TERRE HAUTE — I don’t know Caitlin Fears well enough to know how much she enjoyed the Metropolitan Interscholastic Conference track and field championships Friday night.
As far as I can tell, she competed in just one event and placed 15th, but the Terre Haute South quarter-miler can at least say one thing: She beat Candyce McGrone.
About the only thing you can be certain of when watching a MIC championship meet is that you’re going to see speed and power — lots and lots of speed and power. If I knew how, I would have been texting OMGs to everyone I know on several occasions.
At least two of those messages would have involved McGrone, the tall, elegant Warren Central sprinter. She calmly blistered the field in the 100-meter dash, showing impeccable form with textbook economy of motion, then a few moments later took the baton for the anchor leg of the 4x100 relay with about 10 yards to make up. Again she was placid and unruffled, and swept inexorably past an Indianapolis North Central speedster with time to spare.
But the very next girls event was the 400, an event in which McGrone already had a state-qualifying time that was fastest in the field. Maybe she was tired. Maybe she wasn’t happy about this particular order of events — “in a mood,” my daughter Darcy might say. At any rate, her calmless evolved into lethargy. She finished 16th, a mere 16 seconds off her best time of the season.
She might not want to bring that up if she’s hoping for her team’s mental attitude award either; had she finished sixth or better, her team would have won the championship.
But that just further reinforces my theory that you never know what you’ll run into at the MIC meet. This season’s quirk was a wind that pretty much every runner who went around a corner had to run into.
“I was behind Andy Wilson [of Ben Davis] most of the time,” said Terre Haute North’s Zach Mayhew, for example, a few moments after winning the boys 3,200-meter run — and he indicated there was a reason for that positioning.
“When I had the lead,” Mayhew added, “it was like running full speed into a wall. It just drains you. But you have to use the wind as a tool, and that’s what I did.”
North’s Amy Hamilton also had similar strategic success, giving the Patriots a sweep of the longest races. And there were lots of other Vigo County standouts like North’s Shaun Smith, whose third- and fourth-place sprints didn’t get their due because the lateness of the meet forced the complete agate results to run a day late; North’s Aaron Edwards, with a pair of personal bests in throws; South’s Brianne Steppe (see, I really do know how to spell her first name); and North freshman Amber Wilcox.
Another OMG running moment came in the boys sprints, when I noticed that Warren Central’s George Cheesebourough — the Warrior football team’s biggest take-it-to-the-house threat — was in Lane 1 (not the fast lane, in other words) for the 100-meter final.
And then there was the biggest — literally — OMG moment of all. I wandered over to watch the throws during the running trials, and got my first look at Lawrence North’s Felisha Johnson other than in basketball. The future Indiana State thrower won both shot put and discus convincingly — another basketball player, Warren’s Teka Flowers, was second in both events — and with no small amount of intimidation.
As the girls were transitioning from shot put to discus, in fact, I was listening to South’s throwers talking to their coach, Cathy Herron, about Johnson and her habit of jumping rope between throws to stay loose. Finally one of the Braves — Shayla Lewis, I think — looked at Cathy, shaking her head with a smile of resignation and said, “Coach, you got to get us some steroids.”
• NBA bitterness — It’s always been a personal peeve of mine when a professional sports team tries to buy its way to a championship at the last minute (social liberal, fiscal conservative if you’re voting next week), so I was thrilled by a couple of National Basketball Association outcomes on Tuesday.
Both the Dallas Mavericks and Phoenix Suns were eliminated that night, the Mavs by the New Orleans Hornets, with Chris Paul running rings around recently acquired Jason Kidd of Dallas, and the Suns by the San Antonio Spurs, with recently acquired Shaquille O’Neal of the Suns missing 11 free throws. I was particularly mad at the Suns for abandoning their entire philosophy — “We were only kidding about being able to win while being entertaining” — to add a plodding, overweight, over-the-hill, overpaid O’Neal.
The best parts? Now Dallas and Phoenix are stuck with huge contracts for next year for their recent additions too, which should clear some space for Portland and Golden State to replace them in the playoffs.
Andy Amey can be reached after 4 p.m. for comments or news items at (812) 231-4277 or at 1-800-783-8742; by e-mail at andy.amey@tribstar.com; by mail at P.O. Box 149, Terre Haute, IN, 47808; or by fax at (812) 231-4321.
Amey Takes Aim
AMEY TAKES AIM: Track meet provides many OMG moments
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Amey Takes Aim: NHL playoffs to put TVs to good use
If Jenny had known, she probably wouldn’t have bought that TV.
But four or five years ago, my Fathers Day present — for those unfamiliar with Amey family traditions, the Fathers Day one is “let’s get something we all really want and pretend it’s a gift for Dad” — was a 42-inch Vizio. It’s been used even more than the cell phone I never would have bought for myself, or the TomTom that disappeared since Jenny’s smartphone arrived.
And it came with high-def.
I’m not going to insult you by telling you how great high-def is, because to do so would be to imply that you are even farther behind the technological curve than I am. I’m guessing, however, that not all of you have yet discovered what it does for hockey. -
Amey Takes Aim: Can’t bottle the joy of Amey vacations
The first bad sign was the Gatorade bottle.
In the Bataan-Death-March drive to Orlando that got the Amey family spring break vacation off to a bad start, seeing it between lanes of I-24 — as we zipped along at a 100-miles-in-five-hours clip — filled with an ominous yellow liquid was a little bit scary. And although we didn't stop to check for sure, I'm fairly certain I knew about its contents.
And the person stuck in the same traffic jam with us, the one with the existential license plate YMIHR4, couldn’t have asked a more pertinent question.
But, after seeing a lot more of Oak Grove, Ky., than we’d planned, and after enduring more traffic slowdowns in Nashville, we were on our way. Even some rain in the dark in the Smokies didn’t slow us down much, so you would think our first-day troubles were over.
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ANDY AMEY: Farewell to basketball
I believe you’ve heard me say before — just about a year ago, perhaps — that a boys high school basketball season that ends with the Tribune-Star in Bankers Life Fieldhouse can’t be considered a bad one, which is why we have a little celebrating to do thanks to the Linton Miners.
Lover of irony that I am, I’ve also got to point out that this season was another branch sprouting from the Wabash Valley’s most legendary coaching tree, that of Joe Hart.
Joe never got much credit for his work at Dugger, but he took Brody Boyd, Clark Golish and the Bulldogs to a state championship game in 2000, and since then three of his former players — Joe Pigg, Clint Swan and now Joey Hart, his son — also have coached teams in the final game of the season.
Joe probably wishes he could take credit for Doc Nash, another down-home type who gave a banjo lesson earlier Saturday in leading Borden past a bigger, more athletic Triton team (banjo lesson is a Howard Sharpism, for you younger readers), but his lineage is still the best I can think of around here. -
AMEY TAKES AIM: Maroons, Rox final a true Classic
I don’t make predictions nearly as often as I used to, but I had one several months ago that was proven correct last week.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Nitpicking aside, West Vigo Hall of Fame selections spot on
I can’t imagine a better first class of inductees into the West Vigo High School Athletics Hall of Fame than the one that was feted Saturday night in the Jim Mann Green Dome.
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Tough bunch of people
I’m getting my warm clothes ready for a trip to Linton this week, and if a few thrills from the Miners, Casey or North Vermillion happen the next couple of weeks, I hope I get to see them.
But high school football is over in Vigo County for the season — as coach Chris Barrett of Terre Haute North said, prematurely — and I’m sadder to see it go than usual.
Walking the sidelines and doing midweek or postgame interviews enables me to meet quite a few of the guys whose names you are about to read, and haven’t been more impressed than I was this fall. What outstanding groups of young men. What a tough, tough bunch of people.
Many know that one of my favorite athletic adjectives appeared consecutively in the previous sentence. -
AMEY TAKES AIM: A weekend to remember with ISU’s ’72 football team
They’re all still pretty hale and hearty, the boys of the fall of 1972 who returned to campus over the weekend to honor their former football coach.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: ISU reunion raises more questions than answers
One of the wrestlers I used to hang out with occasionally claimed to be a pretty good second-story man — although he may have just been talking, since I never saw any of the goods — and it was with him in mind that I was able to get access to the Indiana State Wrestling Alumni Reunion late Saturday night.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Deciding not to ‘vacate’ during ‘vacation’ – & other ventures
Flaunting the law, setting a bad example for the kids in other ways, grooming and acquiring dogs … not a typical Amey family vacation, but an appreciated one just the same.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Huntsville’s Stars, Havoc take back seat to GGS
The second-best thing about the Amey family’s spring-break trip to Huntsville, Ala., is that we left a lot of things on the table to do the next time we’re down there.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Rox well represented on Amey teams
If having the state finals in town makes it a successful girls high school basketball season, then certainly having a team to follow at the state finals makes it a very successful boys high school basketball season . . .
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AMEY TAKES AIM: A feeling of pride, not disappointment, comes from watching Rox play
It’s not going to come as a startling admission that I — once the rest of the local opposition has been eliminated from consideration — am an unabashed fan of whatever team the Wabash Valley sends onward in postseason high school sports competition.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: This private school plays basketball the right way
Any girls high school basketball season that ends with state championship games in Hulman Center is a pretty good one — even though I wished I’d seen Riverton Parke and Seeger knock off a couple of private schools the week before to even the public school-private school battle a little bit.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Even 2 of state’s best once had doubts
Look at them now.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Getting ready for the dance
Terre Haute North got the good news Sunday night — or did it?
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Harrowing path for state hopefuls
The bad news is that the winner of Class 4A Sectional 13 in boys basketball heads northeast instead of southeast for regional play in March — to Hinkle Fieldhouse instead of Seymour as a result of Indiana High School Athletic Association’s changes.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: A superior all-star arrangement
I don’t work on Wednesdays, so I wasn’t able to attend the first Wabash Valley Football Coaches Association draft last week to set up the annual all-star game that will be June 23 this year.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: The biggest & baddest of a holiday classic
There are more things to love about the Pizza Hut Wabash Valley Classic than could fit in this newspaper, but one of this year’s best things was that for an hour or so on Wednesday, it was Justin Paddock’s world and we were just living in it.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Taking note of ISU’s latest football win
The biggest difference I’ve noticed, as I transition from the high school football beat to quasi-official status as the Indiana State football beat writer for a few weeks, is the length of the games.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: IHSAA playoff draw not as bad as it could have been
First reaction to the Indiana sectional football pairings drawn late Sunday by the Indiana High School Athletic Association? It could have been a lot worse.
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ANDY AMEY: Between the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame & a hard place
Just in case any of you noticed — with some anticipation — the recent lack of my bylines, I can tell you that your wish (and mine) did come true. It was vacation week for the Amey family.
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Amey Takes Aim: UFC fighter’s bloodines traced back to ISU brothers
As a mild-mannered reporter from a great metropolitan newspaper — or thereabouts — I admit I haven’t paid much attention to the burgeoning mixed martial arts scene.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Predators’ win is music to new fan’s ears
For many, many years, the number of live games televised on WGN has been cited as perhaps the main reason for the popularity of the Chicago Cubs (it’s got to be something besides masochism, right?).
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AMEY TAKES AIM: You’ll be having a good ol’ time on vacation with the Ameys
When one of the first people you meet is Tammy Wynette’s stepdaughter, when you’ve stepped on the feet of people you haven’t met while trying to navigate Ernest Tubbs’ old Silver Eagle tour bus, and when the activities director of your resort is, well, Elvis, you might be vacationing in Nashville.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: The Annual All-Amey basketball teams close out the prep season
The most encouraging boys high school basketball event I’ve attended so far in 2011 has been the Lafayette Semistate a couple of weeks ago.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Family remembers Cheryl Weatherman as caring grandmother
As far as Riley and Keely Davis are concerned, Cheryl Weatherman was simply their grandmother, and a pretty darn good one at that.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Honor to see Turkey Run girls close out memorable career
I don’t know if anyone in this part of the state could actually say they enjoy going to Fort Wayne and back, but I was glad to see the Turkey Run Warriors play one last time during the girls basketball state finals Saturday.
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So many matches, so many favorites
Go ahead, ask me anything about the 224 wrestlers who competed last week at the Indiana state finals — or at least about the 112 wrestlers who survived Saturday’s first round.
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ANDY TAKES AIM: A sportwriters’s lament: Oh, the games we missed
I was already tired of winter by the time that first bitterly cold snap passed through in mid-December, so it’s safe to say the season hasn’t grown on me.
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AMEY TAKES AIM: Time of the season for teams to tough it out
In the last month or so I figure I’ve seen at least four boys high school basketball teams with legitimate state-championship dreams as the season heads into its dog days.
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