Archive | Springdale

Lady Tigers Claim State Tennis Title

AZ 7A TENNIS.JPGFAYETTEVILLE — Bentonville coach Paul Pautsch assembled the Tigers and Lady Tigers tennis teams for a pep talk before semifinal play at the Class 7A State Tournament at the Billingsley Tennis Center Tuesday morning. Pautsch also asked those Bentonville parents in attendance to join in.

Near the end of his talk, Pautsch asked how many players, or parents, had ever won a state championship. Three answered in the affirmative.

That number is now nine.

Amy Anderson and Kendall Kraus roared to the doubles championship and senior Oksana Hillyer was the singles runner-up for the second straight year as the Lady Tigers captured the state championship with 13 points. Mount St. Mary was second with nine points.

The Lady Tigers have won four of the last five state championships and Pautsch has guided the school to six state titles since 1993.

Anderson and Kraus defeated Jessica and Jennifer Word of Van Buren 6-1, 6-4 in the semifinals before ending with a 6-2, 6-0 victory against Little Rock Central’s Lindsey Liles and Trinity Randolph.

“I said I had the best doubles team (Anderson-Kraus) in the state all year long, and they came out and played that way,” Pautsch said. “They were an absolutely phenomenal doubles team for the last two years.”

Mount St. Mary’s Rebecca Bailey defeated Hillyer in the finals for the second straight year after posting a 6-0, 6-3 victory. Bailey defeated Bentonville’s Morgan Ryan 6-1, 6-2 in the semifinals.

The Bentonville boys finished in second after leading the tournament after Monday’s first two rounds. Little Rock Central won the school’s 11th consecutive title, edging the Tigers 12-11. The Bentonville doubles team of sophomores Matt Tabler and Zach Ellis won the doubles title but the Tigers watched Central’s Mario Martinez defeat Fayetteville’s Rob Hodous in the singles final to give Central the championship.

Martinez overcame severe cramping to defeat Hodous 6-4, 1-6 ,7-6 (7-5). Both players will advance to next week’s Overall Championships.

“I drank too much Gatorade and it made me cramp, so I had to change my strategy,” Martinez said. “I can’t run to the ball and I had to take the angles away. I was really glad that I was able to pull it out at the end. I was never going to quit. I’m representing the school.”

Ellis and Tabler defeated Central’s Bobby Emerson and Austin Crawford 6-4, 3-6, 7-5 to run their record to 15-0 on the year. They also advance to the Overall Championships.

“Those two sophomores came out and they absolutely played their guts out,” Pautsch said. “They could have rolled over. They were way up, and then they got down. They could have quit but they didn’t.”

CLASS 7A STATE TENNIS TOURNAMENT

Boys Singles

Semifinals

Hodous, Fayetteville defeated Fox, LR Catholic 6-2, 6-0

Martinez, LR Central defeated Blake, FS Southside 7-5, 6-2

Finals

Martinez defeated Hodous 6-4, 1-6, 7-6 (7-5)

Boys Doubles

Semifinals

Z. Ellis-Tabler, Bentonville defeated Bagwell-Dunn, Van Buren 6-4, 7-5

Emerson-Crawford, LR Central defeated B. Ellis-Shah, Bentonville 6-3, 6-4.

Finals

Z. Ellis-Tabler defeated Emerson-Crawford 6-4, 3-6, 7-5

Girls Singles

Semifinals

Hillyer, Bentonville defeated Gray, Russellville 6-1, 6-2

Bailey, Mount St. Mary’s defeated Ryan, Bentonville 6-1, 6-2

Finals

Bailey defeated Hillyer 6-0, 6-3

Girls Doubles

Semifinals

Anderson-Kraus, Bentonville defeated Word-Word, Van Buren 6-1, 6-4

Liles-Randolph, LR Central defeated Skinner-Kincannon, FS Southside 6-1, 7-5

Finals

Anderson-Kraus defeated Liles-Randolph 6-2, 6-0

TEAM STANDINGS

Boys

1-Little Rock Central 12

2-Bentonville 11

3-Fayetteville 7

4-Fort Smith Southside 3

5-Little Rock Catholic 2

5-Van Buren 2

7-Rogers High 1

Girls

1-Bentonville 13

2-Mount St. Mary’s 9

3-FS Southside 4

3-Little Rock Central 4

5-Russellville 2

5-Van Buren 2

7-Rogers High 1

7-Rogers Heritage 1

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Lady Tigers Lead State Tennis Tournament

FAYETTEVILLE — The Bentonville Lady Tigers are in the driver’s seat at the Class 7A State Tournament and the Tigers have a one-point lead going into today’s semifinals and finals at the Billingsley Tennis Center on the University of Arkansas campus.

The Lady Tigers have six points while Mount Saint Mary’s and Fort Smith Southside have four points each. But the Lady Tigers have Oksana Hillyer and Morgan Ryan in the singles semifinals and Amy Anderson and Kendall Kraus in the doubles semifinals. All semifinals matches will start at 10 a.m. today.

Anderson-Kraus are heavy favorites to win the doubles title and Bentonville coach Paul Pautsch said the Lady Tigers should win the tournament if either Hillyer or Ryan make the finals.

Hillyer defeated Fort Smith Southside’s Lauren Gharhemani 6-1, 6-4 in the quarterfinals while Ryan defeated the Lady Rebels’ Ali Grahl 6-3, 6-0 in another quarterfinals match. Anderson-Kraus needed less than an hour to win their quarterfinal match 6-0, 6-0.

“We need our guns, and they are Amy (Anderson) and Kendall (Kraus) and Oksana (Hillyer), to come through and if the do, they will be state champions,” Pautsch said. “That’s just the way it is. If they slip up, they won’t be.”

Both the Tigers’ doubles teams of Zach Ellis and Matt Tabler and Brandon Ellis and Varun Shah advanced to the semifinals to help lead Bentonville to six points, one point ahead of Fayetteville and Little Rock Central. The Bulldogs’ Rob Hodous advanced to the singles semifinals by defeating Bentonville’s Justin Pollard 6-7, 6-2, 6-2.

If the two Bentonville doubles teams win today, it would set up a rematch of the 7A-West Conference doubles finals that was won by Zach Ellis and Tabler.

Brandon Ellis and Shah will face Little Rock Central’s Bobby Emerson and Austin Crawford in the semifinals at 10 a.m. today.

“Brandon and Varun have to play the team from Central and I watched them and they are good,” Pautsch said. “Our guys can beat them if they do some things right.”

Zach Ellis and Tabler will face Van Buren’s Bagwell-Dunn in the other boys’ semifinals.

“We have seen them this year and had good success,” Pautsch said. “But they (Van Buren) have improved and I am impressed with them. They are in a position and now it is up to them.”

Rogers High’s Trent Lamers and Adam Hile advanced to the quarterfinals with a 6-1, 6-1 victory before losing to Ellis-Shah in the quarterfinals. Mounties coach Steve Peck said the quarterfinals finish was one of the best in recent years.

“We played well and we actually played better in this match (quarterfinals loss),” Peck said. “We did well in the first match and this is the first time I have had a doubles team make it past the first round at state. It felt good.”

The Lady Mounties doubles team of Caroline Kelley and Anusha Manjagi also won a first-round match before falling 6-0, 6-2 in the quarterfinals to the Little Rock Central duo of Lindsey Liles and Trinity Randolph.

“In the first match, we limited unforced errors, covered the nets well and played good team tennis,” said Lady Mounties coach Ronnie Cowan. “We were just overpowered in the second match.”

Rogers Heritage freshman Pratheepa Ravikumar won her first round match against Conway’s Mary Leath 6-0, 6-2 before losing in the quarterfinals.

CLASS 7A STATE TENNIS TOURNAMENT


WHEN: 10 a.m. today

WHERE: Billingsley Tennis Center, Fayetteville

Schedule

Boys Singles

Semifinals

Hodous, Fayetteville vs. Fox, Little Rock Catholic 10 a.m.

Martinez, Little Rock Central vs. Blake, FS Southside 10 a.m.

Finals, 1 p.m.

Boys Doubles

Semifinals

Emerson-Crawford, LR Central vs. B. Ellis-Shah, Bentonville 10 a.m.

Z. Ellis-Tabler, Bentonville vs. Bagwell-Dunn, Van Buren 10 a.m.

Finals, 1 p.m.

Girls Singles

Semifinals

Hillyer, Bentonville vs. Gray, Russellville 10 a.m.

Ryan, Bentonville vs. Bailey, Mt. St. Mary’s 10 a.m.

Finals, 1 p.m.

Girls Doubles

Semifinals

Anderson-Kraus, Bentonville vs. Word-Word, Van Buren 10 a.m.

Liles-Randolph, Little Rock Central vs. Skinner-Kincannon, Southside 10 a.m.

Finals, 1 p.m.

TEAM STANDINGS

Boys

1. Bentonville 6

2. Fayetteville 5

2. Little Rock Central 5

4. Fort Smith Southside 3

5. Little Rock Catholic 2

6. Van Buren 2

7. Rogers High 1

Girls

1. Bentonville 6

2. Mount St. Mary’s 4

2. FS Southside 4

4. Russellville 2

4. Van Buren 2

6. Rogers High 1

7. Rogers Heritage 1

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7A-West Report: Welch Handles Load For Wildcats

Gordon WelchGordon Welch was shoved into action real quick for Springdale Har-Ber this season.

Starting tailback Tre Tyler broke his fibula on the eighth play of the season-opener against Greenwood, forcing Welch into service. Since then, Welch has been the most consistent runner in the conference and now leads the 7A-West Conference in rushing.

“He’s literally taken the ball and ran with it,” Har-Ber coach Chris Wood said. “He’s iron-manned up for us.”

In Friday’s hard-earned 21-14 win against Rogers Heritage in overtime, Welch carried 35 times for 147 yards and all three of the Wildcats’ touchdowns.

“We really pounded him up in there,” Wood said. “It’s nothing fancy. It’s all between the tackles.”

Welch leads the conference in both carries with 167 and in rushing yards with 781. Three times this season, he’s had over 30 carries. Five times, he’s went over 100 yards rushing.

“It starts with the guys around him,” Wood said. “The offensive line has blocked well, and the receivers are blocking downfield.”

Friday night, Heritage just dared Har-Ber to run. Welch did.

“They had eight and nine guys in the box,” Wood said. “They knew what we were going to do, and that’s what we did.”

Welch brings a no-nonsense approach to the position for the Wildcats.

“His parents are hard-working down-to-earth people, and so is he,” Wood said. “He’s a blue-collar worker. He comes to work every day with a lunch pail. He’s very humble.”

Welch had 12 carries for 43 yards and no touchdowns last year as a sophomore in mop-up duty.

Friday night, Welch scored on a 3-yard run and a 14-yard in regulation before scoring on a 10-yard run on Har-Ber’s first play of overtime for the win.

Har-Ber Eyes Gauntlet
Har-Ber is No. 2 the Associated Press poll this week, but the Wildcats will be challenged the final three weeks of the regular season with Fort Smith Southside, Fayetteville and former No. 1 Bentonville waiting to knock them off their perch.

“It’s a gauntlet,” Wood said. “All three are very good. We’re aware of that. Fortunately, two of the three are at home.”

Southside visits Jarrell Williams Stadium this week and will be looking to bounce back from a 34-26 loss to Fayetteville.

“It will be a physical ball game,” Wood said. “Their coaching staff does as good a job as anyone in the conference as far as scheming for their opponents.”

That game will also be a rematch from last year’s semifinals, which Southside won, 8-7, with a late touchdown and two-point conversion.

Bentonville Seniors Make History
The rivalry between Bentonville and Rogers High is as old and storied as any in the state.
Friday, Bentonville’s seniors made history by becoming the first class to go undefeated in all three years against the rival Mountaineers.

Bentonville Tigers“It was in the newspaper earlier in the week, and it was brought up after the game,” Bentonville coach Barry Lunney said. “It’s a long rivalry so it goes without saying when you can do something for the first time, it’s pretty special.”

Friday, Bentonville blanked Rogers, 48-0. Last year, Bentonville won 17-15. In 2007, the Tigers prevailed 28-0.

The win was also Bentonville’s biggest over Rogers since a 58-0 win in 1914.

Perfect Tigers
Bentonville was perfect on Friday against Rogers on possessions.

The Tigers did not punt, committed no turnovers and scored on all six offensive possessions.
“We were real efficient,” Lunney said. “We executed really well. We didn’t have any dropped passes. The passes were on target.”

Bentonville led 41-0 at halftime, applying the mercy rule to begin the second half with the continuously running clock. The Tigers scored on all five offensive possessions in the first half and added a defensive touchdown on Christian Larimer’s 33-yard interception return on the second play of the game.

“We were running the ball, and the clock was running,” Lunney said. “We took a lot of time off the clock in the third quarter and were running the ball with our second group in.”

Bentonville took the second-half kickoff and used up the first seven minutes, 17 seconds of the third quarter before scoring.

Bentonville did have a final possession to end the game running out the clock without scoring, which does not count in scoring efficiency.

End Of The Passing Era?
Passing is still the fancy around the state, but the trend is changing in the 7A-West. In 16 conference games played thus far, the team that rushes for the most yards is 14-2.

“It’s an interesting statistic,” said Lunney, who brought the pass-happy Spread attack to the conference in 1996 while at Southside. “I heard somebody on a college game on Saturday talking about the team with the most rushing yards usually wins. It’s still about the ability to run the football.”

Bentonville and Springdale Har-Ber are the leading rushing teams in the conference. Har-Ber is currently the top-ranked team in the state. Bentonville is the former No. 1 team in the state.

“I think we’re seeing an offensive evolution again,” Wood said. “It’s controlling the clock and controlling the game by running it.”

Har-Ber also has the best defense in the conference, which goes hand-in-hand with the philosophy of controlling the game.

“For us, we have a good defense so why would we throw the ball over and over, stopping the clock and extending the game,” Wood said. “We want to protect the ball and not take any chances with it.”

Many of the teams that are running the ball, however, are still in the one-back shotgun Spread attack but with certain philosophies of the Power-I, Wishbone, the Wing-T and Split-back veer.

“There is a little bit of all of each one of those in the Spread,” Wood said. “There are just variations.”

Teams are relying on defense, field position, ball-control offense like the conference did in the 1980s and 1990s.

“It’s like back in the day of Jarrell Williams and Joe Fred Young,” Wood said. “And those guys sure won their share of games.”

Remember When …

There was actually a 7A-West game that ended regulation in a scoreless tie?

In this modern age of offense, so-called basketball on grass and a barrage of scoring, in 2001 Fayetteville and Springdale actually played a scoreless tie in regulation.

Springdale quarterback Damon Moody broke the tie with a short touchdown run in overtime to lift the Red Bulldogs to 6-0 win over their purple rivals at Harmon Field.

Each team had 14 first downs, Fayetteville had 292 yards of offense while Springdale had 242.

It is the last time two 7A-West teams played to a scoreless tie in regulation and the lowest scoring game in the conference in the past eight years.

By Leland Barclay/Special To The Morning News

THAT FIGURES

0 — Turnovers and punts by Bentonville on Friday night
1 — Win needed by Bentonville’s seniors to tie last year’s senior class as the winningest in school history
3 — Scoreless quarters this season by Bentonville, including two in the fourth quarter of mercy-rule victories, out of 28 quarters played
6 — Straight times in which Springdale has defeated Fort Smith Northside at Jarrell Williams Stadium since Grizzlies won 23-12 in 1997
7 — Straight wins by Fayetteville over Fort Smith Southside, all during Daryl Patton’s tenure

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Bulldogs’ Defense Steps Up

Springdale BulldogsSPRINGDALE — Springdale High’s defense showed more confidence Friday night than it has all season long.

The Bulldogs had one of their best defensive performances this season, nearly shutting down Fort Smith Northside’ potent offense.

Besides putting constant pressure on Northside quarterback Tanner Knight, the Bulldogs (3-4, 1-3) also forced the Grizzlies into four turnovers, including three fumbles. The result gave Springdale its first 7A-West Conference victory this season.

“I don’t think there’s any doubt that was (the defense’s) best game,” Springdale High interim coach Dennis DeBusk said. “We’ve been really close all year, but (Friday), they put it all together and had a great game.”

Although Northside totaled 17 first downs and 203 passing yards, it managed only 79 rushing yards.

“Our guys up front and our linebackers, they all did a tremendous job,” DeBusk said. “We can build off this and really build some momentum.”

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Bentonville Takes Aim At State Titles

Paul Pautsch is happy with the draw his Bentonville Tigers and Lady Tigers received for today’s Class 7A Tennis State Tournament in the George Billingsley Tennis Center on the University of Arkansas campus.

Now, he says it’s up to them to take advantage.

“It’s in their hands now,” Pautsch said. “With this draw, I know the kids are in position to do something. It’s set in front of us. Now let the chips fall where they may.”

Both the Bentonville boys and girls teams come in with legitimate state title opportunities, Pautsch said.

The Bentonville boys will be looking to derail a powerhouse in Little Rock Central, which has won 10 consecutive state titles.

“I totaled the points, and hypothetically, if our boys can score 13 points, we’re in contention,” Pautsch said. “If our singles can win a couple of matches and my doubles team makes the final. That’s gonna give us 11 to 13 points. That may be enough to win it.”

The Bentonville team of Zach Ellis and Matt Tabler is seeded second behind a Central team, but the sophomores won the 7A-West title by knocking off Zach’s older brother, Brandon, and Varun Shah.

Pautsch said he’s happy the elder Ellis’ team is matched against the top Central team.

“Brandon can handle the pressure,” Pautsch said. “He can handle the pressure.”

Two players were suspended prior to the conference tournament, but Brandon Ellis has taken a stronger leadership role, Pautsch said.

“I’ve waited for the last year for him to step up, but he’s done it,” Pautsch said. “Brandon’s really done a great job.”

The Lady Tigers’ doubles team of Kendall Kraus and Amy Anderson come in as the top seed.

“There’s not doubt they’re one of the best doubles team in the state,” Pautsch said. “Amy Anderson is a three-time conference champion.”

Oksana Hillyer, who lost in the state singles finals a year ago, and teammate Morgan Ryan, will be keys to the Lady Tigers’ chances of a sixth state title.

“The (Rebecca) Bailey girl from Mount St. Mary is the best player in the state,” Pautsch said.

Fayetteville’s Rob Hodous could also make a run at a boys singles title. Hodous is the top seed in the draw.

There are also several area players who qualified for the Class 4A Tournament to be played in Arkadelphia.

On the girls’ side, Shiloh Christian’s Alisha Hedgecock will play in the singles draw along with teammates Bailey Riggins and Shannie Suttie, who qualified in doubles. Farmington’s team of Shylene Scott and Plearn Seripumitapap, who won the 4A-1 conference title, will face a team from Nashville.

Shiloh’s Ross Naber and Daniel Evans will play boys doubles, while Shiloh’s Andrew Evans and Farmington’s Blake Cutter qualified in boys singles.

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Hoover Redeems Last Year’s Frustrating Finish

FAYETTEVILLE — Caleb Hoover wasn’t happy when he finished 18th at last year’s Chile Pepper Cross Country Festival.

Before competing in the event, Hoover worked especially hard on his speed and endurance, hoping he could perhaps finish in the top five, a goal he set for himself at the beginning of the cross country season.

But Hoover’s less-than-ideal finish last year only made him work harder throughout the offseason, something that showed Saturday morning at this year’s event at the Agri Park.

Hoover, a junior at College Heights Christian High in Joplin, Mo., won the high school boys 5K invitational with a time of 15 minutes, 1.93 seconds. The first-place finish also kept Hoover undefeated in the eight meets he’s competed in this season.

“This just means a lot because last year I didn’t even medal,” Hoover said. “I just really don’t like to lose.”

Hoover, who trailed Rossview High’s (Clarksville, Tenn.) Jake Rainey throughout the entire race, passed him with about a mile left and never looked back. Rainey finished second with a time of 15:06.46.

“To win this race, it says a lot about him, he’s having a great year,” said Thane Garnett, College Heights Christian’s cross country coach. “He was pretty determined to finish well in this race, and I think he showed it.”

In the girls invitational, Greenhill High’s (near Dallas, Texas) Chelsey Sveinsson won for the third straight year with a time of 17:32.71. Sveinsson, a senior, is one of the top long-distance runners in Texas and is hopeful she can continue doing so next year on a collegiate scholarship.

“This is one of the races that I look forward to the most during the season,” said Sveinsson, who was disappointed with her finishing time. “I really just wasn’t feeling it, but like my mom told me, I’m just happy again to win it.”

Fayetteville’s boys team finished fifth overall with 261 points while Bentonville’s girls team finished sixth with 206 points.

Fayetteville’s Austin Simkins had the highest finish among area competitors, finishing sixth with a time of 16:06.19. Elkins’ Grace Heymsfield also finished fifth with a time of 18:24.48.

2009 Chile Pepper Cross Country Festival

High School Boys Invitational

Team Results

1. West Plains High 72

2. McKinney Boyd 176

3. Southlake Carroll 231

4. Plano West 237

5. Fayetteville 261

6. Monsignor Farrell 271

7. Edmond Memorial High 330

8. Bentonville 347

9. Carthage High 370

10. Rogers High 385

Individual Results

1. Caleb Hoover, College Heights Christian 15:01.93

2. Jake Rainey, Rossview High 15:06.46

3. Neal Smith, Southlake Carroll High 15:27.03

4. Sam Tillery, Plano West 15:53.77

5. Chris Marchman, Sheridan High 15:55.45

6. Austin Simkins, Fayetteville 16:02.95

7. Jacob Shultz, West Plains High 16:06.19

8. Josh Inman, West Plains High 16:09.78

9. Michael Allen, Russellville 16:10.70

10. Aaron Allen, McKinney Boyd 16:11.06

High School Girls Invitational

Team Results

1. Southlake Carroll 74

2. Boswell High 132

3. Kearney High 153

4. West Plains High 175

5. Belton High 193

6. Bentonville 203

7. Rogers High 244

8. Edmond Memorial High 359

9. Fayetteville 404

10. St. Agnes 407

Individual Results

1. Chelsey Sveinsson, Greenhill High 17:32.71

2. Regan Tindell, Belton High 18:17.20

3. Erika Setzler, Conway 18:23.07

4. Maggie Escobar, Bowell High 18:24.00

5. Grace Heymsfield, Elkins 18:24.48

6. Valerie Reina, Springdale Har-Ber 18:27.90

7. Maggie Montoya, Rogers High 18:28.08

8. Jessica Harper, Southlake Carroll 18:46.95

9. Kacey Nobert, St. Agnes 19:01.20

10. Regina Germaine, Boswell High 19:06.78

For complete results, visit chilepepperfestival.org

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Springdale Ends Frustration, Wins First Conference Game

FBH SHS NORTHSIDESPRINGDALE — Throughout the last four weeks, Joseph Calcagni couldn’t figure out what he was doing wrong.

During that span, Springdale High started 7A-West Conference play 0-3, coming up short in two of those losses by only a combined four points. The bad start frustrated the junior quarterback — and all of his teammates — so badly that he couldn’t stop thinking about why the Bulldogs weren’t getting any breaks.

But Friday night against Fort Smith Northside, Calcagni knew a quick start might get Springdale going in the right direction.

He couldn’t have been more right.

Calcagni threw for 157 yards and four touchdowns — three in the first half — and ran for another as Springdale beat Fort Smith Northside 34-21 in Jarrell Williams Bulldog Stadium.

“It feels great to get the first conference win,” Calcagni said. “Our offensive line did great, they pushed (Northside’s) defense back and gave me time to throw the ball.

“Our coaches have been preaching to us that if all 11 players work together, we’ll get the job done, and I think we finally did that (Friday).”

FBH SHS NORTHSIDENot only was Springdale’s (3-4, 1-3 7A-West Conference) passing game on target, but its running game had one of its best performances of the year, combining for 218 yards on 50 carries.

“(Friday) things finally went our way a little bit, we made some things happen and we didn’t turn the ball over,” Springdale High interim coach Dennis DeBusk said. “The defense got us the turnovers and we took advantage of it and scored, where before we hadn’t been doing that.”

Springdale’s defense forced Northside (2-5, 0-4) into four turnovers, including three fumbles that crippled the Grizzlies chances of putting points on the board.

Northside, which finished with only 79 rushing yards, had good production from quarterback Tanner Knight, who completed 25 passes for 203 yards and two touchdowns, both of which came in the fourth quarter.

Knight’s first touchdown pass went for 33 yards to Tevin Williams and his second was for seven yards to Shaquille Jones.

Before Northside knew what happened, it was already down 20-0 with 11 minutes left in the first half, something coach Darrell Henry said was too tough to overcome.

“I don’t know if we have voodoo on us or what, but turning the ball over had killed us in the last five weeks,” Henry said. “We came out in the second half and moved the football and we do everything right. I’m really proud of the kids of how they fought back.”

Springdale’s T.C. Barkey not only caught a 17-yard touchdown pass from Calcagni in the first quarter, but finished with a team-high 74 rushing yards while Calcagni had 63 rushing yards.

“(This win) is something these kids have been looking forward to and have been trying to get,” DeBusk said. “All it does is it gives us another week, we have to get ready for Rogers Heritage now. Every game we have left will be a war, but if we come out and play like we did (Friday), we’ll have a shot.”

SPRINGDALE HIGH 34, FS NORTHSIDE 21

Northside    0    7    0    14    —    21
Springdale    13    14    7    0    —    34
First Quarter
Spring — Bocchino 13 pass from Calcagni (Garcia kick), 8:04
Spring — Barkey 17 pass from Calcagni (run failed), :49
Second Quarter
Spring — Calcagni 10 run (Garcia kick), 11:18
North — D. Jones 5 run (Martinez kick), 9:00
Spring — Johnson 21 pass from Calcagni (Garcia kick), 5:41
Third Quarter
Spring — Robinson 10 pass from Calcagni (Garcia kick), 8:05
Fourth Quarter
North — Williams 33 pass from Knight (Martinez kick), 11:38
North — S. Jones 7 pass from Knight (Martinez kick), 2:28

North    Spring
First Downs    17    22
Rushes-Yards    15-79    50-218
Passing Yards    203    157
Comp-Att-Int    25-38-1    14-20-0
Punts    3-29.7    5-32.2
Fumbles-Lost        3-3    0-0
Penalties-Yards    3-30    14-120

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING—Northside, Knight 9-51, Poole 2-20, D. Jones 4-8. Springdale, Barkey 13-74, Calcagni 13-63, Yager 12-39, Taylor 11-35, Johnson 1-7.
PASSING—Northside, Knight 25-38-1-203. Springdale, Calcagni 14-20-0-157.
RECEIVING—Northside, Poole 7-56, Williams 6-82, S. Jones 6-33, D. Jones 4-16, Shephard 2-14. Springdale, Bocchino 4-41, Fogg 3-41, Barkey 3-38, Johnson 2-26, Robinson 2-11.
MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

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Prep Junior High/Volleyball Roundup

EIGHTH-GRADE FOOTBALL

Springdale Southwest 43, Rogers Oakdale 34

Quarterback Braxton Jester threw for three touchdowns and ran for another to lead Southwest past Oakdale on Thursday.

Jester threw touchdown passes of 6, 6 and 14 yards. He tossed scoring strikes to Colton Wetzler, Sain Matthews and Jordan Dennis. Gus Vitt also ran for two scores for Southwest (5-2).

Bryan Lemus was also perfect on five extra points for Southwest.

The Cougars will play at Harrison next week.

Rogers Kirksey 24, Rogers Lingle 6

Ty Galyean returned a kickoff 73 yards for a touchdown and threw for another score to keep Kirksey unbeaten on Tuesday.

Galyean threw a 62-yard touchdown pass to Hunter Hill after taking a backward lateral from quarterback Max Harrell.

Harrell threw a 56-yard touchdown to Brett Gentz and a two-point conversion for Kirksey (7-0). Devin Young also tackled the Lingle quarterback in end zone for a safety.

Kirksey will host Bentonville Washington next week.

Springdale Central 20, Fayetteville Ramay 9

Kyle Pianalto threw a touchdown pass and added a two-point conversion to lead Central past Ramay.

Pianalto completed a 36-yard touchdown pass to Cole Brothers. He ran in thw conversion for an 8-3 Central lead.

Holden Thornton added a 16-yard touchdown run and Trashaun Gaus finished the scoring with a 51-yard touchdown run early in the fourth quarter.

Brothers also interception a pass for Central (6-1).

JUNIOR HIGH FOOTBALL

Springdale Central 21, Fayetteville Ramay 7

Tucker Lee ran for three touchdowns to help Central remain undefeated on Thursday night.

Lee scored on runs of 13, 47 and 2 yards. Lee’s 47-yard run came after Central (7-0, 5-0 in Northwest Arkansas Conference) stopped Ramay on a fourth-and-1 play. Jesus Sidon added three extra points.

Safety Alex Rice also had two interceptions in the red zone for Central.

PREP VOLLEYBALLL

Springdale Har-Ber def. Rogers High

Alicia Swearingen had 22 kills and Marisa Pless added 20 kills to lead Har-Ber to a 25-12, 25-17, 23-25, 25-20 win over Rogers High in 7A-West Conference play Thursday.

Har-Ber improved to 11-2 in the 7A-West and is now tied with Fayetteville for the league lead. The Lady Wildcats finish the season Tuesday against cross-town rival Springdale High.

Sydney Marsellis contributed six blocks and Katie Huff five blocks for Har-Ber. Katie Collins added 22 digs and four aces.

Springdale High def. Fort Smith Northside

Kristin Hylton finished with 21 kills and Lauren Perry added 20 kills to help Springdale High claim a 23-25, 20-25, 25-14, 25-22, 17-15 win over Northside in 7A-West Conference play Thursday.

The Lady Red’Dogs (14-12, 5-8) clinched a spot in the Class 7A state tournament with the victory. Springdale will likely be the fifth seed.

Setters Emily Broad and Tisha Watkins contributed 19 and 18 assists, respectively. Chloe Brown led Springdale with 20 digs.

Posted in 7A, Fayetteville, Har-Ber, Heritage, Jr. High, Rogers, Springdale, The Morning NewsComments (0)

Hylton Hopes To Lead Springdale Back To State Tournament

VBH-Springdale Hylton Feature 01SPRINGDALE — Kristin Hylton likes volleyball matches that end with a headache.

The senior outside hitter has likely provided the opposition with plenty of pain, but Hylton said she puts a lot of herself into each match.

“I love it when I have a headache after the game,” Hylton said. “I’m very, very competitive. If I have a headache that means I’m screaming and putting all I have into it.”

Hylton has helped Springdale High to a 13-13 record this season, within one victory of a berth in the Class 7A State Tournament.

The Lady Red’Dogs can lock up that spot with a win over Fort Smith Northside tonight. Springdale is 4-8 and in fifth place in the 7A-West. But a loss could plunge Springdale into a three-way tie with Northside and Rogers High — a situation that could leave Springdale on the outside looking in come state tournament time.

The top six advance to the state tournament in Van Buren.

Hylton has adjusted to being a “go-to” player for the Lady Red’Dogs this season.

“It has its good points and bad points,” she said. “If I have a bad game and everyone else has an off game, too, I feel like I was responsible for that. But I think they feed off my enthusiasm.”

Springdale coach Nan Shamblen said there’s never been any question about Hylton’s effort or skill level.

“She was a starter as a sophomore on varsity because of her skill level,” Shamblen said. “Maturity-wise, she’s one of those kids who are pretty mature to begin with.”

Hylton even surprised Shamblen a bit when she came to Springdale three years ago.

“I didn’t realize how good she was,” Shamblen said. “Watching her in practices in the summer was one thing, but when I saw her in our first match, I was thinking this is one of those once-in-a-lifetime athletes that you get to coach.”

The high-flying Hylton not only leads with her physical performance but also emotionally and mentally.

“It’s a lot harder than it sounds,” Hylton said. “I can’t be the one getting frustrated. If I make a mistake, I can’t get down because my team will follow me.”

Hylton is almost like a coach on the floor, Shamblen said.

“She has outstanding court sense,” she added. “Kristin not only knows where she’s supposed to be on the floor, but she knows where everyone else is supposed to be, too.”

No one can question Hylton’s commitment to the Springdale High program, particularly since she had an opportunity to transfer to Springdale Har-Ber over the summer. Hylton plays club ball with several members of Har-Ber’s team

“This is my team,” Hylton said. “I couldn’t do that. They’re my girls.”

She admitted to having a lot of frustrations but no regrets about staying at Springdale High.

“When we’re on our game, I couldn’t be more proud of our team,” Hylton said.

Shamblen added she only tried to lay out the pros and cons of the situation for Hylton.

“That shows how level-headed and mature she is,” Shamblen said. “I told her she made that commitment to this team and that says a lot about her, not only now, but in the future. As an adult, you don’t just quit something and go somewhere else because the pasture appears greener. A lot of times, it’s not.”

Profile
Kristin Hylton
School: Springdale High.
Classification: Senior.
Position: Outside hitter.
Height: 5-foot-9

Posted in 7A, Featured, Springdale, The Morning NewsComments (0)

Calcagni Making Most Of Junior Season

AZ SHS FBO EXTRA 04.JPGSPRINGDALE — Joseph Calcagni has never used inexperience as a crutch.

No matter the situation or the game, the Springdale High first-year quarterback has tried to stay calm and slow down the game. And although there have been a few bumps along the way, Calcagni has been pleasantly surprised by what he’s been able to accomplish so far.

Through six games this season, the junior has made steady progress as one of the top quarterbacks in the 7A-West Conference, with 105 completions for 1,531 yards and 11 touchdowns.

“Coming into the season, there were a lot of questions with myself,” Calcagni said. “I knew being inexperienced could hinder how well I played, but I just tried to never think about that. The more I dwelled on something like that, then the more I’d start making mistakes, and I didn’t want that to happen.”

Calcagni began to fine-tune his playing skills in the spring, when he was still competing for the quarterback position. He constantly worked on his footwork, his throwing accuracy, understanding defenses and anything else he felt would give him an edge.

During the summer, Calcagni said playing in some 7-on-7 tournaments also helped in establishing some self-confidence and experience of playing varsity-level football.

“I think with me, it was all about getting as many reps as possible,” said Calcagni, who didn’t find out he’d be Springdale’s starting quarterback until just before practices started in August. “I just wanted the experience. The more I got, the better I felt about everything.”

Springdale quarterbacks coach Zak Clark, a former Arkansas quarterback, said Calcagni’s biggest improvements have been his ability to adapt in certain situations.

“Physically, he’s got all the tools. He can make any throw we ask him to make,” Clark said. “He moves well in the pocket, and he continues to get better and better with his composure. He’s also improved with his game management, how he handles himself and how he handles the team.”

Against Fayetteville more than two weeks ago, Calcagni had his best game of the season, completing 28 passes for 342 yards and two touchdowns. Despite the impressive performance, however, Calcagni said it’s not his statistics that keep him motivated, but how many wins Springdale has.

“I’m happy with how I’ve played, but at the same time, it’s now showing up in our win column,” Calcagni said. “That’s the part I care about. I want this team to win, and so far, we haven’t been able to do much of that.

“That’s my biggest concern right now, helping this team find a way to win more games.”

Profile

JOSEPH CALCAGNI

  • School: Springdale High
  • Height: 6-foot-1
  • Weight: 183 pounds
  • Position: Quarterback
  • Class: Junior
  • Notable: Calcagni comes from a bloodline full of quarterbacks, including his father, Mark, and uncle, Ron, who both played at Arkansas. Ron was Arkansas’ quarterback from 1975-78 and went 25-4-2, making him the winningest quarterback in Razorback history. Joseph’s older brother, Patrick, is also a former quarterback at Springdale Har-Ber.

Posted in 7A, Featured, Springdale, The Morning NewsComments (0)

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