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KFDM COOP

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Everything posted by KFDM COOP

  1. Monday Nights.
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  3. Yea i spoke with Coach G Friday and he's very excited about this years team. 8)
  4. Why? What's going on?
  5. 32-29 Deweyville over EC in Tiebreaker.
  6. Be sure to post results after scrimmages.
  7. Come on now let's put a team together! Who would play where? Who would you want to be the coach?
  8. From Vicki Castino The 18th Annual Lady Bear Golf Tournament was held Monday at Sunset Grove Country Club in Orange Texas. Here are the results: INDIVIDUALS: 1. Jennifer Sells – Westbrrok - 79 2. Kenze Brooks – Newton - 90 3. Natalie McLane – Orangefield - 93 Bailey Chesser – Hamshire-Fannett – 97 Sarah Rice – Westbrook – 100 Alext Taylor – Westbrook – 100 TEAMS: 1. BARBERS HILL – 450 Leslie Browder 116 Claire Wright 116 Laura Turbeville 103 Shayna Wood 115 Melissa Freeman 117 2. NEWTON - 464 Kenze Brooks 90 Ashley Westbrook 104 Emily Jefferson 138 Megan Hatton 132 3. WARREN - 487 Tiffany Weise 115 Kacy Landry 122 Kristina Steeley 136 Hannah Swinney 121 Candi Burnes 129 4. LCM - 500 Lacie Morgan 106 Nocona Burton 123 Julie Williams 128 Amy Bonneaux 145 Katie Harrell 143 5. NEDERLAND - 509 Catherine Sanderson 134 Lauren Byars 149 Randi Bass 134 Hallie Baker 120 Jamie Harrell 121 6. VIDOR - 510 Sarah St. John 110 Jaisa Walker 114 Ashely Stanley 137 Julia Bagwell 154 Shelby Maxwell 149 7. PNG - 533 Morgan Prewitt 104 Stephanie Carver 135 Morgan Thigpen 143 Brittany Palermo 151 Stephanie Lawrence 160 8. ANAHUAC -571 Saratz Baker 128 Whitney Fountain 153 Kim Deteoyas 153 Emily Baker 155 Dominque Williams 137 9. JASPER - 578 Nicole Hamilton 129 Brandy Shofner 143 Callie Dover 145 Jessica Bowling 161 MEDALISTS: Alison Clary – LCM 145 Stephanie Freese – LCM 149 Krista Powell – Vidor 143 Laura Williams – Bridge City 110 Amy Caillouet – Bridge City 144 Emily Navarro – Bridge City 149 Natalie McLane – Orangefield 93 Jessica Worthy – Orangefield 146 Ashley Krebbs – Warren – 147 Courtney Ard – Warren 147 Linda Hodges – Buna 146 Kim Reeves – Buna 109 Mykalynn Rowland – Silsbee – 122 Lauren Cook – Silsbee – 138 Ashlee Johnson – Memorial 145 Kierra Washington – Central 161 Bailey Chesser – Hamshire-Fannett 97 Jennifer Sells – Westbrook 79 Sarah Rice – Westbrook 100 Alex Taylor – Westbrook 100
  9. Tark and Coldspring will be a war!
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  12. Source kogt LCM Results from Dayton Powerlifting Meet. Varsity Boys: Chris Sonnier won first in the 114 lb class with 1050 lb total weight and for the third week was named outstanding lifter for the light platform. Kevin Greer was 2nd in the 132 lb class with a 1020 lb total and Joseph Viator was 2nd in the 181 lb. class with a total of 1240 lbs.
  13. Lots of NASCAR stars gunning for Johnson CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- Jimmie Johnson was the clear favorite to win last season's Nextel Cup championship, an easy pick after coming so very close so many times before. This year's pick isn't nearly as obvious, with 50 drivers revving their motors in pursuit of dethroning NASCAR's newest champion. Jeff Gordon wants a fifth Nextel Cup title. Tony Stewart is fired up after missing last year's Chase, and Matt Kenseth's goal is to win a second title, this time under a new points system. But no matter how you break it down, the championship is Johnson's to lose. "It's hard to win one, much less back to back, and to do anything twice in a row is tough," said Stewart, who won titles in 2002 and 2005. "I can go to Vegas and put a whole bunch of money on a number, and to have it hit once is something, but to come back again and have it hit again." Only seven drivers have won consecutive Cup titles - none since Gordon in 1997 and 1998. And even though the odds are clearly against him, Johnson plans to make a full-speed run at title No. 2. "I am a race car driver, and I want to win championships," he said. "I always wanted to win one, and now I've got it. That whole experience makes you hungry and want to come back and do it again. I feel with the team and everything that we have (at Hendrick Motorsports), we could be a contender for a few more of these." Johnson has every reason to believe he can do it again, because his 2006 title was no fluke. Since entering the Nextel Cup Series five years ago, Johnson consistently has been among NASCAR's top drivers. The No. 48 team never has been lower than fifth in the standings and was twice runner-up in the championship. That earned Johnson the dubious distinction of being the Peyton Manning of NASCAR - the guy who dominated the regular season, only to come up short when everything was on the line. When Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus finally cleared that final hurdle last November, overcoming a disastrous start to the Chase, Johnson was freed of that label. "A lot was said that they might not be able to win it, and Jimmie couldn't get it if he didn't get it last year," car owner Rick Hendrick said. "Well, he did. I think a lot of the pressure is off. The pressure now is not to prove he can be a champion. The pressure is on himself to come back and be in the hunt again." It again starts with Knaus, who learned valuable lessons last season. First, he realized he had to back off just a bit to sustain the energy and drive Johnson needed over the long 36-race season. Knaus also learned to delegate, but had trouble easing up initially. When he was caught cheating during Daytona 500 preparations, a four-week suspension forced Knaus to slow down. With the crew chief watching from home, Johnson rallied to win at Daytona and again in Las Vegas two weeks later. When Knaus returned to the track, he was able to maintain an even pace the rest of the year. Now, his challenge will be allowing his guys to celebrate last season's success without losing the intensity that made them champions. "You have to give the guys an opportunity to go out there and soak it in and feel a sense of accomplishment," Knaus said. "Because if they are working continuously and they don't get any type of reward for what they have done, they are going to feel like 'Why am I applying myself and working myself to death for nothing?' "The drivers take off and go to France and Italy (during the offseason), but the guys are in here working like crazy. It's a balance that you've got to find, and I think we did a good job. We just have to wait and see." The mind-set of Knaus and his crew will be just one part of Johnson's success, which also will depend on how he handles his new role as ambassador to the sport. The demands on Johnson's time have increased, and the spotlight magnifies everything. He learned that the hard way last December when he fell off a golf cart and broke his wrist while goofing around. Reluctant to reveal exactly how he was injured, Johnson had to backtrack when the truth came out. "It can get overwhelming with the expectations," said Gordon. "Every show, every print and TV, every media, every fan wants more of you. That's a good thing, but at the same time, it can be hard to manage." The only certainty is Johnson plans to give his pursuit of a repeat title his full attention. Anything else and Knaus knows they'll come up short. "I think we have to go out there and prove ourselves every week," Knaus said. "Anytime somebody rolls into a season or an event thinking that they are the favorite, you are going to get your butt handed to you. So we won't take the mentality that we are the favorites." © 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy.
  14. Fans could be barred from Italian soccer stadiums By MARIA SANMINIATELLI, Associated Press Writer February 5, 2007 ROME (AP) -- Soccer fans won't be allowed into stadiums in Italy unless security measures are met, a decision that comes days after rioting at a game in Sicily in which a police officer was killed. Interior Minister Giuliano Amato also said Monday that clubs will not be able to sell blocks of tickets to visiting fans, allowing for better control of those entering stadiums. These decisions and others need to be approved at a Cabinet meeting Wednesday, Amato added. ADVERTISEMENT "I know it is extravagant to think of soccer play without the public," he said. "But I think it is a worse extravagance to have someone die for something like that." Luca Pancalli, the Italian soccer federation commissioner, said the decision on resuming professional play would be made after the Cabinet meeting. He said that would give the league enough time to schedule games for next weekend. Games in the country's top league, scheduled for last Saturday and Sunday, were called off because of Friday's riot after Palermo beat host Catania 2-1. The Italian sports daily Gazzetta dello Sport reported Monday that only four stadiums used by clubs in the Serie A satisfy the safety norms -- the Stadio Olimpico in Rome, the Stadio Olimpico in Turin, the Artemio Franchi stadium in Siena, and the Renzo Barbera stadium in Palermo. San Siro, the stadium shared by AC Milan and Inter Milan, does not meet the criteria. Sports minister Giovanna Melandri also said soccer clubs must cut ties to fan clubs and opponents should be regarded as "adversaries, not enemies." In the Sicilian city of Catania, thousands of mourners flocked to a cathedral for the funeral of the slain police officer. Pope Benedict XVI expressed his "spiritual closeness" to the family of 38-year-old Filippo Raciti. "In reiterating his firm condemnation for any act of violence that stains the world of soccer, the Holy Father urges protagonists to promote respect for legality with greater determination," the pope said in a telegram of condolences that was read during the funeral. In a sign of respect, people applauded as Raciti's coffin, draped in the Italian flag, was carried inside the Duomo Cathedral followed by his youngest son dressed in a police uniform. "I only hope that your death will push society to make changes," Raciti's teenage daughter, Fabiana, said during a tearful speech. Amato has said the violence must stop, or the games will. But officials will also have to consider the economic impact of not allowing a quick return to play. AC Milan and Juventus are the world's third- and fourth-biggest clubs by revenue, according to accounting firm Deloitte. During the 2004-05 season, along with rival giants Inter Milan and AS Roma, the clubs generated more than $1 billion through game-day receipts, broadcast deals, sponsorships and merchandising. "This is among Italy's most important industries, and it needs to continue," Antonio Matarrese, the president of the Italian soccer league, said in Monday's editions of La Repubblica. "We are saddened, but the show must go on." "Unfortunately, deaths ... are part of this huge movement, which law enforcement officials still can't control," he said. Matarrese's comments drew immediate criticism, with the Italian Olympic Committee calling them "seriously offensive." Matarrese later said he had been misunderstood and had not intended to sound as if he was taking the violence lightly. "Those that have done wrong must be punished," AC Milan defender Paolo Maldini said. "But playing with the doors closed would be the death of soccer." Associated Press Writers Ariel David in Rome and Andrew Roberts in Milan contributed to this report.
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  16. Stay tuned...Thanks ECBUCFAN for the updates!
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