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SCOTS SCOOP
– Jan. 31, 2008
– Vol.
8, No. 25
IT’S AUTOMATIC
A quick glance at the team scores from Saturday’s Midwest
Invitational track meet at Monmouth College would not reveal at least
two outstanding performances –
one a record-breaking, automatic qualifier for nationals and the other,
another record-breaking performance and a provisional qualifier.
On the women’s side, senior Jessica White (Galesburg,
Ill./Galesburg), who had missed two days of practice due to illness,
punched her ticket to the NCAA Indoor Championships in the pole vault
with a school record and automatic qualifying height of 12’3-1/2. Her
mark, which broke her own school record set at last year’s indoor
nationals, is tied for the top vault in the nation.
With a performance like that, maybe she should get sick more often.
"Considering she had been sick last week and then come in and vault
an automatic height is significant," said MC coach Roger Haynes. "With
one year left in her career, she’s got to continue to improve. She
wasn’t as technically sound as I think she can be. She is stronger and
more physical than in the past, so if she can get more technically
sound, she can go quite a bit higher."
Freshman Logan Hohl (Orion, Ill./Orion), who last week just missed a
provisional qualifying time in the men’s 55-meter hurdles, turned the
trick on his home track while winning the event in 7.61. Hohl’s time is
currently the third fastest in the nation and broke the Scots’ freshman
record set in 1989 by All-American and 1992 national champion Charles
Burton.
"Logan has put himself in an elite group," said Haynes. "We feel if
he runs just a little bit better as the season goes on, he’ll guarantee
himself a spot at the national meet. That’s pretty impressive for a
freshman."
Impressive, too, is the fact Hohl has run a provisional time in just
his second collegiate meet where he has had to adjust to the collegiate
55 hurdle height of 42" –
a 3" jump in height from the high school hurdles. That’s a feat not lost
on Haynes. "He made quite an improvement in the last week and we expect
that to continue," he said. "It’s quite an adjustment to the college
height."
What about breaking Burton’s freshman record? "I think Logan can be a
more accomplished high hurdler than Charles was," praised Haynes. "It
remains to be seen how good he can be in the 400 hurdles. He’s not at
the national championship status yet, but if he continues to run faster
that will close the gap substantially."
Haynes also put the pressure on himself. "Logan, like any of our
athletes, if he doesn’t continue to improve, we’re not doing our jobs as
coaches and he’s not doing his job as an athlete," claimed the veteran
coach. "I don’t set any kind of limit for him as to where he’s at now."
All told, the Scots had six athletes in six events post automatic or
provisional marks in only the second meet of the season. Senior Jenny
Babos’ (Leland, Ill./Somonauk) winning mark in the women’s weight throw
(51’5) qualified her provisionally for the March meet. In the men’s
competition, senior pole vaulter Jonny Henkins (Kewanee, Ill./Kewanee)
provisionally qualified with his winning pole vault mark (15’9-3/4).
Classmate Peter Sprecher (Canton, Ill./Canton), who made the provisional
mark last week, again cleared the mark to finish second (15’5). Another
senior, Zach Wilson (Lacon, Ill./Midland) took first in the shot put
with a personal-best and provisional mark of 51’7-1/4. He also won the
weight throw, posting a provisional distance of 59’8-1/4, besting last
week’s provisional performance by 6".
Haynes credited assistant coach Brian Woodard with the team’s success
in the throwing events. "Coach Woodard’s group is doing quite well and
making good progress –
men and women," reported Haynes. "The older kids in the group (Wilson,
Babos and Gloria Lehr) are doing well, but the freshmen group
– Sam Cokinos,
Peyton Lumzy and the three freshmen girls
– Allison Renfroe,
Maureen Dewan and Samantha Bleyaert are doing really well."
Other firsts for the women came from Megan Clennon in the high jump
with a personal-best jump of 5’3 and Lehr in the shot put (40’6).
Clennon also had "good" attempts at the provisional high jump height of
5’5. The men received more first place performances from Luke Reschke in
the 400-meters with a personal-best time of 49.89 and the 4x200 relay
team of Hohl, Reschke, Brad Gross and Saidu Sesay, who turned in what
Haynes called a "solid" performance.
Second place finishes for the women were recorded by Babos in the
shot put (40’2-1/4); freshman Morgan Leffel, a personal-best 1:02.05 in
the 400-meters; and Kaile Schreiner, a personal-best in the 5,000-meters
(19:55.74). The women’s 4x200 relay team of Leffel, Jae Moore, Katey
Vaccarello and Shannon Turczyn ran to a third place finish (1:51.34).
Clay Staley finished second in the men’s mile (4:25.54) and placed
third in the 3,000-meters (8:55.23). "Clay was really solid Saturday,"
said Haynes. "He ran good times in both of those events."
While Haynes feels the women’s relays can get better, he heaped
praise on his newcomers and challenged his veteran relays. "Morgan
(Leffel) and Jae (Moore) were very good in the sprints, running multiple
races and running well at every distance," he said. "They’re a solid
part of our team. I’m really pleased with them. The men’s 4x4 can run a
qualifying time, we just need to get a little better there. We’re close
to where we were a year ago."
Other personal-bests were recorded by freshman Mary Kate Beyer who
finished fourth in the mile (5:33.77); classmate Peyton Lumzy in the
men’s weight throw (45’9-3/4) –
good for seventh; and senior Adam Rodriguez’s seventh place time in the
600-meters (1:24.84).
Monmouth and Wartburg’s men tied for second behind Augustana. The
Monmouth women finished fourth. "Overall it was a good meet," said
Haynes. "Had we spread our men out more, I think we could have had a
good shot at winning the meet. We didn’t overdo our sprinters and
largely got out of the meet what we wanted to.
"We still need to improve with our juniors and seniors," he
continued. "I don’t think they’re where they should be at this time.
However, our freshmen are contributing quite well."
The Scots expect to do well this weekend at the Cornell Hilltop Open.
"We’ve had some good meets there," said Haynes, who may break out some
old tape of assistant coaches Woodard and Dennis Staggs for inspiration.
If history repeats itself, be prepared for more national qualifiers
this weekend.
SCOTS SHORT, BUT EFFICIENT
Injuries and illness have riddled the Scots’ swim teams in 2008 and
last weekend was no exception. Keith Crawford’s crew was missing seven
swimmers for their dual meet at Coe College last Saturday. Despite
missing some of their top athletes
– Anne Lane, Meaghan Gritzenbach, Kayce DeRoo,
Kurt Niemeier, Kevin Raske, Chad Rowland and Jon Peterson
– the Fighting Scots
men defeated Coe 145-106 while the women swam competitively, but fell to
the Kohawks 152-96.
"We expect to have everyone back next week," said Crawford. "It will
be nice to have two full squads in the pool which is something we
haven’t been able to do in 2008. Despite missing so many people, we
still had a good day so I was pleased with the effort and we turned in
some good swims."
Good swims, indeed. Monmouth’s men finished 1-2 in four events. The
200-yard medley relay "A" Team of Dan Campione, Kevin Satler, John
Kaiser and Tom Pederson touched first (1:48.40), Josh Van Swol, Brant
Furr, Harrison Heilman and Steven Whittle filled out the "B" Team and
finished second (1:51.39). Van Swol took first in the 100- backstroke
(59.62), Campione was second (1:02.45). Satler won the 100- and 200-
breaststroke (1:06.65 and 2:26.57, respectively), Furr was second in the
100- breaststroke (1:11.46) and Kaiser was second in the 200-
breaststroke (a personal-best 2:31.73).
Jack Clifford swept the diving events, winning the 1-meter (115.90)
and the 1-meter (165.45). What? Don’t you mean the 1-meter and the
3-meter? No, that’s not a typo. Crawford reports there is a "kicker" in
the rule book that allows two, 1-meter events in the same meet
– strange, but true.
Seconds came from Ed Novak in the 1000-yard freestyle (11:00.65) and
the 500- freestyle (5:13.24); Kaiser in the 200- freestyle (1:59.61) and
the 200- individual medley (2:11.55); Heilman in the 200- butterfly (a
personal-best 2:16.24); Campione in the 50- freestyle (24.34); Van Swol
in the 200- backstroke (2:07.97); and Whittle in the 100- butterfly
(1:01.33).
"Ed (Novak) had some of our better swims on the day," reported
Crawford. "His 1000- and 500- freestyles were both season-bests. His
500- time just missed being a lifetime-best. Josh (Van Swol) turned in a
season-best in the 100- backstroke and Jack (Clifford) had another fine
performance in diving."
The Scots women had solid performances from their limited squad.
Megan Wentzlaff and Jessica DeMink finished 1-2 in the 200- breaststroke
(2:52.46 and 2:52.48, respectively). Jessica Houser, DeMink, Wentzlaff
and Heather Plum teamed up to win the 200-yard medley relay (2:10.39).
Wentzlaff also took first in the 1000- freestyle (12:04.97) and the 200-
individual medley (2:35.79). Sally Thomas touched first in the 100-
butterfly (1:16.19) and the 200- butterfly (2:45.68).
Monmouth’s seconds for the women came from Plum in the 200- freestyle
(2:09.78), 500- freestyle (5:43.95) and the 100- freestyle (1:00.83);
Houser in the 100- backstroke (a season-best 1:13.31); and DeMink in the
100- breaststroke (1:20.94).
"I was very pleased with the women," praised Crawford. "We had quite
a few season-best times. It was a very good competitive team effort,
despite missing our top swimmers. Lauren Nelson (1:13.49 in the 100-
backstroke, 2:37.55 in the 200- backstroke) and Jessica Houser (2:46.76
in the 200- backstroke) both had season-best times."
All told, the Scots recorded 13 season-best performances. That’s a
statistic that has Crawford upbeat with the Midwest Conference
Championships just two weeks away. There is only one item on Crawford’s
"To Do" list prior to the MWC meet
– "Get healthy."
The Scots travel to St. Peters, Mo., this weekend for a triangular
with Lindenwood and John Brown Universities before taking next weekend
off in preparation for the Feb. 15-17 conference meet.
THE THRILL OF VICTORY, AND THE AGONY OF DEFEAT
For one-and-a-half games, the women’s basketball team was on top of
the world.
The Scots were riding high after handing St. Norbert their first
league loss in last Friday’s 70-59 win, but that euphoria came crashing
down after Saturday’s 72-59 loss to Beloit. "All around we were very
consistent," said MC coach Melissa Jones of the win over the Green
Knights. "Offensively, we attacked their man-to-man. Defensively, we
held a very good offensive team to 59 points. That’s tremendous
defense."
With Friday night’s win, the Scots were in the position they wanted
to be in – a
rematch against Beloit –
the team that had beaten them by two a week earlier. For the first 15
minutes of the Beloit game Saturday, the Scots were continuing where
they left off Friday night and loving it. Then something happened
– something
terrible.
"We stopped moving the ball," lamented Jones. "We started out
attacking their zone and doing a great job. We got great perimeter
shooting and attacking from Lynsey Barnard, we packed the inside. Ashley
Yeast got some great shots down low and we made them come out of their
zone. At that point, we were thinking ‘Alright, we’re making them do
something they don’t want to do.’ But all of a sudden, we didn’t move
the ball around against their man-to-man."
The Scots had their way with the St. Norbert man defense less than 24
hours earlier, leading for the final 31 minutes. Monmouth had four
players score double-digits against the Knights (Melissa Gorski, 20;
Yeast, 14; Elise Waldorf, 12; Katie Sheets, 12), but struggled against
the Bucs. "That’s somewhat of a mystery," said Jones. "I felt like
Norbert played better man defense than Beloit and we destroyed St.
Norbert’s defense."
Once the Scots relinquished the lead early in the second half, the
Bucs took charge. "Number 33 (Angie Meehan) hit some threes and that
really gave them some momentum," said Jones. "We let them have it and
didn’t take it back."
So, what does last weekend’s split mean for the Scots? They’ll need
to win some tough games on the road in order to make the conference
tournament. With six games remaining, only one
– Illinois College
– will be at
home. To make the road a little tougher, two teams ahead of Monmouth in
the standings, Carroll and Lake Forest, already own wins over the Scots
at Glennie Gym and the Scots needed overtime to beat Lawrence in
Monmouth. They’ll face the Vikings next Friday in Appleton. Jones, while
not looking past anyone, is aiming at a Feb. 9th rematch with Carroll as
being the key. "We’re really looking at it like we’re battling Carroll
for the No. 4 spot," she said. "We need some consistency."
The Scots are off until a road game at Grinnell Tuesday and Jones
can’t wait. "Darby is a tough place to play," claimed Jones. "I have yet
to win there, so I’m incredibly hungry to win in that gym. It’ll be
tough, Grinnell always shoots well in their gym. We’ve always been close
and that’s what’s been so frustrating."
Regardless of the league standings, Monmouth fans will be keeping an
eye on Tuesday’s game. Yeast is just three rebounds from becoming
Monmouth’s all-time rebounding leader, men or women. Her 937 career
rebounds is second only to Roger Sander’s 939 boards set from
1974-78.Yeast could break the record Tuesday against the Pioneers. The 5
p.m. game will be available on-line through the pay-per-view website
http://www.midwestconference.tv/.
VACATION PLANS
The Scots’ basketball teams will have 10 days off before they hit the
road for their next game Tuesday.
The Scots’ men will use that time to try and fix a problem they have
experienced this season –
a sluggish game on the back end of double-header weekends. Monmouth had
hoped to begin another win streak last weekend after their four-game
streak came to a halt nearly two weeks ago. But the Scots fell short in
overtime against St. Norbert Friday and didn’t have enough gas in the
tank on Saturday, falling to Beloit.
The Green Knights posted a 73-58 overtime win against the Scots in a
game that saw 11 lead changes. The Scots, who trailed by as many as nine
midway through the second half, seemed to get new life when Blaise
Rogers’ layup in the final 30 seconds of regulation tied the game at
55-55. Overtime was forced when the Knights’ Tony Jandron failed to hit
a last second shot. The extra session was anything but kind to Monmouth,
who made just 1-of-11 attempts in the extra five minutes and were
outscored 18-3 in the period.
"We’ve won some close games, but it was a case again of hitting some
long dry periods," said MC coach Mark Vershaw. "We came out flat, got
down, and then tried to kick it in. We did that at Ripon and turned
around and did it with St. Norbert."
Monmouth couldn’t recuperate for Saturday and fell to Beloit 67-60. A
week earlier, the Scots had posted a 24-point victory over the Bucs on
their home court. In the rematch, the Bucs took the lead midway through
the first half and never relinquished it.
"It was another case of the second day of a double-header weekend,"
said Vershaw. "We’ve tried everything under the sun from practice to
rotations to give us some energy, but so far nothing has worked. It
speaks to our conditioning this season from Day One. When we have that
quick turnaround, our guys are not recuperating as quickly as the other
teams."
Vershaw has found a common denominator in the last three losses. "It
takes too much energy to get back into a game after we spot our
opponents a 10-point lead," he observed. "When that happens, we’re
really tired down the stretch and can’t hang on. It happened at Ripon,
with St. Norbert and with Beloit."
Senior post Joe Terwelp averaged 23.5 ppg last weekend, and Vershaw
estimates his production could be even better. "If we were a better
shooting team, I think Joe could average around 30 a game," he said.
"We’re averaging less than 30-percent on threes, so teams are able to
sit back on him, which makes what he’s doing even more remarkable. He’s
really been a mainstay for us."
While applauding Terwelp’s work, Vershaw heaped praise on a bench
player and three newcomers. "Wes Wrage (4-of-5, 9 points) played well
for us Saturday and that was good to see," he said. "I really like what
our three freshmen guards (Eric Grant, Corey Gruber and Alex Tanney) are
doing. We have some good building blocks."
Monmouth is in the midst of a 10 day break and will resume Tuesday at
Grinnell. Vershaw cautions his squad can’t be slow out of the gate. "It
can’t be another case of too little, too late," said Vershaw of the
upcoming game with the high-octane Pioneers. "With 10 days off, we’ll
have a chance to work on some things. We have a very tough schedule and
all but one game will be on the road. We’re going to have to correct
some things and work on toughness to close out ball games."
The good news for the Scots’ return to action is the game plan
against the Pioneers should be simple
– limit turnovers
and make layups. "We did some positive things in the second half," said
Vershaw of the Dec. 5th meeting with Grinnell. "It’s going to be another
case of how tough we are with the basketball and how tough we are
finishing around the rim. In the first game we looked surprised by how
many threes they really shoot. We’ll be better prepared this time."
THE WEEK OF THE SCOTTISH WOMEN
Forget the men, a trio of Scots women were honored this week by the
Midwest Conference as Performers of the Week in their respective sports.
Senior Ashley Yeast (Sciota, Ill./West Prairie) posted her third and
fourth consecutive double-doubles and closed to within a breath of the
college’s career rebounding record last weekend to claim the MWC honor
in women’s basketball.
Yeast helped the Fighting Scots hand league-leading St. Norbert their
first conference loss, defeating the Green Knights 70-59. The 6-1 center
threw in 14 points and pulled down 12 rebounds in the Friday night win.
Yeast continued her rampage with 19 points and 10 rebounds in a 72-59
loss to Beloit on Saturday –
that’s 32-percent of the Scots scoring vs. Beloit. "Ashley had a great
week," praised coach Melissa Jones. "She stepped up and played well
against some tough teams in our conference."
Megan Wentzlaff (Mokena, Ill./Lincoln-Way East) accounted for four of
the Monmouth women’s six first-place finishes at the Coe College dual
meet last week and claimed her first POW honor in women’s swimming.
Wentzlaff won the 200-yard breaststroke (2:52.46), the 1000-
freestyle (12:04.97) and the 200- individual medley (2:35.79). The
senior teamed with classmates Jessica DeMink, Heather Plum and sophomore
Jessica Houser to win the 200- medley relay (2:10.39).
Senior thrower Jenny Babos (Leland, Ill./Somonauk) was dominating in
last weekend’s Midwest Invitational indoor track meet at Monmouth
College and was named the MWC’s Women’s Field Performer of the Week.
Competing at her home venue, Babos blasted her competition in the
weight throw. The senior slung the weight a provisional-qualifying 51’5,
beating her nearest competitor by six feet. The mark ranks her 10th in
the nation. She then threw a personal-best 40’2-1/4 in the shot to
finish second, less than four inches behind the winner.
THE WEEK AHEAD
Sat., Feb. 2
Indoor Track –
at Cornell Hilltop Invitational –
10:00 am
Swimming – at
Lindenwood University Triangular –
1:00 pm
Tues., Feb. 5
Women’s Basketball –
at Grinnell –
5:00 pm
Men’s Basketball –
at Grinnell –
7:00 pm
*Basketball games are available on the web at
http://www.midwestconference.tv/.
SCOTSIVATIONAL
"We all have ability. The difference is how we use it." - Stevie
Wonder |