OUR GREAT PUBLIC TRUST: GEORGETOWN POLICE DEPT p.5 OCTOBER 20, 2016
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"Dan Moody" Unveiled on the Square
Former District Attorney and Governor named the 2016 Cattleman's Ball Honoree
Approximately 50 die-hard history buffs and museum fans gathered on the Old Courthouse lawn October 14 to take part in the unveiling of the Dan Moody statue on the east side of the historic building. The ceremony, scheduled for 10am, was well-attended despite the downpour that began around 9:55. Judge Bill Gravell opened the event representing Governor Moody and explained that, "You have all prayed for rain and I have talked to God and he has delivered it to us." Director Mickie Ross thanked the City for matching funds raised totaling $50,000 for the project, as well as Council members who contributed time, talent and treasure. She also recognized Williamson County Commissioners who worked to make sure the statue could be placed on county property. "The statue belongs to all of you—the community—and we have plans for more." The crowd re-convened in the 26th District courtroom upstairs and was regaled with a short biography of Governor Moody by Judge Gravell. He followed up his story telling with a recitation of the closing arguments from then-District Attorney Dan Moody's famous trial against members of the Ku Klux Klan in 1923. Moody was the youngest District Attorney in Williamson and Travis counties, and
Left: Museum Director Mickie Ross celebrates the long road to the reveal. • Top: Mayor Dale Ross joined by museum re-creators, Commissioner Valerie Covey and Councilman Steve Fought. • Above: Judge Bill Gravell recites Dan Moody's closing argument in his famous 1923 Ku Klux Klan trial. • Right: Sculptor Lucas Adams with his finished work. he also later investigated the highly corrupt James E. Ferguson, whose wife "Ma" Ferguson was Governor of Texas. His investigation recovered $1 million for the taxpayers of Texas. In 1926 he ran against her for Governor and become the youngest ever in Texas. He served two terms before leaving public office. Following the closing arguments, Ross announced the "Dan Moody" holiday ornament is now available for sale at the museum (inset right, $20). "The courthouse is an amazing place to be able to tell stories and we hope that all the groups who were involved in this day will continue to help us with what is to come." (View the video clip on the fpgtx.com channel at YouTube.com.) As a divine follow up to the unveiling, the Museum's 5th Annual Cattleman's Ball was a huge success, in part due to the extraordinary planning and management by the Museum staff, but also thanks to the special elegance and finishing touches
provided by the new Georgetown Sheraton hotel. Many of the 300-plus guests were there for the first time and crowed about the perfection of the setting and the entire evening. The guests observed a moment of silence for the late Commissioner Ron Morrison, and Director Ross thanked many local sponsors, including HEB, R Bank and the Sheraton among others. Ross reported that the Museum programs and exhibits served more than 12,000 students in the past year,
via traveling trunks, Hands on History days, and a variety of new exhibits at the museum. Coming soon "Uphill Both Ways: Schools in Williamson County", a look at our schools over the past 150 years to the fast-growing systems we have today. Also see "Courage & Contradiction: Civil War Stories of Williamson County." Visitors will explore unique and courageous stories surrounding our Union sympathies in the middle of a Confederacy.
At the Cattleman's Ball: Arden and David Trevino take a turn on the dance floor. • District Judge Stacey Mathews introduces the elected officials in attendance. • Sue and Dan Schrowang, Linda McDaniel, Kim & Ben Daniel, Beverly & Sheriff-elect Robert Chody. • Kevin & Erandine Kaplan • Vicki Jackimiec was the "Heads or Tails" winner and took home a Yeti cooler.
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In Brief
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OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
St. David’s Georgetown Names New Chief Operating Officer
St. David’s Georgetown
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The Austin Chapter of the Military Order of the Purple Heart raised over $1000 at a G.I. Breakfast fundraiser in Sun City Oct 8. Veterans and supporters alike enjoyed basic military fare, including S.O.S., as well as musical entertainment and a vehicle and armament display by the Lone Star Military Vehicle Preservation Association. The MVPA is made up of veterans and armed forces supporters and they participate in "anything military related or patriotic," including parades and school events. Pictured left are "Trent" and "Barry"—both wearing World War II army issue. Barry explains, "The dyes they used weren't very good so the green soldiers were actually green, as in new, and you would know the 'khaki' soldiers had been in battle a while." Volunteer servers (left) included Larry Darnell, Cindy Atcheson and Blanca Lindsey.
Hospital has named Skyler Reed as its new chief operating officer. Reed oversees the surgery department and most of the ancillary departments, including radiology, laboratory, engineering, environmental services and dietary services. He is also the hospital’s ethics and compliance officer. Before joining St. David’s Georgetown Hospital, Reed was the associate chief operating officer and an associate administrator at St. David’s South Austin Medical Center. He provided executive leadership for laboratory services; respiratory therapy; physical, speech and occupational therapies; food and nutrition services; environmental services; spiritual care; palliative care; and volunteer services. In addition, Reed was
Healthy Families Gtown Boards Mosquito Event Nov. 1 & Commissions: Sample West Apply by Jan. 6 Nile Positive The City is recruiting highly-qualified and dedicated individuals to serve on one of our advisory boards or commissions. City Council depends on citizen board members to help evaluate local issues to enrich and promote the community. Deadline to apply is January 6. Boards and commissions advise the City Council and guide City staff. They address a range of civic areas. An online application to apply as well as descriptions of boards and commissions can be found at georgetown.org. Applicants may include a resume of no more than two pages with the application. An application also may be printed and mailed to Mayor Ross and the City Council, PO Box 409, Georgetown, TX, 78627. Terms begin in March. Most board and commission members serve twoyear terms and most boards and commissions meet monthly or as needed. Contact the City Secretary’s office at (512) 930-3651.
Insecticide Spraying Planned The positive sample was collected from a trap on the north end of downtown Oct 11. The mosquito species has a range of about a mile. Due to the number of children and adults who will be outside in the evening for Halloween activities over the weekend, the City has implemented spraying in the vicinity. The City also continues to use larvicide tablets to treat standing water found on public property. “Residents have a key role in reducing mosquito breeding areas by draining pans and flower pots and putting larvicide disks in puddles or ponds on private property,” says Mark Miller, transportation services manager. There are currently no reported human cases of West Nile Virus in Williamson County, and the County has not had any reported human cases since 2014. For more information, go to the WCCHD website at WCCHD.org or TXWestNile.org.
Dr. Loyce Graham is hosting her first-ever community event November 1 at Women’s Apparel, Jewelr� & Accessories, Yar� Shop, Gour�et Foods, Slider Cafe and Sports Den Baby Giſts & Apparel, Collegiate, Fur�it�re & Home Decor, 305 Limestone Terrace in Junk Gy�sy™ Paint, Ar�isan’s Alley, Men’s Giſts, Wine Giſts & More! Jarrell; 10 am -noon and 6 pm-8pm. Dr. Graham operates Your Personal MD, a direct care medical facility in Jarrell, and the "Healthy Families" event will include free health screenings as well as several wellness product and service providers; Jarrell Pharmacy, Juice Plus, The opinions expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of The Essential Oils, Anytime Advocate, administration, staff or contributing Fitness and more. HEB is writers. The views expressed in all letters to the a publication of Fidelis Publishing Group, LLC Publisher: Mike Payne • Editor: Cathy Payne editor and signed opinion articles are those of offering flu shots for $12; Copyright © 2016 Fidelis Publishing Group, LLC- All Rights Reserved their authors. All letters to the editor must include a Senior Writer Convenience Subscriptions: visitors can pay cash or use name, address and phone number for Ann Marie Ludlow delivered via U.S. Mail verification. Anonymous and unverified letters insurance. There will be $52.00 / 26 issues Sports Editor to the editor will not be printed. The Advocate The Advocate Galen Wellnicki door prizes; kids activities, P.O. Box 213 • Jarrell, TX 76537 reserves the right to edit letters for length and or online at: journalistic style, and has a recommended length Sports Photography including a photo booth for www.WilcoOnline.com of 300 words. Russell Rinn click on “Subscribe” any kids or grownups who Freelance Correspondents want one more opportunity Russell Rinn to wear their Halloween Graphics 2013 Best of Texas General Excellence Elysia Davis costumes. The event and 2012 & 2015 activities are free, but she Address of Record: Media Honor Roll 181 Town Center Blvd. does ask visitors to bring a Suite 500 Jarrell, Texas 76537 "To know the will of God is the greatest knowledge, to find the will of God canned good for the Jarrell 512-746-4545 is the greatest discovery, and to do the will of God is the greatest achievement." info@FPGTX.com George’s On The Town Quarter Page Horizontal~Author Ad with Free Appetizer Offer for The Advocate. Size: 6 col. x 5” (10.25”w x 5” h) Unknown Food Pantry for admission.
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the facility’s ethics and compliance officer, chief staffing officer and led the strategic planning process for the hospital. “Skyler is a rising star with an exemplary track record of responsible operational management," Hugh Brown, chief executive officer of St. David’s Georgetown Hospital, said. “I am confident he will be an asset to St. David’s Georgetown Hospital and a valuable member of our leadership team.” Prior to joining St. David’s HealthCare, Reed was an operations analyst resident at The Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt in Nashville. Reed obtained his Bachelor of Science in Health Administrative Services from Auburn University in Alabama, and he earned his Master of Science in Healthcare Administration from Trinity University in San Antonio. Reed is a member of American College of Healthcare Executives, as well as the Health and Hospital Administration Organization. In addition, he is a St. David’s Foundation mentor and a regular volunteer with Habitat for Humanity and Austin Children’s Shelter.
Mental Health in Schools
The 6th Annual Mental Health in Schools Conference in Williamson County will take place November 2-4, 2016. As in past years, this conference is an effort by the Children & Youth Behavioral Subcommittee of the Williamson County Mental Health Taskforce to bring schools, community agencies, and behavioral health providers together, to support schools in improving outcomes for youth. The feedback from past conferences has been overwhelmingly positive and each school district in Williamson County has been represented in previous years. We are very excited about the 2016 conference lineup and look forward to this opportunity to learn and connect again. The Georgetown Project will again host a pre-conference documentary screening. The screening of "Resilience" at the Public Safety and Training Facility 5:30-8pm Nov 2. James Redford’s film delves into the science of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and a new movement to treat and prevent toxic stress.
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OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
Georgetown
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Congressman Carter Brings Unity and Recognition at GARW
Left: Vietnam Veterans with Paula Dennis (front, right) and Congressman Carter (center) and GARW members/friends who received 50th Commemorative recognition. • Right: Veteran Cathy Cody was recognized at the formal ceremony. CSM King mentioned that it is sometimes even more challenging for female Vietnam Veterans to come forward due to the extreme experiences they had during the war. He thanked Cody specifically for her service and her willingness to participate.
Congressman John Carter (R-TX31)
was the featured speaker at the October meeting of the Georgetown Area Republican Women. As part of the 50th Anniversary of the Vietnam War Commemoration, the Secretary of Defense is supporting and facilitating programs across the country to honor those Veterans. The commemorative program includes, among others, activities and ceremonies to thank and honor veterans of the Vietnam War and their families. During the luncheon, Central Texas' Veterans Advisory Committee Chair CSM Elijah King, Jr. recognized Vietnam Veterans
and/or their spouses and the Congressman presented them with pins and a certificate from the Department of Defense. The ceremony was poignant and emotional for many, and as CSM King pointed out, "We have taken this on as a mission. Vietnam was a very unpopular war. Many of our veterans returned home and were spat upon and were called names. Many of them took off their uniforms at port so they would not be recognized as soldiers who had served this great country. We can not go back and correct those wrongs, but I'm standing here today to say 'thank you' for your service. We honor you, and welcome home."
Unifying the Party
Congressman Carter spoke at length about the importance of the upcoming election. He compared our current situation to the Alamo, and how Santa Ana was only defeated later because the Texas army was able to splinter his forces. "I believe in the Republican Party, and I have since before Williamson County was Republican. We need to look past all the details and see the big picture." He clarified by recalling how Democrats were the majority party for a long time, until they fragmented. He added, "It is criminal to say that
Texas is in the mix... that we are a purple state. Texas is conservative and we prove it every day by the way we run our businesses," for which he received great applause from the group. "We need to unite ourselves. If we were to eliminate all the presidents who have served because we knew bad things about them, 85 percent of them would be gone. History has shown us new things and if we had 24-hour news about Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, the nation would be different today. Things are re-run for 24 hours and today, history becomes a current event. So let's realize no matter how flawed a candidate may be, our party is not."
"Manly" Cuisine On The Menu At 50 Fellas Foodfest Georgetown ISD's Education Foundation is planning its first-ever 50 Fellas Foodfest for its fall fundraiser. The event is just for adults, sponsored in part by H-E-B and takes place October 22 6-8:30pm at the Georgetown Municipal Airport GTU Jet Hangar. Manly teams of two "chefs" each registered from government, business and individual schools. VIP chefs include Mayor Dale Ross, Superintendent Dr. Fred Brent, Police
Chief Wayne Nero, City Manager David Morgan and more, will showcase their culinary talent with appetizers, entrées, and desserts. Event organizer Greg Bowden is pleased to report they have signed up more than 25 teams and, "Just via word of mouth, everyone jumped at the chance to share our vision, participate and support the Foundation." Team dishes will be judged by guests based on their flavor, creativity and how memorable they are. The
best appetizer, entrée and dessert will be chosen by popular vote and awarded a trophy—and bragging rights. Bowden says, "We have Roland Waits as entertainment and we expect at least 300 attendees who will enjoy a huge variety of flavors." Every dollar raised goes to support programs at GISD and tickets are still available for purchase at GISDedfound.org ($45).
"Trim Hunger" Donates to The Locker Salon Professional Acad-
emy of Georgetown held its annual "Trim Hunger" fundraiser Sept 25. Students gave free haircuts for donations, collected cash donations, held a bake sale, and spun signs to attract customers. October 12, owner Tuesday Wilson presented a check to Karen Crosby, founder of The Locker, with a check for $2860 to provide help and support for kids and teens who come to The Locker for
help. Trim Hunger is a national event committed to help families and individuals who are food-challenged. The Salon Academy chose The Locker because the service-learning organization provides not only food, but clothing, hygiene items and assistance with milestone events like school photos or class trips. "We just want kids to be able to feel normal," says Crosby. "We finally reached the point where
kids are comfortable coming to us for help; we have been around for a few years now and the stigma of asking has diminished a great deal. I am so happy to see the number of kids who come to us for help." Wilson is very proud of her students, who not only gave cuts, but were bold enough to visit local businesses and organizations for donations to increase their bottom line even more.
Conservative Values • Proven Leadership • Professionalism • Integrity • Results
Working For You Fiscally Conservative • Led a measure to pay an additional $10M of debt in both budget years 2016 & 2017, saving taxpayers approximately $10M in interest; • Worked to keep spending under control & voted to lower tax rate; • AAA bond rating maintained, saving tax dollars;
Conservative Leadership • Supports our Veterans & their families by addressing issues through Hero’s Night Out, including housing & job search, Peer Mentoring, & the Williamson County Veterans Treatment Court;
Infrastructure
• Completed IH-35 northbound frontage roads; • Completed Williams Dr. expansion from DB Wood/Shell Rd. to Ronald Reagan Blvd.; • Worked to locate County EMS in Florence, • Completed safety improvements to SH 29 Jarrell & Weir & increase coverage in other adding deceleration lanes at Jack Nickalus, areas of the county; Park Place, & Cedar Hollow; • Supported competitive compensation for • Completed safety improvements on law enforcement, retaining highly trained FM 2243 - adding a deceleration lane at personnel; Escalera Pkwy; • Continues to collaborate with various state • Completed CR 245 realignment at & local entities to address material health Williams Dr.; issues; • Partnered with TxDOT on the expansion of SH 195; “It is an honor to serve you as Williamson • Underway on plans for SH 29 Bypass from FM 2243 to IH-35; County Commissioner, Precinct 3, and I humbly ask for your vote and support on • Underway on plans for intersection improvements at DB Wood at SH 29; November 8th.” • Underway on plans to expand & realign CR 111;
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Williamson County
OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
Holiday “Share the Will” Deadline to Sponsor, Dec 5
Help military families in need Volunteer and Veteran ex-
traordinaire Will Williams of Round Rock is giving back to local veterans and Central Texans again this year. In 2015, Williams founded “Share the Will” with friend Dawn Douglas, and is partnering with Just Because Ministries to adopt at least 100 military families for Christmas, through Share The Will's Operation Warrior Christmas. Every year Just Because Ministries at St. William Catholic Church in Round Rock matches needy families who do not qualify for Brown or Blue Santa with sponsors. The ministry has allowed local 501(c)3 non-profit Share The Will to include local veterans and their families in the program. Unfortunately, the military's process of permanent change of station (PCS) often means military families in dire need of a Christmas do not arrive at Fort Hood until early or mid November—after the Just Because deadline for applications.
Share the Will volunteers prepare to make deliveries to Fort Hood families at last year's Project Christmas event. Gifts were delivered in a parade of Jeeps from the Austin Jeep People; known, as in the photo above, for their "creative" methods of parking. So, now in their second year, Douglas and Williams continue working hard to acquire their own resources and sponsors who wish to help these military families. Family names are provided by the local VFW, Heroes Night Out and churches in Killeen. As well, the duo is reaching out to all of Williamson County for help, specifically Round Rock, Sun City and Georgetown. Share the Will recipients are active duty, injured troops and families at Fort Hood, and sponsors may choose a family with one or a specific number of children.
Douglas says benefactors may spend as much as they choose, but they hope people will meet the minimums. “Our vision is that every child will have at least one gift under the tree—perhaps a $50 limit per child, and also that our adopters provide non-perishable food items for Thanksgiving or an HEB gift card.” Douglas assures donors that 100 percent of every donation goes to the military families; "Whether cash or toys, every dollar goes directly to these families." Sponsors may donate cash and Douglas will do
the shopping. She provides photographs of toys and gifts to sponsors to assure them their donation helped a family in need. All of Share The Will operating costs are paid by partners who choose to donate the costs of Share The Will's website, business cards, etc. Families have already begun applying to Share the Will, and Douglas asks sponsors to call her directly (512-779-6786) to sign up
to help the families. Williams says, “We plan to help everyone who applies, but we do have families who are in desperate need. Last year we helped provide Christmas to the families of the four helicopter pilots who perished in the chopper crash on Fort Hood; a single father who was deployed four times and injured twice with high medical costs for his special needs son; a single mom who is a vet-
eran, who had lost her job because she missed many days of work for her cancer treatment and surgery. Not a good time to be let go.” Share the Will and Austin JeepPeople will deliver the gifts and food on December 18 at Fort Hood. Sponsor donations need to be in before December 5 to allow any extra shopping and wrapping of the presents. Douglas will arrange to pick up gifts from donor homes prior to delivery, and will provide a tax deductible receipt to every Sponsor. The delivery is a party in itself. The Austin Jeep People usually put on a show, Douglas says. “We create kind of a parade when we go up there. Plus, Jeeps are fun to watch—they usually crawl on top of each other and the kids just love it! Right now our message is that no family will be turned away so while we hope to find 100 sponsors, we’d love to have more!”
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OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
PAGE A5
Georgetown Police Chief Nero at the White House Chief Wayne Nero visiting residents with Mayor Dale Ross during National Night Out by Ann Marie Ludlow
Last month, Georgetown Police Chief Wayne Nero was invited to participate in a White House Briefing Series to discuss 21st Century policing. As an adjunct instructor for the Department of Justice’s VALOR Program, Chief Nero has been work-
ing toward and speaking about 21st-century professionalism for some time. VALOR Training provides critical nationwide, no-cost officer safety training to all levels of law enforcement. Despite his clear competence, the Chief admits it was an honor to be invited. "The White House briefings have allowed law
enforcement executives to discuss the President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing report," Nero says, "on issues related to police-community relations. What I found interesting is that what the Task Force recommended are things that we've been doing and will continue to do." The Chief explained that the GPD has been consistently building trust and community engagement since he arrived here in 2010. "The report is a good starting point for agencies who do not have the strategic planning that we have, especially in strengthening relationships. While I feel we are actively engaged in this area, I also feel we have work to do.” He adds, "Community Policing is not a special program. Officers are people
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chosen from the community to serve, stand guard and protect. Sometimes, officers have fewer opportunities to interact with the public due to technology, and relationships may suffer. Ideally, people know each others' names. Our premise is getting back to stronger relationships in the community. Community Policing is nothing more special than building strong relationships and collaborative problem solving. That's what we’re commissioned to do." In the past year, GPD has launched its Rapid Deployment Team, activated a demilitarized MRAP vehicle and, for the eighth year in a row, reduced the per capita rate of incidents. Chief Nero reports that all of these things have not always had universal support but the success is in the numbers. The Advocate will provide a close-up look at the Deployment Team in a future issue. As far as being at the White House, Nero says, "It was an honor to be there and the experience provided value to Georgetown in knowing that we are headed in the right direction with regards to the Task Force recommendations. We received some valuable ideas and have lots of good work yet to do. I'm proud of the work our staff has accomplished this far in raising the bar for Georgetown, and we will continue to refuse mediocrity."
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Activities
PAGE A6
OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE will be at the park come rain or shine. Register at exceptionalgeorgetown.org
Zion Lutheran Church and School of Walburg
Boo Bash
SINCE
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hA
4:30 PM TO 7:30 PM
per
MONDAY NOV. 7
OCTOBER 30: Hosted by The Downtown Georgetown Association, this is a family-friendly trickor-treat event around the “Most Beautiful Town Square in Texas.” Merchants keep their stores open from 3 – 6 p.m. offering candy to all in costume. Boo Bash is fun and appropriate for all ages.
p u S nnua l Sausage
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SAUSAGE SOLD BY THE POUND – SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6; 2-4PM
From IH-35. Take Exit 268. Go East on FM 972 approx. 3 miles to FM 1105, then north .2 miles to Zion Lutheran Church & School • 512-863-3065
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5431 Williams Dr. Georgetown, TX 76533
Georgetown Halloween Festival
Dia de los Muertos
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OCTOBER 29, 6-8pm: Wolf Ranch Center. Bring little ones to Trick or Treating Night at Wolf Ranch Town Center. Everyone is invited to enjoy a night of Tricks, Treats and Halloween entertainment. Trick or Treating bags will be given to all children and there will be parent treat bags too.
OCTOBER 29: Round Rock Procession and Festival. Join several local partners for the fifth annual Dia de los Muertos procession and festival, from 1 to 8 p.m. at Centennial Plaza, 301 West Bagdad. Día de los Muertos is a traditional Mesoamerican holiday dedicated to the ancestors; it honors both death and the cycle of life. There will be activities for kids and art, craft and food vendors. There will be an area where you can build an altar in memory of a loved one. In addition, we will have a costume contest.
OCTOBER 27: 5:30– 8:30pm at the Community Center in San Gabriel Park The Carnival is 25¢ per ticket; 1 or more tickets needed for each game, activity or concession. The Trick-Or-Treat Village is free and there is a hayride for kids and adults. Don't miss the costume contest with prizes in several age groups, or pumpkin decorating for free. There will also be a Movie in the Park (no charge). Hotel Transylvania begins at 6:45pm at the at the Gazebo.
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Boo Run
OCTOBER 28-29: Ghosts on the Square Tours are hosted by the Williamson Museum. Tour times: 7:30, 8:00, 8:30 and 9:00 p.m. for both weekends. Tours held at 9 p.m. will be scarier than the earlier tours. Purchase tickets at the Williamson Museum at 716 S. Austin Ave., or by phone at 512- 943-1670. Tickets are $15 for non-museum members and $12 for members and students. For more information, go to Williamson Museum.
OCTOBER 29: The 8th Annual Exceptional Georgetown Alliance (EGA) Boo Run takes place this year in beautiful San Gabriel Park. The 5K Chip-timed race starts at 9:00 am, followed by the 1 mile Fun Run at 10:00 am. Come in your Halloween costume and stay after for a kids’ costume contest. Proceeds from this event help to fund extracurricular events, activities and summer day camp for students in Georgetown with Special Needs. Rain or Shine: We
OCTOBER 31: Christ Lutheran Church (510 Luther Drive). Boy Scouts will be competing for the best decorated car/trunk as they hand out candy to our Cub Scouts, family, friends and neighbors. This is the first year they have done this so hopefully many families can attend and we can create a new tradition every year to come. OCTOBER 31: First United Methodist Church 4-6pm on the church lawn. 410 E University Avenue. OCTOBER 31: First Baptist Church of Georgetown Fall Family Festival 5:307:30pm. 1333 W University Avenue.
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PAGE A7
OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
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CITATION BY PUBLICATION THE STATE OF TEXAS COUNTY OF WILLIAMSON
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF DOROTHY KAYE CL&L Trucks DACY, DECEASED, Cause No. Hiring CDL Truck Drivers. Home 16-0798-CP4, in County Court at Law every 36 hours. We offer Health #4 of Williamson County, 405 Martin Insurance, 401K & Paid Vacation. Luther King Street, Georgetown, TX Bi-annual raises with potential of 78626.
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All persons interested in said estate are hereby cited to appear before said Honorable Court on or before above mentioned time and place by filing a written answer contesting such application should they desire to do so.
If this citation is not served within 90 TERRI LYNN LUDWICK ELMORE, days after the date of its issuance, it A/K/A TERRI SCOTT, Applicant in shall be returned unserved. the above numbered and entitled Applicant’s attorneys: estate, filed on the 10th day of Tom Tourtellotte October, 2016 an APPLICATION 400 W. 15th St., Suite 950 FOR DETERMINATION OF Austin, TX 78701 HEIRSHIP AND LETTERS OF INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION of the said estate and requests that the said Court determine who are the heir and only heirs of the said DOROTHY KAYE DACY, Nancy E. Rister DECEASED, and their respected Williamson County Clerk shares and interest in such estate. 405 MLK Street, Box 14 Georgetown, TX 78626 Said application may be heard at By:/S/S. Klint, Deputy 10:00 o’clock a.m. on or after the first Monday next after the expiration of
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The Last Word
PAGE A8
OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
PUBLISHER'S CORNER
It's All Fun & Games Until Somebody Gets An Eye Poked Out by Mike Payne
As I write this, there are nineteen days, ten hours, twenty-one minutes and fifty-nine seconds left until the Presidential election. In a normal election year this would amount to just under three weeks. This year, however, that amount of time actually represents a lifetime, maybe two, when you consider what might transpire before we push, pull, punch, or mail our choice for President on Election Day. I’ve tried to imagine some of what could happen between now and then... It might be revealed that Hillary received the first successful head transplant, and that she actually has the brain of Harambe; or that Donald Trump used to be a woman, and in the comfort of his own home almost always dresses in Jimmy Choo’s and a corset. Or, perhaps Julian Assange will release John Kerry’s tax returns, showing him to have practically been on welfare before he met the Ketchup queen. Wait—never mind—that happened in real life. Let’s try this one: Kelly Ann
Conway is Vladimir Putin’s secret lover and Donald Trump has a 90% interest in Stolichnaya Vodka, a Russian and American staple. Of course, there’s former President William Jefferson Clinton to consider. It may be reported that 29 more women came forward to claim he sexually assaulted them, but then that wouldn’t be a real surprise to anyone. Maybe they’ll find evidence that Hillary and Huma have a “thang”. Again—yawn. Who doesn’t suspect that already? What if the CIA was to reveal that there really are aliens, and Trump is one of those reptilians with the really long tongues that eat people, shoes and all? We can play this game all day—except that it isn’t a game, and some of these may have to occur for this race to get any crazier. It appears that when Hillary talks about “handlers”, she’s talking about the two FBI agents that follow her around and, from time to time, have to really handle her, holding her up until she can fall into the car. Nothing to see here, folks…. Move along. What if Trump’s tax returns really do show he didn’t pay any taxes for twenty years? Who wouldn’t want to figure out how to do that? I have a friend who has been a CPA for 49 years, and he says he has never had one of his clients say, “Gee, is that all I owe? I feel guilty. You better add on another fifty thousand.” How about this one— Mark Cuban gets rich with an IQ of 59. Has anyone actually listened to the
OP-ED
guy? He’s living proof that a thousand monkeys typing on a thousand typewriters for a thousand years can write the great American novel; there’s about as much chance of that as of Mark Cuban ending up a billionaire… This election has devolved into the lowest common denominator. This may come as a surprise for some, but it is not even the result of the seeming ineptitude of the candidates. No, it is actually because of the gross stupidity of much of the press and media coverage. I had CNN on the other day, and there was considerable wailing and gnashing of teeth concerning Trump’s comment that if he were President, Hillary would be in jail. They spent eons pontificating on the fact that obviously, as President, Trump would usurp all authority and personally hop in his motorcade, go find her, and bring her in like Matt Dillon did on Gunsmoke. Is the media really that stupid? Or do they just believe the American people are? There are those who say a Trump presidency might mirror Winston Churchill who responded to a woman’s confrontation about him being drunk with, “Yes, I am drunk; but tomorrow I will be sober, and you will still be ugly.” Crass, but true, perhaps? Regarding this election, Abraham Lincoln expressed it best with this admonishment: “Elections belong to the people. It’s their decision. If they decide to turn their back on the fire and burn their behinds, then they will just have to sit on their blisters.”
We Must Respect the Rule of Law by Congressman John R. Carter
From Central Texans and police officers alike, one message I keep hearing is the absolute need to respect the rule of law. I'm honored to serve on the committees that provide resources for hundreds of thousands of law enforcement professionals across our great nation, but funding alone cannot establish security and rein in lawlessness. Sadly, we've seen a society-wide erosion in respect for the rule of law. When our nation's leaders allow lawbreakers to escape just punishment, it sets a dangerous example for society at large. When guilty individuals are allowed to escape consequences, it enrages the victims and allows the offender to avoid the essential course-correcting results of their decision. When those charged with enforcing the law fear for their safety, it empowers those who seek to subvert the very foundation of our nation. We see it on the border every day. Millions cross illegally into Texas, treating our border as if it doesn't exist, unconcerned about the consequences. To make matters worse, the Obama administration issues executive orders that undermine border security and refuse to consider key immigration reforms that would make a real difference and save lives along our border. In this current Congress I introduced the Protection of Children Act of 2015, a border security bill designed to stop the endless flow of foreign citizens across our southern border. The bill makes crucial changes to the way foreign citizens are processed once they enter the country ille-
gally. The PCA closes loopholes routinely used by smugglers to subvert our asylum system. Those who enforce the rule of law are under more scrutiny than ever these days. I will continue to hold our law enforcement to the highest standards while I count on their help to protect our homes, families, and communities. Yet, to lay the job of teaching respect for the rule of law at the feet of our police alone is not the answer. It must be taught in our schools, by our community leaders, and within the walls of our homes. I have consistently supported efforts to help prepare our police officers, and to build bridges of trust between the officers and communities they serve. We must do all we can to protect those who protect us. Over my 20 years as a judge for the District Court in Williamson County, I saw lawlessness on a small scale as thousands were arraigned before my court. Many of the judgments I issued resulted in positive, life-changing course corrections. The key to success in many of the cases I tried was the swift and just consequences that nurtured a healthy respect for the rule of law. We need to apply that approach across our land. Our great nation was built on the rule of law, a hard work ethic, and respect for others. I pray we continue to teach our children, friends, and families to respect the rule of law and to do right by their fellow men. God Bless you my fellow Texans. Rep. Carter represents TX Dist 31, which includes Ft Hood, the largest active duty armored military installation in the free world. He is Chairman of the Homeland Security Subcommittee on Appropriations, co-chair of the House Army Caucus, is on the Subcommittee for Commerce, Justice and Science and Defense Appropriations Subcommittee.
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OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
Pirates Plunder Trinity, 48-0 By Galen Wellnicki Sports Editor
After three seasons of sailing the collegiate football seas—and usually being the plundered—Southwestern's Pirates have become quite salty in their fourth voyage. The cannons appear to have plenty of power and shell, the treasure chest contains two conference victories, and the men charged with repelling boarding attempts have their eye patches screwed on tightly and are swinging their
swords with authority. This past Saturday in San Antonio, the Pirates gave their second consecutive showing of their revised identity by sacking the host Trinity Tigers, 48-0, in a Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference game. Southwestern (3-3 on the season) will play Texas Lutheran, also 2-0 in SCAC play and 2-4 for the campaign, for the undisputed conference lead at 6 p.m. Saturday at the GISD Athletic Complex. TLU, which lost its four non-conference
starts, is coming off a 17-13 win on the road over Austin College. The Bulldogs opened conference play with a 38-28 win over Trinity. At least as far as the Tigers were concerned, there were some bad dudes in the Pirates’ crew during their raid on the Alamo City. Justin Broussard and Matt Gillen set SCAC records, as the Bucs rolled to a dominant victory in which they might not have been enough planks for the Tigers to walk. Broussard, the SCAC's
Defensive Player of the Week selection for his performance in the previous week's 37-7 win over Austin College, remained on a rampage with nine tackles and including 5.5 sacks, which set a new conference single-game record. Broussard is a senior from Beaumont Kelly. "I was very proud of the guys around me," Broussard said of the defensive effort, which held Trinity to less than 2 yards a play on 75 snaps. "Everything was clicking. As we say, 'we
were all eating' out there." Gillen, a senior from New Tech High in Coppell, caught nine passes for 135 yards and he reached the end zone five times overall. The senior wide receiver hauled in four touchdown catches (14, 8, 13, 14 yards) and fell on a fumble in the end zone during the first quarter, which also counted as a receiving touchdown. His five receiving touchdowns are the SU defensive end Justin Brousmost in SCAC history. sard recorded 5.5 sacks in the SU cont. on B6
win over Trinity. Photo courtesy Southwestern University.
Eagles, Patriots Fall In District Play
East View Tanner Hahn (#2), Chris Matta (#3) and Zion Hester (#10) combine to force a fumble vs the Hutto Hipps. Photo by: Chris Cutler.
Hutto Escapes Patriots, 36-29
No. 1 Cedar Park Tops GHS, 41-20 By Galen Wellnicki
By Jon Whittemore
Sports Editor
Advocate Correspondent
After being dispatched by then-No. 1 Cedar Park, 41-20, this past Friday at the GISD Athletic Complex, Georgetown will try to terminate a two-game losing streak and claim a victory that should ensure them of a berth in the Class 5A playoffs this Friday when they face struggling Bastrop Cedar Creek at 7:30 p.m. at Bastrop Memorial Stadium. The loss to the Timberwolves dropped the Eagles to 4-2 in conference play and 6-2 on the season with just the battle with Cedar Creek, an open date and a showdown with currently unbeaten Pflugerville Connally on the final Friday of the regular season. For Cedar Park, the win extended its current winning streak to 23 games and kept it in a tie for first in District 19-5A with Connally at 5-0 with three games to go, including this Friday's showdown between the Timberwolves and Cougars at Connally. However, the win over GHS did not enable Cedar Park to continue its hold on the No. 1 position in The Associated Press
In what has become a recurring pattern, East View surged ahead, fell behind, fought back and then collapsed in losing a District 19-5A contest to Hutto this past Friday night at Hippo Stadium. The Patriots now stand at 1-5 in district play (2-6 overall) and have eliminated themselves from post-season competition. Hutto remained mathematically alive with a 2-3 district record, but still must play Rouse and Cedar Park in back-to-back games before closing with Bastrop Cedar Creek. The Hippos were led by 210-pound senior running back Deary’on Milligan, who rushed for 219 yards and four touchdowns. “It’s redundant to say, but we played with great effort,” East View coach Rob Davies said. “We’ve been in so many games (Cedar Park, Connally, Hutto) and just couldn’t close them out in the final quarter.” The Patriots will close out their season, entertaining Elgin at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the GISD Athletic Complex before finishing up at Bastrop on Friday, Oct. 28. East View
GHS cont. on B5
Junior Caden Leggett picks up 68 yards on a pass recption from QB Chandler Herman. Photo by: Russell Rinn
Patriots cont. on B4
VOLLEYBALL/TENNIS PAGE B2
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OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
Eagles, Patriots Take 3-2 Wins Over Hutto By Galen Wellnicki Sports Editor
At least in volleyball, Hutto got a belly full of GISD teams in its drive to reach the Class 5A playoff this past week as the Lady Hippos dropped 3-2 decisions to both Georgetown and East View. The two losses tumbled Hutto to 7-7 as it faces a three-team derby with Georgetown (6-7) and Bastrop Cedar Creek (7-6) to gain the fourth-and-final Class 5A state playoff berth from District 19-5A. Rouse (14-0), Cedar Park (12-1) and East View (9-4) appear to be set as the district first's three finishers with the big question being what will happen when the Lady Raiders and Lady Timberwolves meet on the final night of the regular season at Cedar Park. Coach Kara Del Bosque's Patriots are expected to solidify their hold on third as they face struggling Elgin at home at 6:30 p.m. Friday and on the road at Cedar Creek at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 25, after having played Cedar Park on Tuesday. Georgetown needs to sweep its final three matches to have a solid shot at the fourth spot, but could end up in a playoff situation with a final 8-8 mark. Coach Jenny Richardson's Lady Eagles played at Elgin on Tuesday and then faced Cedar Creek in a crucial showdown for both teams at 6:30 p.m. Friday on the
Creek's court. They close the regular season at home against Bastrop at home at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 25. Hutto, which has its bye on the final night of the regular season, will play at opposite ends of the 19-5A spectrum. They played lastplace Pflugerville Connally on Tuesday and then finish at Rouse on Friday. In addition to Georgetown and East View in its final three games, Cedar Creek faced a road contest with arch-rival Bastrop on Tuesday. Along with their victories over Hutto, East View and Georgetown both dropped 3-0 decisions last week to front-running teams. East View fell to Rouse on the road and GHS lost to Cedar Park at home. Georgetown's 25-23, 21-25, 29-27, 24-26, 15-10 was extremely important in the Lady Eagles' attempt to work their way back into playoff contention after finishing the first round of the district race with a 3-5 record. Junior Emily Ellis was key figure in the victory over the Lady Hippos with 16 kills, and senior Camryn McGinnis added in 10 kills, three blocks and 22 digs. Three of the sets were determined in the closing minutes after late deadlocks—23-23 in the first, 26-26 in the third and 24-24 in the fourth. An ace by Rachel May provided the winning point for GHS in the
15-11 win over Hutto. She had 11 kills and five blocks, while Anna Steger added 10 kills. East View managed just 18 kills and three aces in the loss to Rouse, posting an .075 hitting percentage.
Emery Herman and her Lady Eagle teammates bested Hutto 3-2 as they fight for a playoff spot in district 19-5A. Photo by: Russell Rinn
DISTRICT 19-5A AT A GLANCE Standings— Rouse, 14-0; Cedar Park, 12-1; East View, 9-4; Bastrop Cedar Creek, 7-6; Hutto, 7-7; Georgetown, 6-7; Bastrop, 4-10; Elgin, 1-12; Pflugerville Connally, 0-13. Tuesday (Oct. 11) results—Georgetown def. Hutto, 3-2; Rouse def. East View, 3-0; Cedar Park def. Bastrop, 3-0; Cedar Creek def Elgin, 3-0. Bye: Connally. Friday's results—Cedar Park def. Georgetown, 3-0; East View def. Hutto, 3-2; Bastrop def Elgin, 3-0. Rouse def. Connally, 3-0. Bye: Cedar Creek. Tuesday's matches—Cedar Park at East View, 6:30 p.m.; Georgetown at Elgin, 6:30 p.m.; Connally at Hutto, 6:30 p.m.; Cedar Creek at Bastrop, 6:30 p.m. Bye: Rouse. Friday's matches—Elgin at East View, 6:30 p.m.; Georgetown at Bastrop Cedar Creek, 6:30 p.m.; Connally at Cedar Park, 6:30 p.m.; Hutto at Rouse, 6:30 p.m. Bye: Bastrop. Tuesday (Oct. 25) matches—Bastrop at Georgetown, 6:30 p.m.; East View at Cedar Creek, 6:30 p.m.; Elgin at Connally, 6:30 p.m.; Rouse at Cedar Park, 6:30 p.m. Bye: Hutto. (End of regular season)
first set and back-to-back points by Hannah Fontenot and McGinnis determined the third set. With the score tied 2-2 in the fifth set, the Lady Eagles ran five consecutive points to take a five-point advantage that never dropped below three points. A Hutto service error provided GHS with the winning 15th point in the fifth set.
"I don't think it should have taken five sets," Richardson said. "I think we handled it well. I feel our good is as good, or better, than everybody else, but we've got to play more consistent." That didn't happen in the 25-21, 25-12, 25-11 loss to Cedar Park this past Friday. Senior Corinne Novak paced the Patriots to their 25-15, 18-25, 24-26, 25-21,
TUESDAY (OCT. 11) 19-5A MATCHES Statistics from Georgetown's 3-2 (25-23, 21-25, 29-27, 24-26, 15-10) victory against Hutto: Kills (57)—Emily Ellis 16, Camryn McGinnis 10, Emery Herman 7, Hannah Fontenot 7, Alex Bradley 6, Haley Glenn 4, Karly Koenig 4, Rachel May 2, Lauren Stofle 1. Aces (7)—Stofle 2, Fontenot 2, Hannah Matthew 1, Herman 1, May 1. Assists: Georgia Quiroz 27, Stofle 18, Matthew 2, Herman 2, Fontenot 2, McGinnis 1, May 1. Blocks: McGinnis 3, Fontenot 3, Ellis 2, Bradley 1, Glenn 1, Koenig 1. Digs: McGinnis 22, Quiroz 18, Fontenot 18, Herman 16, Matthew 16, Stofle 11, Bradley 10,Glenn 7, Ellis 5, May 5, Koenig 2, Keeli Escover 1. Hitting percentage: .141. Sub-Varsity: JV—GHS won, 25-21, 25-19. Freshman A—GHS won, 25-7, 25-11. Freshman B --GHS won.
Statistics from East View's 3-0 Loss to Rouse: Kills (18)—Annie Burke 6, Corinne Novak 4, Anna Steger 3, Camryn Miller 2, Rachel Wisian 2, Madison Heald 1. Aces (3)—Ashley O’Daniel 2, Heald 1. Assists: Heald 14, Burke 1. Blocks: Novak 4, Miller 3, Wisian 1, Steger 1. Digs: Katie Smith 7, Burke 6, Steger 5, O'Daniel 3, Devin Cavanaugh 3, Kelsey White 2, Heald 2, Wisian 1, Miller 1, Novak 1. Hitting percentage: .025. FRIDAY'S 19-5A MATCHES Statistics from East View's 3-2 (25-15, 18-25, 24-26, 25-21, 15-11) victory over Hutto: Kills (46)—Novak 11, Steger 10, Burke 8, Miller 8, Wisian 5, Heald 4. Aces (9)—O'Daniel 3, Heald 2, Novak 2, Burke 1, Smith 1. Assists: Heald 35, Smith 2, Novak 1. Blocks: Novak 5, Miller 2, Burke 1. Digs: Burke 14, Smith 14, Heald 11, Novak 8, Cavanaugh 8, Steger 5, O'Daniel 4, Miller 3, White 3. Hitting percentage: .142. Statistics from Georgetown's 3-0 (25-21, 25-18, 25-12) loss to Cedar Park: Kills (22)—Herman 5, Ellis 4, Fontenot 4, Bradley 3, May 2, Glenn 1, Koenig 1, McGinnis 1, Stofle 1. Aces (1)—Ellis 1. Assists: Stofle 10, Quiroz 9, Herman 3. Blocks: Ellis 2, Bradley 2, Herman 1, McGinnis 1, Glenn1. Digs: Matthew 10, Herman 8, Fontenot 8, McGinnis 5, Quiroz 4, Stofle 3, Escover 3, May 1. Hitting percentage: .075. TEXAS GIRLS COACHES ASSN. CLASS 5A RANKINGS (Compiled by Butch Hart) 1, Amarillo. 2. Prosper. 3. Rouse. 4. Waxahachie. 5. Colleyville Heritage. 6. Lucas Lovejoy. 7. Mont Belvieu Barbers Hill. 8. Cedar Park. 9. Highland Park. 10. Dripping Springs. 11. Aledo. 12. Corpus Christi Tuloso-Midway. 13. Saginaw Boswell. 14. Humble Kingwood Park. 15. Frisco Wakeland. 16. Mission Veteran's Memorial. 17. Canyon Randall. 18. Denton Ryan. 19. Frisco. 20. El Paso Eastlake. 21. Fort Worth Arlington Heights.22. Corsicana. 23. Victoria West. 24. Grapevine. 25. Justin Northwest. Honorable mention --Granbury, Lake Dallas, Frisco Reedy, El Paso Riverside, Lubbock Cooper, Denison, Sulphur Springs, Birdville, Fort Worth Western Hills, El Paso, Denton and Canutillo.
GHS, EV Bid For Region Tennis Berths In Area Tournament The Class 5A Region III, Area II team tennis finals are set for 9 a.m. Friday with Georgetown, which was 21-4 on the season prior to Tuesday's regular-season finale with Harker Heights, considered the favorite. No matter the schools involved, the finals are scheduled to be played at the Minzenmayer Tennis Center on the GHS campus. The top two finishers in the area tournament, which started on four Georgetown-area facilities, will advance to the Region III5A Tournament at various sites within the Katy ISD on Thursday and Friday, Oct. 27-28. The eight-team area tournament began with quarterfinal matches on Thursday morning and continued with semifinals in the afternoon. Coach Suzanne Isbell's Eagles, who completed an 8-0 run through 19-5A, faced Magnolia West, the
fourth-place team from 20-5A in its opening match. If GHS advanced, as expected, they were to play either Tomball Memorial (second in 20-5A) or Cedar Park (third in 19-5A in the semifinals. On the other side of the bracket, East View, fourth in 19-5A with a 5-3 mark, opened against 205A winner Tomball. The Tomball-East View winner advanced to the semifinals against either 19-5A runner-up Pflugerville Connally, which 7-1 in district action, or Willis, the thirdplace team from 20-5A. Georgetown completed its perfect run through 195A this past Friday with a 17-2 win over East View. The Eagles dominated play in 19-5A, winning 142 of 152 sets played. Connally, Cedar Park and East View all won more than 100 sets in district play. Prior to GHS-East View
match, both the Eagles and Patriots posted 19-0 victories over Hutto and Bastrop, respectively, on Tuesday, Oct. 11. AREA TOURNAMENT (19-5A vs. 20-5A) Thursday's Schedule Quarterfinals: 9 a.m.—Magnolia West (4, 20-5A) vs. Georgetown (1, 19-5A), Minzenmayer Tennis Center; Tomball Memorial (2, 20-5A) vs. Cedar Park (3, 19-5A), Rouse Tennis Center; Willis (3, 20-5A) vs. Pflugerville Connally (2, 19-5A), Benold; Tomball (1, 20-5A) vs. East View (4, 19-5A). Semifinals: 1 p.m. --Magnolia WestGHS winner vs. Tomball Memorial vs. Cedar Park winner, Minzenmayer Tennis Center; Willis-Connally winner vs. Tomball-East View winner, Patriot Tennis Center. Friday Schedule: Championship: 9 a.m.—Semifinal winners, Minzenmayer Tennis Center. DISTRICT 19-5A STANDINGS (Through matches of Oct. 15) (School, W-L, Composite Score) Georgetown, 8-0, 142-10; Pflugerville Connally, 7-1, 126-26; Cedar Park, 6-2, 115-37; East View, 5-3, 103-47; Rouse, 4-4, 78-74; Bastrop, 3-5, 49-103; Hutto, 2-6, 28-124; Elgin, 0-7, 13-120; Bastrop Cedar Creek, 0-7, 19-112. Tuesday's matches—East View def. Bastrop 19-0; Georgetown def. Hutto,
19-0; Connally def. Cedar Creek, 19-0; Rouse def. Elgin, 19-0. Bye: Cedar Park. Friday's matches—Georgetown def. East View, 17-2; Cedar Park def. Rouse, 18-1; Connally def. Elgin, 19-0. Saturday's match—Bastrop def. Hutto, 15-4. Bye: Cedar Creek. Tuesday's match—Elgin at Cedar Creek, rescheduled from Saturday, Oct. 8. (END OF REGULAR SEASON) EAST VIEW 19, BASTROP 0 At East View Boys doubles (3-0)—Dane Strandborge-Travis Martin, EV, def. Bryan LeBlanc-David Rodriguez, 6-0, 6-3; Cole Perry-Blake Thurman, EV, def. Michael Liriano-Crisian Yanez, 6-1, 6-0; Thomas Knightstep-Bryce Huck, GHS, def. Winter Mosher-Cesar Fuentes, 6-2, 6-1. Girls doubles (3-0)—Sophia Namee-Courtney Burris, EV, def. Elexa Ashby-Lauren Talkmitt, 6-3, 6-1; Tori Kainer-Jessie Halter, EV, def. Lisbet Ruvalcoba-Malee Martinez, 6-4, 6-0; Maria Flores-Jessie Foster, EV, def. Jessica Eskew-Hannah Atteberry, 6-3, 6-1. Mixed doubles (1-0)—Addie Dunham-Kule Brattlof, EV, def. Mason Denson-Jennifer Torres, 6-0, 6-2. Boys singles (6-0)—Strandboge, EV, def. LeBlanc, 6-1, 6-0; Thurman, EV, def. Rodriguez, 6-0, 6-0; Martin, EV, def. Yanez, 6-2, 6-2; Perry, EV, def. Liriano, 6-0, 6-2; Brattlof, EV, def.
Funentes, 6-4, 6-4; Lucas Rollo, EV, def. Mosher, 6-3, 6-0. Girls singles (6-0)—Namee, EV, def. Ashby, 6-7 (3), 6-0, 10-2; Kainer, EV, def. Talkmitt, 6-1, 6-1; Burris, EV, def. Martinez, 2-6, 7-6 (4), 10-5; Ana Piseno, EV, def. Ruvalcoba, 6-0, 6-1; Flores, EV, def. Eskew, 6-2, 6-2; Halter, EV, def. Torres, 6-0, 6-2. EV season record: 7-9. *** GEORGETOWN 19, HUTTO 0 At Hutto Boys doubles (3-0)—Ben Fischer-Corey O'Banon, GHS, O'Neal-Huerta, 6-2, 6-1; Parker Kallman-Alex Watson, GHS, def. Hohensee-Robinson, 6-0, 6-1; Cole Isbell-Stephen Sieckmann, GHS, def. Gonzalez-Ybarra, 6-0, 6-0. Girls doubles (3-0)—Lena Arndt-Rachel Maloy, GHS, def. Lutfak-Garcia, 6-1, 6-0; Tori Watkins-Rachel Strait, GHS, def. Shanday-Perez, 6-0, 6-0; Timberly Abell-Kayla Hart, GHS, def. Yates-Mercier, 6-0, 6-0. Mixed doubles (1-0)—Drew Arnold-Elise Flachs, GHS, def. Martin-Renville, 6-2, 6-2. Boys singles (6-0)—B. Fischer, GHS, def. O'Neal, 6-0, 6-0; O'Banon, GHS, def. Huerta, 6-1, 6-0; Kallman, GHS, def. Hohensse, 6-0, 6-0; Sieckmann, GHS, def. Renville, 6-2, 6-2; Arnold, GHS, def. Robinson, 6-2, 6-0; Nathan Greenhaw, GHS, def. Ybarra, 6-0, 6-0. Girls doubles (6-0)—Arndt, GHS, def. Lutfak, 6-0, 6-0; Maloy, GHS, def. Martin, 6-2, 6-3; Strait, GHS, def. Gar-
cia, 7-5, 6-1; Flachs, GHS, def. Perez, 6-0, 6-0; S. Fischer, GHS, def. Hooper, 6-0, 6-0; Sophie Cothran, GHS, def. Ybarra, 6-0, 6-0. GHS second record: 20-4. FRIDAY'S 19-5A RESULTS GEORGETOWN 17, EAST VIEW 2 At Minzenmayer Tennis Center Boys doubles (3-0)—B. Fischer-O'Banon, GHS, def. Strandboge-Martin, 7-6 (4), 6-3; Watson-Kallman, GHS, def. Perry-Thurman, 7-5, 6-7 (3), (5); Isbell-Sieckmann, GHS, def. Brattlof-Knightstep, 6-1, 6-2. Girls doubles (3-0)—Maloy-Arndt. GHS, def. Yeager-Burris, 6-3, 6-4; Watkins-Strait, GHS, def. Namee-Kainer, 7-5, 6-2; Abell-Hart, GHS, def. Flores-Foster, 7-5, 2-6, (10). Mixed doubles (1-0)—Arnold-Flachs, GHS, def. Piseno-Huck, 6-2, 6-1. Boys singles (5-1)—B. Fischer, GHS, def. Strandboge 7-6 (4), 7-5; Thurman, EV, def. O'Banon, 6-3, 6-4; Kallman, GHS, def. Martin, 6-3, 6-4; Sieckmann, GHS, def. Perry, 6-2, 6-3; Arnold, GHS, def. Brattlof6-1, 6-1; Watson, GHS, def. Huck, 6-7 (4), 6-3, (3). Girls singles (5-1)—Yeager, EV, def. Arndt, 6-4, 6-2; Maloy, GHS, def. Namee, 6-1, 6-2; Strait, GHS, def. Burris, 6-0, 6-0; Watkins, GHS, def. Kainer, 7-5, 6-0; Flachs, GHS, def. Piseno, 6-4, 6-1; S. Fischer, GHS, def. Flores, 6-2, 6-3. Season records: GHS, 21-4; East View, 7-10.
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GHS, East View Girls Open Practice By Galen Wellnicki
Playoff Schedule 13-14—Bi-district. 16-18—Area. 20-21—Region III-5A quarterfinals. 24-25—Region III-5A Tournament, Delmar Field House, Houston. March 2-5—UIL State Tournament, Alamo Dome, San Antonio. *—Denotes 19-5A game.
Sports Editor
The Georgetown and East View girls both opened basketball practice this past Wednesday with both teams and their coaches seeing themselves as definite playoff contenders in District 19-5A along with potentially one of the strongest teams in Cedar Park history. "We are very excited about our team," Georgetown coach Rhonda Farney said. "We return three (senior) starters in Deonna Day, Brooke Elliott and Taylor Elliott. All three were elected captains along with (junior) Josie Weirich. "Our three seniors are providing great leadership and are leading by example. (Sophomore post) Emily (EJ) Jones is also providing muscle and a super defensive and rebounding presence. "Others who are vastly improved and are going to see varsity action are freshman Emery Herman, sophomore Jaelyn Knight, and juniors Josie Weirich, Maddie Vickers, Catherine Dietlein, Miranda Gil, and Emili Harris. "Brooke spoke volumes when she told me that she loved this team. That would be the consensus of all of them. For us, team chemistry is as important as athletic ability. Our theme is OHANA and we believe that that is the prevailing feeling from top to bottom in our program." Over at East View, head coach Dave Walla said, "This year's East View girls team returns three starters and three additional players with varsity experience. With the graduation of Abby Holland and the return of all-district guards Emily Daniel and Diamond Morrison, along with fellow starting wing Paighton Corley and returning guardwing Alyson Ashby, this year's team will be more perimeter oriented. "Due to circumstances that included significant injuries to varsity returning wing-posts Keely Wallis and Sarah Lindsey, the season will begin with the absence of three front line players. "Therefore, the beginning of this season is a great opportunity for some of our more inexperienced players to demonstrate that they can compete successfully against top level varsity competition. I look for solid
Senior guard Emily Daniel will provide scoring and leadership for the Patriots. Photo by: Russell Rinn
play from Rocky Saldana and Cassidy Salyer at the guard position. Jessica Workman, Lilly Brown, and Anna Steger should contribute on the front line while Alex Stone and possibly Tori Castillo should see action in the post. "As we move into the meat of our district schedule, the combination of this newly experienced group of varsity players with the return of Wallis and Lindsey should make us a solid contender for one of the top spots in the district standings." Georgetown's Farney also sees East View as a major factor in the 16-game 19-5A race. "I think the biggest competition will come from East View," She said. "Emily Daniel is a four-year starter and is a great shooter. In addition, Paighton Corley and Diamond Morrison are all very improved. "Also, there is a host of excellent players up from the JV that was very successful last year. One of the players that I feel gives East View the nod is Lilly Brown. She is a rugged player who is fundamentally sound and a great shooter. One of the things that sets Lilly apart is the passion she plays with. That has been evident since she was a little girl." As for long-time rival Cedar Park, Farney said, "I also think that Cedar Park is at the beginning of a three-year run that is going to be the best Mark Meyers has ever been. He has Cami Rettinger and Chika Onyia
back and many excellent young freshmen and sophomore players that have been running his system since they were third graders. He will have size and excellent shooters." Girls teams can begin scrimmages on Saturday, Oct. 9 and regular season kicks off on Monday and Tuesday, Nov. 7-8. The Lady Eagles will open against Waco Miday at home on Nov. 7 and the Patriots will go to Vandegrift on Nov. 8. Both teams will play in the Jack Frost Classic on Dec. 1-3. GHS also will play in the Burleson Centennial Tournament on Nov. 10-12 and the South Carolina Tournament on Dec. 27-29. East View's other tournament will be the Corpus Christi ISD Tournament on Nov. 10-12. GHS VARSITY SCHEDULE October 29—Round Rock Westwood, Glenn scrimmage, 10 a.m. November 2—Pflugerville Hendrickson scrimmage, 5:30 p.m. (Regular season begins) 7—Waco Midway, 7 p.m. 10-12—at Burleson Centennial Tournament, Burleson, TBA. 15—at Pflugerville, 7 p.m. 21—Killeen Ellison, 12:30 a.m. 29—at Pflugerville Connally*, 7 p.m. December 1-3—Jack Frost Tournament, Georgetown (Thursday: Leander, noon; San Antonio Wagner, 6 p.m. Friday: Lubbock Coronado, 7:30 p.m. Saturday: Bracket, TBA). 6—at Hutto*, 7p.m. 9—Elgin*, 7 p.m. 13—at Bastrop*, 6 p.m. 16—East View*, 5:30 p.m. 20—at Rouse*, 1:30 p.m. 27-29—at South Carolina Tournament, Charleston, TBA. January 3—Cedar Park*, 7 p.m. 6—at Bastrop Cedar Creek*, 7 p.m. 13— Pflugerville Connally*, 7 p.m. 17— Hutto*, 7 p.m. 20—at Elgin, 7 p.m. 24—Bastrop*, 7 p.m. 27—at East View*, 8 p.m. 31—Rouse*, 7 p.m. February 3—at Cedar Park*, 7 p.m. 7—Bastrop Cedar Creek*, 7 p.m.
GHS ROSTERS Varsity 10—Brooke Elliott, sr., 5-8. 15— Josie Weirich, jr., 5-0. 22—Taylor Elliott, sr., 5-6. 23—Catherine Dietlen, jr., 5-10. 30—Miranda Gil, jr., 5-5. 33—Maddie Vickers, jr., 5-7. 34— Emery Herman, fr., 6-1. 35—Emili Harris, jr., 5-10. 50—Deonna Day, sr., 6-1. 55—Emily Jones, soph., 5-11. Head Coach: Rhonda Farney. Assistants: Kellye Richardson, Kristin Curtis, Kevin Spruill. Trainers: Vanessa Redeaux, Chad Hennessey. Student trainer: Xandra Lara. Managers: Katy Brandenburg, Alyssa Ellis, Jacque Hernandez, Chloe Sutton. Junior Varsitry 10—Gracie Speer, soph. 12—Morgan Bruning, soph. 14—Ali Isbell, soph. 15—Samari O'Brien, soph. 20—Hailey Wickline, soph. 24— Shelby Jones, soph. 30 --Miranda Gil, jr. 35—Emili Harris, jr. 42—Jade Smith, Soph. Coach: Kellye Richardson. Manager: Lucy Palacios. Freshmen 10—Caroline Horton. 12—Tatiana Williams. 14—Haily Henson. 15— Na'Kela Cook. 20—Hailey Smith. 22—A'Brielle Abrams. 23—Celeste Aguilar. 24—Maya Perry. 25—Kylee Sander. 32—Marney Hazell. 33— Mercedes Robledo. 34—Sueellen Albrecht. 35—Keiana San Miguel. 44—Rachel Heine. 45—Keyla Perez. 50—McCall Hampton. 52 --MacKenzie Mouton. 54—Madison Rincon. Coaches: Kristin Curtis, Kevin Spruill. Managers: Camille Boyd, Lexie Mullen. EAST VIEW VARSITY SCHEDULE October 29—At Bowie scrimmage, 1 p.m. November 4—Liberty Hill scrimmage, 6 p.m. (Regular season begins) 8—at Vandegrift, 7 p.m. 10-12—Corpus Christi Tournament (Thursday: San Antonio Holmes, 7:30 p.m.
GHS senior Brooke Elliott returns for another season as the Lady Eagles floor leader. Photo by: Russell Rinn
Friday: Edinburg North, 10:30 a.m.; Bracket game, TBA. Saturday— bracket games, TBA). 18—Belton, 5:30 p.m. 22—Bastrop*, 7 p.m. 29— at Killeen Shoemaker, 7 p.m. December 1-3—Jack Frost Tournament (Thursday: Austin Bowie, 10:30 a.m.; Hurst Bell, 7:30 p.m. Friday: John Tyler, 4:30 p.m. Saturday: bracket, TBA). 6—Rouse*, 7 p.m. 9—at Cedar Park*, 7 p.m. 13—Cedar Creek*, 7 p.m. 16—at Georgetown*, 5:30 p.m. 20—Pflugerville Connally*, 7 p.m. January 3—at Hutto*, 7 p.m. 6—Elgin*, 7 p.m. 10—at Bastrop*, 7 p.m. 17—at Rouse*, 7 p.m. 20—Cedar Park*, 7 p.m. 24—at Cedar Creek*, 7 p.m. 27—Georgetown, 8 p.m. 31—at Pflugerville Connally*, 7 p.m. February 3—Hutto*, 7 p.m. 7—at Elgin*, 7
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p.m. Playoff Schedule 13-14—Bi-district. 16-18—Area. 20-21—Region III-5A quarterfinals. 24-25—Region III-5A Tournament, Delmar Field House, Houston. March 2-5—UIL State Tournament, Alamo Dome, San Antonio. EV ROSTER Varsity 5 --Alyson Ashby, sr. 10—Paighton Corley, jr. 12—Diamond Morrison, jr. 14—Jessica Workman, jr. 20—Salyer Cassidy, soph. 21—Emily Daniel, sr. 22—Ana Steger, jr. 23—Alex Stone, soph. 24—Rocky Saldana, sr. 25— Lilly Brown, soph. 32—Keely Wallis, sr. 33—Sarah Lindsey, jr. Head coach: Dave Walla. Assistants: Chris Corley, Emily Durell, Veronica Ruiz, Frances Tuttle.
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OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
GHS, East View Sub-Varsity Football EAST VIEW Junior Varsity Hutto 24, East View 21—Offensive MVP—Aaron Garces. Defensive MVP—Hayden Cassel and Chris Honstein. Special teams MVP— Justin Henry. Scoring—71 yard pass, Garces to Devhaun Little; 20-yard run, Noah Reyes; 30-yard pass, Garces to AJ Mays; 2-point conversion, Garces. Fumble recoveries—Reyes and Mays. Interception --Honstein. Freshman Hutto A 35, East View Red 28— Offensive MVP—Deandre Davis. Defensive MVP—Brian Franco. Special teams MVP—Chuy Torrez, Scoring—8-yard run, Julian Morris; 48-yard pass, Jackson Coulson to Davis; 6-yard pass, Coulson to Franco; 12-yard run, Davis; 4 PATs, Torrez. Interception—Franco. East View Navy 15, Hutto B 6. GEORGETOWN Junior Varsity Cedar Park A 56, GHS Silver 14 GHS Blue 20, Cedar Park 14 Freshmen Cedar Park A 30, GHS Blue 25 GHS White 21, Cedar Park Blue 14 Note—No details reported.
East View Mason Klinger (#12) with a clutch catch and diving touchdown vs the Hutto Hippos. Photo by: Chris Cutler.
PATRIOTS FROM PAGE B1
EV vs. Elgin Comparison DISTRICT 19-5A GAME At 7:30 p.m. Friday, GISD Athletic Complex SEASONS TO DATE East View (2-6, 1-5) EV—Opponent Opp. 18—Buda Hays 26 35—W. University 28 40—Rouse 65 20—Cedar Park 35 46—Cedar Creek 0 29—Georgetown 56 25—Connally 45 29—Hutto 36 ELGIN (2-5, 2-3) ELG—Opponent Opp. 14—Harker Heights 35 20—Brenham 21 43—Cedar Creek 0 20—Georgetown 62 14—Connally 28 34—Hutto 37 TEAM STATISTICS OFFENSE (Per game average) Column ELG Points scored 25.6 Yards rushing 150.6 Yards passing 204.7 Total offense 355.3
EV 34.3 237.1 183.5 420.6
Torrie Davis (17 carries for 79 yards) got the final 15 on a jaunt through the right side of the Hippo defense. On the drive, Hester accounted for 44 of the 80 yard total. Down 14-0, the Hippos
DEFENSE (Per game average) Column ELG Points allowed 30.0 Yards rushing 207.0 Yards passing 216.3 Total defense 423.3
EV 36.1 185.9 182.0 367.9
INDIVIDUAL LEADERES Rushing ELG—Jacob Cook, 84-513. EV— Zion Hester, 100-764; Torrie Davis, 85-749. Passing ELG—Deamante Strong, 114-1956, 1,415 (9 TDs). EV—Nowell, 127-215-5, 1,468 (13 TDs). Receiving ELG—Tariq Buchanan, 34-451; Declayvin Simmons, 33-366. EV— Marcus Maldonado, 30-384. Punting ELG—Kris Wyche, 18-36.28. EV— Tyler Galloway, 31-33.84. Kick Scoring ELG—Journey Carnahan, 8 EPs, 0 FGs—8 points. EV—Reed Hoshtein, 20 EP, 6 FG—38 points. HUT --Mangana, 22 EP, 3 FG—31 points. Source: Advocate sports, 19-5A statistics.
roared right back, covering 60 yards on 11 plays. The extra point was good and with four ticks shy of three minutes remaining before half, the Hippos trailed 14-7. Hutto promptly marched
59 yards to open the second half with Milligan scoring the first of his four touchdowns on a 20-yard rumble up the middle. Hutto’s extra point attempt was blocked. With 8:42 left in the third, the Patriots retained the lead at 14-13. Hutto scored again three minutes later on a three-play 69-yard drive. Milligan’s 19 yard TD run was set up by catches of 7 and 43 yards by Hutto wide receiver Caleb Forrest (10 catches for 143 yards). Hutto increased the lead to 22-14 with 1:14 left in the third on a 23-yard field goal by Bradley Magana. On the ensuing kickoff, Klinger returned the kick to the Hippo 21-yard line where it took Hester only one play to find the end zones. Down by two points, Torrie Davis barreled over from the 3 for the two-point conversion. As the third quarter ended, the score was knotted at 22-22. In the fourth quarter, most of the action was by Hutto. East View managed only four first downs (all coming on one drive) and
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into the fourth quarter. Defensively, East View is showing improvement. The Patriots recovered two fumbles, blocked an extra point attempt and intercepted two passes. Hester and cornerback Jaden Selucky got the interceptions and linebacker Civon Lewis seemed to be one of the few Patriots who could tackle Milligan in space. Senior outside linebacker Chris Matta had one touchdown-saving tackle late in the game, running down Milligan from behind after a 51-yard gain. However, Hutto scored from the 2 on the next play. Davies also mentioned senior lineman Austin Naiser has playing well on defense. “You guys (defensive squad) played your tails off,” Davies said after the game. “I hurt for you. We need that same effort next week in practice, Monday through Thursday, and we’ll win on Senior Night against Elgin.” Up 7-0, the Patriots extended their lead to 14-0 five minutes into the second period. Junior running back
PREC
has its open date on the final Friday of the regular season. The Wildcats, who are 2-5 for the season, own the district's most-porous defense with an average yield of 423.3 yards a game. Among their district setbacks was a 62-20 loss to Georgetown. East View was impressive early against Hutto, scoring on the opening drive, which covered 70 yards in 7 plays. Big gainers were tosses of 19 yards from senior quarterback Cameron Nowell (18 of 31 for 186, 2 touchdowns) to sophomore Zion Hester and 20 yards to junior wide receiver Marcus Maldonado. The payoff was a 20yard pitch and catch from Nowell to fellow senior Mason Klinger. Klinger had his most productive game since returning from injury, catching seven balls for 53 yards, including the touchdown. He also had a very nice kickoff return late in the third quarter that led to a Patriots touchdown, knotting the score at 22 going
NE F ISH IN
simply could not move the ball consistently. Their one scoring drive covered 77 yards in nine plays with key gains being a 15 yard completion from Nowell to Hester and a 26 yard burst by Davis. Nowell’s 20-yard strike in the corner of the end zones to junior wide receiver Donald Walton was the lanky Walton’s only catch of the night. Walton’s score was sandwiched by touchdowns numbers 3 and 4 by Milligan. Milligan scored on a two-play 41-yard drive after a short punt. His 35-yard sprint was the money play. With the score tied at 29 and facing a fourth and one at their own 47, Hutto gave the ball to Milligan for his 29th carry and he burst through the East View defense for 51 yards. He scored the winning points from the EV 2-yard line on the next play. The Patriots held the Hippos on the next exchange and took over the ball with 47 seconds remaining. Two completions to Klinger of 8 and 7 yards and two incompletions ended the game.
Featured Athlete
MATT GILLEN
Southwestern wide receiver Matt Gillen, a senior from Coppell, score five touchdowns in the Pirates, 48-0, victory over Trinity University this past Saturday in San Antonio. His five receiving touchdowns are the most in a single game in Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference history. He scored on catches of 14, 8, 13 and 14 yards and fell on a fumble in the end zone. In all, he caught nine passes for 135 yards.
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FOOTBALL OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
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www.capitalgolfcars.com GHS FROM PAGE B1 Class 5A poll as Aledo, also 7-0, leapfrogged the Timberwolves on the strength of six consecutive victories in which they have scored 65, 59, 69, 70, 69 and 59 points. If the Eagles beat Cedar Creek, they can finish no worse than 5-3 in the final standings. At the current time, only Hutto and Rouse, both 3-2, have a chance of passing or catching GHS in the battle for the district's third and fourth playoff spots. Of course, GHS could take the guessing out of the equation by sweeping its final two starts. Hutto and Rouse play Friday in a match that will give another hickey to the loser's record. After their head-to-head meeting, Hutto will close out with Cedar Park and Cedar Creek and Rouse will be going against Elgin and Bastrop. A victory by the Raiders over the Hippos would be a major plus for GHS with Hutto still needing to play Cedar Park. In case of ties in the final standings, the Eagles have the head-to-head tie-breaker over Hutto, but Rouse has the head-to-head over GHS, including a 33-point margin of victory. In Cedar Creek (0-5 in 19-5A and 1-7 on the season), GHS faces a team that is last in the district in offense, having scored only 64 points in seven games and posted an average of 184 yards a game. The BISD Eagles have allowed 310 points and coughed up 393.7 yards a start. The lone victory this season was 28-26 over currently winless 4A Division II Smithville. Georgetown owns a 2-0 all-time record against Cedar Creek, winning 73-0
GHS vs. Cedar Creek Comparison DISTRICT 19-5A GAME At 7:30 p.m. Friday, Bastrop Memorial Stadium GHS (6-2, 4-2) GHS—Opponent Opp. 49—FW Brewer 28 40—Buda Hays 17 35—Hutto 32 62—Elgin 20 41—Bastrop 25 56—East View 29 27—Rouse 60 20—Cedar Park 41
DEFENSE (Per game average) Column GHS CC Points allowed 31.6 44.3 Yards rushing 201.6 269.7 Yards passing 188.6 124.0 Total defense 390.3 393.7
CEDAR CREEK (1-6, 0-5) CC—Opponent Opp. 14—Marble Falls 41 28—Smithville 26 0—Elgin 43 9—Bastrop 43 0—East View 46 13-- Rouse 58 0—Cedar Park 53
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing GHS—Erik Anderson, 57-292. CC— Tristan Hendrik, 109-360; Brock DeShay, 67-263. Passing GHS—Chandler Herman, 169-2547, 2,235 (23 TDs). CC—Hendrix, 43-117-9, 603 (5 TDs). Receiving GHS—Beau Corrales, 72-921; Caden Leggett, 43-815. CC—No receiver with more than six catches. Punting GHS—Luis Diaz, 20-37.50. CC— Hendrix, 31-34.84. Kick scoring GHS—Diaz, 36 EPs, 10 FGs—66 points. CC—Nathaniel Salas, 7 Eps, 1 FG—10 points. Source: Advocate sports, 19-5A statistics.
Cade Sill finds running room behind the blocking of Harrison Schuler (#53) and Jacoby Coleman during Friday nights game against Cedar Park. Photo by: Russell Rinn
in 2012 and 63-0 in 2013. In its five seasons of UIL competition, Cedar Creek has an 8-40 record with four of the wins coming in last year's playoff season out of a district with Austin ISD teams. "Our focus continues to be about us," GHS coach Jason Dean answered about the Cedar Creek game. "We can get that important fifth win in district. We want to continue to improve, eliminating the recent turnovers and penalties, and play a good game." GHS has turned the ball over nine times (5 interceptions add four fumbles) and been penalized 16 times for 118 yards in their backback losses to Rouse and Cedar Park. Looking back at the Cedar Park loss in which GHS trailed just 27-20 late in the third quarter, Dean said, "We're disappointed. I thought we played much better than we did at Rouse—especially on defense. We were tack-
ling much better, flushed the quarterback and only allowed two big plays. The final score was an indication of the game on the field and I think the Cedar Park coaches would tell you that." On Saturday morning, the GHS fieldhouse looked like a MASH unit with top Eagles such as quarterback Chandler Herman, receivers Beau Corrales and Caden Leggett and safety Trace Glanville being nicked to a certain degree in the game with the Timberwolves. "We had guys get hurt, but we should be ready on Friday," Dean said. Having an open date next Friday could aid in the healing process prior to the showdown with Connally at the GISD Athletic Complex on Friday, Nov. 4. Cedar Park jumped to a 13-0 lead in the first four minutes of the game on a 73-yard scoring pitch from Mak Sexton to Hayden Craig, a 4-yard run by Tyler Lavine and the first of his
five extra points by Storm Jensen. However, the Eagles rebounded with 10 points before the start of the second quarter on a 33-yard field goal by Luiz Diaz and a 9-yard run by Erik Anderson. In the second quarter, Lavine wrapped touchdowns on a 51-yard run and a 31-yard pass from Sexton around a 25-yard field goal by Diaz to take a 27-13 lead at the half. A 25-yard pass from Herman to Leggett and a Diaz extra point cut the Cedar Park lead to 27-20 with 10:28 left in the third period. Cedar Park added two touchdowns to complete the game—a 2-yard run by Lavine in the final minute of the third period and a 23yard run down the visitors' sideline by Craig. The Eagles' longest play was a 68-yard completion from Herman to Leggett that took the ball to the CP 4 on Georgetown's second
TEAM STATISTICS OFFENSE (Per game average) Column GHS CC Points scored 41.2 9.1 Yards rushing 103.8 96.9 Yards passing 281.3 87.1 Total offense 385.1 184.0
possession of the game, but it was negated two plays later by an interception. Cedar Park outgained GHS, 447 to 229 yards with Herman leading the Eagles with 257 yards passing on 19 completions in 31 attempts. Leggett caught seven for 167 yards. The Timberwolves have allowed 53 points this season with 40 having been scored by GISD teams—20 each by GHS and East View.
TEXAS FOOTBALL 5A TOP 25 1. Manvel (7-0). 2. Denton Ryan (7-0). 3. Aledo (7-0). 4. Cedar Park (7-0). 5. Richmond Foster (7-0). 6. College Station (8-0). 7. Lancaster (6-1). 8. Corpus Christi Calallen (6-1). 9. Frisco Lone Star (6-1). 10. Highland Park (6-1). 11. Temple (62). 12. Mansfield Lake Ridge (5-2). 13. Texarkana Texas (7-0). 14. Colleyville Heritage (5-2). 15. Angleton (6-1). 16. Fort Worth Richland (7-0). 17. Port Arthur Memorial (6-0). 18. Wylie East (5-2). 19. Boerne Champion (6-1). 20. Mansfield Legacy (5-2). 21. Waxahachie (6-1). 22. New Caney Porter (6-0). 23. Crosby (5-2). 24. Alamo Heights (7-0). 25. Port Neches-Groves (6-1). THE ASSOCIATE PRESS CLASS 5A POLL (First place votes in parenthesis) PL.—School, Record Points 1. Aledo (10), 7-0 229 2. Cedar Park (8), 7-0 220 3. Manvel (4), 7-0 206 4. Denton Ryan (3), 7-0 189 5. Richmond Foster, 7-0 149 6. Lancaster, 6-1 104 7. Texarkana Texas, 7-0 86 8. College Station, 8-0 83 9. Frisco Lone Star, 6-1 46 10. Highland Park, 6-1 23 Others receiving votes: 11, Waxahachie 14. 12, Port Arthur Memorial 6. 13, Pflugerville Connally 4. 13, Lubbock Coronado 4. 15, Mansfield Legacy 3. 15, Fort Worth Richland 3. 17, Grapevine 2. 18, Lubbock Cooper 1. 18, Denton 1. 18, Corpus Christi Calallen 1. 18, Justin Northwest 1.
THE OLD COACH 5A TOP 25 1. Denton Ryan (7-0). 2. Manvel 7-0. 3. Aledo (7-0). 4. Cedar Park (7-0). 5. Richmond Foster (7-0). 6. Lancaster (6-1). 7. College Station (8-0). 8. Highland Park (6-1). 9. Frisco Lone Star (6-1). 10. Corpus Christi Calallen (6-1). 11. Texarkana Texas (7-0). 12. Temple (6-2). 13. Colleyville Heritage (5-2), 14. Mansfield Legacy (5-2). 15. Angleton (6-1). 16. Boerne Champion (6-1). 17. Port Arthur Memorial (60). 18. Waxahachie (6-1). 19. Alamo Heights (7-0). 20. Mesquite Poteet (5-2). 21. Dripping Springs (6-1). 22. Mansfield Lake Ridge (5-2). 23. Fort Worth Richland (7-0). 24. Pflugerville Connally (7-0). 25. Grapevine (6-1).
District 19-5A Football Race, GHS, East View Statistics District Season Team W L W L Pts. Opp. Cedar Park 5 0 7 0 246 53 P. Connally 5 0 7 0 256 166 Georgetown 4 2 6 2 333 252 Rouse 3 2 4 3 289 204 Hutto 3 2 5 2 263 173 Elgin 2 3 2 5 179 210 Bastrop 1 5 1 7 152 262 East View 1 5 2 6 242 291 B. Cedar Creek 0 5 1 6 64 310 Friday's results—Cedar Park 41, Georgetown 20; Hutto 36, East View 29; Elgin 34, Bastrop 27; Connally 20, Rouse 19. Bye: Cedar Creek. This Friday's games—Elgin at East View, GISD Athletic Complex, 7:30 p.m.; Georgetown at Cedar Creek, Bastrop Memorial Stadium, 7:30 p.m.; Hutto at Rouse, Bible Stadium, 7:30 p.m.; Connally at Cedar Park, Gupton Stadium, 7:30 p.m. Bye— Bastrop.
DISTRICT 20-5A AT A GLANCE (Note: Top four teams in 19-5A play 20-5A teams in bi-district) Standings—Brenham, 4-0, 6-1; Magnolia, 4-0, 6-1; Huntsville, 2-2, 3-4; Magnolia West, 2-2, 5-2; Willis, 2-2, 5-2; Tomball Memorial, 1-3, 4-3; Tomball, 1-3, 3-4; Waller, 0-4, 1-6. Friday's results—Brenham 43, Tomball 35; Huntsville 38, Waller 10; Magnolia 21, Magnolia West 14; Willis 44,Tomball Memorial 41. This Friday's games—Brenham at Willis, 7:30 p.m.; Huntsville at Tomball, 7:30 p.m.; Tomball Memorial at Magnolia, 7 p.m.; Magnolia West at Waller, 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY'S DISTRICT 19-5A GAMES CEDAR PARK 41, GEORGETOWN 20 At GISD Athletic Complex Cedar Park 13 14 7 7—41 Georgetown 10 3 7 0—20 CP—Hayden Craig, 73 pass from Mak Sexton (Storm Jensen kick), 11:11 first (2 plays, 73 yards).
FULL
PMS 1545 PMS 180 PMS 142
CP—Tyler Lavine, 4 run (run failed), 8:21 second (3 plays 22 yards). GHS—Luiz Diaz, 33 FG, 3:07 first GHS—Erik Anderson, 9 run (Diaz kick), 0:00 first (5 plays, 34 yards). CP—Lavine, 51 run (Jensen kick), 10:36 second (4 plays, 64 yards) GHS—Diaz, 25v FG, 6:16 second. CP—Lavine, 37 pass from Sexton (Jenson kick), 3:41 second (2 plays, 37 yards). GHS—Caden Leggett, 25 pass from Chandler Herman (Diaz kick), 10:28 third (four plays, 87 yards). CP—Lavine, 2 run (Jensen kick), 0:56 third (9 plays, 85 yards) CP—Craig, 23 run (Jenson kick), 1:12 fourth (10 plays, 65 yards). TEAM STATISTICS Column CP GHS First downs 15 12 Yards rushing 37-188 31-42 Yards passing 259 257 Passes 12-19-0 19-31-1 Total yardage 54-447 62-299
Avg. per play Fumbles lost Penalties Punts
8.3 1-1 4-35 3-37.0
4.8 2-4 10-75 4-36.0
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing CP—Lavine 19-112, Craig 11-59, Sexton 4-16, Omar Alzer 2-3, Paden Sawicki 1-(-2). GHS—Anderson 7-22, Leggett 7-19, Cade Sill 9-9, Herman 8-(-8). Passing CP—Sexton, 12-19-0, 259. GHS— Herman, 19-31-1, 257. Receiving CP—Drew McDaniel 6-107, Craig 3-103, Lavine 1-37, Sawicki 1-7, Carsin Neel 1-5. GHS—Leggett 7-167, Corrales 5-46, Cole Posey 3-18, Colton Knudsen 3-17, Nic Crombie 1-9. Longest scrimmage plays CP—73 yards, Sexton pass to Craig. GHS—68 yards, Herman pass to Leggett.
HUTTO 36, EAST VIEW 29 At Hippo Stadium, Hutto East View 7 7 8 7—29 Hutto 0 7 15 14—36 EV—Mason Klinger, 20 pass from Cameron Nowell (Reed Honshtein kick), 9:27 first. EV --Torrie Davis, 15 run (Honshtein kick), 7:05 second. HU—Caden Dykowski,16 pass from Chase Griffin (Bradley Magana kick), 2:56 second. HU—Deary’on Milligan, 20 run (kick failed), 8:42 third. HU --Milligan, 19 run (pass failed), 5:46 third. HU—Magana 23 FG, 1:14 third. EV—Zion Hester, 21 run (Davis run), 0:59 third. HU - -Milligan, 35 run (Magana kick), 8:58 fourth. EV—Donald Walton, 20 pass from Nowell (Honshtein kick), 5:56 fourth. HU --Milligan, 2 run (Magana kick), 3:49 fourth.
TEAM STATISTICS Column EV HUT First downs 13 20 Yards rushing 31-126 36-211 Yards passing 186 269 Passes 18-32-0 23-36-2 Total offense 63-311 72-480 Avg. per play 4.94 6.67 Fumbles-lost 0-0 4-2 Penalties-Yds 5-45 5-35 Punts 5-32.0 1-32.0 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing EV—Davis 17-79, Hester 9-48. HUT—Milligan 34-219. Passing EV—Nowell 18-31-0, 186. HUT --Griffin, 23-36-2, 269. Receiving EV—Klinger 7-53, Hester 4-59, Davis 4-27, Walton 1-20. HUT—Caleb Forrest 10-143, Cayden Beran 6- 67, Caden Dykowski 3-34.
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OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
SU Volleyball Continues To Roll
Southwestern volleyball rose to the occasion and proved its No. 4 ranking with three victories on Friday and Saturday at Newport News, Va., including two over ranked teams. The wins improved SU's season record to 23-1 as they returned home for a non-conference match with Mary Hardin-Baylor
at Belton on Wednesday and a four-match Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference affair in Kerrville on Saturday and Sunday. The Pirates, who stand 9-1 in SCAC competition, will play the University of Dallas at 10:30 a.m. and Centenary at 5 p.m. on Saturday and then go against Colorado College at
noon and Austin College at 2 p.m. on Sunday. In action in Virginia last weekend, SU beat No. 14 Mary Washington, 3-1, on Friday and No. 18 Christopher Newport, 3-2, and Johns Hopkins, 3-1, on Saturday. Against Mary Washington, SU hit over .300 in the first and fourth sets, win-
ning both 25-19. A tough second set put the Pirates up 2-0, but MW rebounded to take the third set despite Southwestern posting more kills in the set. Kirby Kincannon led the Pirates with a .536 attack percentage with 17 kills. The Pirates opened Saturday against Christopher Newport. SU won the first
two sets with its hard-hitting offense, but trailed off in the next two, allowing CNU to even the score and force a fifth set. SU returned to its early form, posting a .312 attack percentage with no errors to take the match. After splitting the first two sets against a surprising Johns Hopkins team,
SU gutted out the third set 30-28 and pulled out the fourth as well to complete the weekend sweep. "Having three excellent teams to compete against was important for our growth and development as a team," SU coach Don
Washington & Jefferson). The Tigers had not been shut out in the regular season since Sept. 18, 1993 (31-0 at Austin College). •The Pirates did not allow a sack for the first time since the program was reinstated in 2013.
TEAM STATISTICS Column SU TU First downs 23 13 Yards rushing 32-123 37-20 Yards passing 376 128 Passes 22-36-0 17-38-1 Total offense 68-499 75-148 Avg. per play 7.33 1.97 Fumbles lost 2-5 1-3 Penalties 13-126 5-25 Punts 7-36.4 11-31.3 Possession time 23:32 36.28
SCAC RACE AT A GLANCE Standings: Southwestern, 2-0, 3-3; Texas Lutheran, 2-0, 2-4; Austin College, 0-2, 2-4; Trinity, 0-2, 2-4. Saturday's results: Southwestern 48, Trinity 0; Texas Lutheran 17, Austin College 13. This Saturday's games: Texas Lutheran at Southwestern, 6 p.m.; Trinity at Austin College, 1 p.m.
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing SU—Alyas Ramirez 5-34, Hicks 7-32, Hover 7-19, Jahmaal Dumes 2-9, Chris Demny 3-8, Dylan Wilburn 6-8, John David Bishop 1-7, Markell Henderson 1-6. TU—Jake Gorczyka 5-23, Zach Trevino 3-13, Justin Ventua 7-7, Griffin Lay 3-7, Bo Black 4-7, Makal Green 4-(-2), Davis King 11-(-35). Passing SU—Hicks 18-30-0, 261; Hover 4-6-0, 115. TU—King 11-24-0, 75; Ventura 6-14-1, 53. Receiving SU—Gillen 9-135, Wynn Jr. 5-79, Dante Smith 3-34, Shea 2-76, AJ Daniels 1-20, Ben Patterson 1-18, Bishop, 1-14. TU—Cody Sandman 4-48, Zachary Allen, 2-26, Tommy Lavine 2-13, Jayden Holden 2-11, Cole Brewer 2-9 (five others with one each and less than 10 yards receiving). Tackling (Solo-Assist--Total) SU—Aaron Robinson, 7-3-10; Justin Broussard, 4-5-9 (5.5 sacks, 36 yards); Brandon Fleischmann, 1-8-9 (1 sack, 9 yards). TU—Mitchell Globe, 4-8--12; Joshua Cook, 6-2-8.
Pirates cont. on B7
SU FROM PAGE B1 "It's super important to beat your arch-rival who has been beating you," Gillen said of the win over Trinity, which had prevailed in the first six games in the series since SU return to football in 2013. "I made big plays, but it was important to see the team do well." Meanwhile, Bryan Hicks, a senior from Humble Atascocita, came off the bench and threw for 261 yards and six touchdowns as the Pirates outgained the Tigers, 499-148, including a 376-128 bulge in the air as sophomore quarterback Fred Hover threw for 115 yards, including a 71yard touchdown to former Georgetown standout Colten Shea in the fourth quarter. Gillen passed much of the credit for his performance on to Hicks, who after being the returning starter is sharing the duties with Hover, a strong runner. "He's accepted his role with the team and has been playing really great," Gillen said. Southwestern posted nine sacks and shut out an opponent for the first time since
Sept. 16, 1950 when they beat then Southwest Texas State College, 28-0. One must consider that SU was out of the football business from the end of the 1950 season until the sport was resurrected in 2013. Southwestern's other touchdown came on a 14-yard pass from Hicks to Kenneth Wynn Jr. at the end of the first quarter. The SU defense, which included a number of backups at the time, preserved the shutout by stopping the Tigers on a fourth-and-goal at the Pirates 4-yard line with 16 seconds remaining in the game. SU coach Joe Austin like the result, but had some critiques on execution. "We dominated," he said. "It was from the start with 21 points in the first quarter, but we fumbles five times, losing two, and were penalized 13 times (for 126 yards). Other than that, we did exceptionally well. . . . Bryan played great off the bench. We're a run-heavy team and when we go to the air it gives our opponents problems." As for the TLU game, he said, "We getting on a
Southwestern coach Joe Austin was pleased with most aspects of his team’s 48-0 victory over Trinity this past Saturday in San Antonio. Photo courtesy of Southwestern University.
roll. We've been starting to play well and we expect that continue this this week. That's all we're concerned about." The Pirates have lost all three previous meetings with the Bulldogs since 2013 by a combined score of 143-31. Other items of note: • The three victories on the season are the most by the Pirates since they went 5-5 record in 1950. SU now stands 6-29 since the current program was started
in 2013. •The 48 points scored by the Pirates is the most since SU defeated Brooks Army Medical Center, 60-0, on Sept. 25, 1948. *It marked Southwestern's first win over Trinity since Nov. 1, 1941, a 13-6 decision in Waxahachie. It also marked the third shutout by Southwestern against Trinity, in a series dating back to 1909. •The last time Trinity was shut out by an opponent was Nov. 9, 1994 (28-0 by
SATURDAY'S SCAC GAME SOUTHWESTERN 48, TRINITY 0 At Trinity Stadium, San Antonio Southwestern 21 7 14 6—48 Trinity 0 0 0 0—0 SU—Matt Gillen, 0 fumble recovery in end zone (Luke Fierst kick). 4:26 first (4 plays. 38 yards). SU—Gillen, 14 pass from Bryan Hicks (Fierst kick), 2:14 first (4 plays, 60 yards). SU—Kenneth Wynn Jr., 14 pass from Hicks (Fierst kick), 0:00 first (4 plays, 29 yards). SU—Gillen, 8 pass from Hicks (Fierst kick), 1:15 second (11 plays, 72 yards). SU—Gillen, 30 pass from Hicks (Fierst kick), 13:12 third (1 play, 30 yards). SU—Gillen, 14 pass from Hicks (Fierst kick), 3:50 third (2 plays, 14 yards) SU—Colten Shea, 71 yard pass from Fred Hover (kick failed), 4:13 fourth (1 play, 71 yards). Att.—1,800.
LONGEST SCRIMMAGE PLAYS SU—71 yards—Hover pass to Shea. TU—29 yards—Ventua pass to Sandman. Source: Official SCAC statistics.
CROSS COUNTRY OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
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PAGE B7
Eagles, Patriots Set For 19-5A Showdown By Galen Wellnicki Sports Editor
The preliminaries are in the past for the Georgetown and East View cross country teams. Just three events—two of them eliminators—remain on the schedule. The first of those three—the District 195A Meet—will be Friday morning on the new state course at Old Settlers Park in Round Rock. The top three team and 10 individual finishers in the boys and girls varsity races will earn trips to the Region III-5A Meet at Ruth Barr Ross Park in Huntsville on Saturday, Oct. 29. From that showdown four teams and 10 individuals from each regional meet will advance to the UIL State Meet, also at Old Settlers Park, on Saturday, Nov. 12. Cedar Park and Georgetown are expected to duel for the boys team title in the nine-team alignment, and the Lady Timberwolves are a solid favorite in the girls team derby. GHS and East View are solid contenders to advance both their teams to regional. The district schedule calls for the varsity girls race at 8 a.m. and varsity boys race at 8:30 a.m. The JV and freshman races will follow at 30-minute intervals. Georgetown and East View also expect strong individual showings in the two 5,000-meter varsity races from the likes of East View's Guillermo Carrillo and Luis Andana and Georgetown’s Jonathan Parks and Carter Smith in the boys race. The Lady Eagles will be led by Jazmin Hernandez and McKenzie Hargrove, while the Patriots look to a potential standout in freshman Mia Rowe for leadership and a lofty finish. In this past weekend's 30th annual Eagle River Run at San Gabriel Park, the Georgetown boys and girls teams finished third in the final team standings with 78 and 114 points, respectively. Class 6A Vandegrift dominated the girls team derby over runner-up Belton, 34-67, and edged College Station, 64-65 for the boys crown. On the boys side, GHS coach Andrew Braun held
Lady Eagle senior Jazmin Hernandez runs out in front during the River Run Cross Country event held last Saturday morning. Hernandez finished the race in second place with a 18:20.2. Photo by: Russell Rinn
East View’s Guillermo Carrillo and Luis Andana run with Georgetown’s Jonathan Parks and Mason Motakef during the River Run XC meet this past Saturday in San Gabriel park. All four runners were among the top eight finishers with Carrillo second, Parks fourth, Andana fifth and Motakef eighth. Photo by: Russell Rinn
out his usual second, third and fourth runners in preparation for district. East View was sixth in the boys team chase with 155 points and seventh in the girls with 162 points. Neither individual race was close. Belton's Brooke Gilmore took the girls title with a time of 17 minutes, 49.9 seconds—30.3 seconds faster than runner-up Hernandez. Hargrove (18:53.3) was fourth and East View's Rowe (19:37.1) was 16th. College Station's Zephry Seagraves took the boys individual title easily with a 15.34.6. East View's Carrillo was second in 16:03.5 and Georgetown's Parks was fourth in 16.15.7. "I'm happy with the results," Braun said. "They guys we ran competed very well. We got really good efforts from Mason (Motakef, eighth), Ben (Whittemore, 15th) and Dan (Sawyer, 17th). We're focusing on getting healthy and ready for district and another competition with Cedar Park. It should be really close—just a few points apart. "East View has a really good team we're hoping for them to get to regional. Coach (Michael) Burton does a good job with their program." Burton was pleased with the Patriots' performance, saying, "I'm very happy. We're peaking for district
with them and beat them; now I just hope to keep up with the field," he said.
and we had a lot of personal records out there today (including Luis Andana, who was fifth in the boys race at 16:21.6)." "I'm pleased with the way the kids ran today," GHS girls coach Kellye Richardson said. "Our third, fourth and fifth runners are finishing closer together after a series of great workouts. Hopefully, we'll put it together and get out of district as a team on Friday." In the individual front, Hernandez said, "I'm ready for district. . . . excited. I felt good today and really good about the new course (in the River Run)." Hargrove said that she felt "pretty good," but finished a second off her personal best. She added that she hoped that both she and the team would advance to regional. "It was a really good meet and meet experience," Carrillo said of running against Seagraves. "You always have to work because no matter where you go, there is going to be someone faster. That's what sports are about. I'm hoping to be in the top 10 (at district) and helping the team qualify for regional." Mark Townsend, who founded the River Run during his days at GHS, was recognized at the meet and ran along with the varsity boys race, encouraging runners as he went. "Years ago, I would run
30TH ANNUAL EAGLE RIVER RUN At San Gabriel Park, Saturday 5A-6A VARSITY GIRLS (5,000 meters, 115 finishers) Team standings—Vandegrift 34 (4-6-7-8-9-10-11); Belton 67 (1-517-21-23-24-30:; Georgetown 114 (2-3-31-38-40-42-44); Hutto 131, Austin Royals 147, Temple 156, East View 162 (12-16-22-54-58-65); Harker Heights 198; Austin St. Andrews 217, Bastrop 255. Top individuals—1. Brooke Gilmore, Belton, 17:49.9; 2. Jazmin Hernandez, GHS, 18:20.2; 3, Celia Holmes, Live Oak Classical, 18:23.6; 4. McKenzie Hargrove, GHS, 18:53.3; 5. Allison Mopsik, Vandegrift, 18:56.3; 6. Olivia Houlden, Belton, 18:56.8; 7. Jordan Mathis, Vandegrift, 19:17.6; 8. Natalie Goddard, Vandegrift, 19:17.9; 9. Emi McCollum, Vandegrift, 19:21.1; 10. Vanessa Budde, Vandegrift, 19:21.3. Other GHS scoring runners (overall finish)—45. Hailey Hale, 21:36.6; 56. Sarah Fischer, 22:07.9; 61. Megan White, 22:20.3; 64. Camryn Whitman, 22:23.6; 66. Michaela Yakesch, 22:31.9. East View scoring runners (overall finish)—16. Mia Rowe, 19:37.1; 23. Lily Rodriguez, 20:31.6; 32. Isabella Zane, 20:57.2; 77. Tiare McConnell, 23:08.6; 82. Christy Stinson, 23:25.9; 98. Aileen Andrew, 25:09.5. 5A-6A VARSITY BOYS (5,000 meters, 135 finishers) Team standings—Vandegrift 64 (79-12-15-21-22-30); College Station 65 (1-10-11-20-23-38-43); Georgetown 78 (4-8-14-16-36-37-46); Lockhart 102, Austin St. Andrews 146; East View 155 (2-5-31-55-6264-65); Temple 167, Austin Royals 232, Belton 238, Harker Heights 253, Hutto 328, Elgin 349, Bastrop 378. Top individuals—1. Zephry Seagraves, College Station, 15:34.6; 2. Guillermo Carrillo, EV, 16:03.5; 3. Andres Uriegas, Austin Royals, 16:07.9; 4. Jonathan Parks, GHS, 16:15.7; 5. Luis Andana, EV, 16:21.6; 6. Ian Flores, Lockhart, 16:24.9; 7. Ricardo Jowers, Vandegrift, 16:27.6; 8. Mason Motakef, GHS, 16:28.8; 9. Petros Johnson, Vandegrift, 16:30.4; 10. Max Warrick, Austin Steel, 16:35.5. Other GHS scoring runners (overall
finish)—15. Ben Whittemore, 16:44.2; 17. Daniel Sawyer, 16:50.5; 37. Cole Zubek, 17.22.2; 38. Blake Walker, 17:23.6; 52. Jed Daniel, 17:40.4. Other EV scoring runners (overall finish)—32. Alvin Gusman, 17:15.1; 61. Riley Bunch, 17:58.5; 75. Dakota Richardson, 18.19.7; 78. Aaron Lara, 18.25.1; 79. Marshall Henry, 18:25.4. 5A-6A JV BOYS (5,000 meters, 105 finishers) Team leaders (nine teams)—San Antonio Antonian 15, Georgetown 66 (9-11-14-15-17-23-24), Austin St. Andrews 95 (5. East View 100, 6-1819-28-29-33-38). Individual winner—John Pena, Antonian, 17:25.6. GHS scoring runners (overall finish)—9. Noah Mersiovsky, 18.43.3; 11. Joshua Warnasch, 18:57.2; 14. Chance Thiele, 19:07.09; 15. Logan Sadler, 19:08.1; 17. Will Windham, 19:18.5; 23. Paul Mercer, 19:55.7; 25. Logan Patterson, 28:02.6. EV scoring runners (overall finish)—6. Oscar Garcia Santos, 18:29.3; 18. Cale Perry, 19:18.9; 19. Adam Bray, 19:23.1; 31. Garrett Klinger, 20.12.1; 32. Ethan Bray, 20:16.1; 36. Miles Whelan, 20:30.9; 37. Davis Bullard, 20:34.6. 5A-6A JV GIRLS (5,000 meters, 99 finishers) Team leaders (eight teams) --Belton 28, Vandegrift 31, Temple 103 (4. East View 136, 20-23-24-28-41-4254; Georgetown 151, 17-19-34-3744-49-53). Individual winner—Margaret McElmurry, Vandegrift, 22:04.6. EV scoring runners (overall finish)—24. Jessica Del Real, 24:02.4; 32. Mia Madrigal, 24:48.4; 36. Lille Kemp, 25:10.2; 40. Sydney Sargeant, 25:15.6; 62. Roxy Odiorne, 26:46.7; 65. Tara Jensen, 26:54.4; 92. Taylor Valadez, 29:37.8. GHS scoring runners (overall finish)—19. Nadia Gomez, 23:51.4; 23. Camille Sawyer, 23:57.8; 53. Shelby Jones, 26:09.9; 56. Jaelyn Knight, 26:15.9; 69. Karina Arellano, 27.10.4; 49. Riley Nemec, 28:11.7; 89. Alyssa Proctor, 29:16.3. MIDDLE SCHOOL GIRLS (Two miles, 198 finishers) Team leaders (14 teams)—Austin Hill Country 56, Benold 85, Austin West Ridge 90, Forbes 105 (9. Tippit, 238). Individual winner—Evan Biles, Hill
Country, 12:29.9. Benold runners in top 80 (overall places)—6. Avery Hill, 13:37.6; 16. Taylor Mendelsohn, 14:25.1; 17. Kennedy Timmons, 14:28.0; 21. Regan Marshall, 14:44.4; 36. Mallory Schacheral, 15:15.16; 39, Daniella Roby, 15:28.7; 42. Jane Lee, 15:32.4; 47. Alyssa Stock, 15:39.9; 49. Kennedy Bailey, 15:43.4; 53. Victoria Yakesch, 15:49.1; 54. Baylie Foster, 15:52.4; 68. Abby Heaton, 16:21.7; 68. Olivia Harris, 16:25.7; 75. Maddie Stockton, 16:38.2. Forbes runners in top 80 (overall places)—12. Mary Brown, 14:08.7; 15. Tonie Fenton, 14:19.6; 22. Ashleyn Valadez, 14:46.3; 23. Gabriella Cabrera, 14:50.4; 50. Brooke Bullard, 15.44.7. 52. Samantha Folsom, 15:47.2; 58. Grace Inman, 15:54.2; 65. Amelia Federico, 16:11.1. Tippit runners in top 80 (Overall places)— 34. Patricia Ruiz, 15:08.4; 46. Leigha Amato, 15.38.7; 76. Nidia Gomez, 16:45.1. Zion Lutheran runners in top 80 (overall places)—55. Shaelyn Poe, 15:52.5; 62. Chesni Scott, 16:00.4. MIDDLE SCHOOL BOYS (Two miles, 180 finishers)—Austin Hill Country 80, Fort Worth Southwest Christian 102, Benold 104, Tippit 119 (9. Forbes 211; 14. Zion Lutheran 364. Individual winner—Jack Burgess, Hill Country, 11:46.9. Benold runners in top 80 (overall places)—7. Rigo Cerna, 12:32.7; 15. Christian Lewis, 12:49.4; 18. Nate Garza, 12:55.7; 38. Ty Klaus-Kisamore, 14:00.7; 51. Nolan Champion, 14:35.1; 52. Mario Hernandez, 14:35.1; 61. Timmy Kurtin, 14:56.4; 66. Tristan Cooper, 15:04.4; 74. Tucker Case, 15:14.3; 78. Jayden Marceaux, 15:19.6. 79. Jake Windham, 15:20.2. Tippit runners in top 80 (overall places)—20. Andy Bishop, 13:05.7; 24. Gregory Zavala, 13:24.5; 28. Christian Franklin, 13:38.2; 29. David Rodriguez, 13:41.1; 42. Mitchell Widlowski, 14:09.7; 56. Logan Walker, 14:45.2. Forbes runners in top 80 (overall places)—27. Samuel Reithmayer, 13:36.7; 36. Samuel Yantis, 13:59.2; 48. Noah McMahon, 14:29.1; 49. Jace Knauth, 14:29.3. Zion runners in top 80 (overall places)—43. Sterling Gattis, 14:13.9; 60. Lawson Crowe, 14:54.9. Source: Official meet results.
PIRATES FROM PAGE B6 Flora said.
MEN'S SOCCER: Temperatures weren't the only thing on the rise in this past Sunday's SCAC contest between No. 20 Colorado College and Southwestern. A hotly contested, physical match went the way of the Tigers as CC took advantage of every opportunity. After losing 2-1 decisions to both Colorado College and Dallas this past weekend, the Pirates will take their 7-8 season and 6-5 SCAC records into home matches with No. 1 Trinity at 5 p.m. Friday and Schreiner at noon Sunday. SU was the first on the board with the only goal of the first half in the match with Colorado College. Tanner Irons' diving header off Mason Tomasak's low, driving corner kick gave SU extra confidence to start the second half as they better dictated the pace of play. An SU foul in the box awarded Colorado College a penalty kick with 14 minutes remaining, tying the match. A straight red card to the Pirates with 10:30 left put the SU down a man for the remainder of the game and opened the door for the visitor's game-winning goal. Defense dominated most of
Friday's match until the final two minutes of regulation. The University of Dallas took the win with a penalty kick in overtime to defeat the Pirates. Both goalkeepers made outstanding saves throughout the match to keep the game scoreless. UD broke the seal in the 88th minute and seemed to have the game-winner until SU capitalized off a corner kick as Wil Mekelburg put in a rebound to score the equalizer with under a minute remaining. Dallas seemed to have the game-winner three minutes into OT, but they were deemed offside to keep the game rolling. Just minutes later the Crusaders took the victory after a strong tackle in the box on a breakaway awarded UD the penalty kick to win the game. WOMEN'S SOCCER: SU allowed just one shot on goal and five shots total in a 2-0 win over the University of Dallas this past Friday to remain unbeaten at home. However, they dropped a 4-0 non-conference decision to Hardin-Simmons in Abilene on Saturday. This coming weekend, the Pirates, 7-2 in SCAC play and 9-5 on the season, will face a pair of conference matches. They face No. 3
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Trinity at 7 p.m. Friday and Schreiner at 2 p.m. on Sunday. The Pirates had full control in the Dallas match, taking the lead early on Sarah Bevins' lofting shot in the 17th minute. Megan McGrath assisted by Audrey Silver added insurance in the second half. On Saturday, three second half goals gave No. 20 Hardin-Simmons a solid cushion and kept SU off the board to hand the Pirates their fifth loss of the season. CROSS COUNTRY: The Southwestern men's cross country team finished second in a five-team field at the Southwestern Invitational this past Friday evening at Berry Springs Park. The Pirates were paced by Joshua Im, who placed fifth in the 5,000-meter event with a time of 17 minutes, 6 seconds. Ulles Castaneda (17:24) and John Hatten (17:24.7) finished in ninth and 10th places, respectively, to bolster Southwestern's team placement. Texas Lutheran won the team title, outscoring the Pirates, 25-46. In women's action, Morgan Forteith led the Pirates with a 15th-place finish (22:59). Trinah Ha covered the 5,000 meters in 23:34 for 19th place
and Callie Mantooth was 29th with a 26:26. There was no women's team competition. Southwestern will host the SCAC Championships at Old Settlers Park in Round Rock on Saturday, Oct. 29. MEN'S GOLF: SU rebounded with a one-over-289 in the third round at the Division III Golfweek Invitational to finish in 13th of 18 teams this past week at the Raven Golf Club in Sandestin, Fla. Competing against a strong field, the Pirates stumbled at the start but clawed their way back throughout the remainder of the tournament. SU shaved 21 strokes off their first round and finished with 900 strokes over 54 holes. Tyler Gammill (74-76-71) and Cade Osgood (79-69-73) tied for 22nd place overall with 221 strokes. Matthew Christly (77-77-72) came in tied for 48th, Andrew DeHennis tied for 71st Devon Horne in 95th (DQ79-76). Texas Tyler won the tournament with a total of 854, 14 strokes better than Rhodes College. The Pirates remained in action as they competed in the Alamo City Classic in San Antonio on Monday
and Tuesday. WOMEN'S GOLF: Strong second and third rounds at the Division III Golfweek Invitational brought the Pirates into 13th place with 995 strokes. Valentina Olivieri led the Pirates a 54-hole total of 244 strokes (86-7979), tying for 39th. Leilani McDaniel tied for 60th
with 250 (91-83-76) and Paige Greenan tied for 65th with 253 (87-7888).Mikayla Miller a 255 (87-85-83) and Katherine Dyo a 267 (85-84-98). The Pirates remained in action as they competed in the Alamo City Classic in San Antonio on Monday and Tuesday. Source: SU sports information.
GHS Golfers Take Second The Georgetown and East View boys golf teams recently competed in a tournament at Teravista with the Eagles finishing second with a 332—20 strokes behind Belton. Individual scores for GHS were Will Dietlein, 79; Davis Northcutt, 81; Lucas Garza, 82; Jimmy Hebert, 90; and Cooper Cash, 94. East View fielded three individuals—Jack Richison, 84; Connor Colangelo, 105; and Logan Dupree, 113. "The greens were lightning fast and our guys struggled with them," GISD boys golf coach Vernon Killen.” Will Dietlein played well as he continues to play varsity basketball and varsity golf."
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OCTOBER 20, 2016 THE ADVOCATE
The Georgetown High School Cross Country program wishes to thank the following sponsors for partnering with us to host the Eagle River Run Invitational Meet on Saturday, October 15, 2016 at San Gabriel Park. We strongly encourage the support of these area businesses, as they have partnered with our program and our athletes.
Georgetown High School XC Eagle River Run Invitational 2016 Sponsors
Please help us keep children warm this winter
Gold Sponsors David Daniell Todd Hargrove State Farm Insurance
Texas Wolverine Properties
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Central TX Powersports
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Silver Sponsors D&L Printing First State Bank Central Texas Georgetown Fireplace & Patio Georgetown Interstate Transmission & Auto Repair Georgetown Muffler & Automotive Georgetown Shirt Company Home Away From Home Petcare
JDI Contractor & Supply Mrs. Mac’s Shining Stars McIntire’s Garden Center Minute Man Press Raising Canes Rothenberg Realty, Alan Parks, Realtor Watkins Insurance Group Wildfire Restaurant
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YOUR DONATION Makes A Difference! You can donate online at www.caringplacetx.org or mail to P.O. Box 1215, Georgetown, TX 78627
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For more information, please contact Rita Turner at 512-943-0702, rturner@caringplacetx.org
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