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About Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 2019)
PAGE A14, KEIZERTIMES, OCTOBER 11, 2019 12,000 $ OFF MSRP 2019 F-150 SUPERCREW 2019 F-350 4X4 XLT 39,999 % 3555 River Road N, Keizer (503) 463- 4853 or 0 www.skylineforddirect.com sale price* x60 available *MSRP: $52,040. Sale price $39,999 after $3,791 Skyline discount $3,250 retail customer cash, $1,500 retail bonus cash, $750 select inventory customer cash, $750 retail bonus cash, $1,250 trade assist, $750 Ford Motor credit. Plus license, tax, title & doc fee. Must trade a ‘95 or newer. Must fi nance with Ford Motor Credit, on approved credit. 1 at this price. Subject to prior sale. Stk# 194160,VIN# KKD57102. Art for illustration only. Offer expires 10/31/2019. 0%x 60=48266 to fi nance after Skyline discount, Tier 0-1 OAC must fi nance with Ford Motor Credit. XLT LARIAT SUPER CAB UNDER 50K! $ ** **MSRP: $56,920. Sale price $49,995 after $3,925 Skyline discount $1,250 retail customer cash, $750 select inventory customer cash, $1,000 Ford Motor credit. Plus license, tax, title & doc fee. Must finance with Ford Motor Credit, on approved credit. 1 at this price. Subject to prior sale. Stk# 194357,VIN# E54636. Art for illustration only. Offer expires 10/31/2019. KEIZERTIMES.COM SOCCER: McNary knocks off fourth-ranked Summit By MATT RAWLINGS against a high-caliber team. Of the Keizertimes I’m really proud of the boys.” After losing a heartbreak- The Celtics have struggled er to West Salem in their for most of the year with tak- league opener, the McNary ing advantage of early scoring boys soccer team knew they chances. This time around, it had little room for error if was a different story. they wanted to contend for a In the fi fth minute, Mc- Mountain Valley Conference Nary forward Edgar Salazar title. sent a beautiful through ball But in their following con- to Lopez, who streaked past test, the Celtics played argu- the Summit defense and had ably their best game of the a one-on-one opportunity season against fourth-ranked with goalkeeper, Khael En- Summit. gleman. Luis Lo- “It was a pez’s early great ball from fi rst half goal Edgar and was all Mc- I just knew Nary needed that I could as their back take (Engle- line kept one man) on. He of the state’s was starting to best offenses close me off out of the net and I knew if for 80 min- I didn’t shoot utes, allowing right then that the Celtics to I wasn’t going defeat Summit to get a clean 1-0 on Friday, — Luis Lopez shot,” Lopez Oct. 4. McNary forward said. “It just The senior means that forward took we’re back in advantage of the race for a league champi- Engleman’s overaggressive- onship. It was really import- ness and sent a missile into ant for us to come out and the top right corner of the win this game. We have just goal to give McNary the ear- been really dedicated to the ly lead. process and the hard work Lopez had another oppor- showed off today,” Lopez said. tunity moments later, but his “They are defi nitely a great long range shot bounced off team, but we locked down on the artifi cial turf and over the defense after I got that goal.” post. McNary head coach Mi- In the fi nal 10 minutes guel Camarena added: “The of the fi rst half, Summit guys played very disciplined had a pair of chances to tie “We have just been really dedicated to the process and the hard work showed off today.” KEIZERTIMES/Matt Rawlings McNary forward Elio Carella (21) battles for possession on the ball in the Celtics 1-0 upset victory over Summit for their fi rst win in Mountain Valley Conference play. the game up. But they were turned away by McNary’s veteran goalie Alejandro Vil- larreal. After Celtics midfi elder Noah Gatchet committed a foul just outside of the box, Summit’s Jace Marshall was awarded a free kick from close distance. But Villarreal read the shot perfectly and made his save look easy. Villarreal would make a diving stop later in the half allow his team to maintain the lead at the half. “He played incredibly well and had some huge saves in the back. To me, he’s the best goalkeeper in the conference and probably a top fi ve keep- er in the state,” Camarena said. “He’s very experienced, he’s calm and has great skills. He did excellent leading the team.” Villarreal and his back line remained in-sync for the remainder of the game, minimizing Summit’s shots- on-goal and successfully pro- tecting the McNary lead. “Summit is a really good team and they have a good attack. The most important Please see CELTS, Page A11 The good old days KEIZERTIMES/Matt Rawlings Claggett Creek’s Izeyah Contreras runs past a Leslie defender to pick up a fi rst down. Contreras scored three touchdowns in the Panthers 20-6 victory. Claggett takes down Leslie By MATT RAWLINGS Of the Keizertimes After suffering a close loss to Parrish in their previous contest, the Claggett Creek football squad made sure to grab the early momentum in this one. The Pan- thers jumped out to a 14-0 lead in the fi rst half and never looked back as Claggett Creek defeated Leslie 20-6 on Wednesday, Oct. 2. “I told those guys to go out and smack someone in the mouth and play physical foot- ball and that is what they did,” Claggett Creek head coach Aar- thers forced Leslie to punt after three plays. Then, on Claggett Creek’s second offensive play of the game, running back Izeyah Contreras took a pitch from quarterback Ja- cob Allen and went 56 yards for the score. Allen pounded in the two-point conversion on a quarterback sneak to put the Panthers on — Aaron Carr top 8-0. On Claggett Creek’s Claggett Creek head coach second offensive drive, they got a very similar result. Facing a third-and-10 from on Carr said. It was the defense that set the tone early on as the Pan- Please see CREEK, Page A10 “We did a really good job with our team tackling and rallying to the football.” We often wish it was like the good old days. Life was much easier. It was easy to pick what shows to watch on TV because there were only four black and white stations. You had to get up and go turn the channel knob to change the chan- nel. Te l e p h o n e s were interesting. If you wanted to call someone you had to dial them by stick- ing your fi nger in a hole with a number and dial it seven times with the proper numbers equaling the person’s phone number. If you had a party line you had to count the rings to know if a call was for your house. One ring was for your neighbor, two was your house and three was some old guy down the road. If you picked up the phone you could hear someone else’s conversation if they were using their phone. Very complicated, and the phone didn’t move. We had anxieties as well. Almost all children at some- time got the measles, chicken pox and the mumps. It was a right of passage... we all had to learn to duck and cover in case the Russians nuked us. That was a lie because if you ducked and covered the only outcome was your rear end would just be vaporized fi rst. So what was so good about the good old days? The hunt- ing and fi shing. Most hunters got their deer in the fall. Pheas- ants were abundant in the Keiz- er area and were a popu- lar game bird. The fi sh- ing was great. All the small creeks were full of cutthroat and most of the rivers had abundant salmon and steel- head runs. There were many hatcheries and they stocked most of the streams with smolts to enhance the runs. We would go to a coast- al river in the fall and often catch our limit of Chinook or Coho salmon. It was not unusual to catch Chinook weighing 40-50 pounds. Now one of 30 pounds is considered large. Steelhead were in almost every creek and stream. We used to catch them in Abaqua Creek, Thomas Creek and lots of them in the Santiam River, but for the best steel- head fi shing, we went to the coast. I spent most my time chas- ing winter steelhead on the Nestucca River where we could sometimes hook a doz- en in a day drifting the riv- er. You could also be at the Deschutes River for summer steelhead fl y fi shing where a morning or an evening could result to a to 10 hook ups. Todays generation of fi sh- ermen have no idea how good the fi shing used to be. Most are satisfi ed with catch- ing one fi sh for every two or three days fi shing. With the wild fi sh policy now in place, runs are dwindling to a rem- nant of what they once were. Hatcheries are being closed and fewer and fewer fi sh are being planted. A coalition has been started to try and get more hatchery fi sh again. The science shows hatchery and wild fi sh can co-exist if hatchery practices are done correctly. So until we get rid of the current wild fi sh policy, I’ll just dream about the good old days and be thankful I got to experience them. I will get my fl u shot, lay on the couch and channel surf and look up stuff on my smart phone. Maybe that will hold me till we get back to the good old days again.