10 The Dallas Post Dallas, PA Wednesday, May 15, 1996 i a SPORTS ROUNDUP 4 } ! ’ i Baseball allas 13 - Berwick 3 i Jef Kunkle sparkled in the box dnd on the mound with three hits including a triple and double, 3 RBI's and hurling a complete game “victory for Dallas as the Mounts Beat Berwick 13-3 May 9. The Mounts benefited from an eight run first and held Berwick to just three runs. Frank Valvano sliced a triple as he went three for three with 2 RBI's. r Hanover 8 - Dallas 3 + Despite a 8-3 loss at Hanover May 13, the Mounts keep hold of first place in Division II by one and one half games. Chuck Fehlinger was tagged with the loss for Dallas, giving up 12 hits in five innings pitched. Aaron Getz was two for three with one run scored and one batted in. Volleyball Dallas 2 - West Side Tech 0 | Dan Holdredge blasted 13 kills to lift the Mounts past Tech, 15-1, 15-5 May 7. Holdredge's 13 topped him over the 100 kills for the season plateau while Amro Nejib bested the 150 mark for assists with 12. «4 Pittston 2 - Dallas 1 1 The Patriots narrowly escaped an awesome Mountaineer attack May 7 as Pittston pulled away with a 20-8, 4-15, 15-13 victory. Don Holdredge paced the Mounts with 21 kills and four aces. Jared Dukas lifted eight digs and four service points and Amzo Najib supplied 31 assists. i Dallas 2 - Coughlin 0 The Mountaineers offense ral- lied to sweep Coughlin 15-11, 15- 3 May 9. Don Holdredge led the Mount attack with 11 kills while Walt Davis added six and Jared Dukas sliced three. Soccer Dallas 3 - O'Reilly 2 The Mounts stretched a goal in each of the final three quarters to down O'Reilly 3-2 May 9. Robin Holeman scored twice including one with an assist [rom Melanie Love while Christy Callahan booted in another with a pass from Holly Shiber. Soccer Dallas 1 - Valley West 0 Robin Holeman booted the game's lone tally off an assist from Christy Callahan as the Mounts shut out Valley West 1-0, May 13. Dallas outshot the Spartans 41- 22, while the defense hung tough including 18 saves for goal tender Adrienne Camp. Softball Crestwood 9 - Dallas 8 Crestwood narrowly escaped a late game rally to hold off Dallas 9-8 in softball action May 7. The Lady Mounts record drops to 3-4. Hazleton 1 - Dallas 0 The Mount defense held off Hazleton for extra innings May 8 but let the game slip away in the 8th off of a Cougar single with the bases loaded. Dallas’ sticks were silent as Hazleton's Nichole Spishock tossed a complete game no hitter. Dallas lost 1-0. Dallas 2 - Hoban 0 The Mount defense survived a seventh inning scare [rom Hoban to claim victory 2-0 May 9. With the Mounts clinging to a 2-0 lead Dallas hurler Sandy McCloud walked three to fill the bases. The the Dallas “D” kicked in and re- corded three straight put outs to save the win. Softball Dallas 6 - Coughlin 3 Suzanne Fisher belted out two doubles and went three for four pacing Dallas to a 6-3 victory over Coughlin May 13. Holly Baseski also punched out three hits as the Mounts even their record to 5-5. | PELE WAN Lehman 6 - Crestwood 2 Kelly Spencer's stick caused some headaches for Crestwood as she went two for three including two RBI's igniting Lehman to a 6- 2 victory over the Comets May 8. Darby Wolfe and Nicky Newell also added some spark to the fire both hitting two for four. The Knights now have a secure hold on first place in the AAA north with a two ~ game lead over Valley West. Soccer Lehman 4 - O'Reilly 2 The Knights scored a goal a quarter to drop O'Reilly 4-2 May 13. Kelly Spencer accounted for two of Lehman's goals, while Adrienne Miroslaw and Sarah Kasper had one apiece. The Knights next game is Wednesday, May 15, at Crestwood. Lehman 3 - Dallas 1 The Lady Knights clinched a District 2 playoff berth by defeat- ing backyard rival Dallas 3-1 May 7 al home. Kelly Spencer scored twice and added an assist for the victors. Robin Holeman sank the Lone Mount goal off an assist from Christy Callahan. Lehman 5 - Wyoming Sem. 4 The Black Knights bolted into first place after handing a 5-4 loss to Seminary May 9. The two teams traded places in the standings with the Blue Knights now at #2. Kelly Spencer accounted for three of Lehman's tallies, two of which were assisted by Jess Elston who had three assists for the day. Volleyball Lehman 2 - Hazleton 0 Jeremy Baranowski com- manded the court May 7 serving up eight aces and seven kills as Lehman pummeled Hazleton 15- 0, 15-2. Phil Snyder also got his share of the action slamming five kills. The Knights improved on their perfect season to 11-0. Track Wyo. Area 82 - Lehman 54 GAR 71 - Lehman 58 The Lady Knights had a tough day on the track May 10 falling to both Wyoming Area and GAR in a tri-meet held at Lehman. First place finishers for Lehman in- cluded Allison Savage in the 1600m run, Jen Reno. shot put and Caren Clarke. javelin. Wyo. 93 1/2 - Lehman 56 1/2 Lehman 84 - GAR 56 The Knights settled for a split May 10 falling to Wyoming Area but besting GAR. Chris Bath took the 100m dash and 1600m run while Brad Dieflenbacher cap- tured first in the triple and high jumps. Baseball Lehman 17 - Hafey 6 Geoff Engle and Jared Parulis each belted homers as the Knights won a wild 17-6 contest over Bishop Haley May 11. Engle, Mike Woronko, Mike Adamshick andJohn Oliver all supplied three hits for Lehman. Oliver nearly went for the cycle with a single, double and triple. Lehman 2 - West Side Tech 0 Jeremy Baranowski and Phil Snyder slammed seven kills apiece as the Black Knights wrapped up the regular season with a 15-2, 15-1 victory over Tech May 9. Lehman closed out the season with a perfect 11-0 record. ’ A It's Easy to : POST PHOTO/JIM PHILLIPS John Barbose beat the throw to second in the Indians game with the Orioles last week. Ryan Gryskewicz awaited the throw. LITTLE LEAGUE RESULTS Yankees 10 - Astros 9 Jeff Emanuel pitched and hit the Yankees to a win. He struck out five in three innings and was two for four at the plate with a homerun. David Walters was three for four, Patrick Rother two for two with a double and Joe Yankoski two for three in the Astros hitting attack. Pirates 15 - Reds 1 Jordy Spencer was the winning pitcher for the Pirates. He also had two singles in the game along with a hitting spree from Drew Suszko and Tyler Droppers (two doubles) each having two hits. Blake Saba hammered a double for the Reds. Dodgers 11 - Pirates 4 Eric Kowalek got the win from the mound. Teammate Josh Bryant assisted with the bat with two hits while Jordy Spencer had a double and single for the Pi- rates. Pirates 3 - Yankees 2 Jordan Kozlowski was the win- ning pitcher. John Pambianco provided three hits for the Yanks. Tigers10, Orioles 5 Joey Austin pitched a complete game striking out 10 for the win. Mike Kozak had three RBI's for the Tigers and Robert Murphy had a double for the Orioles. Indians 10 - Tigers 7 Mike Fehlinger and Dan Unvarsky combined a two hitter to collect the win. Matt Flanagan made a spectacular catch in left field to end the game with bases loaded. Extra base hits for the Indians came from John Schultz, Nick Matthewson, John Barbose and Flanagan. Unvarsky had the only triple in the game. Tigers with hits were John Simonitis and Mike Kozak. Yankees 10 - Indians 4 Bob Gebhardt and Jeff Emanuel pitched a combined three hitler with 16 strikeouts to rack up a win for the Yankees. Jeff Emanuel also had three hits including two doubles. May 18 road rally The Wyoming Valley Chapter of the Saturn Car Club will sponsor a benefit road rally for the American Red Cross on Saturday, May 18, rain or shine, at Saturn of Wyo- ming Valley, Sans Souci Highway, Hanover Township. Awards will be presented to the top three finishers. Grand prize is a seafood feast weekend, donated Rangers 11 - A’s 10 : The Rangers built a 9-2 lead through thee innings, then staved off a furious sixth inning four run rally by the A's. The entire game was played in a light rain and saw the A's bang out eight hits, seven went [or extra bases. The A's Jefl Dickson and Mike Dombroski each hada home run and adouble, Adam Tkaczyk a single and double, while Paul Saxon and Bobby Zaruta had doubles. The Ranger's Tim Faneck had three singles and a double, Billy Evans two singles and a double and win- ning pitcher Shawn Whalen chipped in with a double. Phillies 9 - Rangers 4 (5 innings) Colin Donnelly fanned seven and walked just two to pick up the win [or the Phillies in a game shortened to [ive innings due to rain. Joel Lesinski's two run homer was the big blow as the Phillies jumped to a 7-1 lead in the second inning. Mark Kapitula singled and doubled for the Phillies. Billy Evans and Brian Dempsey each had two hits for the Rangers. Phil Engler added a triple and Shawn Whalen a double. BOYS AAA Cards 11 - Reds 10 Chris Bertinelli and Jonathan Woods pitched the Cards toa win. Wood struck out nine for the win. Bertinelli had two hits while Mark Mueller had a two run double in the bottom of the sixth for the go ahead score and win. : Cards 14 - Orioles 1 Winning pitcher was Jonathan Woods with 11 strikeouts. Craig Kasper had two hits in the game leading the hit category for both teams. Reds 11 - Tigers 6 [Luke Marchakitus led the Reds n the mound and at the plate. He had two singles with three RBI's while Nathan Alley assisted him at the plate with a triple and three RBI's. will aid Red Cross by the Best Western Inn, Hunts Landing. From the left are Craig Husch, executive director, American Red Cross; Gary Redding, Saturn sales consultant; Tom Skall, Saturn sales manager, and Bob Herstek, Saturn sales consultant. Toregister, call Gary Redding or Bob Herstek at 1-800-SATURN 1. DeCesaris will attend King's Angelo DeCesaris, a football standout at Lake-Lehman High School, has announced he will continue his academic and ath- letic careers at King's College. DeCesaris, a 6'2", 215-pound linebacker-nose guard, was a first team Wyoming Valley Conference All-Star as a senior and has been selected to play in the UNICO All Star Game this summer. As a senior, he made 74 solo tackles with 20 assists, including 12 tack- les for losses, three quarterback sacks, one pass interception for a Black Knight defense which posted four shutouts and yielded only seven points per game. Ted Jackson Jr., center, was flanked by his parents, Ted Sr. and A three-year letter winner, DeCesaris helped Lehman reach post-season playoffaction each of the past three years. DeCesaris will major in busi- ness at King's and was selected to Who's Who Among High School Students. He was a member of Lehman's Student Council and volunteers his time as a coach for the Back Mountain Tee-Ball Team. He also excelled in basketball and was a second-team WVC All- Star and was among the top scor- ers in Division II. He also partici- patedin the 3-point shooting com- petition at the WVC Senor All- Star Game. Sandy when he announced his intention to attend Lycoming College in the fall. Dallas High School principal Frank Galicki stood behind Jackson. Jackson (continued from page 13) Lycoming also recruited Ted for the position he prefers and at which he excels - quarterback. “They were recruiting four quar- terbacks, and Ted is the only one they got,” said Ted Sr., also the head football coach at Dallas. “They have a strong senior com- ing back, the kid's an academic all-american, but after that there's only two (current) freshman and one of them is switching posi- tions." . “The senior is outstanding,” said Ted Jr. “I'm going to contrib- ute wherever I can this year and be ready to play as a sophomore.” As many as seven or eight schools expressed a strong inter- est in Jackson. Lycoming won out over Geltysburg, Stony Brook, Ithaca, Fordham and Lehigh. Fordham recruited him as a de- fensive back while Lehigh was looking to move him to wide re- ceiver. Lycoming’'s proximity to the Back Mountain, a little over an hour drive, was a key determining factor. “T'll be the one doing most of the traveling,” said Sandy Jackson, “since Ted will need to coach the team here. Most of the road games are within a decent radius too.” An honor student at Dallas, Jackson was a member of student council and has been selected to Who's Who Among High School Students. During the winter months he starred on the basket- ball court and concluded his Dal- las cage career as a 1,000 point scorer. Football has always been his first love, however. “I wanted to play in college,” said Ted Jr. “I probably realized | had a good chance to do so during my junior season. Playing and contributing (alongside) that group of guys, | realized I was going to be all right.” Dallas compiled a 45-7 record during his four ‘years with the team and won the PIAA, Class AA state championship when Ted was a sophomore, basically playing wide-out. He's earned the praise of opposing coaches as a defen- sive back, but really made things happen during his tenure as Mountaineer signal-caller. Jackson passed for 2,414 yards and 33 touchdowns. He also scored 16 touchdowns and * rushed. for 1,029 yards while be- ing honored as a two*imé all con- ¥ ference selection. “Ted is an excellent quarter- back prospect who possesses out- standing speed and the ability to make things happen,” said Girardi. “We expect Ted to make a positive contribution to our pro- gram and we're looking forward to having him in our program for the next four years." Over the summer he'll work a regular regime of weightlifting, running and throwing. Ted the younger will represent Dallas one more lime at this summer's UNICO game, bul is anxiously awaiting the arrival of fall. “This (recruiting) has taken so much time, that I'm probably ready right now," said Ted Jr.” Sporting smiles, both Teds ad- mitted on Monday that the feeling of accomplishment and euphoria ranked up their with winning the state title. “It's exciting," said Ted Sr., who played [or East Stroudsburg Uni- versity. “I certainly would have loved to see him at a Division 1 school, but if you're going to play at Division III, you might as well go to the best.” IUs possible that he'll still have a son on the sidelines this fall. Matt, a freshman to be, will be given a shot at a varsity spot. Ted and Sandy also have a daughter, Jill. 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