more than 7,000 fans in attendance were on
their feet, and the place with the new green-and-purple Field Turf was
rocking.

After forcing a punt on Pennâ??s next possession, Ben Davis went back
to work, capping off a six-play, 68-yard drive with another long score.
Williams caught a Gray pass over the middle, split two defenders and
found paydirt from 37 yards out.

All the momentum was now on the side of the purple-clad Giants, who
now led 21-7 and were not yet finished with their third-period
pyrotechnic performance.

Another fumble by the Kingsmen â??? this one from running back Brady
Iams â??? allowed Ben Davis to set up shop at the Penn 16. Fullback
Cahmelan Porter surged into the end zone from four yards out four plays
later, and after a two-point conversion it was now 29-7 with 1:28
remaining in the third.

That was the final straw for the coaches from Warren Central, who
apparently had seen enough. First-year head man Steve Tutsie and his
assistants exited stage left, and many of the Kingsmen faithful could
not have been far behind.

But that is why they play the games, folks.

Pennâ??s offense, which had dropped 61 points on Valparaiso the week
prior, went to work, finally showing some flashes of brilliance.

The passing attack was the means of offense as quarterback Nick Keim
found his favorite target, wide receiver Caleb Laidig, on a 14-yard
scoring strike 34 seconds into the final stanza. That capped off a
five-play, 69-yard drive for the visitors, and these two were just
getting warmed up.

After forcing a Giant punt, Penn once again went to work. Two big
receptions (one by Laidig, the other by tight end Joey Hardman) put the
Kingsmen on the Giantsâ?? 20 with just over seven minutes remaining.

Keim then found another one of his favorite targets in 6â??4â? senior
Brandon Miller, who scored on a 21-yard slant pass over the middle as
he burned two Giant would-be tacklers. Matt Stines converted another
extra-point kick, and the Kingsmen now trailed just 29-21 with 6:27 to
go.

pic
Penn QB Nick Keim unloads a pass under pressure from a
Ben Davis defender during the Kingsmen’s furious rally.
 
Photo by Brian Drumm,
Triple Play Photo

All
the momentum now rode with the â??Gold Rush,â? and the Penn defense
responded in kind. After surrendering a first down, Penn stopped Ben
Davis on its own 42, at which point the Ben Davis punting unit took the
field â?¦ and self-destructed.

The ball was snapped over the punterâ??s head and, though he did
manage to avoid it being blocked, it went off the side of his foot for
a net punt of one yard. Penn took over, and what else would you expect?

The first play was a 16-yard reception by Laidig on a beautiful
touch pass by Keim. After a four-yard scramble by Keim, a questionable
pass interference call then put Penn on the BD 12. A halfback draw by
Iams resulted in a 12-yard touchdown, and Pennâ??s side of the field
absolutely erupted.

Penn trailed 29-27 and had to make a two-point conversion for its
miraculous fourth-quarter run to mean anything. The subsequent corner
fade to the 6â??5â? Laidig fell into the seniorâ??s hands as he reached over
a Giant cornerback some eight inches shorter.

The game was now tied with just over one minute remaining, and Ben
Davis came out like a wounded dog, sitting on the clock and settling
for overtime.

Penn got its chance first, and the Kingsmen went backwards. Iams
lost three yards on the first play from scrimmage, and that was
followed by two incomplete passes from Keim. The three-and-out
possession forced a 30-yard field goal attempt by Stines from the left
hash mark, who drained it for Pennâ??s first lead since Depositarâ??s
four-yard run got Penn on the board early in the first quarter.

But the late lead would not last long. After an illegal procedure
penalty, the Giants began backed up to the Penn 15. On the next play,
Porter busted nearly untouched up the middle for the game-winning
touchdown.

â??He told me, ‘Coach, give me the ball on the first play and I’m going to score,â?? â? said Ben Davis coach Tom Allen.

Final score: Ben Davis 35, Penn 32. Instant classic.

Gray led the Giantsâ?? rushing attack with 95 yards on 15 carries,
with Porter adding another 65 on 10 totes. Williams caught three passes
for 65 yards. For Penn, Keim ended up 15 of 22 for 186 yards and one
interception, while Laidig grabbed six balls for 72 yards.

If these two teams are fortunate enough to make it to the RCA Dome
come Thanksgiving, think the encore will be talked about much?

So what do you think? Share your thoughts in our Football forum.

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SCOREBOARD: Week 2

Here are
your results from Week 2 of the 2006 Indiana
high school football season, courtesy of John Harrellâ??s splendid website:

Aug. 26
Indianapolis Cathedral
38
Detroit Renaissance (Mich.)
0
Lawrence North
21
Evansville Reitz
14
Warren
Central
61
Maine South (Ill.)
12
Muncie Central
28
Muncie South
6
Gary
West
56
Chicago Englewood (Ill.)
6

Aug. 25
49
0
27
6
13
6
33
21
43
0
21
0
35
32
overtime
13
7
21
10
14
7
19
6
22
21
42
18
35
22
24
8
38
8
13
10
47
31
20
13
12
6
25
20
57
42
42
26
39
9
15
13
40
7
34
20
24
13
27
20
29
0
35
6
41
28
East
Richland (Ill.)
42
8
55
0
33
19
35
13
42
0
22
15
21
14
50
0
55
0
28
13
18
15
35
14
29
8
55
8
28
27
overtime
30
27
47
24
36
7
34
7
35
34
overtime
42
39
42
6
42
21
54
7
Henderson County (Ky.)
16
13
81
7
37
21
28
6
45
0
49
7
39
8
40
35
28
27
21
14
55
8
21
19
30
0
24
12
35
14
42
14
58
0
47
0
60
6
38
0
41
20
42
13
33
7
35
0
38
0
42
0
Louisville Waggener (Ky.)
13
0
63
6
20
17
53
23
26
0
35
18
56
6
29
6
30
20
22
Harrisburg (Ill.)
14
24
21
34
27
49
6
32
14
21
14
33
14
20
14
19
7
69
14
20
6
7
6
15
0
29
20
28
12
42
0
75
0
14
6
34
0
35
27
27
21
28
12
48
6
55
7
62
14
41
27
27
0
44
26
27
26
16
14
39
7
47
6
18
17
30
12
28
6
21
14
42
7
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They don't get no respect: Hoosier Authority's Week 1 Underrated poll


By Mike McGraw
Executive Director

Everybody
ranks the top teams (and we will, also, as the season goes along), but it takes
a brave band of brothers to rate the Rodney Dangerfields of the world. Iâ??m
talking about those teams that just canâ??t seem to get any respect despite their
great performances.

Each week,
the intrepid staff at HA will bicker, argue, shout, and probably throw a few
things at each other, but we will come up with such a list. Here, then, is the
Week 1 Most Underrated poll:

1.
Fort Wayne
Concordia Lutheran: The Cadets may fall flat on their
faces as the season goes along, but come on. THEY BEAT SNIDER!

2.
Columbus North:
It remains to be seen how good
Seymour is going to be, but last year the Owls were among the best the Hoosier
Hills had to offer. Last week, Columbus North throttled them. Weâ??re not sure
North scored 48 points all of last year. Now they are doing it in one game.

3.
Mooresville:
The Pioneers have one down year
and everyone says Decatur Central will dominate the Mid-State. Think again.

4.
NorthWood:
Letâ??s see here. The Panthers were
ranked second in the preseason, lose by an eyelash to last yearâ??s 2A state champ
on the road, and drop to sixth. Give me a break.

5.
Evansville
North: The Huskies may still have a ways
to go, but they are even better than people thought they would be.

6.
Hamilton
Heights: These Huskies beat a ranked Tipton
team 48-0 last week. They may not be the sacrificial lamb Carmel is hoping for on Friday.

7.
New Prairie:
People say LaPorte is way down
this year, but the Cougars still beat a 5A Duneland team. Jimtown may have its
hands full in the Northern
State this year.

8.
Culver Academies:
Something has to give on Friday
night when the Eagles go up against Northwood.

9.
South Bend St.
Josephâ??s:
The Indians beat Mishawaka in Week 1, which
means they at least regain the title of best of the rest in the Northern
Indiana behind Penn.

10. Lebanon: The
Tigers throttled Indianapolis Northwest and are coached by a Wright. Does something
sound familiar?

So
what do
you
think? Share your thoughts in our Football forum.

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Week 2: Big games


By E. Shawn Aylsworth

Managing Editor
 
According
to the Sagarin power ratings, there are 29 big games on tap in Week 2 of the
2006 Indiana
high school football season. Following is a look at 10 of the really big showdowns
as well as the pertinent pre-game numbers taken from John Harrellâ??s wonderful
site.
 
Donâ??t
forget to check back Saturday for a look back at all the action!
 
Northern Indiana
The four
big battles that take place up north all feature teams playing a same-class
opponent, meaning they may see each other down the line in the playoffs.
(PLAYOFFS?!?! Did you say PLAYOFFS?!!!!?)
 
In 5A, 13th-ranked
Homestead
travels to No. 20 Warsaw in a tilt featuring a pair of 1-0 schools as well as
two third-year coaches. The series has been extremely even, too, with the host
Tigers having won four of the last seven, including a 17-14 squeaker a year
ago.
 
Defending 3A
state champion NorthWood â??? fresh off a heartbreaking defeat at defending 2A
state champ Jimtown â??? hits the road once again, this time landing at No. 16
Culver Academies (1-0). The Panthers have won the last three in the series,
including a 24-17 nail biter in last yearâ??s sectional.
 
The 2A
biggie pits 1-0 Knox at 10th-ranked North Judson (1-0), where a win
would be HYOOGE for the visiting Redskins, who earned one lone point in this
weekâ??s coaches poll to sit at No. 17. North Judson has owned this series by
winning 11 of the last 13, including a 59-12 mauling in last yearâ??s sectional.
 
Finally,
the Class A showdown finds No. 11 South Newton visiting No. 14 Frontier in
another duel of 1-0 teams. A year ago it was South Newton
coming out on top 35-20, and the Rebels have a slight 6-5 lead in this series
over the last 10 years.
 
Central Indiana
The middle of the
state brings us two same-class showdowns and two inter-class battles. First,
the similar games â?¦
 
The stateâ??s
marquee clash comes on the far-westside of Indianapolis, where second-ranked Ben Davis (1-0)
welcomes No. 3 Penn (1-0). The host Giants own a 2-1 lead in the series where Class
5A state championships are concerned, and Ben Davis has won nine of the last 11
overall, including a surprisingly easy 20-0 blanking in Mishawaka a year ago. Our Brandon Jones will be on hand to bring us the story.
 
The stateâ??s
biggest 4A battle, meanwhile, goes down in Lebanon, where the resurgent Tigers
host perennial power Mooresville in another joust between 1-0 squads. The
Pioneers have won six of the last 10 in the series, but it was Lebanon that
prevailed in 24-23 overtime thriller a year ago. Yours truly will be in the
heart of Boone County for what I sincerely hope is a
suitable sequel!
 
In what promises
to be the latest installment of The Bartholomew County War, 4A No. 2 Columbus
East (1-0) rolls across town to visit 5A No. 15 Columbus North (1-0). The last
two seasons this game has come down to a final shot at the end zone by North
with the clock melting away, and both times the Bull Dogs have come up empty-handed,
including last yearâ??s 28-24 doozie. Bubba Harnist makes the trek to Columbus to describe this
potential classic.
 
Finally, chauffeur
Josh Ember wheels the Hoosier Authority Fan Wagon onto Carmelâ??s campus, where the 5A 10th-ranked
Greyhounds (0-1) host 3A No. 5 Hamilton Heights. The 1st Annual
All-Sports Trophy gets presented to Carmel at halftime amid shooting T-shirts
and assorted hoopla, so the Greyhounds â??? a 31-21 winner a year ago in the
seriesâ?? first-ever game â??? better stay focused against Heightsâ?? high-powered
offense.
 
Southern Indiana
Both the southern
showdowns feature games between classes and are highlighted by a pair of highly
regarded 4A teams.
 
In the Pocket City,
4A No. 11 Evansville Central plays host to 3A seventh-ranked Evansville Mater
Dei in a Vanderburgh
County
battle of 1-0
schools. The offensive-minded Bears have got to be drooling at the prospects of
reversing a series trend thatâ??s seen Mater Dei win nine of the last 10,
including a 20-6 victory a year ago.
 
And finally (no,
really, we mean it), 4A traditional powerhouse Jasper (1-0 and ranked fourth in
this weekâ??s coaches poll) cruises just south on U.S. 231 to Huntingburg for its
annual rivalry game with 2A Southridge (0-1), which held Evansville Central to
just 28 points last week. The vaunted Wildcats have won eight of the last 10 in
the series, including last seasonâ??s 27-7 victory.
 
The games:

GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET, Stanley Stadium.
COACHES:
Dave Shelbourne,
33-14 in 5th year at Avon, 183-125 in 30th
year overall. Bo Belden, 18-45 in 7th year at Westfield.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Avon, 85.36, 14th overall, 10th in
Class 5A. Westfield,
72.31, 54th overall, 19th in Class 4A.
LAST
MEETING:
Avon, 63-21, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Avon, 6-0.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm CT,
The Boneyard.
COACHES:
John Snyder,
27-28 in 6th year at Chesterton, 29-35 in 7th year overall. Russ Radtke,
123-41 in 14th year at Griffith,
242-96 in 30th year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Chesterton, 71.93, 57th overall, 25th in Class 5A. Griffith, 70.14, 63rd overall, 10th in
Class 3A.
LAST
MEETING:
Griffith, 56-7, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Chesterton,
2-1.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Max Andress Field.
COACHES:
Bob Gaddis,
41-18 in 6th year at Columbus East, 159-118 in 27th year overall. Tim Bless,
40-28 in 7th year at Columbus North, 52-37 in 9th year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Columbus East, 86.05, 13th overall, 3rd in Class 4A. Columbus North,
84.58, 15th overall, 11th in Class 5A.
LAST
MEETING:
Columbus East, 28-24, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Columbus North, 6-4.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET, Danville.
COACHES:
Rex Ryker, 14-20
in 4th year at Crawfordsville. Terry Siddall, 0-1 in 1st year at Danville, 36-32 in 7th
year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Danville, 66.59, 89th overall, 16th in
Class 3A. Crawfordsville, 60.96, 118th overall, 20th in Class 3A.
LAST
MEETING:
Crawfordsville,
35-28, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Danville, 7-1.
GAME
TIME:
7:30 pm
ET, Kelso Stadium.
COACHES:
Grant Zgunda,
81-17 in 9th year at Delta, 118-29 in 14th year overall. Doug Armstrong,
31-18 in 5th year at New Palestine, 33-36 in 7th year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Delta, 74.19, 49th overall, 15th in Class 4A. New Palestine, 67.61, 80th overall, 12th in
Class 3A.
LAST
MEETING:
Delta,
16-0, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Delta,
10-1.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Shireman Field.
COACHES:
Don Stonefield,
38-14 in 5th year at East Central. Mike McClure, 5-6 in 2nd year at Franklin.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
East Central, 71.72, 58th overall, 20th in Class 4A. Franklin, 64.17, 99th
overall, 29th in Class 4A.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
No
meetings.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm CT,
Central Stadium.
COACHES:
Mike Goebel,
94-23 in 10th year at Evansville Mater Dei. Mike Owen, 93-112 in 21st year at
Evansville Central.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Evansville Mater Dei, 75.13, 43rd overall, 8th in Class 3A.
Evansville Central, 69.32, 67th overall, 22nd in Class 4A.
LAST
MEETING:
Evansville Mater Dei, 20-6, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Evansville Mater Dei, 9-1.
GAME
TIME:
8 pm ET,
Red Pride Field.
COACHES:
Larry Mattingly,
26-40 in 7th year at Evansville Memorial. Brian Woodard, 1-0 in 1st year at Plainfield.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Plainfield, 83.22, 19th overall, 5th in
Class 4A. Evansville Memorial, 67.57, 81st overall, 13th in Class 3A.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
No
meetings.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Royal Stadium.
COACHES:
Rick Wimmer, 0-1
in 1st year at Fishers, 164-84 in 24th year overall. Rob Cutter, 96-35 in
12th year at Hamilton Southeastern, 126-50 in 16th year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Hamilton Southeastern, 103.71, 1st overall, 1st in Class 5A.
Fishers, 45.66, 208th overall, 61st in Class 5A.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
No
meetings.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Spuller Stadium.
COACHES:
Dean Doerffler,
30-30 in 6th year at Fort Wayne Concordia, 90-66 in 15th year overall. Ernie
Bojrab, 8-14 in 3rd year at Fort Wayne Northrop.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Fort Wayne Concordia, 80.9, 23rd overall, 3rd in Class 3A. Fort
Wayne Northrop, 75.43, 40th overall, 19th in Class 5A.
LAST
MEETING:
Fort Wayne Northrop, 30-21, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Fort Wayne Northrop, 7-2.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET, Harding.
COACHES:
Russ Isaacs,
163-26 in 16th year at Fort Wayne Snider. Sherwood Haydock, 41-31 in 7th year
at Harding, 99-96 in 19th year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Fort Wayne Snider, 72.07, 56th overall, 24th in Class 5A. Harding, 70.05,
64th overall, 3rd in Class 2A.
LAST
MEETING:
Fort Wayne Snider, 51-22, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Fort Wayne Snider, 8-1.
GAME
TIME:
7:30 pm
ET, The Reservation.
COACHES:
Brett Colby,
72-40 in 11th year at Frankfort,
108-63 in 17th year overall. Brad Urban, 1-0 in 1st year at Twin Lakes,
52-40 in 9th year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Frankfort, 68.4, 72nd overall, 11th in
Class 3A. Twin Lakes, 59.91, 122nd overall, 22nd in
Class 3A.
LAST
MEETING:
Twin Lakes, 28-2, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Twin Lakes, 3-1.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Panther Field.
COACHES:
John Fallis, 0-1
in 1st year at Hagerstown,
155-126 in 27th year overall. Bob Prescott, 0-1 in 1st year at Knightstown,
16-17 in 4th year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Knightstown, 48.39, 197th overall, 12th in Class 1A. Hagerstown, 45.59, 209th
overall, 13th in Class 1A.
LAST
MEETING:
Knightstown,
56-0, sectional, Oct. 21, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Knightstown,
7-5.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Greyhound Stadium.
COACHES:
Steve Stirn,
65-31 in 9th year at Hamilton Heights, 80-45 in 12th year overall. Mo
Moriarity, 7-6 in 2nd year at Carmel,
190-48 in 22nd year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Carmel, 87.31, 10th overall, 9th in
Class 5A. Hamilton
Heights, 76.57, 36th
overall, 7th in Class 3A.
LAST
MEETING:
Carmel, 31-21, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Carmel, 1-0.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Fisher Field (WCYT, 91.1 FM; ESPN, 1480 AM).
COACHES:
Chad Zolman, 16-8 in 3rd year at Homestead. Troy Akers, 11-10 in 3rd year at
Warsaw.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Homestead, 74.41, 47th overall, 20th in
Class 5A. Warsaw,
74.22, 48th overall, 21st in Class 5A.
LAST
MEETING:
Warsaw, 17-14, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Warsaw, 4-3.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Flash Dome (WXLW, 950 AM).
COACHES:
Bruce Scifres,
167-40 in 17th year at Indianapolis Roncalli. Lance Scheib, 34-19 in 6th year
at Franklin Central, 84-58 in 15th year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Franklin Central, 87.73, 9th overall, 8th in Class 5A. Indianapolis
Roncalli, 83.22, 20th overall, 6th in Class 4A.
LAST
MEETING:
Indianapolis Roncalli, 33-7, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Indianapolis Roncalli, 8-2.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Western Boone.
COACHES:
Ott Hurrle,
96-69 in 15th year at Indianapolis Scecina, 97-78 in 16th year overall. Jeff
Pearson, 128-111 in 22nd year at Western Boone.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Western Boone, 66.75, 86th overall, 6th in Class 2A. Indianapolis
Scecina, 62.21, 110th overall, 13th in Class 2A.
LAST
MEETING:
Western
Boone, 31-0, sectional, Oct. 21, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Western
Boone, 4-1.
GAME
TIME:
7:30 pm
CT, Raider Field (WBDC, 100.9 FM).
COACHES:
Tony Ahrens,
29-9 in 4th year at Jasper. Kelly Murphy, 5-7 in 2nd year at Southridge,
35-50 in 9th year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Jasper, 70.75, 60th overall, 21st in Class 4A. Southridge, 63.94,
100th overall, 10th in Class 2A.
LAST
MEETING:
Jasper,
27-7, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Jasper,
8-2.
GAME
TIME:
7:30 pm
ET, Knepp Field.
COACHES:
Justin Bogunia,
54-40 in 9th year at John Glenn. Bill Sharpe, 267-50 in 27th year at Jimtown.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Jimtown, 86.33, 12th overall, 1st in Class 2A. John Glenn, 57.04,
138th overall, 19th in Class 2A.
LAST
MEETING:
Jimtown,
34-0, sectional, Oct. 28, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Jimtown,
11-0.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm CT,
Liberty Field.
COACHES:
Steve Snodgrass,
4-17 in 3rd year at Knox. Kevin Cox, 38-13 in 5th year at North Judson.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
North Judson, 64.81, 95th overall, 7th in Class 2A. Knox, 53.79,
157th overall, 23rd in Class 2A.
LAST
MEETING:
North
Judson, 59-12, sectional, Oct. 21, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
North
Judson, 11-2.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Eagles Stadium.
COACHES:
Kevin O’Shea,
53-34 in 9th year at McCutcheon, 92-52 in 14th year overall. Larry McWhorter,
98-27 in 11th year at Zionsville.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Zionsville, 74.61, 46th overall, 14th in Class 4A. McCutcheon,
73.61, 50th overall, 16th in Class 4A.
LAST
MEETING:
Zionsville,
34-21, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Zionsville,
4-3.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Lancer Field.
COACHES:
Reggie Glon,
75-54 in 13th year at Mishawaka Marian. Brian Stultz, 1-0 in 1st year at LaVille.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Mishawaka Marian, 55.18, 150th overall, 29th in Class 3A. LaVille,
40.81, 233rd overall, 24th in Class 1A.
LAST
MEETING:
Mishawaka Marian, 37-0, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Mishawaka Marian, 1-0.
GAME
TIME:
7:30 pm
ET, Lebanon.
COACHES:
Mark Bless,
77-44 in 12th year at Mooresville, 116-58 in 17th year overall. Kent Wright,
27-25 in 6th year at Lebanon.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Lebanon, 76.65, 34th overall, 11th in
Class 4A. Mooresville, 73.31, 51st overall, 17th in Class 4A.
LAST
MEETING:
Lebanon, 24-23, overtime, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Mooresville,
6-4.
GAME
TIME:
7:30 pm
ET, Oliver Field.
COACHES:
Rich Dodson,
145-38 in 15th year at NorthWood. Andy Dorrel, 42-43 in 9th year at Culver Academy.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
NorthWood, 83.27, 18th overall, 1st in Class 3A. Culver Academy,
66.7, 87th overall, 15th in Class 3A.
LAST
MEETING:
NorthWood,
24-17, sectional, Oct. 28, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
NorthWood,
3-0.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Giants Stadium (WBDG, 90.9 FM).
COACHES:
Cory Yeoman,
36-7 in 4th year at Penn. Tom Allen, 17-8 in 3rd year at Ben Davis, 25-11 in
4th year overall.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Penn, 88.66, 7th overall, 6th in Class 5A. Ben Davis, 75.75, 38th
overall, 17th in Class 5A.
LAST
MEETING:
Ben
Davis, 20-0, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Ben
Davis, 9-2.
GAME
TIME:
7:30 pm
ET, Falcon Field.
COACHES:
Chris Bell, 50-55
in 11th year at South Newton, 57-74 in 14th
year overall. Greg Martz, 19-35 in 6th year at Frontier.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Frontier, 50.85, 179th overall, 8th in Class 1A. South
Newton, 42.46, 228th overall, 21st in Class 1A.
LAST
MEETING:
South Newton, 35-20, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
South Newton, 6-5.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm CT,
Patriot Field (WAXL, 103.3 FM).
COACHES:
John Elliott,
3-8 in 2nd year at Tell
City. Bob Clayton,
263-60 in 29th year at Heritage Hills.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Heritage Hills, 81.9, 21st overall, 2nd in Class 3A. Tell City,
58.21, 135th overall, 18th in Class 2A.
LAST
MEETING:
Heritage
Hills, 34-0, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Heritage
Hills, 11-0.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET, Indiana State.
COACHES:
Chris Barrett,
19-27 in 5th year at Terre Haute North, 47-59 in 11th year overall. Jay
Engle, 29-73 in 11th year at Terre Haute South.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
Terre Haute North, 77.98, 30th overall, 16th in Class 5A. Terre
Haute South, 70.67, 61st overall, 27th in Class 5A.
LAST
MEETING:
Terre Haute South, 24-21, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Terre Haute North, 9-5.
GAME
TIME:
7 pm ET,
Owens Memorial Field (WLHM, 102.3 FM).
COACHES:
Marshall Overley, 16-37 in 6th year at West Lafayette. Scott
Mannering, 135-74 in 21st year at Lewis Cass.
LAST
YEAR’S SAGARIN RATINGS:
West Lafayette, 66.87, 85th overall, 14th in
Class 3A. Lewis Cass, 62.47, 109th overall, 12th in Class 2A.
LAST
MEETING:
Lewis
Cass, 28-19, Aug. 26, 2005.
SERIES
LAST 10 YEARS:
Lewis
Cass, 2-1.
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Volleyball takes center stage on ‘Prep Sports Weekly’ Sunday


â??Prep Sports Weeklyâ? is back this Sunday for Week 2 of the 2006-07 sports
season. Mike McGraw & Chris May will be on from 7 to 9 p.m. Aug. 27 EDT to
break down everything high school sports.

Our featured guests this week will be volleyball coaches from across
the
state, including Mary Cox of perennial power Boonville and Scott
McQueen of Avon. Additionally, Mike & Chris will break down the
football action from Week 2 of the high school season as well as the
other
major fall sporting events. You can also hear the statewide sweep where
the
boys will check in with reporters from all four corners of Indiana.

Finally, Mike will give a review of this weekendâ??s 1st Annual
Hoosier Authority All-Sports Trophy championship presentation to Carmel. Speaking of the
All-Sports Trophy, some changes have been made to the scoring system, and Mike
will give you all the details as we prepare to start the calculations for the â??06-07
All-Sports Trophy winner.

To listen to the show, simply log on to HoosierAuthority.com, click on Prep
Sports Weekly near the top of our Home page, then locate and click on the link
to Prep Sports Weekly under Current Schedule. The flashing microphone will let
you know when the show has begun.

Canâ??t catch the show live? No problem. Once the show is over, head to our
Recent Archives section where you can listen to the show as well as any other
production weâ??ve done.

Log on to HoosierAuthority.com Sunday to check it out!

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Week 2 wrap: A look at how the second games went

By E. Shawn Aylsworth
Managing Editor

According
to the Sagarin power ratings, there were 29 big games on tap in Week 2 of the
2006 Indiana
high school football season. Following is a quick review of 10 of the really big showdowns:

Northern Indiana
The four
big battles that take place up north all feature teams playing a same-class
opponent, meaning they may see each other down the line in the playoffs.
(PLAYOFFS?!?! Did you say PLAYOFFS?!!!!?)

In 5A, 13th-ranked
Homestead
travels to No. 20 Warsaw in a tilt featuring a pair of 1-0 schools as well as
two third-year coaches. The series has been extremely even, too, with the host
Tigers having won four of the last seven, including a 17-14 squeaker a year
ago.
FINAL: Homestead
28, Warsaw 6
COMMENT: Unlike last week, some of
the visitors actually did some damage away from the crib tonight! Homestead posts one of
the more satisfying road revenge victories here.

Defending 3A
state champion NorthWood â??? fresh off a heartbreaking defeat at defending 2A
state champ Jimtown â??? hits the road once again, this time landing at No. 16
Culver Academies (1-0). The Panthers have won the last three in the series,
including a 24-17 nail biter in last yearâ??s sectional.
FINAL: Culver Academies
27, NorthWood 20
COMMENT: Holy d?©j?  vu, Batman! Hard-luck
NorthWood falls by a single score on the road again against another ranked
team, dropping the Panthers to 0-2 â?¦ But they donâ??t care after going yard last
year following a 2-26 start LOL.

The 2A
biggie pits 1-0 Knox at 10th-ranked North Judson (1-0), where a win
would be HYOOGE for the visiting Redskins, who earned one lone point in this
weekâ??s coaches poll to sit at No. 17. North Judson has owned this series by
winning 11 of the last 13, including a 59-12 mauling in last yearâ??s sectional.
FINAL: North Judson 7, Knox 6
COMMENT: Holy close game, Batman!
Give the Redskins all the credit for coming as close as humanly possible in
reversing that 47-point nightmaremobile from last season.

Finally,
the Class A showdown finds No. 11 South Newton visiting No. 14 Frontier in
another duel of 1-0 teams. A year ago it was South Newton
coming out on top 35-20, and the Rebels have a slight 6-5 lead in this series
over the last 10 years.
FINAL: South
Newton 28, Frontier 7
COMMENT: A convincing road romp for
a western border team on the rise in the small-school division.

Central Indiana
The middle of the
state brings us two same-class showdowns and two inter-class battles. First,
the similar games â?¦
The stateâ??s
marquee clash comes on the far-westside of Indianapolis, where second-ranked Ben Davis (1-0)
welcomes No. 3 Penn (1-0). The host Giants own a 2-1 lead in the series where
Class 5A state championships are concerned, and Ben Davis has won nine of the
last 11 overall, including a surprisingly easy 20-0 blanking in Mishawaka a year ago.
FINAL: Ben Davis 35, Penn 32 (OT)
COMMENT: Host Giants in control at
29-6, then find themselves in overtime at 29-all. Penn goes for the field goal,
leaving the door open for a game-winning TD in this thrilluh. (See Brandon
Jonesâ?? game story.)

The stateâ??s
biggest 4A battle, meanwhile, goes down in Lebanon, where the resurgent Tigers
host perennial power Mooresville in another joust between 1-0 squads. The
Pioneers have won six of the last 10 in the series, but it was Lebanon that prevailed
in 24-23 overtime thriller a year ago.
FINAL: Mooresville 30, Lebanon 20
COMMENT: Visiting Pioneers dominate
time of possession by 2:1 ratio and sic junior QB Trent Mossbrucker â??? 211 yards
passing, nearly 100 rushing, 3 passing TDs, one rushing score, a gorgeous
36-yard pass on a 4th-and-21 fake punt, AND a career-best 49-yard
field goal â??? on the overmatched Tigers. (See E. Shawn Aylsworthâ??s game story.)

In what promises
to be the latest installment of The Bartholomew County War, 4A No. 2 Columbus East
(1-0) rolls across town to visit 5A No. 15 Columbus North (1-0). The last two
seasons this game has come down to a final shot at the end zone by North with
the clock melting away, and both times the Bull Dogs have come up empty-handed,
including last yearâ??s 28-24 doozie.
FINAL: Columbus
East 15, Columbus
North 13
COMMENT: Olympians do it again, and
in lower-scoring fashion than many anticipated. (See Bubba Harnistâ??s game
story.)

Finally, chauffeur
Josh Ember wheels the Hoosier Authority Fan Wagon onto Carmelâ??s campus, where the 5A 10th-ranked
Greyhounds (0-1) host 3A No. 5 Hamilton Heights. The 1st Annual
All-Sports Trophy gets presented to Carmel at halftime amid shooting T-shirts
and assorted hoopla, so the Greyhounds â??? a 31-21 winner a year ago in the
seriesâ?? first-ever game â??? better stay focused against Heightsâ?? high-powered
offense.
FINAL: Carmel
24, Hamilton Heights 8
COMMENT: Host â??Hounds feed off
momentum of beautiful All-Sports Trophy to build 24-0 halftime advantage, then
coast to victory. (See Mike McGrawâ??s
story on this huge night for both Carmel
and Hoosier Authority.)

Southern Indiana
Both the southern
showdowns feature games between classes and are highlighted by a pair of highly
regarded 4A teams.
In the Pocket City,
4A No. 11 Evansville Central plays host to 3A seventh-ranked Evansville Mater
Dei in a Vanderburgh
County battle of 1-0
schools. The offensive-minded Bears have got to be drooling at the prospects of
reversing a series trend thatâ??s seen Mater Dei win nine of the last 10, including
a 20-6 victory a year ago.
FINAL: Central 22, Mater Dei 15
COMMENT: With last weekâ??s opponent
proving to be of considerable mettle (see below), Central establishes itself as
a player with another touchdown victory over a worthy opponent.

And finally (no,
really, we mean it), 4A traditional powerhouse Jasper (1-0 and ranked fourth in
this weekâ??s coaches poll) cruises just south on U.S. 231 to Huntingburg for its
annual rivalry game with 2A Southridge (0-1), which held Evansville Central to
just 28 points last week. The vaunted Wildcats have won eight of the last 10 in
the series, including last seasonâ??s 27-7 victory.
FINAL: Southridge 20, Jasper 14 (OT)
COMMENT: HELLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!

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4A Cathedral bounces back to beat 2A Burris in battle of top-ranked volleyball powers


By Sam Murdock
Contributing Writer

An
athletic rivalry between the top two schools in the state ended as anyone would
expect Aug. 23 as Class 2A top-ranked Muncie Burris hosted 4A No. 1
Indianapolis Cathedral in a battle featuring hard serves, smart kills, and hot
skills.

At
under-renovation Ball Gym at Ball
State University,
Burris took command early but lost its footing late as the Fighting Irish
dropped the first game then roared back to win three straight games and the
match.

Behind
successful kills from Karin Caudill, Christie Waters, and Leslie White and a
lack of serves from Cathedralâ??s offense, Burris was able to take the first game
of the night, 25-21. But that was pretty much it for the Owl highlight film.

â??Their
blocking hurt us,â? said Burris coach Steve Shondell. â??We donâ??t have a middle
blocker to match what Cathedral has. They have the height, and our best blocker
was out sick.�

Added
Cathedral coach Jean Kesterson: â??It feels good to beat a Shondell team — heâ??s the
best coach in the nation.�

The second
game was evenly matched until Cathedral junior Jenna Queally served the second
time around. The Irish scored five straight points on her serve to go up by a
17-10 count, and that was enough to allow Cathedral to tie the match up, 25-22.

From that
point, the Irish never looked back. Cathedral, which registered 21 blocks on
the night, won the next two games by 25-14 and 25-18 scores. Six-foot-one
senior Lauren McIntyre and 6â??5â? sophomore Christiana Gray led the way with six
blocks apiece.

Caudill,
meanwhile, was Burrisâ?? top scorer for the night with 11 points, including five
in the first game. The Owlsâ?? best overall performer was four-year starter
Caitlyn Vann.

â??She
stepped up,â? said Shondell. â??Caitlyn is our go-to player. We can always count
on her trying her best.�

Vann had
four points because of some great jump-serving. But her biggest numbers came in
the **** department, with most of her 12 coming toward the end of the match in
attempt to keep Burris close. Yet despite Vannâ??s determination as a captain and
senior leader, things just didnâ??t line up for Burris in its first loss of the
season.

â??It was
hard,â? said Kesterson. â??Burris is well-trained. They were finding our weak
spots early, so we had to adjust accordingly.
â??But our
blocking and serving was the key to the win.�

Thirty-four
kills, 25 assists, and 47 service points didnâ??t hurt, either. Queally led the
Irish with 18 points, while McIntyre and Gray each posted nine kills and senior
setter Emily Burke came up with 19 assists.

Now, for
ALL the stats!


Team
Game 1
Game 2
Game 3
Game 4
Cathedral
21
25
25
25
Burris
25
22
14
18
Burris
Stats
Points
Aces
Kills
Assists
Digs
   Blocks
Taylor
Unroe
5
1
4
4
1
1
Leslie
White
1
0
3
0
0
3
Karin
Caudill
11
0
2
7
0
1
Caitlyn
Vann
4
1
12
1
4
1
Cristie
Waters
7
1
3
1
3
0
Allyson
Morey
1
1
3
1
2
3
Emily
Brown
0
0
3
0
0
3
Mia
Rabberson
0
0
2
5
0
2
Ana
Fuschetto
2
0
0
0
2
0
Kiara
Stockett
0
0
0
0
1
0
Avery
Mayfield
0
0
1
0
0
0
Taylor
Hyman
0
0
0
0
1
0
Cathedral Stats
Points
Aces
Kills
Assists
Digs
   Blocks
Emily
Burke
3
0
1
19
0
2
Lauren
McIntyre
4
2
9
5
0
6
Yvonne
Marten
1
1
6
1
0
4
Jenna
Queally
18
1
0
0
0
0
Christiana
Gray
6
0
9
0
0
6
Emily
O’Connor
13
0
0
0
5
0
Mary
Ording
1
0
5
0
0
3
Hayley
Ryan
1
0
0
0
0
0
Julie
Sylvester
0
0
0
0
3
0
Christina
Barra
0
0
0
0
1
0
Caroline
Lemke
0
0
1
0
0
0
Kathryn
Treadway
0
0
2
0
0
0
Burris school records
4
National Titles, the last in 2004
16 State
Titles, including the last 9 seasons
17
State Finalist Appearances
22
Regional Championships
22
Sectional Championships
Cathedral school records
4 State
Titles, the last in 2003
3 State
Runners-up, the last in 2005
9 State
Finalist appearances, including the last 7 years
15
Regional Championships, including the last 7 years
17
Sectional Championship, including the last 7 years
Indianapolis
City Tournament champ the last 3 years.
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AUDIO: Pigskin Postgame Week 2

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SCOREBOARD: Boys tennis Week 1


Here are results
from Week 1 (Aug. 14-19) of the 2006 boys tennis season, courtesy of the Indiana High School Tennis Coaches Association:

Aug. 19
DeKalb
Invite
DeKalb 34

Northwood 28

Bellmont 17

East Noble 12

Norwell 10

West Noble 9

Angola 8

Jay County 7

Concord Invite
Concord 4, Jimtown 1

Bethany Christian 4, Rochester 1

Concord 4, Bethany Christian 1

Jimtown 3, Rochester 2

Concord 4, Rochester
1

Jimtown 3, Bethany Christian 2

Goshen Invite
SB Clay 4, Elkhart
Memorial 1

FW Northrop 4, Goshen 1

FW Northrop 3, SB Clay 2

Goshen 4, Elkhart
Memorial 1

FW Northrop 3, Elkhart Memorial 2

SB Clay 3, Goshen
2

Jeffersonville Invitational
1. Delta 36 (won #1s, #2s, and
#1d)

2. Columbus North 32 (won #3s)

3. Bloomington South 29 (won #2d)

4. Zionsville 27

4. Evansville
Memorial 27

6. Jeffersonville
11

7. Centerville
10

8. Peru 8

Lawrence Central Invitational
North Montgomery 5, Decatur Central 0

Lawrence Central 4, Fishers 1

Lawrence Central 5, Decatur Central 0

Fishers 3, North Montgomery 2

Fishers 5, Decatur Central 0

Lawrence Central 5, North Montgomery 0

Muncie Central 3, Huntington North 2

Muncie Central 4, Logansport 1

Scottsburg 4, Eastern (Pekin) 1

Centerville 5, Randolph Southern 0

Evansville Central 4, Tecumseh 1

Evansville Central 5, Mater Dei 0

Plymouth 5, Wawasee 0

Richmond 5, Huntington North 0

Richmond 5, Logansport 0

Richmond 5, Hagerstown 0

Richmond 5, Northeastern 0

Lowell 3, Lake Central 2

North Central (Indianapolis) 4, Floyd Central 1

Seymour 3, Providence 2

Seymour 4, Scottsburg 1

Greenwood 4, Terre Haute North 1 (THN w/out 1 starter)

FW Canterbury 3, West Lafayette 2

Homestead 3, West Lafayette 2

Kokomo 5, Anderson 0

Kokomo 5, New Castle 0

Brebeuf 3, Floyd Central 2 (BJHS won #1d to decide match)

Floyd Central 3,Indianapolis Cathedral 2

Homestead 3, West Lafayette 2

FW Canterbury 3, West Lafayette 2

Loogootee 4, Evansville North 1

Peru 5, Huntington North 0

Greenwood 4, Terre Haute North 1

Hamilton SE 4, Harrison (West Lafayette) 1

Hamilton SE 3, McCutcheon 2

Heritage Christian 5, Warren Central 0

Noblesville 4, McCutcheon 1

Noblesville 4, Harrison (West Lafayette) 1

Center Grove 4, Terre Haute South 1

Aug. 17
Yorktown 3, New Palestine 2 (NP w/o 2 varsity players)

Pike 3, Lebanon 2

West Lafayette 5, Harrison (West Lafayette) 0

Terre Haute North 5, Sullivan 0

East Central 4, Oldenburg 1

Greenfield 5, Ritter 0

Greenfield 3, Scecina 2

Austin 5, Corydon 0

Austin 5, Borden 0

Bloomington South 5, Jasper 0

Warren Central 3, Southport 2

Wabash 4, Madison Grant 1

Wabash 3, Mississinewa 2

Lawrence North 3, Franklin Central 2

Batesville 5, Connersville 0

Zionsville 5, Westfield 0

East Noble 5, Lakeland 0

Park Tudor 3, Center Grove 2

Loogootee 5, Bloomfield 0

Hamilton Southeastern 3, Avon 2

Fishers 5, Lafayette Jefferson 0 (inaugural match for FHS)

Bedford North Lawrence 4, Bloomington North 1

Brownsburg 5, Plainfield 0

Manchester 4, Maconaquah 1

Jay County 4, Norwell 1

Kokomo 5, Peru
0

Carroll (FW) 4, Snider 1

Carroll (FW) 5, FW Concordia 0

Fountain Central 5, Attica 0

McCutcheon 4, Lafayette Jefferson 1

Brebeuf 5, Heritage Christian 0

Noblesville 4, Avon 1

Aug. 16
New Castle 3, Tri 2

Aug. 15
Whiteland
4, New Palestine 1

Floyd Central 5, New Albany 0

Kankakee Valley 5, Rensselaer 0

Franklin 3, Perry Meridian 2

Center Grove 5, Perry Meridian 0

Bloomington South 5, Columbus East 0

Pike 4, Plainfield 1 (Plainfield had 2
varsity players ineligible)

Wabash 3, Mississinewa 2

Manchester 5, Elmhurst 0

Mt. Vernon (Fortville) 5, Lapel 0

Mt. Vernon (Fortville) 3, Shenandoah 2

Kokomo 5, Peru 0

Loogootee 3, Vincennes Rivet 2

FW South 4, Concord 1

Franklin Central 3, Roncalli 2

Zionsville 4, Brownsburg 1

Kankakee Valley 3, Benton Central 2

Indianapolis Cathedral 4, Lawrence Central 1 (LC played w/o 3 doubles players)

Crawfordsville 5, Fountain Central 0

Aug. 14

Penn 3, Warsaw 2

Hamilton Southeastern 5, Westfield
0

Lafayette Jefferson 4, Lake Central 1 (LC
played w/o 4 varsity players)

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