Jackson defeats Christi
Transcription
Jackson defeats Christi
SPORTS B A comeback? Agent says Magglio Ordonez is almost ready for return to baseball. B2 JEFF BLEILER 768-4984 [email protected] Comics B6 Classified B7 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2012 JACKSON CITIZEN PATRIOT MSU BASKETBALL Spartans lose by 1 Green injured, Appling misses late shot in loss at Illinois By Graham Couch MLive.com CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — What the flu Illinois 42 didn’t take from MSU 41 Draymond Green physically, foul trouble did Tuesday night. Anything that was left was ruined by an apparent knee injury with less than 4 minutes remaining. On the road, against an Illinois club staring at the collapse of its season and perhaps a coaching tenure, Michigan State couldn’t quite overcome a night mostly minus its star and leader. Keith Appling missed a driving layup short and to the right with a few seconds remaining. By the time Austin Thornton forced a jump ball on the rebound, time had expired with Illinois on top 42-41. Appling finished 1-for-10 from the floor, his second straight one-field goal game. Michigan State scored nine straight points to take a 38-35 lead with 4:09 remaining. ASSOCIATED PRESS But on the next possession, Michigan State’s Adreian Payne tries to block the shot Green came up hobbled, fallof Illinois guard Brandon Paul in the first half of TuesSee MSU, on B2 day’s game in Champaign, Ill. HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS — JACKSON VS. LUMEN CHRISTI SUPER BOWL Ochocinco demure in spotlight SEAN PROCTOR | MLIVE.COM Jackson’s Alyse Hines dribbles past Lumen Christi’s Chelsea Perez on Tuesday night at Jackson High School. Jackson defeats Christi Girls basketball team beats their crosstown rival 58-41 By Eric Hammis MLive.com The Jackson High School girls basketball team lost to rival Lumen Christi once this season. The Vikings looked determined Tuesday night not to make it twice. Looking to avenge a fourpoint loss Jackson 58 to Lumen Lum. Christi 41 Christi earlier this season, Jackson led the entire way of a 58-41 victory. “A big difference in (Tuesday’s) game compared to our first matchup was that we came out with four different starters,” Jackson coach Jerry Malone said. “It was kind of a work in progress, but I knew where we needed to be by the end of the year and our team is really starting to gel.” The Vikings (10-3) scored the SEAN PROCTOR | MLIVE.COM Lumen Christi’s Paige Pryson reaches for the ball as it rolls out of bounds against Jackson on Tuesday night at Jackson High School. game’s first seven points and built a 16-8 lead after the first quarter. In a back-and-forth second quarter, Lumen Christi was able to make up two points and trailed 25-19 at the half. Cierra Pryor was all over the floor in the first half for Jackson, scoring 10 points, and finished with 16 points, seven rebounds, five steals and four assists for the game. The Vikings came out strong again in the second half, thanks to a tough press and fast-break points. Jackson headed into the fourth quarter with a commanding 44-29 lead. Jackson scored the first six points of the fourth to put the game away. The Vikings forced Lumen Christi into 28 turnovers. “Last time we played we were able to force the turnovers but we missed probably 20 layups,” Malone said. “This time around, we were able to capitalize and finish.” Chelsea Hall had 13 points and four assists while Ashleigh Spencer finished with seven points and eight rebounds for Jackson. Angela Hubert led Lumen Christi (11-4) with 13 points while Rachel McDonald chipped in with 11 points, nine from the free-throw line. ONL I N E: PH OTO GA LLE RY FRO M T H I S G A M E AT ML I V E.CO M/S P O RTS/JACKSO N INS I D E: MORE BOYS A ND G I R LS H I G H SC H O O L BA SK ET BA LL R ESU LTS PAG E B5 HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL Lumen Christi boys beat Western By Rich McGowan MLive.com It may not have been the prettiest win the Lumen Christi Lum. Christi 60 High School Western 57 boys basketball team will have all season, but the Titans will take it. After a slow start, the Titans needed an extra period to get past a pesky Western squad in a 60-57 victory on Tuesday at Western. “We got off to a slow start; why I don’t really know,” said Lumen Christi coach Rich Karasek. “I was proud of the kids, the way they played in the second half and in the overtime.” Lumen outrebounded Western 8-3 in the extra session while taking 12 free throws to the Panthers’ zero. “We played a lot of basketball together, and we’ve played some overtime games so we’ve been through that before,” Karasek said. Khari Willis led the Titans (7-7) with 14 points, while Matt Bullinger added 10 while grabbing seven rebounds and four assists. Western coach Lee Ingles said the loss was a disappointing end to a game that began with a promising start. “Before the game we talked about how hard we had to play, and I thought we did,” Ingles said. “I thought we played extremely hard. In the third quarter we hit a lull and only got six points. We just didn’t move the way we did in the first half.” Sophomore Isaiah Ingles led Western (4-9) with 19 points. INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Chad Ochocinco was the last Patriot to walk across the field and wade into the pack of reporters and photographers waiting near the sideline. He felt no need to rush the moment he’d longed for nearly his whole life. This was his Super Bowl media day. Ochocinco finally got to be on the receiving end of questions Tuesday at Lucas Oil Stadium for an annual event that he attended several times as a microphone-toting correspondent for his social media Ochocinco News Network. Now, the microphones were aimed at him. “Aw, man, I’ve dreamed of it,” Ochocinco said, wearing his blue No. 85 jersey, blue Super Bowl cap and irrepressible smile. “I’ve been playing this game a long time — started out at 4 years old. And this is what you dream of, to OCHOCINCO come to this stage and enjoy it. So that’s what I’m going to do.” And he’s doing it the New England way. Instead of driving the conversation by talking about himself, Ochocinco was along for the ride. He didn’t seem to mind that he didn’t get one of the 14 podiums set up on the field for coach Bill Belichick and players. Instead, he stood at the 13-yard line between podiums reserved for tight end Aaron Hernandez and receiver Matthew Slater, his soft tone often drowned out by his teammates’ speaker-amplified comments. Didn’t matter. “This is my podium,” Ochocinco said, referring to his small section of artificial turf encircled by reporters and photographers. “If I was up there, you couldn’t get to me. You couldn’t smell the cologne I have on now.” During the nearly hour-long session, Ochocinco provided hardly a whiff of his old look-at-me ways. After 10 years of commanding the spotlight and losing games in Cincinnati, the social media mogul had to pull off one of his most difficult changes. Ochocinco had to use the words “I’’ and “me” much more sparingly in order to co-exist with Belichick in New England. He had to learn, he says, throwing in an obscenity, to shut up. There was no remorse in his tone on Tuesday. He knew when the Patriots traded for him that his self-promoting ways would have to end. If he lapsed back into look-at-me, he’d be looking at the end of his stay in New England. So, he did away with his lists of cornerbacks who couldn’t cover him, his touchdown skits and victory guarantees. Ochocinco, who legally changed his name from Johnson to get more attention, would have to drop the “diva” from his job description. “I could have talked,” he said, ‘but then I’d be sitting at home today. “I think I’ve had a great career in general. The year wasn’t what I expected, what everyone else expected. But I did everything I was supposed to do — work, stay quiet. I don’t know if being on this stage is a reward, but there’s nothing else I can do. I’m part of a team and I’ve done everything asked of me.” Especially the “stay quiet” part, which went against his nature. He repeatedly bumped egos in Cincinnati with coach Marvin Lewis, who referred to him once as “Ocho Psycho.” Ochocinco miffed teammates with his See OCHOCINCO, on B2