Wood gets ace at Cascade Peaks

August 27, 2009 by  

RANDLE, Wash. — Jimmy Wood, a senior at Selah High School, recorded a hole-in-one on the fourth hole at Cascade Peaks RV & Golf Resort last weekend.

Wood used an 8-iron on the 141-yard hole. It was witnessed by Ricki and Dean Lenseigne.

• Leon Hester of Quincy scored an ace on the seventh hole at Granger’s Cherry Hills Golf Course on Monday. He used a 3-wood on the 136-yard hole and was witnessed by Dorothy and Don Harker.

DirecTV may lose Versus next week

August 27, 2009 by  

YAKIMA, Wash. — With the college football season about to start and the NHL a little more than a month away, it appears to be a very real possibility that DirecTV subscribers could lose access to the Versus network.

DirecTV and Versus’ parent company, Comcast, have an agreement which runs through Aug. 31, and are negotiating a new deal, according to DirecTV’s Web site. The Web site also says if a deal is not reached by Aug. 31, Versus “may” be removed from DirecTV.

Versus, which was known as Outdoor Life Network prior to 2006, carries Pac-10, Mountain West and Big 12 college football, as well as NHL, IndyCar, Tour de France, mixed martial arts and professional bull riding.

If negotiations fail, some games and events of note that will be unavailable on DirecTV include:

• The final two events of the IndyCar season.

• The start of the NHL season.

• Oregon State at Utah on Oct. 2

• Oregon State at Washington on Oct. 18

• The Civil War between Oregon and Oregon State on Nov. 29.

• Cycling’s tours of Missouri and Spain.

Have glove, will travel

August 27, 2009 by  

Wherever he’s needed, Kaczrowski shines in field ||

YAKIMA, Wash. — Before Dan Kaczrowski embarked on his first professional baseball journey, his college coach made a suggestion.

“He told me it might be a good idea to bring an outfielder’s glove,” Kaczrowski said. “Even though I’d played the infield my entire college career, he said, ‘You never know.’”

It turned out that Jason Verdugo, head coach of the Hamline University Pipers of St. Paul, Minn., was on the right track. He might also have recommended a first baseman’s mitt.

“I didn’t bring one of those, either,” Kaczrowski, a Bears utilityman, said during a recent interview.

Yakima's Dan Kaczrowski warms up to bat as his team plays the Tri-City Dust Devils on Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2009. (Sara Gettys/Yakima Herald-Republic)

Yakima's Dan Kaczrowski warms up to bat as his team plays the Tri-City Dust Devils on Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2009. (Sara Gettys/Yakima Herald-Republic)

And who knows? By the time the Northwest League season ends on Sept. 6, Kaczrowski might need to borrow someone’s catcher’s gear. Or maybe he’ll be summoned to the pitcher’s mound.

Kaczrowski has, after all, played all seven positions other than pitcher or catcher this summer, impressing Yakima manager Bob Didier and others among the Arizona Diamondbacks system.

“He’s also been a DH,” Didier said. “So I guess you’d have to count that, too.”

Have glove, will travel.

That the 5-foot-9, 170-pound Kaczrowski has played so many different positions is one thing. That he’s played each of them well — appearing as well-rehearsed in left field as he has at shortstop or second base — is quite another.

“He’s a baseball player,” Didier said. “I guess that’s the best way to describe him.”

Especially if you trace Kaczrowski’s baseball roots.

The Yakima Bears's Dan Kaczrowski runs for second base as his team plays the Tri-City Dust Devils on Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2009. (Sara Gettys/Yakima Herald-Republic)

The Yakima Bears's Dan Kaczrowski runs for second base as his team plays the Tri-City Dust Devils on Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2009. (Sara Gettys/Yakima Herald-Republic)

“I played everywhere except first and the outfield,” he said of his days at St. Anthony Village High School, located between Minneapolis and St. Paul. “I caught through JVs, and then I was our closer in high school.”

At Hamline (pronounced HAM-lynn), the player known as Kaz to friends and teammates played second base his first two years, then moved to shortstop as a junior and senior.

Early this season Didier, who has a knack for tapping previously unrealized potential, gave Kaczrowski a start in left field. In one of his first games there Kaz made two head-first, diving catches.

“The thing about diving for a ball,” he said, “is you have to know when to do it and when not to. If there are runners on base and you’re in a close game, you don’t want to let the ball to get by you so one or maybe all of them can score. With two out and no one on base — that’s when maybe you dive for one.”

Subsequent moves to center and right revealed similar success. He seems a natural at tracking fly balls, has the speed to reach drives to the gaps and the hands to hang on once he gets there.

Third base, meanwhile, is not called the hot corner for nothing.

“The ball gets on you quick,” Kaczrowski said. “It’s pretty much just reacting.”

His favorite position? “Probably second,” he said.

“The thing with me is, though, that I don’t really care as long as I’m in the lineup. As long as I’m playing — somewhere, anywhere.”

Said Didier, “The good thing about him is has enough arm to play short or third or in the outfield. You can pinch-run him (he began Wednesday night’s game with 10 stolen bases in 12 tries). He has some work to do on his hitting — still tries to pull the ball a little too much (though he had hiked his batting average to .273 prior to Wednesday’s game).

“He’s probably been overlooked some because of his size. But with his versatility, which makes him more valuable to any organization, he has a very bright future.”

And now, a wider selection of gloves.

Numbers don’t add up for Bears

August 27, 2009 by  

YAKIMA, Wash. — It’s nothing new, this matter of low-scoring teams struggling mightily to win games. But that doesn’t mean it can’t become especially old for a squad thus plagued.

“It’s been proven,” Bears manager Bob Didier said Wednesday night, having witnessed another distasteful example of that age-old axiom. “In rookie ball, single-A ball, whatever, you have to score four to six runs a game to win.”

Or one more than Yakima managed against division front-runner Tri-City, before an announced 1,752 at Yakima County Stadium.

The Bears’ 4-3 loss was their fifth straight, matching their second-longest skid of the year, while the Dust Devils’ fifth consecutive triumph moved them closer to the Northwest League East title.

Secured by Jeremiah Sammy’s two-out, RBI single in the ninth inning, after which Charles Ruiz came on for his league-leading 16th save in 17 chances, the victory kept Tri-City (39-26) seven games up on second-place Spokane with 11 to play.

It also overshadowed three more hits by Ryan Wheeler, the league’s leading hitter, plus a solid-if-unspectacular start by Dan Taylor.

However, as Didier noted, the game served to typify the season-long plight of a Yakima team (23-42) that has scored the fewest runs of any NWL team.

“It (not scoring) puts pressure on your pitchers, your defense — everybody,” he said.

It also backs the manager into undesirable corners, as was the case in a three-run Dust Devils third inning.

With runners at second and third and one out, Didier had the Bears infield in. Against Taylor, Yakima’s best starting pitcher, No. 8-hitter Alex Feinberg popped to short center field.

Roberto Rodriguez charged in an appeared to have a play, but lost the ball in the evening twilight. It thus dropped for an RBI single in front of second baseman Gerson Montilla, who would otherwise have been able to bail Rodriguez out.

“If you’re scoring more runs, you play the infield back in that situation and give them one (a run),” Didier said. “With our little offense, we don’t have that luxury.”

Taylor was then unable to make a play on Shane Lowe’s safety squeeze bunt, and the third run scored when Feinberg, who’d moved to second on the aforementioned play, stole third and then scored when Bears catcher Jorge Corniel’s throw skipped into shallow left field.

That was all Tri-City would get off Taylor, who pitched into the fifth inning for his sixth consecutive start. But, with the ninth-inning tally off Brian Budrow, who had two out before yielding a double to Tim Wheeler and then Sammy’s bouncer up the middle, that was enough.

It made setup man Craig Bennigson, who allowed no hits through the seventh and eighth, the league’s first eight-game winner (8-3).

Yakima had enjoyed scant success against Dust Devils starter Rob Scahill, who was in line for his first win against four losses when he left with a 3-0 lead through five innings.

But Brent Greer opened the sixth with a single to right, after which the white-hot Wheeler ripped a double off first baseman Bo Bowman’s glove and into the right-field corner.

After Tyson Van Winkle went down swinging, Tim Sherlock launched a double off the wall in right-center that scored two. Sherlock then took third on Gerson Montilla’s single, then scored on a wild pitch.

Wheeler and Montilla combined for six of the Bears’ eight hits, with the former’s 3-for-3 night (he also walked) making him 6 for 7 over the last two games and boosting his league-best batting average to .361.

Yakima is now 1-6 against the Dust Devils and 8-14 in one-run games.

8/27/09 Yakima Bears update

August 27, 2009 by  

Next game

Opponent: Tri-City Dust Devils.

When, where: 7:05 p.m. today, Yakima County Stadium.

Radio: KUTI (1460).

Probable pitchers: Yakima RHP Houston Summers (2-0, 6.37) vs. Tri-City RHP Sheng-An Kuo (3-3, 6.00).

Notes

ROTATION NOTATION: With 12 games left in their Northwest League season, the Bears have made some changes in their starting rotation.

Knuckleballer Houston Summers, previously used in long relief, will get the ball tonight for his first start of the year.

Brad Wilson, coming off a dominant performance Sunday at Tri-City (six innings, two hits, one run, one walk, 11 strikeouots), will start Friday with Andrew Wolcott going Saturday and Dan Taylor, who has emerged as Yakima’s ace, working Sunday.

Rafael Quezada, 0-7 as a starter, pitched a scoreless inning of relief Tuesday night and will finish the year in the bullpen. And Ricardo Taveras, who had seven starts (0-2, 4.42) before encountering arm discomfort, has been shut down for the season.

“We want to give some different guys some chances in different roles,” manager Bob Didier said. “Wilson was very good the other night — he established his fastball, had a good changeup and was getting his curve ball over, too. He had three pitches working and used them well.

“We have 12 games left, and we want to finish strong.”

Box score

TRI-CITY YAKIMA
ab r h bi ab r h bi
TWheeler cf 5 1 2 0 Kacrwski 3b-lf 2 0 0 0
Sammy ss 5 0 1 1 Inciarte lf 3 0 0 0
Sandoval rf 3 0 0 0 Davidson 3b 1 0 0 0
Bowman 1b 4 0 0 0 Greer ss 4 1 1 0
Sanders 3b 4 1 1 0 RWheeler 1b 3 1 3 0
Reyes dh 4 1 1 0 V Winkle dh 4 0 0 0
Gonzalez c 3 0 0 0 Sherlock rf 3 1 1 2
Feinberg 2b 3 1 2 1 Montilla 2b 3 0 3 0
Lowe lf 2 0 1 1 Corniel c 4 0 0 0
Wong ss 0 0 0 0 Rodriguez cf 2 0 0 0
Helm ph 1 0 0 0
Wrthngton cf 1 0 0 0
Totals 33 4 8 3 Totals 31 3 8 2
Tri-City 000 300 001 4
Yakima 000 003 000 3
E—Corniel, Harvil. DP—Tri-City 1. Team LOB—Tri-City 9, Yakima 6. 2B—Feinberg, TWheeler, RWheeler, Sherlock. 3B—TWheeler. S—Gonzalez, Kaczrowski. SB—Lowe, Feinberg. CS—RWheeler, Kaczrowski, Montilla.
IP H R ER BB SO
Tri-City
Scahill 5 3 0 0 1 5
Federico 1 4 3 3 0 1
Bennigson W,8-3 2 0 0 0 2 1
Ruiz S,16 1 1 0 0 0 3
Yakima
Taylor 5 5 3 2 3 8
Harvil 2 1 0 0 2 1
Budrow L,3-3 2 2 1 1 1 2
WP—Scahill, Federico, Harvil, Budrow. HBP—Montilla (by Scahill). Umpires—Shaun Lampe, Joel Brinkman. T—2:43. A—1,752.

Northwest League Standings

EAST DIVISION
W L Pct. GB
Tri-City (Rockies) 39 26 .600
Spokane (Rangers) 32 33 .492 7
Boise (Cubs) 30 35 .462 9
Yakima (D-backs) 23 42 .354 16
WEST DIVISION
W L Pct. GB
Salem-Keizer (Giants) 40 25 .615
Everett (Mariners) 35 30 .538 5
Vancouver (Athletics) 31 34 .477 9
Eugene (Padres) 30 35 .462 10

Wednesday’s results

Tri-City 4, Yakima 3
Spokane 7, Boise 1
Everett 21, Salem-Keizer 1
Vancouver 13, Eugene 6

Today’s games

Boise at Spokane, 6:30 p.m.
Everett at Salem-Keizer, 6:35 p.m.
Vancouver at Eugene, 7:05 p.m.
Tri-City at Yakima, 7:05 p.m.

Friday’s games

Boise at Spokane, 6:30 p.m.
Vancouver at Eugene, 7:05 p.m.
Everett at Salem-Keizer, 7:05 p.m.
Tri-City at Yakima, 7:05 p.m.

Robertson will start at QB for Central in opener

August 27, 2009 by  

YAKIMA, Wash. — The race for the starting quarterback job at Central Washington remains a dead heat, but someone must start Saturday night’s season opener at Mesa State.

So in that regard Wildcats coach Blaine Bennett disclosed Wednesday that redshirt freshman Ryan Robertson will be the man with Western Washington transfer Cole Morgan also getting substantial playing time.

“What we’re going to do is start Ryan,” Bennett said after Wednesday afternoon’s workout, “and then we’ll also have Cole playing in certain series or certain quarters. We haven’t exactly decided how we’ll do that, but they’ll both play.

Robertson

Robertson

“Then we’ll continue our evaluational process throughout the game and see who performs best.”

Robertson, a 6-foot-3, 195-pounder, was part of Bennett’s first recruiting class out of Sammamish High School.

Morgan, 6-3 and 203, is a senior who prepped at Ballard before starting his college career at Washington State and then moving to Western.

The duel to succeed Mike Reilly, who started every Central game the previous four years, once included Nick Lomax from Boise State, Johnny DuRocher from Washington and Jordan Rasmussen from Montana State.

Those three all left the program, however, with DuRocher the most recent to exit.

Morgan last season backed up Adam Perry in what proved to be the Vikings’ last season of football. He played in only one game, completing 4 of 6 passes for 26 yards and no touchdowns with no interceptions.

The only other quarterbacks on Central’s roster are David Weisner, a redshirt freshman from Walla Walla, and true freshman Jordan Durbin from Prosser. Durbin is expected to redshirt.

Three Yakima boxers win Seattle-area bouts

August 27, 2009 by  

WHITE CENTER, Wash. — Three of four boxers from the Yakima Police Athletic League posted victories in the White Center PAL boxing tournament this past Saturday.

In the Open Division (10 or more fights), Andy Reyes, 16, and Eric Ocampo, 14, both won their fights, with Damon White, 15, winning in the Novice Division (fewer than five fights).

White defeated Williams Edwards of Tony’s Boxing in Auburn, Reyes decisioned Lalo Lopez from the South Seattle Sea-Mar Boxing Club, and Ocampo decisioned Hector Reardon of the Tacoma Boxing Club.

Yakima’s David Dzul also made the trip, but they were unable to match him up with a boxer.

The Yakima PAL coach is Reid Goyette.

Soccer

Strikers excel at Chinook Cup

The boys and girls U-11 Sun City Strikers teams both captured medals after their efforts in the Chinook Cup Challenge last weekend in Portland.

The girls team, coached by Ryan Alexander, won the Gold Division championship, defeating Aloha United Pride 2-1 in a shootout. Team members are Dusti Benner, Olivia Chan, Kaitlyn Gasseling, Kendra Hanses, Carlee Kopp, Llesenia Massey, Natalie Nagle, Mikala Page, Lauryn Peters, Tristen Roberts, Makala Swart, Jesse Sydney and Haley Wammock.

The boys team, coached by Jake Sagare, took second, losing to MASC Manchester United in the Silver Division final. Team members are Nick Berge, Tanner Bortolazzo, Seth Conrad, Jared Cozzacrea, Andrew Hanses, Luis Haro, Anthony Lopez, Lorenzo Lopez, Blake Miller, Kolbein Moore, Keegan Morford, Quinton Stromme and Angel Sanchez.

8/27/09 VSW bulletin board

August 27, 2009 by  

RACQUETBALL: The Yakima Athletic Club fall league, which is open to members and non-members, starts Sept. 9. The league runs for six weeks and meets on Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m. For more information or to sign up, contact the YAC at 509-453-6521.

SOFTBALL: The University of Washington’s national championship team will be at Selah’s Carlon Park on Sept. 26-27. The Huskies will play a doubleheader against Boise State on Sept. 26. Game times are 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. and admission is $2. At 5:30 p.m. on Sept. 26 there will be a dinner and auction at the Selah Civic Center. Tickets are $25 and can be purchased from Bill Harris at 697-7006 or 961-1588. On Sept. 27 there will be a pitching and skills clinic for ages 8-12 and 13-18. Sessions will be 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The cost for the clinic is $50 for one camp and $80 for both. For more information or to register, go online to www.washingtonsoftballcamps.com.

SWIMMING: The YMCA Swim Team is holding tryouts for new members all next week. Swimmers age 11 and over are welcome Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 4:30 to 6 p.m. and 10 and under on Tuesday and Thursday from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Practice begins Sept. 8. For more information call coach Roger Coburn at 509-972-5272.

BASEBALL: Speed and agility, and strength classes are starting at Baseball Advantage. The six-week classes begin Sept. 1, and are on Tuesdays and Thursdays each week, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. each day. For more information, call 910-9333 or 961-6559.

8/27/09 Valley Sports Weekly

August 27, 2009 by  

Pool

Upper Valley
9-BALL SUMMER LEAGUE
Standings, Week 9
Bud 9-Ball: West Valley #4 66, Little Dutch Inn #6 62, Brews & Cues #3 60, West Valley #3 55.
Bud Light 9-Ball: Little Dutch Inn #17 132, Ranch #10 129, Ranch #8 115, Little Dutch Inn #13 110.
Bud Light Lime 9-Ball: Ranch #13 120, Little Dutch Inn #12 98, Little Dutch Inn #18 95, Ranch #11 90, T&T #3 83.
Bud Select 9-Ball: Ranch #9 128, Ranch #12 115, Little Dutch Inn #14 86, Little Dutch Inn #15 81, Susie’s 75.

Softball

Yakima Parks and Recreation
MEN’S ASA
Standings, Aug. 24
A Division: 2nd Street Grill/Tequila’s 8-0, Aqua Sox 3-5, Team Beer 3-5, Sports Center 2-6, Steel Structures 2-6, Yakama Naash 0-8.
B Division: The Replacements 7-1, Washed Up 6-2, The Bandits 5-3, Old Town Pump Mudsharks 1-7, Bad Boys 1-7, Elephant Super Car Wash/Beer Nutz 0-8.
C Division: Electric Boogaloo 4-2, Four Square Fungos 3-3, Shocker 3-3, Spike’s 3-3, Inland Fire Protection 1-7.
D Division: VH Legal/CBB Law 6-2, Moss Adams LLP 5-3, Country Financial 5-3, BHUC/North West Auto Body 4-4, Outlaws 2-6, Vijarro’s Crew 1-7.
E Division: Little Dutch Inn 5-1, Structural Components/Yakima Battery 4-2, Pain Killers 4-2, Firefighters 5-3, Shield’s Bombers 3-3, Boondock Saints 1-7, Max’s/Caribbean Casino 0-8.
F Division: Desperado’s 6-0, Fire Rescue 4-2, Chinook Heating 3-3, Vance Heating & A.C. 2-4, Y.T.C. Ligers 2-4, Brews & Cues 1-5.
G Division: Jack Horner Electric 8-0, Yak-Town Bombers 3-5, Old Town Pump/Fruit City 2-4, Retrofits 2-4, Hooligans 2-4, Country Studs 1-5, The Bar 0-8.
WOMEN’S ASA
Standings, Aug. 24
Platinum Division: Planned Parenthood/Sports Center 6-0, Yakima Merchants 4-2, T&T Lounge/Mickey’s Misfits 3-2-1, Over & Under 2-6, Yakama Nation 0-5-1.
Gold Division: Scared Hitless 6-2, Boise Cascade 5-3, Auto Metrics 5-3, Ball Busters 0-8.

8/27/09 Yakima Valley scorecard

August 27, 2009 by  

Apple Tree
MEN’S DIVISION
2-Man Tournament, Aug. 22
First Flight — Gross: 1, Pete Pitzer-Mark Donahue 68; 2, John Onstad-Shane Snell 69; 3, Steve Crow-Dewey Boynton 70. Net: 1, Steve Hargreaves-Ron Ball 581/2; 2, Butch Lenberg-Larry Oliver 611/2; 3, Dan Snipes-Alex Podruzny 621/2.
Second Flight — Gross: 1, Stacy Burns-Ike Purdy 72; 2, Mark Turnquist-Tony Frontis 75; 3, Ed Parkins-James Barber 77. Net: 1, Michael Harrison-Greg Lenhart 58; 2, (tie) Ray Ridenour-Gary Hall 601/2, James Richartz-Josh Rohwer 601/2.
WOMEN’S DIVISION
Club Championship, Aug. 18-19
Gross: 1, Betty Gilmore 164; 2, Ann Hall 176; 3, Pene James 184; 4, Debbie Holbrook 190; 5, Judy Rozelle 201. Net: 1, Sara Keefe 143; 2, Linda Lenseigne 147; 3, Bev Morgan 149; 4, Lynda Matthews 151; 5, Carol Romig 153; 6, Carol Hammermeister 157; 7, Claudette Haubner 161; 8, Connie Wilson 166.

Mount Adams
MEN’S DIVISION
Individual Play, Aug. 20
First Division — Gross: 1, Troy Wilmoth 71; 2, Aaron Louis 75; 3, Lynn Jenison 77. Net: 1, Erick Holden 65; 2, (tie) Joel Elder 72, Kim Parker 72, Jerry Besel 72.
Second Division — Gross: 1, Tony Whitley 84; 2, Chon Torres 88. Net: 1, Monte Heggie 63; 2, Leonard Rabanal 71.
Individual Play Tourney, Aug. 22
First Division — Gross: 1, Gary Hutchins 70; 2, Marcus Kilthau 71; 3, Ty Schatz 74. Net: 1, Louis Alcala 66; 2, Greg White 68; 3, (tie) James Rogers 69, Tye Barrett 69.
Second Division — Gross: 1, Randy Anderson 88; 2, Jim Bradbury 90; 3, Gary Hyatt 92. Net: 1, Doug Wright 69; 2, Randy Cobb 72; 3, (tie) Dexter Rogers 73, Dave Barnes 73.
WOMEN’S DIVISION
Mutt & Jeff, Aug. 19
1, Sharon Hedden 261/2; 2, Sheila Whitaker 39.
COUPLES DIVISION
Chapman, Aug. 21
Gross: 1, Mike Chambers-Debbie Anderson 39. Net: 1, Kim Parker-Connie Rogers 28; 2, Randy Anderson-Maria Frank 303/4; 3, Ron & Carol Storkel 331/4.

SunTides
MEN’S DIVISION
Thursday League, Final Standings
1, Fore Players 841/2; 2, KWL Brokerage 84; 3, Curly’s Bar and Grill 801/2; 4, Rocc’s 771/2; 5, The Foreskins 74; 6, Northwest Autobody 74; 7, 429 Goldworthy 66; 8, House of Real Estate 631/2; 9, Country Rock Cafe 561/2; 10, RJ’s Tire and Auto 541/2.
WOMEN’S DIVISION
Gross and Net, Aug. 25
A Division — Gross: 1, Karen Cooper 86; 2, Carolyn Bowman 89; 3, Judy Pozarich 95. Net: 1, Grace Wagoner 67; 2, (tie) Claudette Haubner 72, Lynda Mathews 72.
B Division — Gross: 1, Anne Fortier 94; 2, Sharon Anderson 101; 3, Vi Bond 104. Net: 1, Becky McCloud 74; 2, Lynne Willard 75; 3, Bev Morgan 81.
C Division — Gross: 1, Dianne Oeltjen 105; 2, Evva Lange 108; 3, Karen Salsgiver 116. Net: 1, Harriet Clark 69; 2, Donna Erhart 75; 3, Sally Billups 87.
Buckskin qualifier: Dianne Oeltjen 67.
COUPLES DIVISION
Friday night, Aug. 21
Gross: 1, George & Linda Plummer 36; 2, Don & Harriett Clark 42; 3, Ken & Margaret Hawkins 43. Net: 1, Ron & Marty McClain 331/2; 2, Will Curley-Mary Egan 34; 3, Lou & Sally Anderson 343/4.

Westwood West
MEN’S DIVISION
6-6-6 Tournament, Aug. 23
Gross: Jim Noel 77. Net: (tie) Berk Greenwood 62, Richard Olszewski 62.
First 6 — Gross: Jim Noel 23. Net: Bill Rogers 18.
Second 6 — Gross: (tie) Andy Fischer 26, Jim Noel 26. Net: (tie) Howard Alexander 20, Berk Greenwood 20.
Third 6 — Gross: Ron Luttrell 27. Net: Richard Olszewski 20.
WOMEN’S DIVISION
Better Ball Tournament, Aug. 12
1, Trudy Ledwich-Pam Kingsboro 60; 2, Bernie Snyder-Waldene Benoit 61; 3, (tie) Andrienne Quinnell-Marnie Finney 64, Judy Ponto-Marci Snyder 64.
Match vs. Par, Aug. 19
A Division: 1, Jan Stohr +2; 2, Trudy Ledwich +1.
B Division: 1, Marci Snyder 0; 2, (tie) Geneva Nelson -2, Kathie Sanders -2, Paula Redd -2, Waldene Benoit -2.
C Division: 1, Elsie Gamache 0; 2, Janie Richartz -1.
COUPLES DIVISION
Chapman, Aug. 20
Gross: 1, Gary & Pam Kingsboro 58. Net: 1, Jim & Janie Richartz 41; 2, Hilde Brule-Dave Edgerton 47; 3, (tie) Al & Shirley Rogstad 48, Don & Geneva Nelson 48.

Yakima Country Club
MEN’S DIVISION
Club Championship, Aug. 22-23
Club champion: 1, Jeff Larkin; 2, Gabe Runge; 3, (tie) West Campbell, Terry Harrington.
First Flight: 1, Doug Snipes; 2, Joe Buchanan; 3, (tie) Terry Bleisner, Michael Roche.
Second Flight: 1, Michael Combs’ 2, Bill Douglas; 3, (tie) Mike Cole, Mark Uhlman.
Third Flight: 1, Bruce Kinney; 2, Bruce Allen; 3, (tie) Will Halpin, Bruce Willis.
Fourth Flight: 1, Don Shute; 2, Ron Berger; 3, (tie) Alan Cattle, Harley Hansen.
Consolation champion: Duane Monich d. Bill Adkison.
First Flight: Ash Miller d. Tim White.
Second Flight: Dave Lewis d. Tom Snell.
Third Flight: George Nedhardt d. John Gavin.
Fourth Flight: Julio Gomez d. Corky Lewis.
WOMEN’S DIVISION
Best 9, Aug. 25
Low gross: Cricket Callarman 87. Low net: Debby Douglas 69.
First Flight: 1, (tie) Terri Schaake 34, Marie Halverson 34.
Second Flight: 1, Karen Bernd 34; 2, Brenda Batali 351/2.
Third Flight: 1, Ellen Gibson 34; 2, Sally Kincaid 341/2.

Yakima Elks
MEN’S DIVISION
Aug. 19
4-Man, 1-Net: Mick McDonald-Jim Russi-Dick Dreher-Mike Broadhead 54; Dave Uhlman-Bob Sewell-Leonard Durand-Bill Poulin 56; Ted Stone-Jack Lovell-Tom Lovell-Jack Carey 57.
2-Man Bestball — Gross: Ron Capps-Don Capps 69; Jack VanVleck-John Jamieson 71; Mark Mochel-Jim Blevins 71; Mark Mochel-Joe Folk 71; Dave Uhlman-Leonard Durand 72; Dave Uhlman-Bill Poulin 72; Mark Mochel-John Mills 72; Mark Mochel-Les Webster 72. Net: Jim Russi-Mike Broadhead 59; Ted Stone-Jack Lovell 59; Jack Carey-Jack Lovell 59; Jack Carey-Tom Lovell 60; Mick McDonald-Mike Broadhead 61; Robert Weiss-RD Dalebout 61; Dan Rollins-Larry Ozanich 61; John Jamieson-Dick Welch 61; Bob Sewell-Bill Poulin 61.
Best 17, 0-10 HCP — Gross: Jack VanVleck 67, Dave Uhlman 70. Net: Mark Mochel 61, Ron Donaldson 63. 11-17 HCP — gross: Ron Capps 69, Jack Lovell 73. net: Bill Poulin 59, Les Webster 60. 18&U HCP — Gross: Robert Weiss 79, Jim Russi 84, Larry Ozanich 84. Net: Mike Broadhead 61, Ron Silicki 61.
WOMEN’S DIVISION
Electric Tournament, Aug. 20
Low gross: Christine Cook 73. Low net: Louis Schaap 60.
A Flight — Gross: 1, Nancy Eglin 75; 2, Dorothy Brink 83. Net: 1, Marge Oberlander 65; 2, Judy Cussons 65.
B Flight — Gross: 1, Shirley Markland 85; 2, Judy Gano 98. Net: 1, June Wilkes 69.
C Flight — Gross: 1, Nydo Damaskos 99; 2, Flo Holm 107. Net: 1, Evva Lange 64; 2, Jerry Stone 73.

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