Jump to content

Post scores here - Friday, January 11th


Recommended Posts

6A #24 WestBrook (24-5)(6-1)   06       6A #14 C.E.King (21-5)(6-1)   14  End of 1st

                                                  15                                                      24 Halftime

                                                  25                                                     39 End of 3rd

                                                 36                                                      48  Final 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

From kogt.com

GIRLS

Deweyville lost to Big Sandy 37-30. The Lady Pirates fought back to make it a game after BS shot out to a 16-4 lead in the first quarter. Emilee Totino had 10, and Adisyn and Jillian Thompson each scores 7.

Bridge City lost to Lumberton 45-40. They fall to 4-1 in district (19-10). Whitney Cunningham led BC with 16 pts. Nicole Sasser, Kaylee Britten, Kennedy Campbell, and Whitney Cunningham all had 6 rebounds each. Sasser also added three steals.  

WOS lost to Silsbee 70-32

LCM beat Jasper 68-23

The Lady Bobcats are 6-1 after the first round of district with after defeating Anahuac 76-27.  The Lady Bobcats had a great team win with every one contributing. MiKayla Locke had 18 points, 6 steals and 3 assists. Paisley Reeves had 10 points and fought hard for 4 rebounds. Kaylea Gravett had a great night with 5 assists, 7 steals and 4 points. Brook Wagoner had 8 points, 4 rebounds and 3 steals. Steeley Franklin had 8 points and 3 rebounds while Olivia Smith also had 8 points and 3 rebounds. The Lady Bobcats will travel to Kountze Tuesday night, varsity only at approximately 6:00. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Member Statistics

    46,201
    Total Members
    1,837
    Most Online
    JBarry68
    Newest Member
    JBarry68
    Joined


  • Posts

    • naw, maaaaybe 7, definitely not 8 deep.  today im avoiding sitting by #10s parents, had to move away yesterday.   "put my son back in jub, put my son back in"  and then crying on every little touch of someone.    lets ball out today ktz!    
    • Very close game until the 2nd half (mostly the 4th) when Orangefield came unraveled. Worse defensive effort I have seen out of the Bobcats in three years. This team has to get back on D and quit getting beat over the top when pressing. Offensively, non ball handlers continually turn it over and their shot selection is poor. Basic basketball, such as: defensive hustle, boxing out, and taking care of the basketball are the areas the Bobcats need to work on most. Whitmire will get them on point, but he shouldn't have to coach effort at the Varsity Level.  We'll be at McNeese this Friday night at 6pm.
    • I don’t benefit from it, that’s not my area.  But the average cost to imprison someone is around $15k per year (on average in the US) and capital cases cost somewhere between $1.5-$3M with over half being overturned or reduced to life in prison anyway.  These numbers may be inflated since the last report I read but I’m sure it would be on both sides and higher on the DP side if anything. So what’s the point?  We feel better because we got to return the favor on someone (hopefully) who committed a heinous crime?  And I don’t know I can say we have “complicated” it. Which appeal should we cut out?  Our justice system has a pecking order and we have higher courts for a reason. When we are about to impose the ultimate judgment, should we cut steps that other cases have to save a buck?  Or do we not pay for an indigent person’s experts at the trial court level because it’s too expensive? Or do we just lock them up and throw away the key (unless we later find out they weren’t actually guilty, in which case we have a key and a life we haven’t unjustly ended) and save a ton of money?  Seems to me to be an obvious solution but I’m more of a pragmatist.
    • 1 thing for certain. Coach Earned 3 more years to figure it out lol
  • Topics

×
×
  • Create New...