Junior Varsity Soccer
??
Glenn squared off with
Parkland in junior varsi
ty soccer Oct. IS at Park
land. The host Mustangs came
away with a 2-0 shut out.
Photos by Rcginal^CtfijpRtoU
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Junior Varsity Football
Peoples' Rushing Leads Carver
+Yellow Jackets win fourth consecutive game, remaiifiiuibeaten in conference
By JEROME RICHARD
Chronicle Sports Editor
Shawn Peoples ran for 120
yards and Carver set the game's
tone on its first offensive posses
sion as the
| Yellow Jack
ihhhh||hhh|hhbh ets remained
HI undefeated in
North Piedmont 3-A Conference
junior varsity football with a 32-6
blowout of homestandine Trinity
Oct. 19.
The victory was Carver's
fourth straight, raising its confer
ence record to 4-0. The Yellow
Jackets stand 6-2 overall.
"We are playing together.
You can see the unity among the
players," Carver coach Darryl
Hall said. "They are playing as
* one. Winning helps, but we have
also had the repetition of almost
an entire season and that has con
tributed to our success. But
maybe most important is the
players believe in what we are
doing."
Carver wasted little time
exerting its muscle, scoring on
the game's first offensive series
when quarterback David Cole hit
paydirt on a sprintout and added
the PAT for an 8-0 lead.
The Yellow Jackets made it
16-0 when Tauric Rice took a
toss around right end for a 17
yard touchdown and converted
the extra point. Trinity scored on
a 15-yard tight end dump pass to
slice the lead to 16-6 before
Carver scored with 28 seconds
remaining in the first half when
Cole connected with Terry
Brown on a 45-yard scoring pass.
Rice converted the extra point for
a 24-6 halftime lead.
"Our goal going into the
game was to score earh." Hall
said. "In our last seven games we
scored late and I wanted us to
score early to build morale and
get a lead so other guys could
play in the second half. In that
respect the touchdown right
before the half \yas important for
us."
The Yellow Jackets started
the second naif like they opened
the game, scoring on their first
offensive possession when Peo
ples turned a dive play into a 75
yard touchdown scamper for a
32-6 advantage as Rice ran fpr
the extra point.
Carver played without three
defensive starters who were side
lined because of disciplinary rea
sons. Yet. the defense didn't skip
a beat.
*i wasn't concerned going
into the game about the three
missing starters because our
backups can do a fairly good
job." Hall said. "The starters and
backups are all about equal in tal
ent. About the only difference is
the backups don't have the expe
rience. so I expected some mis
takes. But we didn't miss a beat
without those three guys."
Spartans Make the Most of Limited Opportunities
By JEROME RICHARD
Chronicle Sports Editor
Mount Tabor made the most
of its limited offensive posses
' sions Oct. 19 to beat visiting
South Rowan, 13-0, in Central
The Spartans, leading 7-0 on
the strength of Walter Hauser's
40-yard first-quarter touchdown
run and Zach Aldridge's extra
point, touched the ball once in the
Piedmont 4-A
Conference
junior varsity
football.
i
third quarter, but made the most
of it when Hauser "sped 75 yards
on a right sweep to give the Spar
tans some breathing room at 1 3-0.
"They had the ball all night."
Mount Tabor coach Lonnie Pul
ley said of South Rowan. "We
didn't have the ball that many
plays. The defensive coaches got
on me because the defense was
on the field so much, but I'll take
scoring on big plays an\ day "
The Mount Tabor defense
came up with a couple of big
plays of its own when David
Kaplan intercepted a pass on the
Spartan 25 to stop a South Rowan
drive in the second half with
Mount Tabor clinging to a precar
ious 7-0 lead. Antoine Hughes
picked off a pass on the Raiders'
next series to stop another drive.
"Those were big plays for us
because South Rowan was dri
ving both times," Pulley said.
The Spartans, winners of
seven game* in a tow after a sea
son-opening loss to North Forsyth
and the owner of a 4-0 conference
record, got another big game
from Hauser. who rushed for 140
vards on six carries.
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