sports
Cougar offense scoring;
Cougar soccer winning
By Tracy Sumner
Of The Print
The Clackamas Com
munity College soccer team
finally began doing what Coach
Janos Szanto had said they
would and the result was a two-
win southern Oregon road-trip
for the Cougars last weekend.
What the Cougars started
doing was producing on both
ends of the soccer field. The
defense of the Cougars has
been excellent all season, but
until the last two league games,
they had been nearly non
existent as a goal-scoring unit.
The team managed three
goals in each of the two games,
not unusually high scoring, but
Clackamas continued playing
their stifling defense, allowing
just one goal for the weekend.
Brian Gorsek scored two
goals and Rick Townsend add
ed one counter to give
Clackamas its first league win
of the season, a come-from-
behind 3-1 victory over Oregon
Institute of Technology in
Klamath Falls last Saturday.
OIT struck early for the
1-0 lead, but Gorsek tied the
game and scored what proved
to be the game-winner before
the first
half ended.
Townsend’s goal came in the
second half to account for the
final score.
The Cougar’s second
league win was a relatively easy
3-0 shut-out of Southern
Oregon State College Sunday
in Ashland. Townsend had two
goals for the game, giving him
three for the weekend. '
Clackamas struck quickly
for the game-winner. SOSC
had possession to start the
game, but the Cougars stole
the ball and Townsend scored
with less than 20 seconds gone
in the first half.
“It’s very bad for a team to
be scored on like that,” Szanto
said. “After that, they fell
apart.”
Jamie Keough scored
about 20 minutes later on a
penalty kick to give this team a
2-0 lead. Townsend’s third
goal of the weekend gave his
team a 3-0 lead and an oppor
tunity for Szanto to play
reserve players in the second
half.
Szanto expressed con
fidence in his team’s new-
Graham, Sue Rogers, Tami Arbini, Coach Marilyn Wynia. Bottom row, Sheri Hilton,
Debbi Koffel, Vicki Anderson, Julie Pearson Staff Photo by Troy Maben
found scoring attack and
believes that the team will con
tinue to score and win games.
“We’re finally scoring
goals,” he said. “I knew it was
coming. NoW we’ve got our
confidence back. We’re playing
together. It seems everybody
has the will to win.”
Clackamas now holds a
2-1-1 league record and trails
first place Portland Community
College by one point in league
standings. The two teams meet
here at 3 o’clock this afternoon
for a clash that will give the
winner undisputed first place in
the standings. Szanto express
ed confidence in his team’s
ability to beat the first-place
PCC.
“PCC dug themselves a
hole in Ashland (Portland lost
to SOSC there last Saturday),
Wednesday, we’re going to
help bury them,” Szanto said.
Cougar Tales— Clackamas
lost a non-league game to
Warner Pacific here last
Wednesday by a 3-1 count.
Szanto said that the Cougs had
25 shots-on-goal in the second
half alone.
“We hit the crossbar, the
goalposts ... we just couldn’t
score,” said Szanto. What
Szanto calls a “revenge game”
is scheduled with Warner
Pacific later this season.
Volleybailers take fourth with erratic play
By J. Dana Haynes
Of The Print
The Cougar women’s
volleyball team took fourth
place last weekend at the
Western Baptist Invitational
Tournament in Salem. Coach
Loren Swivel was none too
disappointed,
however;
Clackamas Community was
the only junior college par
ticipating.
The two-day tourney held
last Friday and Saturday, was
highlighted by feast or famine
play by the Cougars. “We
played very well in spots,”
Swivel said. “Then we’d lose
our intensity and people would
gain on us.”
The Friday matches were
played “very, very well, with
good combination of offense
and defense,” Swivel said. The
first match went to Clackamas
with scores of 15-9 and 15-11
over Judson Baptist of The
Dalles. Later that night, the
Cougars swept past Concordia
15-8 and 15-2.
Saturday’s competition
was another matter. “We had
mental lapses,” Swivel explain
ed. “We’d be ahead by five
points, then let them get the
lead.”
The first match of the day
was against Northwest
Nazarene College of Nampa,
Idaho. Clackamas dropped the
first game 10-15, won the se
cond 19-17, and lost the third
9-15.
The next heat went better
for the women from the Col
lege, as they went up against
the Oregon Institute of
Technology (Ashland) and eas
ed through the first game
15-10, lost the next 12-15 and
returned to win the third
15-13.
Next came the first game
of the single elimination
bracket. Clackamas took on
Western Baptist. After losing
the first bout 8-15, the Cougars
blitzed the next two 15-2, 15-3.
The next match was
against Judson Baptist again.
However, the fates were with
Judson this time, as the
Cougars dropped both games
13-15, and 12-15.
“It’s not as bad as it
sounds,” Swivel feels. “Judson
is packed with Juniors and
Seniors, who’ve played
together for three or four
years.” The Cougar team has
only two Sophomores and 10
Freshman. “Our people had to
talk to each other and concen
trate to take the place of Jud
son’s experience,” she said.
The last match of the day
for the Cougars was against
Northwest Nazarene. By that
time, fatigue had joined forces
with inexperience to hand the
Clackamas women losses of
6-14, 5-15, and 2-15.
“It was terrible. We were
up 8-0, and the next thing I
knew they came back and
won,” Swivel said. “I’m not
sure what happened. It may
have been the pressure, but
we’ve played well under
pressure before.”
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